Seven LGBTQ students from Yeshiva University have filed a discrimination complaint against the college, saying it has refused to authorize a gay-rights organization.

The “YU Alliance” — a newly created group of straight and LGBTQ undergraduates — filed “an initial report” with the city Human Rights Commission on Feb. 14, it said in an email to The Post.

The complaint “comes after several years of YU refusing to allow an LGBTQ+ club and suppressing LGBTQ-themed events,” the group charged.

“During the fall, The YU Alliance met with administrators who knew we would be applying [for official club status] at the beginning of the next semester, but the administration was resistant to the idea,” the group claimed.

On Jan. 30, the Alliance applied. However, student council presidents earlier this month abstained on a motion to approve the alliance, so the decision now rests with the administration.

“Over the past several months, we have been meeting with students, student leaders, LGBTQ+ students and alumni, faculty, rabbis, diversity and inclusion experts, and members of other faith-based institutions with the goal of ensuring an inclusive community of belonging,” said Dr. Josh Joseph, Yeshiva University senior vice president. “As with all student initiatives, we review requests to make sure they are aligned with the values of our institution.”

He said “discussions are still underway.”

On Friday, the school emailed The Post saying, “We are dealing with a dynamic and ever-changing dialogue. As such, the statement we provided last week no longer reflects the current state of our discussions. We hope to have a more substantial update in the next week or so.”

“YU is a non-sectarian institution, with no legal basis for discriminating against LGBTQ students,” Dov Alberstone, a YU senior and co-president of the proposed club, told the Jewish Week, which first reported the story.

YU has previously pushed back on recognizing gay groups on campus because gay sex is prohibited under Orthodox Jewish law, the Jewish Week reported.

Founded in 1886, Yeshiva University enrolls 7,000 students and counts Ralph Lauren and Alan Dershowitz among its alumni.