https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/uclas-unholy-alliance/
In December the House Committee on Education and the
Workforce held a hearing on anti-Semitism on college campuses that
forced University of Pennsylvania president Liz McGill and Harvard
University president Claudine Gay to resign in its wake. In April the
committee held another hearing, reducing Columbia University President
Minouche Shafik, keen to avoid the fate of her counterparts, to a
groveling mess. On May 23 it will hold yet another, under the title
“Calling for Accountability: Stopping Antisemitic College Chaos.”
This time the committee has summoned Michael Schill, president of
Northwestern University; Jonathan Holloway, president of Rutgers
University; and Gene Block, Chancellor of the University of California,
Los Angeles. We expect another show trial, where committee chair
Virginia Foxx (Republican of North Carolina), Elise Stefanik (Republican
of New York), and their friends pressure “liberal” university leaders
into confessing that anti-Semitism has run amok on college campuses,
that Jewish students are the real victims of a Hamas-backed genocide
being plotted in Gaza solidarity encampments and the classrooms of
tenured radicals, and that the source of Jew hatred is critical race
theory. The committee has promised that it will not sit idly by. In a
press release, Foxx warned
“mealy-mouthed, spineless college leaders” that “College is not a park
for playacting juveniles or a battleground for radical activists.
Everyone affiliated with these universities will receive a healthy dose
of reality: actions have consequences.”
The House Committee hearings chose only to summon college presidents
for a public tongue-lashing and dressing-down. This is because House
Republicans are less interested in anti-Semitism than racking up
“gotcha” soundbites for their fundraising campaigns, advancing the
right-wing assault on DEI and what they define as “critical race
theory,” and attacking the university as a whole. According to Inside Higher Ed, Foxx confirmed
that “the inquiries could broaden to include the universities’
diversity, equity and inclusion politics.” If Foxx, Stefanik, and fellow
House Republicans were genuinely concerned about anti-Semitism, they
would investigate the white nationalists, neo-Nazis, and QAnon
conspiracy theorists who make up part of their base and participated in
the January 6 insurrection. Parroting Donald Trump, Stefanik referred to
the men and women convicted on charges ranging from obstruction to
assaulting a law enforcement officer as “hostages.” Foxx not only voted
against certifying the 2020 election but, like Stefanik and fellow House
Republicans, vehemently opposed the commission to investigate the
capitol riot.
The charges Chancellor Block will face exonerate
those responsible for the worst incident of anti-Semitic violence in
UCLA’s history.
Unlike the January 6 hearings, Foxx’s committee has produced very
little evidence of anti-Semitism outside of words and slogans either
taken out of context or misinterpreted. Stefanik, for example, managed
to turn “intifada,” which literally means “shaking off” or “uprising,”
into “genocide of Jews.” But Chancellor Block’s testimony will be
different. It will give the committee an opportunity to investigate not
only a verifiable and egregious incident of anti-Semitism, but one
involving white nationalists and neo-Nazis.
Between April 25 and May 2, UCLA experienced the worst episode of both
anti-Semitic and anti-Palestinian/Islamophobic/racist violence in the
university’s century-long history. White nationalists and neo-Nazis
joined forces with Zionists (including some saying they were Israelis)
to attack UCLA’s Palestine Solidarity Encampment, whose residents
included a large number of Jewish students. The assailants were not
affiliated with the university. One neo-Nazi was heard shouting, “we’re
here to finish what Hitler started,” without any apparent protest from
the self-identified Zionists. At least one person present has been identified
as an associate of the Proud Boys. Using metal pipes, wooden planks,
fists, knives, bricks, noise, chemical weapons, and incendiary
fireworks, the mob sent at least twenty-five students to the hospital
for broken bones, head trauma, and severe lacerations, while police
stood by and watched for hours, electing to neither detain nor
interrogate the perpetrators. No arrests took place that night. The
following day, only students and faculty defending the encampment were
arrested.
Although Block has promised to launch a full investigation, reporting from various media outlets (including outstanding coverage by our student paper, The Daily Bruin),
along with hundreds of hours of video captured by students, faculty and
observers, prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Palestine
Solidarity Encampment—a nonviolent occupation erected to protest U.S.
support for the genocide in Gaza and to demand that UCLA divest from
companies that fuel Israel’s war and occupation, exercise financial
transparency, break ties with Israeli universities, and acknowledge the
loss of Palestinian life—came under brutal attack from its very
inception and the administration did nothing to protect our students.
