Campus activism for Gaza ignites

April 30, 2024
Issue 
Students protest for Palestine at Qld Uni
Student protest at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. Photo: Alex Bainbridge @greenleftonline/Instagram

Students at more than and colleges in the United States and around the world have lit a fire under the Palestine solidarity movement by setting up encampments on their campuses. They are demanding that their universities end their complicity with Israel鈥檚 genocide in Gaza and the occupation of Palestine more broadly.

While the first and longest-running student takeover has been at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, it was Columbia University that lit the fuse for a widespread student movement and drew global attention. The administration鈥檚 decision at the elite New York City school to sic the repressive New York Police Department on peacefully protesting students led to a global movement and gave hope for the first time in months to countless people. As of April 26, student occupations in addition to dozens of campuses in the US.

Police repression at other sites besides Columbia has been fierce as well. At Emerson University in Boston, Massachusetts, the Boston Police Department was livestreamed manhandling protesters in the early hours of April 25. At Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, the police threw Caroline Fohlin, an economics professor who attempted to intervene in arrests of students, , her head hitting the concrete. The University of Southern California allowed officers to fire rubber bullets at students, and the University of Texas鈥揂ustin had local and state police on motorcycles, horseback and on foot arresting students.

But the police didn鈥檛 always have the upper hand. At Cal Poly Humboldt, students successfully barricaded themselves in a building. At the City University of New York鈥檚 City College, protesters pushed the police back and maintained the integrity of their encampment.

Through it all, students have grounded the protests in what matters: conditions in Gaza and their universities鈥 ties to Israel. Even as establishment figures hemmed and hawed in the face of the student uprising 鈥 President Joe Biden tried to link them to 鈥渁ntisemitism鈥 鈥 two mass graves were uncovered in Palestine, which was from the aftermath of terroristic Israeli raids on two hospitals in Gaza. About 400 doctors, patients, children, and others were found dead, .

The higher-ups on campuses, in boardrooms, and in presidential palaces around the world appeared to have nothing new to say about Israel鈥檚 horrifying and murderous tactics. The Zionist state鈥檚 genocide in Gaza has already reached its 200th day, with at least 34,000 dead and an invasion reportedly imminent in Rafah, the southern city and place of last refuge for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians.

While some have claimed that the mainly US student movement is a distraction, movement figures like have noted the connections between racist state violence in the US and in Israel and elsewhere. And, if nothing else, the student movement in advance of both the launch of the aid-carrying 鈥溾 and International Workers鈥 Day has given countless Palestinian solidarity activists something concrete to do beyond doomscrolling horrifying images from Gaza for hours or attempting to carry on with their daily lives in the face of ongoing genocide.

Moreover, with billions of dollars in endowment money, social capital, and, in some cases, direct links to the state of Israel, universities are an important site of struggle for the advancement of the . For example, Columbia University .

The US proves increasingly inhospitable to free speech, a cornerstone of democracy; and it seems nearly every private and public institution has been corporatised, militarised, or both. Reprising the historical role of universities as centers of knowledge and public interest as students are doing now could offer a site for pushback to not just the genocide in Gaza, but much more.

In the coming days, there may be many more encampments in an ever-widening range of sites around the world. The protesters are united in their purpose; as a common chant, 鈥溾 is heard across the globe.

[This article was produced by Saurav Sarkar is a freelance movement writer, editor, and activist living in Long Island, New York. Follow them on Twitter and at .]

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