Los Angeles Times

Student protests grow across state

College activists back Palestinia­ns, condemn Israel as campuses wrestle with free speech, antisemiti­sm.

- By Hannah Wiley, Teresa Watanabe and Jaweed Kaleem

BERKELEY — Pro-Palestinia­n protests swept across California colleges and universiti­es Tuesday as tensions grew nationwide amid an expanding studentled movement that has pitted administra­tors and police against young activists and intensifie­d the debate over the line between campus free speech and antisemiti­sm.

At UC Berkeley, students have set up dozens of tents in front of Sproul Plaza — the historic hub of the campus free speech movement. They vowed to face arrest as they demanded the university divest from investment­s in weapons manufactur­ers tied to Israel’s war in Gaza.

At Cal Poly Humboldt, administra­tors shut down the Arcata campus through Wednesday and moved classes online after dozens of students barricaded themselves with chairs in an administra­tion building and police made overnight arrests.

And at USC, students said they planned to erect tents Wednesday at the center of campus. The school has been embroiled in controvers­y after canceling a pro-Palestinia­n valedictor­ian’s commenceme­nt speech amid accusation­s that she promoted antisemiti­sm on social media.

“We are in solidarity with students speaking up everywhere,” said Malak Afaneh, a UC Berkeley law student who is part of the “Free Palestine Camp.”

“We put up tents because that is how Palestinia­ns are living now. We will not move until Berkeley divests,” said Afaneh, who is Palestinia­n American.

Tensions have grown at colleges since the Oct. 7

Hamas-led attack on Israel, which killed 1,200 people; in addition, about 240 hostages were taken before Israel began its retaliator­y war in the Gaza Strip. Gaza health authoritie­s say the war has killed more than 34,000 Palestinia­ns. According to the United Nations, 2 million Gazans are in near-famine conditions.

The unrest, which has spread to more than a dozen American campuses from Massachuse­tts to California, was kindled last week after Columbia University President Nemat Shafik called in police to arrest at least 100 students who refused to leave a sprawling encampment there. Shafik made the move after fielding accusation­s about campus antisemiti­sm at a Republican-led congressio­nal committee hearing on April 17 in Washington, D.C.

Instead of cooling tensions, the decision further inflamed the campus. Jewish students, pointing to posters and statements made on and near campus that supported the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, said the university has become unsafe. Those statements were widely documented via photos and videos. But firsthand accounts from news outlets of the Columbia demonstrat­ion said it has been largely peaceful.

Now, tent camps calling for a permanent cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war and in support of the “boycott, divestment and sanctions” movement against Israel have popped up at New York, Vanderbilt and Yale universiti­es. Police have made arrests at NYU and cleared a camp at Yale, arresting 60 protesters. Columbia has canceled in-person classes, and, at Harvard University, the typically open gates to Harvard Yard were scheduled to be closed to the public through at least Friday.

High schools, including several in the Seattle region, also took part by staging walkouts Tuesday. Stanford

University joined in Tuesday as local media reported hundreds of students gathering at Memorial Church in the center of campus for a “solidarity march” with Palestinia­ns and American university activists. The event was organized by Stanford Against Apartheid in Palestine, a group that previously staged a 120-day proPalesti­nian tent sit-in on campus that ended in February when university officials removed the structure and banned overnight camping.

The national Students for Justice in Palestine organizati­on has called for more encampment­s and rallies, posting on its Instagram account, “Disclose. Divest. We will not stop. We will not rest.”

Students are asking for a

permanent cease-fire in Gaza, an end to U.S. military aid to Israel and for universiti­es to sign on to the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement. They want universiti­es to pull endowment investment­s from corporatio­ns that manufactur­e weapons used in Gaza and other military equipment, such as checkpoint technology in the West Bank. National Jewish organizati­ons have called the BDS movement antisemiti­c because they say it aims to isolate and delegitimi­ze the only Jewish nation.

Some of the most strident activism has been at UC Berkeley, where tents multiplied overnight Monday from an initial dozen.

About 50 tents remained on the lawn and steps outside Sproul Hall on Tuesday.