Given Block’s fervent opposition to anti-Semitism and his unwavering
defense of Israel and Zionism, why are House Republicans going after
him? Are they really concerned about the assault on the encampment and
the health and safety of our students? To the contrary, Foxx has crafted
an indictment designed to shield white nationalists from accountability
and prosecution for their rabid anti-Semitism by magically recasting
neo-Nazis as encampment defenders rather than assailants, and
by twisting information, repeating misinformation, and conveying
outright falsehoods fed to the committee by Israel advocacy
organizations such as the AMCHA Initiative, the Anti-Defamation League
(ADL), American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), and Stand With
Us; right-wing media outlets such as Campus Reform, Legal Insurrection, and Fox News; and isolated tweets and Instagram posts. Foxx’s letter
notifying Block of the charges against him makes the wildly specious
claim that “a van displaying the Star of David inside a Nazi swastika,
as well as antisemitic writing referring to Jews as ‘puppet masters,’
was parked on UCLA’s campus in support of the encampment.” It repeats
false claims that journalists who tried to enter the encampment were
“assaulted,” but never mentions the documented fact that in the wee
hours of May 1, four student journalists with the Daily Bruin were tracked down, maced, and severely beaten by members of the mob —sending one,
Catherine Hamilton, to the hospital. The letter also repeats the
thoroughly debunked rumor that “anti-Israel activists shoved a Jewish
student counter-protestor . . . kicked her in the head, and stepped on
her. The assault left her bleeding and caused her to lose consciousness
and to be rushed to the hospital.” Immediately after the story began
circulating on social media, the Los Angeles Times interviewed
the woman in question who explained that she had been accidentally
shoved by a fellow counterprotester “while attempting to retrieve her
fallen [Israeli] flag.”
The letter never mentions that self-proclaimed Zionists took part in
the attacks, nor does it acknowledge that the encampment had actually
been attacked. Instead, Foxx labels the victims of mob and police
violence “antisemitic rioters.” She finds evidence of rampant
anti-Semitism in the Undergraduate Student Association Council’s (USAC)
resolution calling for amnesty for those arrested, the elimination of
police on campus, and, in her words, “a “permanent ceasefire” and an end
to what they allege is a “genocide in Palestine.” Finally, she makes
the absurd claim that the resolution asks professors to hold Muslim and
Palestinian students “to lower academic standards.” In actuality,
it asks for temporary academic leniency “and to take into account the
needs of all students during this time, but especially those of
Palestinian and Muslim identities who are the most unsafe and targeted
individuals on campus right now.”
There are many more examples of misinformation that I will address
below. My point is that the list of charges Chancellor Block will face
on May 23 performs double duty in that it defends Israel’s genocidal war
and exonerates white supremacists and Zionists responsible for the
worst incident of anti-Semitic violence in UCLA’s history. Foxx and
Stefanik will undoubtedly demand Block’s resignation. A large proportion
of the faculty and students at UCLA is also calling for Block’s
resignation, but for very different reasons.
UCLA’s Task Force on Anti-Palestinian, Anti-Muslim, and Anti-Arab
Racism, of which I am a member, conducted its own investigation, and
released a report with its findings earlier this week. The report
holds Block and his administration, along with various branches of law
enforcement, responsible for failing to protect our students. UCLA’s
administration, it finds, not only failed to direct law enforcement to
arrest and remove the armed mob but indirectly incited the violence by
inviting “counter protesters” to come on to our campus, hold
inflammatory rallies a few feet from the encampment, and allow them to
remain in the name of protecting “free speech” and upholding their
responsibility as a “public university” to grant the “community” access
to campus. It seems clear in hindsight that permitting hostile groups to
harass and attack the encampment is one strategy to avoid the optics of
sending in the police to attack students. If that was the strategy, it
didn’t work. The administration probably did not anticipate an unholy
alliance of neo-Nazis and Zionists working together, but those of us who
spent more than a decade criticizing Chancellor Block’s unremitting
hostility toward critics of Israel and his fervent defense of Zionism
could have predicted this outcome—especially after October 7.
The following account draws on findings from our report and provides a
broader context but does not purport to speak for the entire task
force.
