Discourse that allows us to express a wide range of ideas, opinions, and analysis that can be used as an opportunity to critically examine and observe what our experience means to us beyond the given social/cultural contexts and norms that are provided us.
Two weeks after Hamas attacked Israel, University of Pennsylvania President Elizabeth Magill issued a revealing salvo in the war of the statements.
Like many other university presidents, she mourned the deaths of
Israelis without making any mention of Palestinian loss of life. (As of
this writing, over 8,000 Palestinians have been killed—including more
than 2,000 children alone.) This dehumanization of Palestinians is
common enough to be unremarkable. What was revealing was that Magill’s statement
mentioned, and apologized for, a festival of Palestinian literature
that had taken place weeks before, referencing the discomfort of some
Jewish community members with speakers at the event in the same breath
as Hamas.
In my role as an attorney at Palestine Legal, an organization which
protects the constitutional and civil rights of people in the United
States who speak out for Palestinian freedom, I advised organizers of the Palestine Writes Literature Festival
that Magill mentions. (I also attended the festival.) Beyond the free
speech issue—what in First Amendment parlance is called viewpoint
discrimination—what struck me was the bigoted anti-Palestinian nature of
the censorship campaign that sought to ban speakers or prevent the
festival from taking place. Pro-Israel groups fear-mongered to local
papers that the presence of speakers who supported Palestine posed a
threat to the Jewish students housed nearby. At the event itself, police
stationed themselves outside the venue as elderly Palestinian aunties
and families with children streamed in.
And all this took place before October 7.
Since then, my office has received a tsunami of requests for legal
help from people who have been fired, doxxed, canceled, censored, and
physically threatened for speaking out for Palestinian freedom. No
profession is untouched. We’ve received over 370 calls from lawyers,
doctors, journalists, professors, teachers, students, and other workers
in nonprofits, government, and the corporate world who have been fired,
locked out of email accounts, questioned, or put on leave for signing
open letters or retweeting material criticizing Israel or otherwise not
sufficiently marching in lockstep behind Israel’s actions.
The climate of censorship, suppression, and intimidation resembles the aftermath of 9/11.
The range of targets spans Starbucks workers, Harvard students,MSNBC reporters, Pulitzer Prize winners, editors of science journals, and the Hadids. 92NY canceled a talk by Viet Thanh Nguyen after he signed an open letter in the London Review of Books supporting Palestinian rights. Events promoting Nathan Thrall’s A Day in the Life of Abed Salama have likewise been canceled because the book dared to humanize Palestinians. Hollywood agent Maha Dakhil was forced to apologize and resign for calling what Israel is doing genocide, though groups like the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) have said the same. Artforum editor David Velasco has been fired after the magazine published a letter in support of Palestinian liberation.
This repression amounts to a McCarthyite backlash. The climate of
censorship, suppression, and intimidation resembles the aftermath of
9/11; it is what the CCR and we at Palestine Legal have called the “Palestine exception to free speech”—the “real cancel culture,” or whatever you want to call it—in action.
At a time when Israel has ordered 1 million Palestinians to leave
northern Gaza—the literal definition of ethnic cleansing—and continues
to mount air and ground assaults, it’s important to understand that the
underlying erasure of Palestinian suffering that undergirds all of this is a form of anti-Palestinian racism.
In cases where university administrators have tried to support
Palestinian students by expressing symmetric concern for lives lost in
both Israel and Gaza, big donors and lobby groups complain that there is
not enough sympathy for Israeli victims of Hamas’s attack. While
universities have been swift to condemn Russia’s occupation of Ukraine
and to support Black or Asian students faced with racist attacks, there
is often radio silence
when it comes to the suffering of Palestinians. Palestinians, and those
who believe they are human beings deserving of rights, are appalled at
their institutions’ double standards.
And it’s not just universities. Last week the U.S. Senate passed a resolution
condemning Students for Justice in Palestine chapters for statements
critical of Israel (which it called a form of “solidarity with the
terrorists”). Lamenting the loss of Israeli life, the resolution said
nothing about the rights of Palestinians.
Thousands have taken to the street to protest in support of a
ceasefire. Students are organizing. Artists and writers, as they have
done throughout history, are speaking out.
These are people who have acted as our conscience in moments of grave
injustice, often at great personal risk. All of this is in addition to
the hundreds of regular people without a large audience who have been
fired for a tweet, for condemning genocidal statements for what they
are, or for simply asking their bosses to express equal concern for the
lives of Palestinian civilians.
If we had truly open and informed debate, where journalists were able
to accurately report this issue—where students, professors, and artists
could write articles and publish freely without fear of employer
retaliation—how might U.S. policy change? Would our elected officials
stay Israeli airstrikes? Might we be able to stop the ongoing killing
and prevent the mass tragedy unfolding before us? Free speech on behalf
of Palestinian rights has never been more important than it is now.
