The Sunday Telegraph

As a Cambridge student, I appeal to university chiefs to end the silence at anti-Israel protests

- By Devika Shah Devika Shah is an undergradu­ate at Selwyn College, Cambridge

I AM a third-year undergradu­ate student at Cambridge, and have been following the activities of a small number of my fellow students currently occupying the lawn outside King’s College and the official response of the University. I am writing to say that I am appalled by their response.

Freedom of speech is critical to the wellbeing of any university. There must be space for us to express our views, disagree, and engage in dialogue to enrich our own understand­ing of the world. Yet this does not mean that this university may remain impartial and silent about the right of existence of a sovereign state, and the right of its inhabitant­s to have exactly the same rights as other sovereign peoples around the world: their own self-determinat­ion.

The protesters in front of King’s College are openly calling for the destructio­n of the state of Israel. Their placards call for a “Free Palestine from the River to the Sea”. The protesters know exactly what this means. It means that in their view a Jewish State should not exist. It means that the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea should not be home to the 7.2million Jews who live there (as well as the two million Israeli Arabs, and the half a million Christians and others – groups that consistent­ly respond at a rate of about 70 per cent to independen­t polls saying they support the Israeli state). A Palestine “from the River to the Sea” means no Israel, no Israelis, and no security for Jews in the Middle East.

Again, I would like to reiterate that freedom of speech must be protected. Regardless of my own opinions on the matter, to call for a ceasefire, or to advocate for the quick removal of Benjamin Netanyahu, or to express the absolutely critical empathy that is deserved by all the inhabitant­s of Gaza should be encouraged.

Yet the University’s statement fails to address the genocidal aims of Hamas. Their 1988 Charter calls for “The Day of Judgement will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews... when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees.” This could be an exact descriptio­n of what happened on Oct 7 2023. When Israeli men and women had to hide in cars, under dead bodies, in bushes, and wherever else they could find so as to not be brutally murdered by militant Islamists.

Perhaps you think I’m exaggerati­ng? In a statement from Oct 10, available on Instagram, the Cambridge University Palestine Society said the “Israeli regime is entirely responsibl­e” for the “violence” seen on Oct 7. These are the words of actual students from the University of Cambridge.

The rhetoric in general – that Israel and Zionism are western constructs built exclusivel­y on colonialis­m – is at best complete ignorance of Jewish history and at worst thinly veiled anti-Semitism that the University’s weak response fails to address.

This open appeal is an attempt to say that not everyone at the University will stay silent and feel forced to go along with the genocidal aims of Hamas, or the radicals occupying the lawn outside King’s. There are those of us at Cambridge who stand with Israel. For any Jewish friends, and supporters of Israel reading this, I want to share my belief that the light of the Jewish people will continue to glow even in the darkest of times. The many thousands of years old history of Israel will not be extinguish­ed by the radicals in our universiti­es or by anti-Semites around the world.

‘Not everyone will feel forced to go along with the genocidal aims of Hamas, or the radicals on the lawn’

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