Albany Times Union

How Columbia’s president avoided Israel-hamas fallout

- By Sharon Otterman This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

NEW YORK — In the weeks after Oct. 7, Columbia University was the scene of rising tensions over the Israel-hamas war on American college campuses.

A Jewish student said he was assaulted after putting up posters of hostages. Pro-israel and propalesti­nian students accused one another of support for genocide in a series of heated protests and counter-protests.

But as the fall semester ended, Columbia faded from the spotlight even as its peer schools, Harvard and the University of Pennsylvan­ia in particular, were scrutinize­d over their responses to the war and claims of antisemiti­sm on campus.

Supporters of Columbia’s president, Nemat Shafik, credit her diplomatic skills in avoiding a similar public relations crisis. But detractors said she has bent too far to the demands of Israel supporters, angering students and some faculty members but keeping powerful donors and trustees mostly happy.

She might also have benefited from a bit of luck.

When Congress invited her to a congressio­nal hearing on antisemiti­sm on Dec. 5 with her peers from Harvard, Penn and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, Shafik said she could not go. She told representa­tives that she had already planned to attend the COP28 climate conference in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, where she introduced a panel about women leaders.

The congressio­nal hearing did not go well. The University of Pennsylvan­ia president lost her job, and the Harvard president became mired in weeks of controvers­y.

Instead of fighting for her job, Shafik was announcing a new initiative, called Values in Action, in which she called for informed debate, not “taunts and cruelty.”

Still, she is walking a precarious path.

Her call for compassion and respect, some students said, does not reflect what they say has been a repressive effort to rein in pro-palestinia­n protesters that has gone farther than at other Ivy League universiti­es: In November, Columbia’s administra­tion made the extraordin­ary decision to temporaril­y suspend two propalesti­nian student groups, Students for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace.

“I just think the university is not identifyin­g the proper threat,” said Deen Haleem, a third-year law student and a leader of Law Students for Palestine. “The current threat right now are the universiti­es that are shutting down propalesti­ne speech.”

Through a spokespers­on, Shafik, who also goes by Minouche, declined to be interviewe­d. Her supporters say she has taken a practical approach to the crisis and has done well in addressing different constituen­cies that are often in conflict.

Board members, including pro-israel voices, say they are pleased at how the president has maneuvered.

“I think it’s very difficult, but I think she did as well as anyone could have done,” said Victor Mendelson, a Columbia trustee who supports Israel and Shafik. “She’s been responsive. She’s been out and about on campus and she’s been very careful to try to make everyone feel welcome. I mean, everyone who is following the rules, obviously.”

While she is known for her support of diversity initiative­s, Shafik’s views on politics — and the way her personal experience­s may have influenced them — can be hard to decipher. Mendelson said that as Columbia scrutinize­d her before she became president, the search committee was impressed that she had been “meticulous­ly nonpartisa­n” in her previous job.

“One couldn’t figure out her personal views because she wanted that evenness on campus,” he said. “That’s one of the key reasons I was supportive of her candidacy for president.”

Two days after the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7, Shafik issued a statement saying she was “devastated by the horrific attack on Israel,” adding that “we must reject forces that seek to pull us apart.” But in the days that followed, protests became so tense that the university closed its campus to outsiders and postponed a major fundraisin­g drive.

Then, on Nov. 10, it suspended the two pro-palestinia­n student groups. According to a statement from Gerald Rosberg, the chair of the school’s Special Committee on Campus Safety, the action was justified because the two groups had repeatedly violated university policies requiring them to get permission and give 10 business days’ notice before holding an event.

Student groups criticized the 10-day rule, saying it violated free speech protection­s. Jaxon Williams-bellamy, a law student and delegate to the University Senate, said it was “too onerous and creates a chilling effect.”

Columbia administra­tors said that the rule had been in place for years, though it was not always enforced, and that the school was working with the Senate to amend the policy.

Shafik’s other actions have included creating an antisemiti­sm task force along with a “Doxing Resource Group” to help student protesters who face harassment after their identities are revealed online, a tactic that has targeted pro-palestinia­n students in particular. She has also gone to interfaith meetings, Hillel events and a Muslim Student Associatio­n meeting, and has met with students affected by the war, her office said.

She has not, however, met with leaders of the suspended Palestinia­n groups, student leaders said.

Ester R. Fuchs, one of the co-chairs of the new antisemiti­sm task force, credited Shafik with “lowering the temperatur­e” on campus.

“Over 300 kids gathered for a Hanukkah candle lighting on campus recently, for example, and you don’t hear about it,” she said. There was no incident.” Claire Shipman, the co-chair of the university’s board of trustees, praised the president’s calm approach toward crisis management.

“We have to focus as a university — and this is where Minouche is so good — on moving to a place where people are listening and engaging in conversati­on, not only protesting,” Shipman said.

But student organizers see her differentl­y. The request to self-police protest chants feels like a trap and not free speech, said Mohsen Mahdawi, a co-founder of Dar, the school’s Palestinia­n student union.

“I am all for compassion and tolerance,” he said. “But there should be no double standards. People have to be treated equally with dignity.”

Some students predicted that Shafik’s efforts to contain the conflict on campus would only lead to more of it in the coming semester. Columbia’s student governing board voted to declare noncoopera­tion with the event policy, the Columbia Spectator reported. Propalesti­nian groups reorganize­d and are planning protests under the name Columbia University Apartheid Divest.

Yoni Kurtz, 21, is a junior studying history and the Hillel student president. He said that while some Jewish students didn’t feel comfortabl­e with the tenor of some pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ions, suspending the groups was a step too far.

“There’s a real distrust from basically almost any student you talk to of almost anything the administra­tion does or will do, basically no matter their political beliefs,” he said. “Most students really just don’t believe the administra­tion has their best interest in mind.”

 ?? Christophe­r Lee/the New York Times ?? Nemat Shafik, president of Columbia University, at Morningsid­e Park in Manhattan on July 15. Columbia University’s president declined a congressio­nal call to testify about her handling of antisemiti­sm on campus — and dodged a firestorm that cost one of her colleagues her job.
Christophe­r Lee/the New York Times Nemat Shafik, president of Columbia University, at Morningsid­e Park in Manhattan on July 15. Columbia University’s president declined a congressio­nal call to testify about her handling of antisemiti­sm on campus — and dodged a firestorm that cost one of her colleagues her job.

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