Employment attorneys, civil rights attorneys, and
First Amendment attorneys—among others—will be challenging many of these
actions in the coming weeks. But the legal process is often slow, and
not every bad act has a remedy in law. Every writer who is canceled
should not have to sue for breach of contract; student groups should not
need a team of attorneys just to hold a talk, and professors should not
need to retain counsel before posting to Instagram. Even if we had an
army of lawyers to represent each individual who is targeted, the
chilling effect is real: people will self-censor. Combating this
injustice requires social change. That means everyone—journalists,
artists, students, teachers, professors, anyone with a social media
account or the ability to take to the streets—using the tools at their
disposal to stop the censorship campaign and the ethnic cleansing that
is taking place.
Radhika
Sainath is a senior staff attorney at Palestine Legal. Together with
the Center for Constitutional Rights, she brought a landmark lawsuit
against Fordham University after it refused to grant club status to Students for Justice in Palestine.
Thousands in San Francisco march to demand end of attacks on Gaza
by John Ramos November 4, 2023 CBS News Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO -- It has been four weeks since a brutal, coordinated
attack by Hamas touched off an Israeli counterstrike offensive in the
Gaza Strip and demonstrations against Israel have grown worldwide. The
question now is, will that have an impact on U.S. lawmakers and United
States policy?
Saturday's pro-Palestinian rally in front of S.F. City Hall drew tens of thousands of people.
Many,
like Sand and John Symes of Marin County, have no stake in the land
dispute between Israel and the Palestinians. But tragic images on the
evening news are something they said they cannot ignore.
"I think
it's convincing people to come out of their homes and come on the street
like we have, for sure," Sand Symes said. "I don't think people are
listening right now. There's so much anger, there's so much resentment,
there's so much history in this place, that it feels like we keep
missing the point. We keep missing sitting down and really listening to
each other."
"I can feel the momentum of it and that's why we had
to get out today," John Symes said. "My son's in Trafalgar Square right
now or he was earlier today. Same deal. People who just feel the
injustice of the world."
Sgt. Kathryn Winters, a spokeswoman for the San Francisco Police
Department, said in an e-mail, "The crowd may have been as large as
15-18k, not an official estimate."
"This is a historic moment:
millions are pouring out across the world to demand an end to Israel's
crimes against the Palestinian people," said Lara Kiswani, executive
director of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center in San Francisco, in
a statement. "From the Bay Area to Washington, D.C., we are demanding
an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, and an immediate end to US aid to
Israel."
"We're taking to the streets! We're making our voices be
heard because we're not going to be complicit in a massacre!" one
protester yelled.
Organizers of the San Francisco rally say
similar demonstrations were planned to take place Saturday in more than
100 cities around the world. One activist named Noor said people who
never would have been involved in such a matter are now being influenced
through the power of social media.
"Before, it was a lot harder for people to just take out their phones
and see what Israel is doing on the ground," she said. "But now, it's
like you have videos, you have photos, showing what's happening. It's
hard for people to deny it when they see right in front of their face."
Protest
organizers said more than 9,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed
by the Israeli military in the last three weeks, including at least
4,000 children.
Will it ultimately have any impact on America's
support of Israel in the conflict? UC Berkeley political science
professor and Israel Studies chair Ron Hassner expressed doubt.
"The
American government has made its stance very clear. You have seen the
incredible bipartisan vote earlier in the week, in which 98 percent of
the House of Representatives backed a very strong anti-Hamas, pro-Israel
statement. The American public, I think, responds viscerally to images
of Palestinian fatalities and there have been high rates of Palestinian
fatalities, many killed by Hamas, many killed by Israel," Prof. Hassner
said.
The government also supported the Vietnam War until
televised images convinced the public of its futility, turning the tide
against the war. These days, communication is much faster so Americans
are faced on a daily basis with the reality of what Israel's war on
terrorism actually looks like.
Back at the rally, Sand Symes said she hoped public opinion can have some influence on the conflict.
"I've
got to believe that it can," she said. "Otherwise I'm left with a
hopelessness. I've got to keep hope. It's a way to keep hope alive."
Tens of thousands of people demonstrated in Washington,
D.C., on Saturday. It was one of the biggest pro-Palestinian protests in
the U.S. Tyrone Turner/DCist/WAMU
At least tens of thousands of people gathered in the nation's capital
on Saturday for one of the biggest pro-Palestinian protests in the U.S.
since the Israeli bombardment of Gaza began in response to the attack
by Hamas militants last month.
Protesters are pushing for a
cease-fire in Gaza, where health officials say thousands of Palestinians
have been killed in Israeli airstrikes.
The event, organized
by several pro-Palestinian groups, began with an afternoon rally at
Freedom Plaza, before crowds began a march in a loop past the White
House a few blocks away.
Protesters hold cloth bundles with the names of Palestinian children who were killed by Israeli attacks. Tyrone Turner/DCist/WAMU
At the rally, speakers' chants and messaging centered on calls to
end U.S. funding for Israel in the war, accusing President Biden of
backing a "genocide" of Palestinian people.
