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After NYPD Crackdowns, Campus Protests for Gaza Persist at Columbia and NYU

Calls also mount for Columbia President Minouche Shafik to resign, with some student groups and alumni saying she hasn’t done enough to combat antisemitism.

April 24, 2024 | 9:28 AM
in NEWS, POLITICS, SCHOOLS
32
Palestinian-solidarity student protesters continued to occupy part of Columbia University.
Student protesters continued to occupy part of Columbia University, April 23, 2024. Credit: Alex Krales/THE CITY.

Editor’s Note: THE CITY article below recaps developments in the Columbia protest through Tuesday. This morning, Columbia’s administration issued a statement saying “important progress” had been made in discussions with representatives of the student encampment, and that as a result the university would continue talks with the protestors for 48 hours. The administration said protestors had agreed to remove “a significant number of tents” from the protest area, would ensure that people not affiliated with Columbia leave, and would take steps “to make the encampment welcome to all,” including by prohibiting discriminatory or harassing language. Also Happening on Wednesday: U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson is scheduled to meet with Jewish students at Columbia on a visit that will not include a meeting with Columbia’s president, Nemat Shafik, according to The New York Times. “Instead, he is expected to focus, his office said, on the ‘troubling rise of virulent antisemitism on America’s college campuses.'” President Shafik will be meeting “with the university senate, which could censure her as soon as Friday,” The Times reported.

By Gwynne Hogan, THE CITY

This story was originally published by THE CITY. Sign up to get the latest New York City news delivered to you each morning. 

An encampment in support of Gaza at Columbia University continued into its seventh day, with administrators struggling to maintain control of the campus with student protesters vowing to demonstrate until their demands — that the university disclose its financial investments, divest from companies that support Israel and grant amnesty to suspended students — are met.

Speaking to reporters at a virtual press conference Tuesday afternoon, Ben Chang, Vice President for Public Affairs at Columbia, said the administration was in discussions with student organizers until 2 a.m. this morning, aiming towards a resolution.

“We have our demands and they have theirs,” Chang said. “President [Minouche] Shafik is focused on de-escalating the rancor on Columbia’s campus.”

Nonetheless, calls have mounted for Shafik’s resignation from all sides, including from Congressmember Elise Stefanik (R-NY) and all other GOP members of New York’s House delegation, who were apparently unswayed by testimony last week at a House hearing where Shafik was grilled on her efforts to clamp down on antisemitism.

Meanwhile, one of the university’s major donors, alumni Robert Kraft, announced Monday through his Foundation to Combat Antisemitism that he was pulling his financial support for the school citing the “virulent hate that continues to grow on campus.”

In the days since Columbia students started camping out on the campus green, similar pro-Palestinian encampments have swept New York University, Yale, Harvard, MIT, Emerson, the University of Michigan, the New School and others.

Last Thursday, Columbia administrators called in the NYPD to break up the encampment and police arrested more than 100 demonstrators who were charged with trespassing. Many students were subsequently suspended, and some attending Barnard College were kicked out of their campus housing, according to student organizers.

Police officials have insisted they were called in at the behest of Columbia administrators. At a press conference outside the Columbia campus Monday, NYPD’s Deputy Commissioner of Public Information Tarik Sheppard said that “there has been no credible threats to any particular group, or individual coming from this protest or any other.”

Hours later, New York University officials called on the NYPD to break up a similar pro-Palestinian encampment, with scores of NYPD officers in riot gear arriving at Gould Plaza on West 4th Street Monday night as Muslim students kneeled for the Maghrib prayer. Police tore down tents and arrested 120 students and faculty, charging the majority with trespassing.

Hundreds of students and pro-Palestinian advocates rallied in Washington Square Park the day after NYPD officers arrested dozens of protesters on NYU’s campus.

Hundreds of students and pro-Palestinian advocates rallied in Washington Square Park the day after NYPD officers arrested dozens of protesters on NYU’s campus, April 23, 2024.

“It was demonstrably peaceful,” said a 26-year-old student Abdulaziz Aleisa, shaken after the crackdown. “Honestly, I feel it’s clear evidence that they’re taking a pro-Israeli stance and refusing to listen to the student voices.”

Following the arrests, Kaz Daughtry, the NYPD’s Deputy Commissioner, said on X, the agency stood ready to break up additional encampments if need be.

