Last spring, campuses across the country became flashpoints of anti-war resistance, as thousands of students mobilized in a powerful demonstration of moral conscience and collective action. Their demands were clear: an end to U.S. complicity in the genocide in Gaza and the dismantling of the war machine that sustains it. This wave of activism commanded both national and international attention.
Yet, in recent months, despite the ongoing slaughter and the White Houseās egregious proposals to further orchestrate the ethnic cleansing of Gaza, mainstream coverage of the student movement in solidarity with the Palestinian peopleāand in opposition to what Martin Luther King Jr. condemned as āthe madness of militarismāāhas steadily faded from the headlines.
Despite the relative media silence, and amid an intensifying campaign of institutional repression, the campus-based fight against the intolerable status quo has not ceased. Students remain at the forefront of the struggle for a more just, less militarized, and truly democratic world.
What coverage remains has largely functioned to reinforce the narrative that universitiesāinitially caught off guard by the spontaneous protests of the springāhave successfully reasserted control over their campuses from what they have long framed as unruly agitators.
In November, The New York Times framed administratorsā crackdown on campus protests as a success, reporting that their efforts āseem to be working.ā These draconian measures have had a chilling effect on campus expressionāundermining free speech, stifling dissent, and betraying the universityās role as a laboratory for democracy and social change.
Nonviolent civil disobedienceāa cornerstone of student activism from the Civil Rights Movement to the anti-Vietnam War and anti-Apartheid strugglesāis now being met with the heavy hand of repression, as both the legal system and university conduct boards enforce arbitrary, vague, and inconsistently applied punitive measures.
These crackdowns have disproportionately targeted advocates for Palestinian liberation and their allies. This assault on Palestine-related dissent has already prompted multiple complaints over civil rights violations.
In just the past two months, several alarming examples of escalating repression have underscored the intensifying crackdown on pro-Palestinian activism:
- New York UniversityĀ imposed yearlong suspensionsĀ on 11 students for participating in a nonviolent sit-in, in what organizers have decried as an extension of a broader ācampaign of collective punishment.ā
- The University of RochesterĀ expelled four studentsāwho were already facing felony chargesāfor distributing posters directly naming and accusing university leadership and faculty members of complicity in the military-industrial-academic complex and supporting the U.S.-backed genocide in Gaza.
- The University of MinnesotaĀ threatened to hand downĀ two-and-a-half-year suspensionsĀ and $5,500 fines to seven members of their Students for a Democratic Society chapter for their participation in a campus building occupation in October.
- Harvard UniversityĀ adopted the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which conflates nearly all criticism of Zionism and of Israeli policy with antisemitism while simultaneously and hypocritically claiming āinstitutional neutrality.ā Rights groups have condemned this move as āa prescription to chill campus speech.ā
- The University of MichiganĀ suspended Students for Freedom and EqualityĀ (SAFE), the largest pro-Palestine coalition on campus, until at least 2026.
Faculty and staff have not been exempted from this wave of repression. In recent weeks:
- New York UniversityĀ also barred two professors from campus for their participation in the nonviolent sit-in at their universityās library, a move experts describe as ātantamount to suspension.ā
- Columbia UniversityĀ pressured law professor Katherine Franke toĀ resign over her support for pro-Palestine activism, joining others who haveĀ lost academic appointmentsĀ or faced internal investigations due to their principled positions on Palestine.
- AtĀ Harvard University, Jay Ulfelder, Director of the Nonviolent Action Lab at Harvard Kennedy School,Ā left his position in protest, following David Vine in his departure from American University in September afterĀ publishing an op-edĀ condemning his institutionās complicity in genocide.
This all combines with the Trump administration vowing to further its unconstitutional crackdown on so-called āpro-Hamas students,ā threatening international students with deportation through the cynical pretext of combating antisemitism.
This marks the first steps in the implementation of the Heritage Foundationās āProject Esther,ā a component of the broader fascistic Project 2025 agenda. These efforts have been further amplified by militant Zionist organizations like the World Betar Movement, which has reportedly deployed AI to compile lists of students involved in campus protest to be targeted for deportation.
Despite the intensifying climate of repression and intimidation, students, faculty, staff, and community members of conscience remain steadfast in their struggle for justice and a better world and continue to push back:
- Within theĀ University of CaliforniaĀ system,Ā Peopleās Tribunals are being organizedĀ to expose institutional complicity, build grassroots power, document evidence, and hold those responsible accountable.
- Scholars within theĀ American Historical AssociationĀ overwhelmingly voted toĀ condemn the ongoing destructionĀ of schools, libraries, and universities and the murder of academics in Gaza asĀ scholasticide.
- AtĀ Columbia University, students haveĀ initiated legal actionĀ against their administration, joining other lawsuits across the country.
- InĀ California, taxpayers areĀ suing their representativesĀ over the unlawful appropriation of public funds to support genocide.
- Students atĀ Bowdoin CollegeĀ launched the first encampmentĀ since last spring in protest of their universityās intransigence despite a democratic referendum that passed calling for the university to take a public stand against the genocide in Gaza.
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