Nour Jaghama, a
Palestinian organizer for the anti-war organization Code Pink, asked the
crowd: "Why we can hear these words and firsthand accounts from Gaza
yet the genocide still continues? Why do only 18 representatives and
only one senator support a cease-fire?"
At Saturday's rally,
protesters held a moment of silence for those killed in Israel's
response offensive. More than 9,480 Palestinians have been killed by
Israel's military attacks over the last four weeks, according to Gaza's
health ministry.
A massive crowd gathered in downtown Washington, D.C. to support Palestinians. Tyrone Turner/DCist/WAMU
Israel has tightened its siege on Gaza City in the northern part
of the Gaza Strip, the focus of its expanded ground offensive in its
stated campaign to defeat Hamas after the militant group carried out
attacks on Israeli communities on Oct. 7 that killed about 1,400 people.
The
event drew supporters from cities across the country, selling out bus
seats for many departure points including Portland, Maine; Boston;
Columbus, Ohio; Miami; and at least 10 buses from New York City.
People pause to pray during the rally. Protesters came from across the country to join the rally.
Tyrone Turner/DCist/WAMU
Younass Barkouch, 24, came from Jersey City, N.J., to attend the
march. He said that while his family comes from Morocco, he is
protesting first and foremost as an American.
"I was raised to
believe that the United States condemned atrocities, war crimes,
heinous government acts wherever they saw them. Regardless of who
committed them," he said.
He believes Israel's response has
been disproportionate. He wants a cease-fire and for mediators to come
together to resolve the conflict.
Ammara Rana, 39, grew up in
Maryland. As a Muslim herself, she said, it was emotional to see the
show of solidarity for a Muslim-majority people.
"The unity is amazing — to see so many Americans come out — and I
hope Joe Biden sees what he's losing," Rana said. "He's going to lose
the vote if he doesn't do anything to stop this."
"We all voted
for him for equality," she continued. "And if he doesn't give everybody
that right, then he's hopefully not going to be our next president."
Protesters walk underneath a large Palestinian flag. Protesters are pushing for a cease-fire in Gaza.
Tyrone Turner/DCist/WAMU
Pedro Kremer, 48, was raised Jewish in Argentina and now lives
outside D.C. He says he was taught that Jews seek justice "everywhere
and for everyone."
"What is happening right now is the farthest that justice can be," he said.
Protesters march through Washington, D.C., on Saturday.
U.S. officials have so far stopped short of demands for a cease-fire,
but pressed Israel on Friday for a "humanitarian pause" in its military
offensive.
Pierre Kattar for NPR
His stance, questioning Israel's leadership, has created a rift
between family and friends, he says — even his best friend, who called
him antisemitic. Kremer, who pushed his baby in a stroller during the
march, said there's no difference between the value of his son's life or
that of a child living in Gaza.
All attendees NPR spoke to at the march expressed support for a cease-fire.
U.S. officials have so far stopped short of demands for a cease-fire, but pressed Israel on Friday for
a "humanitarian pause" in its military offensive to allow more aid to
enter Gaza and for the release of the more than 200 hostages being held
by Hamas.
Protesters gather outside the White House on Saturday.
President Biden has requested more than $14 billion in military aid for
Israel. Pierre Kattar for NPR
Israel rejected such a pause, saying any sort of cease-fire is
contingent on the release of hostages. Later Friday, an Israeli
airstrike had hit an ambulance
near Al Shifa, a main hospital in Gaza. Palestinians said more than a
dozen people were killed in the strike; Israel's military said the
target of the bombing was Hamas, whose members Israel says have been
using sensitive sites for cover.
‘Gaza will be liberated’: Tens of thousands march in S.F. to support Palestinians by Noah Arroyo November 4, 2023 San Francisco Chronicle16
1 of 16
Marchers
hold a banner outside the federal building in San Francisco during a
rally in solidarity with Palestinians. The protest was one of many
across the country and around the world as part of International Day of
Solidarity.
PHOTO: Benjamin Fanjoy/Special to the Chronicle
Tens
of thousands of pro-Palestinian protesters, calling for an end to the
horrors unfolding in the Middle East, rallied Saturday at San
Francisco’s Civic Center Plaza and marched throughout downtown.
The
protest was one of many across the country and around the world as part
of International Day of Solidarity, organized to support Palestinians
in Gaza. Protesters also took to the streets at sister rallies in
Washington, D.C., New York, Nashville, Cincinnati and Las Vegas.
“Our
goal is to create the biggest demonstration in support of Palestine in
U.S. history,” said Noor, an organizer with the Party for Socialism and
Liberation, which convened the rally with local groups and Bay Area
chapters of national and international organizations. The Chronicle is
withholding Noor’s last name because she is concerned that divulging her
identity would endanger her ability to visit her family in Palestinian
territory.