Intolerance and its Discontents
As I write, UAW Local 4811, representing some forty-eight thousand
postdocs, teaching assistants, academic and student researchers, tutors,
and readers across the University of California system, is preparing to
strike over the administration’s conduct with respect to the
encampment. The union is demanding, among other things, amnesty for all
academic employees, students, faculty, and staff facing criminal or
disciplinary charges for protesting; the right to free speech;
divestment from UC’s known investments in weapons manufacturers,
military contractors, and companies profiting from Israel’s war on
Palestine; and disclosure of all funding sources and investments. UCLA
faculty are pushing
for a vote of no confidence, or at minimum, “censure” of Chancellor
Block for failing to keep our students safe. Some argue that the vote is
merely symbolic, both because the faculty do not have the power to
remove the Chancellor and because Block is just two months from
retirement.
The administration probably did not anticipate an unholy alliance of neo-Nazis and Zionists working together.
By most standards, his seventeen-year tenure has been a success. Under his leadership, UCLA rose in the U.S. News and World Report rankings from the twenty-sixth best public university in the country to the first, and its endowment swelled
from $2.2 billion to $7.7 billion. The grandson of working-class
Eastern European Jews, Block proudly identifies as a liberal who
believes in diversity and racial equity. He often speaks of his
experiences as an undergraduate at Stanford (1966–70) when he opposed
the war in Vietnam. He is way too liberal for House Republicans, who are
poised to make him their latest punching bag. But his liberalism ends
when it comes to Palestine.
Since I joined the UCLA faculty in 2011, I’ve seen colleagues
targeted for teaching critical perspectives on Israel, and Muslim and
Arab students profiled by campus police and subject to racist epithets
and graffiti. In 2012 a UC “President’s Advisory Council” issued a
report on the campus climate asserting that Students for Justice in
Palestine (SJP) and “anti-Zionism and Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
(BDS) movements and other manifestations of anti-Israel sentiment”
created a hostile environment for Jewish students. It warned faculty
that criticizing Israel or Israeli policies in the classroom was
tantamount to using “the academic platforms to denounce the Jewish state
and Jewish nationalist aspirations.” The report recommended, among
other things, suspending support for Palestine Awareness Week from any
university sponsorship and adopting a hate speech policy that would not
only mute criticisms of Israel but prohibit outside speakers deemed
advocates of hate. The report was so extreme and biased that over two
thousand faculty signed a petition asking the UC Regents to reject its
findings. Ultimately, UC President Mark Yudof rejected the report, since
its recommendations violated the First Amendment. But while we
succeeded in pressing the UC Regents, students and faculty at UCLA could
not persuade Chancellor Block to openly denounce it.
In 2014 students seeking to divest student council funds from
companies doing business in the Palestinian occupied territories learned
that some members of student government had accepted paid-for trips to
Israel sponsored by the ADL, AIPAC, Hasbara Fellowships, and other
organizations that not only lobbied on behalf of Israel but promoted
“discriminatory and Islamophobic positions.” SJP argued before the
student judicial council that the members who accepted these trips had a
conflict of interest in any government resolutions regarding
divestment, since the organizations furnishing them were firmly opposed
to campus divestment movements. They also asked candidates running for
student government to take an ethics pledge committing to decline free
trips to Israel paid for by those organizations—provoking a vicious
backlash from the AMCHA Initiative, who accused the students raising
these issues of “intimidation,” “harassment,” and making Jewish students
feel unsafe.
In reality, pro-Zionist retaliation made pro-divestment students actually
unsafe. Zionist organizations not affiliated with the university came
on campus, filmed students without their consent, engaged in online
harassment, and arranged visits by Israeli soldiers in full military
uniform. Rather than condemn these intimidation tactics, Block chastised
the students for proposing divestment in the first place. He stated
flatly that the UC Regents “does not support divestment in companies
that engage in business with Israel” and that “divestment decisions
should not hold any one organization or country to a different standard
than any other.” He refused to meet with SJP, but he did meet with
representatives of the AMCHA Initiative to hear their demands to
investigate SJP. The divestment campaign also triggered a resolution
from the Los Angeles City Council condemning SJP’s actions as “bullying”
and “harassment” and requesting that UC administrators “refer cases of
‘intimidation or harassment’ to ‘the proper law enforcement agencies.’”
And while Block’s administration was busy painting
campus divestment advocates as closed-minded and intolerant, it was the
other side who was moving to shut down opposing speech. That same
year, UCLA Hillel worked with a public relations firm to “‘isolate’ SJP
on campus and to paint the group as ‘unrepresentative,’” in the words of
a leaked email.
