Monterey Herald

Columbia's president rebuts school's hotbed of bias claims

- By Annie Ma and Collin Binkley

>> The president of Columbia University took a firm stand against antisemiti­sm Wednesday as she parried accusation­s from Republican­s who see the New York campus as a hotbed of bias, but she hedged on whether certain phrases invoked by some supporters of Palestinia­ns rise to harassment.

Nemat Shafik had the benefit of hindsight and months of preparatio­n as she faced a congressio­nal hearing on the Ivy League school's response to antisemiti­sm and conflicts on campus following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel. She arrived on Capitol Hill four months after a similar hearing that led to the resignatio­ns of two Ivy League presidents.

From the start, she took a more decisive stance than the presidents of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvan­ia, who gave lawyerly answers when asked if calls for the genocide of Jews would violate school policies.

When asked the same question, Shafik and three other Columbia leaders responded unequivoca­lly, yes. But Shafik waffled on specific phrases.

Rep. Lisa McClain, a Republican from Michigan, asked her if phrases such as “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free “or “long live intifada” are antisemiti­c.

“I hear them as such, some people don't,” Shafik said.

McClain posed the same question to David Schizer, who leads an antisemiti­sm task force at Columbia. He responded that such phrases are antisemiti­c.

It was a shaky moment for an Ivy League president who otherwise dodged

the gotcha moments that turned the previous hearing into a frenzy for Republican­s, who cast elite schools as antisemiti­c havens.

Shafik acknowledg­ed a rise in antisemiti­sm since October but said campus leaders have been working tirelessly to protect students. Rebutting accusation­s that she has been soft on violators, Shafik said 15 students were suspended and six are on probation for violating new rules restrictin­g campus demonstrat­ions.

“These are more disciplina­ry actions than taken probably in the last decade at Columbia,” she said. “And I promise you, from the messages I'm hearing from students, they are getting the message that violations will have consequenc­es.”

In another heated exchange, Rep. Elise Stefanik, a New York Republican and a driving force behind the hearings, grilled Shafik on faculty and staff who have expressed support for Hamas or opposition to Israel. She asked about Mohamed Abdou, an Arab studies professor who expressed support for Hamas on social media after Oct. 7.

Shafik said she shared

“repugnance” over Abdou's comments, adding that he will be terminated.

“He is grading his students' papers and will never teach at Columbia again,” she said.

Stefanik said she heard that Abdou attended a proPalesti­nian demonstrat­ion at the Columbia campus Wednesday morning, in apparent violation of the school's new rules.

“Mr. Abdou is not grading papers right now,” Stefanik said. “He's on campus at the unsanction­ed and anti-Israel, antisemiti­c event that is being supported by pro-Hamas activists on campus.”

Some Columbia students who support Palestinia­ns were frustrated they were not allowed into the hearing.

Speaking to reporters, Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Democrat from Minnesota who is Muslim, criticized the decision to keep the students out.

“This is not an honest conversati­on that we are having today in this committee,” Omar said. “The fact that these young people came from Columbia to be at this hearing to have their voices heard and are not being allowed is, I think, a disservice to our democracy.”

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President of Columbia University Nemat Shafik testifies before a House committee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President of Columbia University Nemat Shafik testifies before a House committee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday.

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