The groups are calling for an end to U.S. military aid
to Israel; an end to Israel’s siege of Gaza and to bombing; and a
freeing of all political prisoners.
A group marches down Market
Street in San Francisco to show support for Palestinians in Gaza and
call for a cease-fire in the Mideast conflict. Video: Benjamin Fanjoy
Special to the Chronicle
Priscilla Rodriguez, a nurse practitioner, came to the rally out of “utter outrage for what’s going on — the genocide.”
“I
hope we can put political pressure, to hopefully cause a cease-fire,”
Rodriguez said. A daughter of Mexican immigrants, she said she
empathizes with the plight of the people in Gaza.
“If it happens to them, it can happen to others next,” she said.
At the rally, speakers engaged the crowd in call and response:
“Free Palestine! From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!”
“From Palestine to Mexico, these border walls have got to go! From Palestine to the Philippines, stop the U.S. war machines!”
The
crowd cheered when speakers called for support for Gazans and booed at
the mention of President Joe Biden. Some speakers equated Israel’s
attacks with genocide.
Protesters wave an upside-down U.S. flag
along with Palestinian flags during a march Saturday on San Francisco’s
Market Street as part of the International Day of Solidarity in support
of Palestinians.
Santiago Mejia/The Chronicle
“Nazism was
acceptable in Germany until people exposed it. Fascism was acceptable in
Italy until people exposed it,” said Monadel Herzallah, co-founder of
the U.S. Palestinian Community Network, addressing the crowd from atop a
truck. Now, “we are witnessing what Zionism really stands for, through
the practices of the state of Israel.”
“Gaza and Palestine is the
spark that is going to create fire under the dictators of the world,
that are killing our people,” Herzallah said. “The people on the street
are sick and tired of the status quo. They are saying in Jordan and
Lebanon that enough is enough!”
Lara Kiswani, executive director
of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center, said that politicians “from
here to Washington, D.C.,” must condemn the military action in Gaza so
no more innocent lives are lost. Elected officials who don’t do that,
“including the ones who sit in that building,” she said, pointing to
City Hall, “are standing with genocide! They’re standing with war!”
Kiswani added: “We will do whatever it takes to make sure we stand on the right side of history.”
The crowd erupted in cheers.
Tens of thousands of protesters rally during the “Free Palestine” march on San Francisco’s Market Street.
Santiago Mejia/The Chronicle
After
the rally, the crowd marched from City Hall down Market Street and
erupted in chants amid a sea of signs and flags: “Cease fire now!” “It’s
not complicated, Gaza will be liberated!” “Biden, Biden, you can’t
hide! We charge you with genocide!”
As the marchers turned south
on Sixth Street on the way to Mission Street, customers at the Gai
Chicken Rice restaurant appeared surprised, many erupting into laughter.
The group marched up Mission to Seventh Street, then headed back to Civic Center.
As
a truck approached to bring the marchers back to where they started, a
preteen girl and one of the adults traded a mic back and forth. They
said together: “The youth, united, will never be defeated!”
Then
the girl led the crowd, shouting, “Takbir,” or “God help us” in Arabic.
The crowd roared back in response, “Allahu akbar,” or “God is great.”
Almost
half of the Gaza population is younger than 18, and women and children
comprise the bulk of the conflict’s casualties, according to the World Health Organization.
Karla
Romero rallies in solidarity with Palestinians as part of the
International Day of Solidarity at San Francisco’s Civic Center.
Benjamin Fanjoy/Special to the Chronicle
One of the protest leaders said the march, which appeared to have tens of thousands of participants, filled 12 city blocks.
It
has been a month since Hamas, the Islamic militant group that has
governed Gaza since 2007, broke through the border into Israel in a
surprise attack that killed more than 1,400 people.
Israel’s
retaliatory bombings were swift and brutal. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu escalated the conflict last week by sending ground troops into
Gaza. More than 9,000 Gazans have been killed so far, according to the
city’s Health Ministry, in what has become a humanitarian crisis.
U.S.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken called Saturday for pauses in the
fighting to allow more aid into the Palestinian territory. Egyptian and
Jordanian foreign ministers also called for immediate cease-fires.
Saturday’s Civic Center rally followed Friday’s protest
at the Port of Oakland against a U.S. military ship believed to be
carrying weapons for Israel, and last Saturday’s pro-Palestinian march
through several locations in San Francisco, which briefly closed the Central Freeway.
Noah
Arroyo is a reporter examining the future of San Francisco. Before The
Chronicle, he worked at Mission Local and the San Francisco Public Press
and focused on the city’s housing and homelessness crises — possibly
two sides of the same coin. Noah takes a data-driven approach when
possible and seeks out the sources who don’t generally get quoted.