Palestinia­n flags decorated the tent neighborho­od. A banner hung over the entrance to the building declaring, “An injury to Gaza is an injury to all.”

Dozens of students and community members were milling about the tents and sitting on the steps outside the building. Many wore keffiyehs, traditiona­l scarves that have come to symbolize support for Palestinia­ns.

The Muslim Student Assn. had set up a table to pass out fliers and brochures, while a large white board displaying the demands of a coalition of dozens of student groups behind the protest stood prominentl­y next to the tents. In addition to divestment, the demands included support for an academic boycott that would sever ties and collaborat­ion with Israeli universiti­es. The coalition also called for policies that “protect the safety and academic freedoms of Palestinia­n students and their allies,” including the creation of a Palestinia­n studies program.

“People are choosing this and are choosing to do this because they know that they cannot be complicit in this genocide. They know that they have to use their voices, they have to put their bodies on the line,” said Banan

Abdelrahma­n, a graduate student and member of the UC Berkeley Divest coalition.

The effort includes more than 70 groups, the majority of them Berkeley student organizati­ons, which have roughly 7,000 members including students, faculty and staff. There are about 45,000 graduate and undergradu­ate students at Berkeley.

“If Palestinia­n bodies are being annihilate­d in Gaza and in Palestine, then the least we can do is come here and puncture the silence,” Abdelrahma­n said.

Student protesters said about 200 people attended events at the site on Monday, including a rally, teach-in and a Passover seder hosted by Jewish students. They said they had not been contacted by UC Berkeley officials or police to remove the tents.

In a statement, UC Berkeley Assistant Vice Chancellor Dan Mogulof said the university would not let the demonstrat­ion “disrupt.”

“With three weeks left in the semester, Berkeley is prioritizi­ng students’ academic interests. We will take the steps necessary to ensure the protest does not disrupt the university’s operations. There are no plans to change the university’s investment

policies and practices,” Mogulof said.

Protests are also expected at Claremont Colleges — where a recent proPalesti­nian sit-in led to 19 arrests at Pomona College — and Occidental College.

Matthew Vickers, a thirdyear student in diplomacy and world affairs at Occidental, said the recent wave of arrests, suspension­s and other actions against student protesters has reinvigora­ted the student pro-Palestinia­n movement.

“It’s been a real galvanizin­g moment,” said Vickers, spokesman for Occidental’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter. Vickers called recent events a “turning point” in the student movement.

Other California campus student groups said they are still discussing more protests. Some, such as UC San Diego’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter, are building solidarity in other ways. On Monday, it held a “Threads of Resistance” event to teach the art of Palestinia­n cross-stitching.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? PROTESTERS SET UP an encampment in front of Sproul Hall at UC Berkeley on Monday. An administra­tor said UC Berkeley would not let the demonstrat­ion disrupt the university as the semester winds down.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images PROTESTERS SET UP an encampment in front of Sproul Hall at UC Berkeley on Monday. An administra­tor said UC Berkeley would not let the demonstrat­ion disrupt the university as the semester winds down.
 ?? Fatih Aktas Anadolu ?? POLICE TAKE students into custody at New York University in New York on Monday. Recent arrests in that city have sparked further pro-Palestinia­n protests across the country, including at Stanford, right, on Monday.
Fatih Aktas Anadolu POLICE TAKE students into custody at New York University in New York on Monday. Recent arrests in that city have sparked further pro-Palestinia­n protests across the country, including at Stanford, right, on Monday.
 ?? Tayfun Coskun Anadolu ??
Tayfun Coskun Anadolu
 ?? Fatih Aktas Anadolu ?? PRO-PALESTINIA­N students protest at New York University on Monday. Unrest has spread to more than a dozen American campuses.
Fatih Aktas Anadolu PRO-PALESTINIA­N students protest at New York University on Monday. Unrest has spread to more than a dozen American campuses.
 ?? Stefan Jeremiah Associated Press ?? TENTS HAD returned to Columbia University in New York on Monday after police last week arrested about 100 students who refused to leave an encampment.
Stefan Jeremiah Associated Press TENTS HAD returned to Columbia University in New York on Monday after police last week arrested about 100 students who refused to leave an encampment.

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