“There is a pattern of behavior occurring on campuses across our nation, in which individuals attempt to occupy a space in defiance of school policy,” he wrote. “Rest assured, in NYC the NYPD stands ready to address these prohibited and subsequently illegal actions whenever we are called upon.”

Charges of Antisemitism

As the demonstrations have grown, so have allegations that the protests are antisemitic, with the viral circulation of a video of someone outside Columbia campus yelling “go back to Poland,” and an account of Jewish students getting Israeli flags stolen and water thrown on them.

Both the White House and Mayor Eric Adams, among other political leaders, have denounced what President Joe Biden called “an alarming surge of antisemitism.”

Jewish groups on campus have also called on Columbia to do more to protect Jewish students, while a campus rabbi, Elie Buechler, the director of the Orthodox Union-Jewish Learning Initiative, wrote that events have “made it clear that Columbia University’s Public Safety and the NYPD cannot guarantee Jewish students’ safety in the face of extreme antisemitism and anarchy,” the Columbia Spectator reported. 

Jessica Weinfeld, an 18-year-old Jewish Columbia student, said hearing her fellow classmates chanting, “from the river to the sea,” among other slogans, was jarring for her.

“That’s death threats to Jews in Israel,” she said.

University officials insisted they’ve ramped up security, adding more guards and supervisors and extra campus patrols, as well as tightening security around the campus’s perimeter.

Columbia students show support for Israel while pro-Palestinian demonstrators occupied part of campus.
Columbia students show support for Israel while pro-Palestinian demonstrators occupied part of campus, April 18, 2023.

But hosting a press briefing of their own outside Shafik’s house on Morningside Drive, several pro-Palestinian Jewish students and faculty said they’ve felt unsafe on campus for months. Soph Askanase, a Jewish student at Barnard College, said they were among the students allegedly sprayed with a chemical during a demonstration on campus earlier this year and spent several days sick in bed afterwards. They were also arrested and charged with trespassing, as well as suspended, for their involvement in the protest last week.

“Being uncomfortable is different than being unsafe,” they said.

Columbia professor Marianne Hirsch, the daughter of Holocaust survivors, joined the student press conference and had been among the American Association of University Professor faculty members to walk out of classes a day earlier calling for amnesty for the suspended students.

“I’m extremely distressed right now to see how antisemitism is being weaponized and misused under the guise of safety and security, but actually in the interest of shutting down academic freedom, free debate, and critical thinking,” she said.

120 Arrested at NYU 

NYU spokesperson John Beckman sent out a statement Monday saying students were given multiple warnings to disperse before the university called in the NYPD. “Many refused to leave. We also learned that there were intimidating chants and several antisemitic incidents reported,” he said. “Given the foregoing and the safety issues raised by the breach, we asked for assistance from the NYPD.”

But faculty and protesters disputed the administration’s account. Jewish professor Zach Samalin said he’d spent several hours in Gould Plaza, including the moments before arrests began, alongside his five-year-old daughter.

“I would reject that forcefully,” he said. “What I instead saw was a Passover Seder being conducted in the center of the plaza. I was given a piece of Matzo with Charoset on it minutes before the evening prayers were called.”

As police penetrated the plaza during Muslim students’ prayer, Samalin was among a row of faculty who rushed to the back of the plaza, linking arms with the hope of protecting students from police officers. He was among the first faculty members arrested and spent the night in jail, charged with trespassing.

NYU placed barriers around their campus a day after the NYPD arrested pro-Palestinian student protesters.
NYU placed barriers around their campus a day after the NYPD arrested pro-Palestinian student protesters, April 22, 2024.

All told 120 students and faculty were arrested, 116 of whom were given summons for trespassing, according to an NYPD spokesperson. Four students were hit with additional charges of obstructing governmental administration and resisting arrest, according to the NYPD.

Several reporters on scene described police officers using mace on demonstrators who’d tried to block buses of arrested students and faculty from leaving the area.

A day after the crackdown, NYU had erected plywood walls around the plaza gates to prevent students from re-establishing another encampment there, though hundreds of ousted NYU students rallied in Washington Square Park across the street Tuesday afternoon vowing to keep pressuring the administration to disclose and divest from Israeli interests.

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32 Comments
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RealityCanBeHard
RealityCanBeHard
1 year ago

It’s adorable that the protesters demand to know where the school is spending its money while they wear masks to hide their identities.