As pressure builds for a ceasefire after 27 days of Israel's bombardment of Gaza, author and journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates joins us in a broadcast exclusive interview to discuss his journey to Palestine and Israel and learning about the connection between the struggle of African Americans and Palestinians. "The most shocking thing about my time over there was how uncomplicated it actually is," says Coates, who calls segregation in Palestine and Israel "evil." "There's no way for me, as an African American, to come back and stand before you, to witness segregation and not say anything about it." Coates acknowledges the suppression of those advocating for Palestinian rights but says this is not new for Black writers and journalists. "I have to measure my fear against the misery that I saw."
Across U.S. universities and workplaces, a growing number of
dissenting voices have faced swift reputational, career and personal
backlash after speaking out against the Israeli government’s retributive
mass killing of Palestinians. The October 7 Hamas attacks
indiscriminately killed over a thousand Israelis, many of them
civilians. Yet the IDF, clearly bent on revenge, has responded by
killing at a disproportionate extreme: More than 9,000 Palestinians in Gaza, including more than 3,700 children, have now been murdered by their airstrikes. In the U.S., many individuals who have openly opposed this genocidal collective punishment have been swiftly punished by social consequences including harassment, slander, blacklisting and firings.
Students and academics, among many others, have protested this
treatment with calls for solidarity and speech freedoms, including in a
number of collective letters signed by major figures. These discursive
struggles have reached the highest levels of government, with
condemnations and censorship issuing from state leaders and the Senate.
For decades, there has been a long, slow massacre perpetrated as so
many in the U.S. remained oblivious, pacified by propaganda. But each
new horror further pulls the blinders from Western eyes. It comes as
little surprise that U.S. universities, where radical student bodies are
overseen by more conservative administrators, have been the sites of
some of the most fevered rhetorical upsets — and the harshest
punishments. The college campus, it seems, will be a key site of the
increasingly desperate scramble to control the narrative. Nevertheless, far more consequential worldwide protests seem to indicate that, perhaps, the long denial is entering its last throes.
A State of Exception
“History didn’t start on October 7,” Palestinian literary critic Saree Makdisi wrote recently.
It is that self-evident fact that has too often fallen to the wayside.
The longtime imprisonment of Gazans and the steady colonization of the
West Bank has meant a drumbeat of death and violence for Palestinians:
death from IDF weapons and death from the slow violence of social
murder, by the active denial of lifesaving necessities.
For decades, the grim truths of Palestinian suffering have been
whitewashed for the U.S. population. The state of Israel has been
effectively exempt from criticism in major news organs; in many ways, it
is the sole subject that has remained totally anathema. So thoroughly
has the U.S. public understanding of the Israeli occupation been
manipulated that the effort represents perhaps the single greatest
domestic triumph of manufactured consent.
Yet, despite Israeli propagandists’ success in implanting that
correlation in the public mind, there have been undeniable signs that
the lockstep ideological narrative is increasingly in disarray. The
selective moral outrage cultivated by Israeli hasbara, or propaganda operations,
has been diluted by new Western attentiveness to the truth of the
occupation, which generates daily injustices that have become impossible
to hide. There’s a sense of a qualitative shift; even just a handful of
years ago, open criticism of Israel was off the table. Now, it’s arguably a liability for the incumbent in the next presidential election. The fact that referring to the Israeli occupation as a state of “apartheid” has more or less entered the mainstream bespeaks a remarkable reversal.
Still, IDF apologists will not cede any terrain without a fight. As Dylan Saba wrote in the publication n+1 (his article was first for The Guardian,
but was tellingly pulled by editors at the last minute), support for
Palestine has invited a distributed, stochastic reprisal, severe to the
point that it can, without exaggeration, be compared to a “McCarthyite
backlash.” Historian and n+1 editor Charles Petersen concurred, in a post that stated:
“We are witnessing the largest number of politically motivated firings
in at least fifty years. You have to go back to the Vietnam War or
McCarthyism to see something on a greater scale.”
A wealth of examples bears out this charge. Saba, who works at law
services nonprofit Palestine Legal, wrote, “Since 2014, we’ve handled
thousands of such incidents — suppression of speech supporting
Palestinian rights is nothing new — but it’s never been this bad.”
Indeed, Palestine Legal has already fielded over 200 reports of
repression in the U.S. since October 7.
In a letter also signed by “over 600 legal organizations and professionals,”
the organization included a litany of infringements on the rights of
Palestine supporters: censorship on social media and news, doxxing,
harassment online and on campus, firings and demotions, discrimination
and bullying, organizing activities banned or disrupted, racist
legislative initiatives on visas and immigration, calls for action to
instate surveillance, law enforcement investigations and outright
violence. In this most recent crisis, examples of these kinds of
suppressions first reared their heads at universities.
On-Campus Reaction
After the Hamas attack on October 7, school administrations and various academic leaders
released a volley of statements (as did other entities, from corporate
brands to sports teams). Generic at best, other declarations were
misleadingly pat, condemning Hamas violence without contextualizing it
in the brutalities of the occupation. The oversight is revealing; it
obscures the essential aspect of the problem and delegitimizes
Palestinian suffering. But implicit support for Israel is
uncontroversial — that’s why it’s perceived as the safe bet for
organizations looking for something milquetoast to churn out, to
inoffensive effect. (Why every corporation now sees fit to declare a stance on sociopolitical issues at all is another matter.)