Despite these tactics, in November 2014 a coalition of more than
thirty student groups passed a resolution calling on student government
“to divest from companies engaged in violence against Palestinians.” In
response, the David Horowitz Freedom Center (DHFC)—which has been
designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center—plastered
posters all over campus and in the surrounding neighborhood accusing SJP
and individual faculty members of terrorism and anti-Semitism. The
names of individual students and faculty were printed on posters under
the slogan “Combat Jew Hatred on College Campuses.” At the time, only
the Vice Chancellor of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Jerry Kang,
issued a strong campuswide statement condemning the posters as racist
fear-mongering. Chancellor Block was silent.
Student council remained a contested terrain over Israel and
divestment. In 2015 three students unaffiliated with SJP questioned
Rachel Beyda, a nominee for USAC’s Judicial Board, about her ability to
remain objective on the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict” because of her
Jewish identity. Foxx resurrects this incident as evidence of USAC’s
“deeply concerning history of retribution against students who speak
against anti-Jewish bigotry on campus.” What she omits from the story is
that the students who opened the line of questioning were swiftly
censured and offered
apologies, and that Beyda was unanimously appointed to the committee.
SJP also condemned “the questioning of Beyda or anyone else based on
their identity,” adding that its members “believe in the inherent
equality and right to freedom for all people, a stance that inspires us
to both support the Palestinian call for BDS as well as to oppose
incidents like that which befell Beyda.”
We can point to many more examples, such as Block’s November 2018 Los Angeles Times
op-ed explaining why he “allowed” SJP to hold its National Conference
at UCLA. After claiming that “some” feared the conference “will be
infused with anti-Semitic rhetoric” expressed by people who embrace “a
double standard that demonizes the world’s only Jewish state while other
countries receive less condemnation for dreadful behavior,” Block invoked the principle of free speech to justify his decision to let it proceed. But the damage had been done.
Block was silent when a hate group plastered
posters all over campus accusing SJP and individual faculty members of
anti-Semitism.
This decade-long trail of evidence indicates that Block has
maintained a consistent anti-Palestinian bias, giving Zionist and
pro-Israeli groups such as AMCHA Initiative outsized influence over
university policy and carte blanche to come onto campus and intimidate
students and faculty without consequence. The mere fact that DHFC could
access our campus under the cynical guise of protecting Jewish students
presaged the crisis we now face.
The Winds of October
Our students were deeply affected by the events of October 7. The
nearly 350 students enrolled in my lecture course on the history of
neoliberalism were genuinely shell-shocked, saddened by the immediate
loss of life. When a couple of Jewish students told me they felt unsafe
on campus, I encouraged them to stay home and listen to the recorded
lectures. We mourned the loss of life—not just the 695 Israeli
civilians, but the 26 Arab-Israeli citizens (mostly Bedouin), the 71
Thai and Nepalese migrant workers, and even the 373 police and soldiers
who were official combatants.
But before the official death toll and hostage count were complete,
Israel had begun its breathtaking war of extermination. As the death
toll in Gaza rose exponentially, students and colleagues told of losing
dozens of family members, including cousins they had never gotten the
chance to meet. They felt betrayed when Block and UC President Michael
Drake spoke on behalf of the university, affirming that “we” stand with
Israel but saying nothing about the slaughter of Palestinians, the
leveling of universities, schools, hospitals, and homes, and the
displacement of more than 75 percent of Gaza’s population. When students
and faculty began to criticize the war and deploy the word “genocide,”
many were threatened, doxxed, and subjected to investigation by
colleagues who weaponized Title VI complaints and the university
grievance process to attack anyone critical of Israel or Zionism.
Statements decrying the loss of Palestinian life, Israeli war crimes,
and U.S. complicity were deemed anti-Semitic and “pro-Hamas.”
Unfazed by these patently false accusations, SJP and the UC Divest
Coalition organized a mass march and rally on campus on October 25,
calling for an immediate ceasefire and divestment. Unsurprisingly, Block
found the speakers’ rhetoric “hateful” and “antisemitic,”
cherry-picking a few ill-informed and unsanctioned actions
unrepresentative of the spirit or intent of the march. More significant
is the fact that the administration ignored the Undergraduate Students
Association Council’s Cultural Affairs Commission (CAC) warning that
Zionists who do not attend this school are being allowed entry into
UCLA to freely harass students. It speaks volumes of the level of
unsafety that our students are facing. . . . Various attacks like these
have been happening on campus for weeks and UCLA has not done a
sufficient job to intervene or even condemn harm against students who
support Palestine.
