Saoirse Kennedy Hill was a champion for the #MeToo movement as part of her studies at Boston College, according to a Twitter account purportedly set up by her.

Under the handle @saoirsekh, Hill fired off a series of posts about the women’s empowerment movement in March and April 2018 for her social media and social justice class.

“The sensationalization of claims made by women who are victims of sexual harassment and assault is one of the biggest issues the movement is tackling,” one post read. “Believing victims when they come forth is an important step in the fight against sexual assault.”

Other posts reference the influence of #MeToo on Bill Cosby’s sexual assault trial and its effect on the “international fashion community.”

The unverified account follows just three people — the #MeToo movement, its founder Tarana Burke and a Boston College professor who teaches social justice.

The most recent post was from April 21, 2018.

Hill, 22, opened up about her own experience with sexual assault as a rising junior at Deerfield Academy, a grade 9-12 school in Massachusetts.

“My sense of well-being was already compromised, and I totally lost it after someone I knew and loved broke serious sexual boundaries with me,” Hill wrote in a 2016 piece for student newspaper the Deerfield Scroll. “I did the worst thing a victim can do, and I pretended it hadn’t happened. This all became too much, and I attempted to take my own life.”

The heartbreaking piece chronicles Hill’s struggle with depression and feelings of isolation.

Hill — who died of an apparent drug overdose Thursday at the Kennedy family compound in Cape Cod — was studying mass media and communications at Boston College, according to her LinkedIn page.

She was expected to graduate next year.

In a statement regarding her death, the Kennedy family remembered her as being “passionately moved by the causes of human rights and women’s empowerment.”

Last year, she accompanied her mother, Courtney Kennedy Hill — a daughter of Robert F. Kennedy, who was assassinated in 1968 — to a gun control protest in Cape Cod, the Barnstable Patriot reported.

“He and I are the product of gun violence, and we are damaged goods,” Courtney said, referring to her late father.