Student groups and various left-leaning campus voices, of course, put
out oppositional statements of their own — which invited immediate
backlash. One of the more reported-on examples was that of Ryna Workman,
a New York University (NYU) law student and former president of the (now-disbanded) student bar association. Workman was harassed online, attacked on right-wing media and condemned by her dean. She also lost a job offer
at the law firm Winston & Strawn for posting a statement that
ascribed responsibility to Israel for the violence. (A stance, it’s
worth noting, that was not meaningfully distinct from an op-ed on the front page of Israel’s leading newspaper, Haaretz — in other words, not an absurd or extreme fringe view, except in a public discourse so warped as ours.)
Winston & Strawn, on top of rebuking Workman, was joined by the firm Davis Polk & Wardwell in declaring that any student signatories of similar statements will be persona non grata at their offices.
Similarly, in what seems like a low point in teacher-student trust, a
corporate law professor at UC Berkeley expressed his wish to sabotage
his own students’ futures in a Wall Street Journal op-ed: “Don’t Hire My Anti-Semitic Law Students.”
A statement written and signed by Harvard student groups, like
Workman’s, attributed the violence’s origin to Israel. They were, almost
immediately, met with a startling reprisal: not only doxxing and harassment of themselves and their family members, but also more inventive punishments. Executives at Wall Street firms “demanded a list of student names to ban their hiring,” reported The New York Times.
Most absurd was “a truck with a digital billboard — paid for by a
conservative group — [that] circled Harvard Square, flashing student
photos and names, under the headline, ‘Harvard’s Leading Antisemites.’”
On October 25, the Columbia University student newspaper reported that the tactic had resurfaced on their campus: Another “doxxing truck” singled out pro-Palestine Columbia students, adorned with their pictures and personal information. (As the students themselves would later comment,
most of the doxxed students were people of color, at least in Harvard’s
case; there were intimations of a racist aspect to the threat.)
Black Studies professor Russell Rickford faced outrage and death
threats after he made some initial remarks as the Hamas attack was
unfolding that some perceived as lauding the later violence. (Rickford clarified in Cornell’s student paper
that what he was “referring to is in those first few hours, when they
broke through the apartheid wall, that it seemed to be a symbol of
resistance”; rather than cheering the “horrifying realities” of Hamas’s
cruelties toward civilians, which later came to light.) Columbia
professor Joseph Massad is also facing death threats and calls for his
firing after he published an article in the Electronic Intifada that some interpreted as vaguely celebratory of the attack. (Hundreds of students and scholars
have since come to the defense of Massad’s academic freedom, noting
that his statements have been misrepresented in mainstream media.)
A source at Boston University, who requested anonymity out of concern for reprisals, told Truthout that, after students walked out in protest,
silence was implicitly demanded of the faculty: “The administration
[made it] clear that we were expected to follow a particular political
line, neither condemning it nor punishing students for participating,
but rather talking about it as ‘a complex issue’.… All of the faculty
recognized [this as] a contravention of academic freedom.”
Even a small sign of dissent, the source continued, incurred
consequences. “I stuck my neck out in a staff meeting over the statement
and supported the students who walked out.” As a result, he was brought
in by administrators more than once for questioning about his loyalties
and activities. “Since we don’t yet have a union contract,” he added,
“all of us generally have felt extraordinarily precarious.”
There are clear incentives motivating private universities to condemn
their own students and faculty: First and foremost, they have little
choice but to try and placate powerful donors. Some examples that The New York Times listed:
At Harvard, a billionaire couple quit an executive board. Another donor pulled money for fellowships. And Lawrence Summers, a former Harvard president and Treasury secretary, criticized the leadership for a “delayed” response to the Hamas attack and the student letter.
Dylan Kupsh is a Ph.D. candidate in computer science at UCLA and a member of Students for Justice in Palestine. He described ongoing Students for Justice in Palestine activities:
walkouts, teach-ins, vigils and marches across greater Los Angeles,
which have drawn thousands. The events’ success has, naturally,
attracted opponents’ attention as well: “We’ve been facing a lot of
repression,” Kupsh said to Truthout. “Students on our campus
are being harassed — physically assaulted, in some cases — and a lot of
the times, the university has just watched.”
It’s certainly not the first time Students for Justice in Palestine has been targeted at UCLA (or at other schools, in other circumstances).
But Kupsh has been disquieted by the escalation. “We were getting
threats around a teach-in, so it went online. But people still showed up
in person — and they were assaulted. A Zionist came in and threw
people’s computers in the trash.” Kupsh says the university was made
aware of this — but “nothing ever came [of it].”