They made a direct appeal to UC leaders to
protect students from the violence that is waged by both students and
non-students on your own campuses. We call on campus resources to be
more accessible to students facing imminent and indirect danger from
islamophobic, zionist, and anti-Palestinian violence. It is unacceptable
that agitators, especially non-students, are able to access student-led
spaces like Kerckhoff [Hall] to harass and threaten students.
The attacks on faculty and students ramped up when a group
calling itself “UCLA Faculty Against Terror,” led by Professor Judea
Pearl, branded the student antiwar movement as anti-Semitic and
“incitement.” Pearl himself labeled these students “pro-Hamas,”
endangering antiwar students, faculty, and staff and putting a chilling
effect on speech as well as on the urgent effort to secure a ceasefire.
In response, well over 250 of our colleagues signed a letter
expressing our concerns over the attack on academic freedom, the safety
of our students, and the administration’s indifference to Palestinian
suffering. A meeting with Chancellor Block and Executive Vice Chancellor
and Provost Darnell Hunt in November ultimately led to the creation of
our group, the Task Force on Anti-Palestinian, Anti-Muslim, and
Anti-Arab Racism, along with a Task Force on Antisemitism and
Anti-Israeli Hostility. Our taskforce’s goals were to inform campus
leadership of the hostile climate faced by Arab and Muslim students as
well as student groups protesting Israel’s assault on Gaza; to urge
Block to affirm the value of Palestinian life publicly and
unequivocally, to make a clear statement rejecting the conflation of
anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism; and to back up any statement with
action. To date, none of our objectives have been met.
A Beautiful Experiment Under Siege
Five months later, the UCLA Palestine Solidarity Encampment was up.
Erected on Royce Quad on Thursday morning, April 25, it was one of the
greatest examples of principled protest, nonviolent civil disobedience,
collective education, and political resistance I have ever seen. The
encampment was a multiracial, multinational, and gender-diverse
assembly, composed of undergraduate and graduate students from across
campus. Residents were required to sign a community agreement outlining
shared principles and behavior, and those who were willing to risk
arrest or assume security duties underwent training in de-escalation
tactics. All faiths were welcome, and so were families with children.
The encampment fed everyone, thanks to donations, volunteers, and the
labor of Strike Kitchen—an autonomous student-run outfit formed during
last year’s historic UC-wide graduate student workers’ strike.
Protesters took special care to ensure everyone’s safety. One member
of the community had a banana allergy, so signs were posted prohibiting
bananas in the encampment. They made art, created a People’s Library,
watched and discussed films, organized reading groups and teach-ins on a
range of topics: Kashmir, Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth,
local tenants’ rights struggles, and of course, Palestine. They never
lost sight of why they were: to stop the genocide in Gaza, divest, and
fight for a free Palestine. The encampment offered a more enriching and
interdisciplinary learning space than what many students found in their
classrooms. As one fourth-year student explained to me, “My time in the
encampment was actually a very positive experience. Yes, the shit was
scary. I’m not going to lie. . . . I loved the community, and I felt
safer in the encampment than I felt on any other part of the campus.”
Another young woman, a first-year student of mine, was awestruck by
people’s eagerness to share with and care for one another, and the fact
that she could eat without having to pull out her meal card or wallet.
“Is this communism?” she asked.
As with any experiment, the encampment was hardly perfect. Managing
security, food, hygiene, health, space, negotiations, personalities, and
political disagreements while establishing a certain level of
discipline among hundreds of young people is hard enough. I don’t doubt
that there have been tensions, divisions, and missteps within the ranks,
but encampment leaders created a system of accountability to address
and redirect these disruptions critically and empathetically.
One agitator shouted at students, “We’re not
American Jews! We’re Israelis! You stand up against us, we’ll fucking
slit your throat.”
They soon had to operate under a state of siege. Counterprotesters
who identified as Zionists began trickling into the camp around noon on
the first day. They heckled people with racial and homophobic slurs and
comments: “You’re cool with rape?”, “You’re a jihadist,” “You’re a
terrorist,” “Hamas would kill you fags.” Some entered the encampment
without authorization and physically attacked the students. On April 25 a
man walked through the encampment carrying a sign that read “Israel is
not apartheid. Come talk,” and proceeded to steal a student’s keffiyeh,
pour water over chalk art, and assault
a Black woman who tried to take his sign. Even as the harassment
intensified, lead security organizers urged students to stand down. “By
engaging with them we’re only opening the risk for the community to get
hurt,” one organizer texted me. “I understand they make really heinous
comments, but we need to keep in mind that these people should not be
the focus, we should be the focus, our community should be the focus,
and sustaining this encampment until we reach FULL DIVESTMENT is our
focus.”
