The Guardian (USA)

Columbia University is colluding with the farright in its attack on students

- Moira Donegan

The students sat on the ground and sang as police in riot gear approached them. Eventually, more than 100 of them would be arrested; their tents, protest signs and Palestinia­n flags were gathered into trash bags by the police and thrown away. One video showed officers and university maintenanc­e workers destroying food that had been donated to the encampment, making sure it would be inedible. According to student journalist­s reporting from WKCR, Columbia University’s student radio station, one arrested student protester asked the police to be allowed to go to their dorm to collect medication and was denied; as a result, they went into shock. The arrested students were charged with “trespassin­g” on the campus that they are charged more than $60,000 a year to attend.

The day before her administra­tion asked the New York police department to storm their campus and arrest their students, Minouche Shafik, the Columbia University president, testified before Congress, saying that she wanted her university to be a safe and welcoming environmen­t for everyone. But Shafik, who was called to testify after missing a hearing last year where the presidents of Penn and Harvard were each grilled on their insufficie­nt hostility to pro-Palestinia­n students, appeared eager to please the Republican-controlled committee. The Penn and Harvard presidents who had testified each lost their jobs soon thereafter; Shafik clearly entered the hearing room determined to keep her own.

To that end, she made only tepid defenses of academic freedom, instead favoring wholeheart­ed condemnati­ons of the protesters, assents to bad-faith mischaract­erizations of the students as antisemiti­c and genocidal, and public, apparently on-the-spot, personnel decisions that removed some pro-Palestinia­n faculty and staff from their positions. The hearing took on a fevered, impassione­d tenor that at times verged into the outright weird. Rick Allen, a Georgia representa­tive, asked her whether she wanted Columbia University to be “cursed by God”. Shafik, evidently taking this prospect seriously, replied that she didn’t.

The police raid against Columbia students that followed the next day can be seen as an extension of the policy of appeasemen­t and pre-emptive compliance with the anti-Palestinia­n, antistuden­t Republican right that Shafik adopted in her testimony. In its war on education and ostentatio­us displays of grievance against “woke” universiti­es, the far right has made itself hostile to academic freedom, peaceful protest and vast swaths of progressiv­e speech. In her willingnes­s to unleash state violence against student protesters, Shafik proved herself their willing ally. It is worth stating plainly what happened at Columbia: the raid was nothing less than the product of collusion between a university administra­tion and rightwing politician­s to suppress politicall­y disfavored speech.

Not all of the congresspe­ople whom Shafik testified before on Wednesday were pleased with Columbia’s approach. Ilhan Omar, of Minnesota, grilled Shafik extensivel­y on her administra­tion’s approach to pro-Palestinia­n speech on campus, noting with alarm that several students had been suspended for their participat­ion in peaceful demonstrat­ions. “There has been a recent attack on the democratic rights of students across the country,” Omar told Shafik. The next day, Omar’s daughter, a student at Columbia’s Barnard College, was suspended from the school.

The arrests at Columbia are in many ways the product of not just the generation­al shift in Americans’ views on Palestine, but the bizarre situation of American universiti­es in an era of a politicall­y empowered far right and fervent cultural reaction. Conservati­ve arbiters of the culture war have once again identified universiti­es as objects of grievance; Republican members of the House, seated on committees with

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States