“I think the university has been tacitly condoning a lot of this by
lack of action,” said Kupsh, who also said that counterprotesters have
regularly become violent at Palestinian solidarity rallies: “We’re
concerned about the safety when people are getting really physically
aggressive and escalating the situation.” In addition, he alleges that
the university explicitly refused to publish an announcement of a
solidarity gathering for Muslim students, despite sharing a similar one
for a Zionist group.
Students for Justice in Palestine has been a focal point of reprisal: The City University of New York chancellor indirectly condemned the organization, and on October 24, rather disturbingly, the Florida State University system banned Students for Justice in Palestine on its campuses outright
after “consulting with Governor DeSantis.” The statement claimed the
group’s activism was tantamount to “material support” of a “foreign
terrorist organization.”
Things escalated further still: As reported by The Intercept,
the U.S. Senate, a day after mass student walkouts, passed “a unanimous
resolution condemning what it called ‘anti-Israel, pro-Hamas student
groups’ across the country” — namely, the organizing groups, Students
for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace. Such are the true
heights attainable in this overzealous stifling of all dissent — the
impulse to ideological chastising runs all the way to the top.
Joint action by faculty, especially unionized faculty, represents one
means of pushing back against the dominant narrative and the
restriction of academic freedoms. Truthout reviewed a response
letter addressed to the UC Board of Regents, in which the UC Ethnic
Studies Faculty Council, comprising over 300 teachers, “call[ed] on the
UC administrative leadership to retract its charges of terrorism … and
to stand against Israel’s war crimes.”
Insistence on “viewpoint diversity” is one means of introjecting pro-Israel counterclaims into dissent, analogous to “both sides”
rhetoric. Of course, academic and speech freedoms must cut both ways.
The issue is that Zionist speech has been manifestly well-protected,
while advocacy for Palestinians has been outright criminalized.
Political consequences do not end there, though they do come in more
petty varieties: At present, New York Councilman Robert Holden
(D-Queens) is attempting to defund an entire women’s services nonprofit to the tune of millions of dollars because its communication manager attended a protest against the killing of Gazan civilians.
Consensus Fails
The reach of the Israel lobby and its legal, media and advocacy
infrastructure mean that the recriminations extend far beyond academia.
Blacklists are not a thing of the past, to be sure. On social media, commentators have been tracking first-person accounts of people that have suffered career consequences and firings
in the last few weeks — a range that includes professions from subway
drivers to sportswriters to talent agents to tech executives. Major
conferences have been cancelled, publications and media interviews pulled, and bomb threats called into a Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) banquet, as The Guardian would eventually document. (That particular publication was, as noted above, a bit late to the subject.)
There are certainly extremist voices that can be found reveling in
the deaths of Israeli innocents. But to a large extent, what makes the
backlash so remarkable is that it has not only spanned a wide front of
industries and income levels, but also that its punishments have been
brought down for statements that are so mild — like approvingly sharing an article from The Onion.
It’s an outrage that people are facing dramatic reprisals for having
advocated for the basic human rights of Palestinians, called for an end
to an apartheid system and demanded a halt to the revenge killings of
thousands. Yet these kinds of reactions are a testament to how warped
the discursive space around Palestine still remains. Decades of
effective propaganda produced by the Israeli government’s hasbara
organs and amplified by the evangelical chorus in the United States
have drowned out dissent for so long that the struggle toward a
corrective shift will necessarily be long and, as is clearly apparent,
rather grueling.
Despite progress, a reversal may still be a long time coming. After
all, the reason the domestic echoes resound so loudly is because the
U.S. military and foreign policy blob
have an enormous strategic-economic interest in propping up,
vindicating and rearming their Israeli client. And the mainstream U.S.
media, those noble watchdogs of the fourth estate, still react much more
like the kind of dog that prefers the lap.
We can at least be certain that center and far right mainstream media
channels (that is to say, all of them) will continue to play eager host
to fawning praise of Israel, and to tut-tut about the real threat to campus free speech. Their claims of “woke” repression and Orwellian pronoun enforcement are, of course, totally fraudulent. The actual repression, which goes unreported, is the glaring “Palestine exception.” Though free-speech warriors will never deign to mention it, there is a cancel culture, as activist and cartoonist Eli Valley reminded us in a social media post. It’s just not the type that the anti-woke charlatans have concocted.
The real infringement of rights consists in these punishments that
are meted out for free expression — all part of an ideological apparatus
that has, in the U.S., held Israel above reproach. The consensus is at
long last shifting. Until it does, Palestinians and their supporters,
from U.S. campuses to Gaza and the West Bank, are left demanding a kind
of change that is far more sweeping than any rhetoric, far more
consequential than any campus dust-up. Before all else, the genocidal
IDF bombardment of the Gaza Strip must be halted before countless more
are killed.
"I'm for truth, no matter who tells it. I'm for justice, no matter who it's for or against."
W.E.B. DuBois (1868-1963)
"There is but one coward on earth, and that is the coward that dare not know."