The agitators showed up around 4:00 a.m. the next morning, shouting
“Death to Hamas,” “Wake up commies, it’s time to work,” and “Fuck Allah”
and spraying students with bear spray and other chemical agents. As
their numbers grew over the next couple of days, the mob became more
aggressive. They sexually harassed women in the encampment, blasted loud
music, screamed throughout Muslim prayer times, and brought bunches of
bananas to throw into the encampment—which terrified and drove out the
student with the allergy. Instead of barring the agitators from campus
and providing more security, the UCLA administration granted
counterprotesters a permit to assemble
a Jumbotron adjacent to the encampment for a pro-Israel rally on
Sunday, April 28. The massive concert-grade flat-screen TV equipped with
powerful speakers was paid for by a GoFundMe account that had raised
over $70,000, and was protected by private security guards employed by
the Apex Security Group. Supporters of the encampment regarded the
university’s decision to permit outside groups to rally against a
peaceful student-run assembly, which the administration refused to
recognize or authorize, as a hostile act of incitement.
The rally, sponsored by the Israeli American Council, attracted
between eight hundred and one thousand people. Speakers included State
Assembly member Rick Chavez Zbur, Hillel at UCLA executive director Dan
Gold, student council candidate Eli Tsives (who had been photographed
shaking hands with a UCLA Police Department (UCPD) officer), regional
Consul General of Israel Israel Bachar, and ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt.
In between speeches denouncing the encampment as anti-Semitic and
defending Israel’s aggression, the Jumbotron blasted the U.S. national
anthem and clips about the October 7 attacks, and counterprotesters
carrying Israeli flags verbally and physically attacked our students. They were pushed, punched, spat upon, called “dogs,” “whores” (sharmuta
in Hebrew), “bitch-ass n—,” and told to “listen to your master” and
that “Hamas would rape and murder you for what you’re wearing,
sweetheart.” One agitator shouted, “We’re not American Jews! We’re
Israelis! You stand up against us, we’ll fucking slit your throat.” The
attacks continued well into the night. At around 1:30 a.m. someone emptied a backpack full of mice injected with an unknown substance into the encampment.
The permit for the Jumbotron expired Sunday afternoon, but the
university allowed it to remain, where it continued to be weaponized
against the encampment. All students passing by the quad, whether or not
they had anything to do with the encampment, endured near-continuous
video loops of the October 7 attacks, audio clips with graphic
descriptions of rape and sexual violence, sounds of gunshots and
screaming babies, clips of President Biden pledging unconditional
support for Israel, and loud music, including the children’s song
“Mamtera Im Matara,” which Israeli soldiers and West Bank settlers have
been documented playing on hours-long loops for captive Palestinians.
The taunts and harassment continued throughout the day. One inebriated
agitator harassed several Black women and femmes working security,
calling them “slaves” and threatening rape. Later that night, several
agitators broke through the encampment barriers and attacked students
and pepper sprayed one of the security guards hired by UCLA.
Students complained about the attacks to UCPD, administrators, and
trusted faculty. Several filed reports to our office of Equity,
Diversity, and Inclusion. Campus security’s failure to protect our
students prompted a faculty walkout on Monday, April 29. The next day
Block issued a statement
calling the encampment “unauthorized” and condemning tactics he found
“shocking and shameful.” He did not mention the violence committed by
the Zionists, the slurs and epithets, the Jumbotron, or the mice attack.
Instead, he only identifies reports that “students on their way to
class have been physically blocked from accessing parts of the campus. .
. . These incidents have put many on our campus, especially our Jewish
students, in a state of anxiety and fear.”
The problem is, it wasn’t true. All buildings and classrooms remained
accessible. Campus security closed off particular entrances to
buildings facing the quad, but that decision was authorized by the
administration. Student-appointed security leads asked passers-by to go
around the encampment in order to limit congestion and the risk of Covid
infection (masks were required). Nevertheless, a video taken by a
Jewish student demanding to pass through the encampment rather than walk
around went viral. The student’s mother circulated
the video as evidence that Jews were being denied access to classrooms.