34
Reply
Linda Kiswani
Linda Kiswani
1 year ago
Reply to  RealityCanBeHard

While Muslims who have nothing to do with the Palestinian protests are hassled with on the UWS and the community leadership on the UWS doesn’t want to lift a finger for them.

4
Reply
Bill Bogardt
Bill Bogardt
1 year ago
Reply to  Linda Kiswani

Source, please. Thank you.

4
Reply
Shams bin Waleed
Shams bin Waleed
1 year ago
Reply to  Bill Bogardt

Asking for sources is another trope that leads to people denying bias against Muslims exist. We know that there’s people that think that bias against Muslims is a bold faced lie. We also know that many American people haven’t learned their lessons when it came to the unjust treatment of Japanese Americans during World War II. It was as if the $20,000 payments to survivors of Japanese American prison camps nearly a half century after World War II was the cost of doing business for the United States.

4
Reply
UWS Muslim
UWS Muslim
1 year ago
Reply to  Shams bin Waleed

The reason why there isn’t a source is because this Muslim-American who was hassled with on the UWS thinks that getting press attention would further inflame the situation. This person wants nothing to do with the pro-Palestinian protests. Imagine if a news outlet like Hell Gate or West Side Rag covered their story and then there’s more pro-Palestinian protests on the UWS because the activists get wind of their plight but that make that person look bad even if they’re understanding of Israel’s right to exist and condemn Hamas etc. This is where elected officials have to step in, because leadership is not always about getting a press quote or getting themselves on camera, leadership is sometimes about quietly working to diffuse tensions and anger between Jews and Muslims.

Last edited 1 year ago by UWS Muslim
2
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Linda Berkowicz
Linda Berkowicz
1 year ago

How come nobody protested the October 7th massacre when Hamas brutally attacked Israel?

24
Reply
Please
Please
1 year ago
Reply to  Linda Berkowicz

I think they did?

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-city-rally-planned-demand-release-hamas-hostages-2023-10-19/

34,000 people have been killed since, including 14k kids.

That’s why they’re protesting.

20
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Let's be real
Let's be real
1 year ago
Reply to  Please

34,000 according the Hamas-run health ministry, and assuming that zero Hamas fighters have been killed, which is a statistical impossibility. Also, how many of those 34,000 have been killed directly by Hamas or Islamic Jihad launched missiles?

15
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neighbor785
neighbor785
1 year ago
Reply to  Let's be real

I have seen comments like yours, and Let’s be real, can you tell us what point you are making? Surely you are not claiming that negligible numbers of civilians in Gaza have been killed. If 34,000 is inflated, surely the accurate figure is not, say, 2000? Can’t we agree that many civilians have been killed in Gaza?

6
Reply
RCP
RCP
1 year ago
Reply to  neighbor785

If you don’t have definitive, verifiable figures, don’t make them up.

3
Reply
Peter
Peter
1 year ago
Reply to  neighbor785

Right. That’s why Hamas lies about it by orders of magnitude, because we all need to “agree”.

What is your point, then? Accept terrorist propaganda at face value, maybe with some small-print caveats?

3
Reply
Mike
Mike
1 year ago
Reply to  Please

What is your solution? Hamas is dedicated to destruction of Israel and murder of Jews. Hamas leaders have stated that they will repeat Oct 7th time and time again until Israel is wiped out. So what do you propose? A cease-fire to let Hamas re-arm and then for Hamas to attack again?

29
Reply
communitylove
communitylove
1 year ago

I’m so tired of people claiming these are peaceful. They are absolutely not. There are literal chants of not only “Jews go back to Poland” but of several protesters yelling that October 7 will happen over and over again, screaming up at Jewish students’ dorm rooms saying, “we know where you live, you better watch it” “death to Jews” and circles of people not letting Jews onto campus, chanting “We are not welcoming those who are unsympathetic to our cause.” There are people saying “they are Hamas” and screaming horrible things, burning Israeli flags etc. Not allowing Jews to cross the campus, purposely forming a ring around them and taunting them. With phone cameras so ubiquitous, you have to be willfully blind to not see the hate. They are chanting “burn Tel Aviv to the ground! Hamas we love you! And we love your rockets too!'” There are physical attacks–Jewish students have been shoved, pushed, followed, surrounded, fake blood thrown on them,, spit on, punched, hit.