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968)
"Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom. A man can't ride you unless your back is bent. "
James Baldwin (1924-1987)
"Precisely at the point when you begin to develop a conscience you must find yourself at war with your society."
"A civilization that proves incapable of solving the problems it creates is a decadent civilization. A civilization that chooses to close its eyes to its most crucial problems is a stricken civilization. A civilization that uses its principles for trickery and deceit is a dying civilization."
Nina Simone (1933-2003)
"There's no other purpose, so far as I'm concerned, for us except to reflect the times, the situations around us and the things we're able to say through our art, the things that millions of people can't say. I think that's the function of an artist and, of course, those of us who are lucky leave a legacy so that when we're dead, we also live on. That's people like Billie Holiday and I hope that I will be that lucky, but meanwhile, the function, so far as I'm concerned, is to reflect the times, whatever that might be."
Amilcar Cabral (1924-1973)
"Always bear in mind that the people are not fighting for ideas, for the things in anyone's head. They are fighting to live better and in peace, to see their lives go forward, to guarantee the future of their children ....Hide nothing from the masses of our people. Tell no lies. Expose lies whenever they are told. Mask no difficulties, mistakes, failures. Claim no easy victories..." .
Angela Davis (b. 1944)
"The idea of freedom is inspiring. But what does it mean? If you are free in a political sense but have no food, what's that? The freedom to starve?”
Duke Ellington (1899-1974)
“Jazz is the freest musical expression we have yet seen. To me, then, jazz means simply freedom of musical speech! And it is precisely because of this freedom that so many varied forms of jazz exist. The important thing to remember, however, is that not one of these forms represents jazz by itself. Jazz simply means the freedom to have many forms.”
Amiri Baraka (1934-2014)
"Thought is more important than art. To revere art and have no understanding of the process that forces it into existence, is finally not even to understand what art is."
Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.” --August 3, 1857
Cecil Taylor (1929-2018)
“Musical categories don’t mean anything unless we talk about the actual specific acts that people go through to make music, how one speaks, dances, dresses, moves, thinks, makes love...all these things. We begin with a sound and then say, what is the function of that sound, what is determining the procedures of that sound? Then we can talk about how it motivates or regenerates itself, and that’s where we have tradition.”
Ella Baker (1903-1986)
"Strong people don't need strong leaders"
Paul Robeson (1898-1976)
"The artist must take sides. He must elect to fight for freedom or for slavery. I have made my choice. I had no alternative."
John Coltrane (1926-1967)
"I want to be a force for real good. In other words, I know there are bad forces. I know that there are forces out here that bring suffering to others and misery to the world, but I want to be the opposite force. I want to be the force which is truly for good."
Miles Davis (1926-1991)
"Jazz is the big brother of Revolution. Revolution follows it around."
C.L.R. James (1901-1989)
"All development takes place by means of self-movement, not organization by external forces. It is within the organism itself (i.e. within the society) that there must be realized new motives, new possibilities."
Frantz Fanon (1925-1961)
"Now, political education means opening minds, awakening them, and allowing the birth of their intelligence as [Aime] Cesaire said, it is 'to invent souls.' To educate the masses politically does not mean, cannot mean, making a political speech. What it means is to try, relentlessly and passionately, to teach the masses that everything depends on them."
Edward Said (1935-2003)
“I take criticism so seriously as to believe that, even in the midst of a battle in which one is unmistakably on one side against another, there should be criticism, because there must be critical consciousness if there are to be issues, problems, values, even lives to be fought for."
Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937)
“The challenge of modernity is to live without illusions and without becoming disillusioned. There must be pessimism of the intellect and optimism of the will.”
Susan Sontag (1933-2004)
"Do stuff. Be clenched, curious. Not waiting for inspiration’s shove or society’s kiss on your forehead. Pay attention. It’s all about paying attention. Attention is vitality. It connects you with others. It makes you eager. Stay eager."
Kofi Natambu, editor of The Panopticon Review, is a writer, poet, cultural critic, and political journalist whose poetry, essays, criticism, reviews, and journalism have appeared in many literary magazines, journals, newspapers, and anthologies. He is the author of a biography MALCOLM X: His Life & Work (Alpha Books) and two books of poetry: THE MELODY NEVER STOPS (Past Tents Press) and INTERVALS (Post Aesthetic Press). He was the founder and editor of SOLID GROUND: A NEW WORLD JOURNAL, a national quarterly magazine of the arts, culture, and politics and the editor of a literary anthology NOSTALGIA FOR THE PRESENT (Post Aesthetic Press). Natambu has read his work throughout the country and given many lectures and workshops at academic and arts institutions. He has taught American literature, literary theory and criticism, cultural history and criticism, film studies, political science, creative writing, philosophy, critical theory, and music history and criticism (Jazz, Blues, R&B, Hip Hop) at many universities and colleges. He was also a curator in the Education Department of Detroit’s Museum of African American History. Born in Detroit, Michigan, Natambu currently lives in Berkeley, California with his wife Chuleenan.