This was Block’s smoking gun. Soon it would become Virginia Foxx’s as
well, evidence that Jewish students were subject to “pervasive civil
rights violations and harassment.”
If Block’s statement was intended to quell potential violence, it had
the opposite effect. The video and the message paved the way for the
April 30 assault. That night Zionist agitators, alongside neo-Nazis,
came armed with bear mace and other chemical irritants, hammers, knives,
stink bombs, high-grade fireworks, metal and wooden rods, and,
according to some reports, a gun. The attack began with loud recordings
of screaming babies, followed by a fusillade of fireworks shot directly
into the encampment. Men in full-faced white masks broke down the
barriers and began attacking students with metal rods, chunks of wood,
stink bombs, bear mace and tear gas. One student recalled seeing “planks
of wood come sailing into the camp and strike some girl in the back of
the head and she just fell to the ground.” Another student was struck in
the back of the head by fireworks and had to be hospitalized. The
medics were simply overwhelmed, forcing students with little experience
to attend to wounds. “People were crying and being like, ‘Can you call
my mom, I need to call my mom, please help me’. . . . We were trying to
do the best that we could but we ran out of saline needed to flush the
chemicals out of people’s eyes,” one told me.
As of this writing, not a single assailant has been arrested or questioned.
As objects rained down on them, the leads shouted “Don’t throw back!
Don’t engage!” and implored campus security to intervene. They refused,
choosing instead to retreat inside of Royce Hall. UCLA alumnus Ismael
Sindha, who was later treated for chemical burns, heard attackers shout,
“I’ll kill you,” “I’ll rape your sister,” and “What Israel does to
Gaza, we’ll do to you.” Students under siege and their family and
friends inundated UCPD with calls for help, only to be told that the
situation was “under control” and for the operators to hang up on them.
The California Highway Patrol and LAPD showed up just before midnight
but sat idle for three hours watching the violence unfold. People inside
the encampment were left on their own to care for the wounded and
protect the barricades.
One student was rushed to the hospital by his classmates after being
struck twice in the head. His injuries were serious enough to require
stitches and staples. “I thought I was going to die. I thought I’d never
see my family again,” the student recalled.
“The only thing that kept me moving forward was my . . . classmates who
were brave enough to protect the encampment from these terrorists.”
What also kept him going was remembering why they were there in the
first place: “I had the luxury of getting sedated as they stapled my
head back together. Currently, in Gaza, there are zero fully functioning
hospitals.”
It was nearly 3:00 a.m. when CHP officers began moving in to quell
the violence. They permitted the mob to leave without questioning or
arresting a single assailant. The next day, Block issued a statement
bemoaning the violent attack on the encampment by “a group of
instigators.” While acknowledging that the students and faculty
protecting the encampment were the victims of violence, he refused to
link the pro-Israel rally that the university authorized to the attack
or to recognize that the attacks had been ongoing since April 25.
“Physical violence ensued,” he declared,
“and our campus requested support from external law enforcement
agencies to help end this appalling assault, quell the fighting and
protect our community.” The administration issued all sorts of excuses
for the failure of campus security and the UCPD to act. But we were
especially outraged by the inaction of our Chancellor, who, along with
the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Darnell Hunt, watched the
violence unfold in real time via a security camera. Members of our Task
Force texted back and forth with Hunt into the early morning hours. He
was responsive and seemed genuinely concerned, but explained that once
the police are called in there is nothing they can do. The claim
strained credulity; if it is indeed true, then it exposes a dangerous
imbalance in university-police relations.
In yet another statement, issued on May 1, Block condemned the
attacks, acknowledged the trauma our students experienced, and expressed
“sympathy” for those injured. He called for an investigation, urging
“those who have experienced violence to report what they encountered to
UCPD, and those who have faced discrimination to contact the Civil
Rights Office.” Students and faculty not only found Block’s concern to
be disingenuous but suspected that by declaring the encampment
“unauthorized” he actually emboldened the mob. Our suspicions were
confirmed when, shortly after issuing his statement, he announced plans
to clear the encampment by 6:00 p.m. that day. The timing is important:
UC Divest and SJP were scheduled to begin negotiations with Hunt at 4:00
p.m. The meeting was doomed to fail, in part because the administration
did not try to negotiate in good faith and gave students no time to
recover from the horrific violence they had suffered just hours before.
Angry and disenchanted, organizers refused to give up.
