Star-Telegram

Pro-Palestinia­n protests intensify at Columbia

- BY SHARON OTTERMAN

For a second day, proPalesti­nian students at Columbia University on Thursday directly challenged the vow that their administra­tors made during a high-stakes congressio­nal committee hearing to crack down on unauthoriz­ed student protests as part of the university’s fight against antisemiti­sm.

The students have set up dozens of tents on the South Lawn of the campus, in front of the iconic Butler Library. They have also set up a makeshift kitchen, and held a teachin and a film screening. And though Columbia administra­tors have closed the campus’s gates to outsiders, hundreds of students and others rallied with the protesters inside and outside of the school, overnight and through the morning.

“They can threaten us all they want with the police, but at the end of the day, it’s only going to lead to more mobilizati­on,” said Maryam Alwan, a senior and proPalesti­nian organizer on campus, speaking from the tent encampment.

The escalation is a sharp challenge to Columbia’s president, Nemat Shafik, who largely conceded in a hearing before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce on Wednesday that she felt some of the common chants at pro-Palestinia­n protests were antisemiti­c. It underscore­s the difficulty that she and other college presidents are facing as they try to strike a balance between supporting the free speech rights of some students and protecting other students from statements academic leaders say are discrimina­tory and hateful.

“Trying to reconcile the free speech rights of those who want to protest and the rights of Jewish students to be in an environmen­t free of harassment or discrimina­tion has been the central challenge on our campus,” Shafik told members of

Congress on Wednesday.

Etched into Columbia’s history is the brutal police crackdown its administra­tors authorized in 1968 against student protesters who were occupying academic buildings. The fallout of the violence tarnished the school’s reputation and led it to institute reforms in favor of student activism.

Now, the university points proudly to that activism as one of the hallmarks of its culture, and markets it to prospectiv­e students.

But in recent months, the school’s leadership has taken a number of steps to restrict protests and has discipline­d dozens of students who it says have broken the rules. Columbia has hired external security firms and brought the police to campus for the first time in decades.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States