Let’s make sure to mention that fact that you can’t be angry at someone and accuse them of “atrocities” simply because they are JEWISH. You don’t know if they are zionists (which is a de-colonization movement anyway), support the current govt or anything else because someone wears a Jewish star. Protesters want to pretend that regular Jewish people are the enemy. The same kids who were horrified when Chinese people were accosted and attacked after COVID, the same people who don’t hold Arabs or Black people accountable for what is happening in those regions (as they should not). The doube standard is sickening. And these protests are nothing but racist and hateful under a guise of peace.

Cease fire now! Intifada revolution”–anyone who knows the meaning of these words, will chuckle at this impossible juxtaposition and recognize it as a wish to eradicate Jews. I can’t even believe the white-washing of these events claiming they are peaceful, and the point that we have reached–where outright anti-Jew sentiment is acceptable and is perfectly mirroring the pre-holocaust political patterns. Columbia already had their own little aparthied by going hybrid (Jews are on zoom, non Jews are in class). The latest news is that some faculty are holding classes IN THE ENCAMPMENT. If I have to explain why that is wrong, I want to cry.

I beg of you–Jewish or not–please stand up against this racism. We need people to speak up against wrong. Truly peaceful protests are welcome on both sides. This is hateful mob–go up to 116th and see for yourself. We need love. We need dialogue. We need to weed out those who are concerned from those who hate. Not to mention those who have no clue why they are protesting (some interviews showed both NYU and Columbia students say, we are not sure why we are protesting.”

Last edited 1 year ago by communitylove
47
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Abdullah Faisal
Abdullah Faisal
1 year ago
Reply to  communitylove

I am Muslim, a UWS area worker, and I condemn this mob against Jews at Columbia University and think Israel has a right to exist and defend itself. What I don’t appreciate is when Muslim area workers and visitors to the UWS are profiled and messed with by cops, the UWS’s political leadership, many of whom are Jewish and many of whom rely on Jewish voter blocs to get into and maintain power, don’t stand with Muslims who have nothing to do with extremists or pro-Palestinian protestors and don’t even give them the time of day.

5
Reply
Graydon
Graydon
1 year ago
Reply to  communitylove

Some of those offenses did take place, which is terrible — but external groups (not CU students) were the ones doing it, and campus security has become very strict and careful about keeping them outside. Some of them are continuing to assemble on 116th Street, but there’s nothing we can do about their presence on a public street. Inside campus, student protest is peaceful. There are readings, and both Jewish and Muslim religious services are being held.

It is not true that hybrid classes have created the “apartheid” that you’re alleging. What has happened, unfortunately, is that pretty much all students are zooming in.

I don’t take exception to your feelings about the external group out on 116th, but if your comment about welcoming peaceful protests is sincere, please don’t generalize their behavior to the students.

Last edited 1 year ago by Graydon
5
Reply
Communitylove
Communitylove
1 year ago
Reply to  Graydon

Are you a student? I saw footage sent to me by a Columbia student, of students chanting to keep (Jewish) people out of their circle. I saw an interview with two students who talked about how powerful they feel and how’s it’s “their university” now. I am for sure sincere about peaceful protests but it’s STILL chanting from the river to the sea and long live the intifada seriously argued to be peaceful? We know it’s not. And the chants against Zionists? It’s foolish. Zionists support a two state solution and peace between the two groups. Why are they shunned by the students? You can advocate for Israel and the Palestinians at the same time. Which is what most people did initially until Jews were backed against a corner.

Why do the “peaceful” students not speak out against the violent hateful ones? I have never ever, not once seen a student say -no! We don’t stand for that. Why?

9
Reply
Graydon
Graydon
1 year ago
Reply to  Communitylove

Yes, I’ve seen all that footage (and more). I’ve seen all those chants taking place (and more) with my own eyes in real time. I’m a professor and I am inside campus and outside on 116th St. every day. The students have spoken out against hateful speech many times. You are not wrong about the offensive chants. You are simply being too broad in your commentary. If you are sincere about peaceful protest, please do not characterize all our students in terms of the worst actors.

8
Reply
UWS Dad
UWS Dad
1 year ago
Reply to  communitylove

Well said

14
Reply
GoRangers
GoRangers
1 year ago

Protesters for Gaza would have demonstrated against Hamas for dragging Gaza population into this war, for killing aid workers and stealing humanitarian aid ( https://palwatch.org/page/35086) directed for Gaza civilians and creating famine, and for using Gaza civilians as human shields.
These are pro-Hamas protests – incited by Hamas ( https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/columbia-suspends-students-for-resistance-101-where-guest-speaker-had-alleged-ties-to-terror-group-reports/ar-BB1let2V) that are explicitly calling for violence against Israel, Jews, and America. The inaction of the Universities at the onset of these events was not a display of tolerance, but an acceptance of hate, which is out in the open now…

22
Reply
bloomie
bloomie
1 year ago

If the Jew-haters do not stop harassing others, they should be expelled permanently.