With the encampment slated for destruction, the mob grew, as did the
number of police officers. The encampment population also grew, as
faculty showed up in significant numbers in an effort to protect
students. One colleague was shocked to see assailants viciously
attacking students in front of the police. “Not one of the attackers was
detained or arrested. Some of the attackers were older—definitely not
students. Some of them looked like they had militia training.” When
police finally intervened, LAPD snipers on the roof of Royce Hall
trained their guns on the people defending the encampment, and
California Highway Patrol officers in riot gear moved within close range
and allowed the mob, once again, to pass by unmolested. Once in
formation, they fired stun grenades and rubber bullets at students and
faculty, hitting them in the face, head, legs, and chest. The police
command blocked EMS from entering the encampment to aid the injured. The
medics were already overwhelmed, leaving the remaining students and
faculty to administer first aid.
Police arrested over two hundred people, the vast majority of them
students. As of this writing, not a single assailant has been arrested
or questioned.
Aftermath
If Chancellor Block believed clearing the camp would restore order
and balance, allowing him to enjoy a hero’s retirement, he was mistaken.
UC Divest, SJP, and Faculty for Justice in Palestine continue to push
for divestment and focus on ending the genocide in Gaza.
Our students did not pitch tents and risk arrest to save the university; they’re trying to save lives.
On May 6 students attempted what has long been an effective strategy
of university-based civil disobedience by occupying Moore Hall, a large
building at the center of campus that houses the School of Education and
Information Studies—but with an expanded police presence on campus, the
administration has ramped up repression. The LA County Sheriff and the
LAPD arrested some forty-three students as well as legal observers,
confiscated their cell phones, and plan to charge them with conspiracy
to commit burglary. Block also announced plans to expand and reorganize
UCPD under a newly created Office of Campus Safety. The proposal is
wildly unpopular, as is the expanded police presence on UCLA’s campus
right now. As we state in our report:
With such a heavy police presence, students and faculty reported
feeling unsafe and on high alert. As visibly armed police patrol near
classrooms and student centers, immigrant, undocumented, and formerly
incarcerated students have reported feeling afraid to be on campus.
Staff have also expressed reluctance to report to work. UCLA has become a
militarized space, where peaceful protest and the right to free speech
have become pervasively criminalized. They have alienated and isolated
students from their right to learn and from each other.
Chancellor Block represents the status quo in U.S. higher education,
which not only has a record of stifling criticism of Israel and
initiatives in support of Palestinian freedom but is also heavily
invested in firms with ties to Israel and weapons manufacturers fueling
the ongoing war in Gaza. The rise of the Palestine solidarity
encampments, a UC-wide graduate workers strike, and the proliferation of
acts of civil disobedience led by organizations such as Jewish Voice
for Peace and If Not Now are proof that the status quo is no longer
tenable. But rather than reinvent higher education—modeled for us by the
encampments as a free space of deep learning, dissent, and
experimentation, divested of all ties to militarism and state violence
and genocide—our universities are becoming police states. Policing is
not just armed uniformed officers. Policing entails monitoring our
communications and classrooms, doxxing, intimidation, curtailing
academic freedom, maintaining the Palestine exception, and refusing to
grant amnesty for those arrested for trying to stop a genocide.
Chancellor Block’s right-wing inquisitors encourage the repressive turn;
they want to lock up our students, crush dissent, and replace the
university with fortresses of “patriotic” Christian education.
But our students did not pitch tents and risk arrest
to save the university; they’re trying to save lives. Their eyes are
trained of the people of Palestine, on the rubble where universities and
schools and libraries and homes once stood, on the young people who
continue to believe liberation is possible. Our students refuse to be
complicit with their own universities in the unimaginable death and
destruction occurring in Gaza right now. They have challenged all of us
in the academy to ask the question Noam Chomsky posed in 1967 in the
face of America’s war on Vietnam: “As for those of us who stood by in
silence and apathy as this catastrophe slowly took shape over the past
dozen years—on what page of history do we find our proper place?”
Correction: An earlier version of this article stated that a
member of the Proud Boys was present at the UCLA encampment. While Proud
Boys founder Gavin McInnes was spotted trying to enter the encampment at Columbia, it has not been confirmed that a Proud Boys member was present at UCLA. According to the Guardian, at least one person present at UCLA has associated with Proud Boys in southern California.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Robin D. G. Kelley is Gary B. Nash Professor of American History at UCLA and a contributing editor at Boston Review. His many books include Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination.