DAVIS, Calif. – University of California-Davis students awoke Saturday to find swastikas painted on the side of their fraternity house.

According to Nathaniel Bernhard, vice president of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, the vandalism took place between 3 and 9 a.m. Saturday, according to a Sacramento Bee.

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“Jewish people still can’t feel safe on their own campuses and in their own houses,” Bernhard says.

“Anti-Semitism still exists today. It’s not a fairy tale.”

Davis police Sgt. Trevor Edens says two swastikas were sprayed at the back of the house, including one near the entrance.

Scott Dresser, campus news editor for the California Aggie – the UC Davis student-run newspaper – tweeted a photo of the vandalism:

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“Nothing rivals a swastika as a more potent or offensive symbol of hatred and violence toward our Jewish community members,” UC Davis Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi said in a statement.

The California Aggie notes the action came after the Associated Students of UC Davis passed a resolution demanding the University of California regents “divest from companies with connections to Israel.”

“I don’t think that it’s a coincidence that this happened right after divestment,” Bernhard tells the student newspaper.

“I’m also not making any assumptions or blaming anyone in particular, but I feel like there were a lot of anti-semitism feelings after divestment.”

The university sought to distance itself from the student government action, saying the vote doesn’t reflect the position of the regents.

“That’s a student government matter,” university spokesman Andy Fell says, according to the Bee.