12
Reply
Graydon
Graydon
1 year ago
Reply to  bloomie

Protesters who are harassing others and/or have shown themselves to be “Jew-haters” don’t need to be expelled because they aren’t students. They are members of external groups who are holding their own rallies in the streets outside campus.

The encampment students include a significant proportion of observant Jewish students who don’t hate themselves, their families, or any Jewish people anywhere. They are people whose opinion is that the war should not continue any longer. In many nations where wars have been waged, there have been those who did not believe in the war as a solution. People have always had the right to be conscientious objectors in that way. We support people’s opportunity to have opinions that are different from each other.

4
Reply
Jo Silverman
Jo Silverman
1 year ago

Never forget October 7.

15
Reply
Gini
Gini
1 year ago

If you want to know the genesis of the campus protests nationwide, just follow the money: https://www.city-journal.org/article/stop-the-mideast-money-fueling-campus-anti-semitism?utm_source=mailchimp&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=cjdaily

9
Reply
riverside
riverside
1 year ago
Reply to  Gini

The writer of your source article works for an institution that “was founded in 2021 to promote former U.S. President Donald Trump’s public policy agenda.”

Yikes

3
Reply
Bill Williams
Bill Williams
1 year ago
Reply to  Gini

Maybe we should follow the AIPAC money instead of worrying about inconsequential protests at Columbia.

9
Reply
Steevie
Steevie
1 year ago

It would be great if Israel would finish up their operations in Gaza. As long as there are pictures of Gazan civilians dying, from Israeli actions, I don’t think these disturbances can end.

8
Reply
riverside
riverside
1 year ago

All the commenters here stating the protestors are anti-Semitic seem to be missing the fact that they are largely attended by Jewish students who are tired of watching the STATE of Israel use its majority religion as a dividing point and a reason to continue to bomb civilians indiscriminately.

If the ultimate goal was actually to defeat Hamas, killing tens of thousands of innocent people would not be the answer. Meanwhile, Israel is already planning settlements in Gaza (after having made it almost completely uninhabitable for the civilians living there).
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-68650815

Many people see this as a continuance of colonization that has been happening to the non-Jewish residents of the region for 75+ years. Perhaps there is more to think about here…

8
Reply
Eyes on the street👀
Eyes on the street👀
1 year ago

Leave them alone and let them protest! I did it in the 60s and we won!!!
Let the new generation alone, let them do what they wanna do. There are leaders of tomorrow and they’re just gonna take it out on you later…
The people who are trying to stop them (their parents), never protested in their life and they are so boring!

3
Reply
Frustrated UWS
Frustrated UWS
1 year ago
Reply to  Eyes on the street👀

It would be nice if we do not relive the 60’s. We need this country united.

Last edited 1 year ago by Frustrated UWS
1
Reply
UWS Mom
UWS Mom
1 year ago
Reply to  Frustrated UWS

Then do the work necessary to unite the country.

1
Reply
Frustrated UWS
Frustrated UWS
1 year ago
Reply to  UWS Mom

If this was directed to me, I am an independent and I listen to both sides and try to make good judgment decisions and understand each side. That’s what I can do and I wish more people would open their hearts and their minds to unite us as a country.

0
Reply
neighbor785
neighbor785
1 year ago

I can understand why students, including numbers of Jewish students, may call for their universities to divest from companies that sell weapons to Israel. But why were there not protests all over when Russia invaded Ukraine, and why aren’t college campuses in turmoil from calling for an end to investment in companies that do business with Russia? Ditto other repressive countries that kill large numbers of people outside and/or inside their own borders.

I am reluctant to deem all protesters anti-semitic. And I think the media has largely ignored cases where Muslim students say they have faced discrimination on a campus. Is the focus on Israel because it is a US ally, so people figure they have more chance ultimately of influencing Israel than of influencing Russia? Or do sizeable numbers of college students actually want there to be no state of Israel?

Back in the 1980s, students protested against South Africa but not, as I recall, against other repressive regimes and dictatorships in Africa, of which there were many. ??? All very confusing.

1
Reply

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