Protests and arrests: what’s going on on US campuses?


Anger over the humanitarian disaster caused by the Gaza war has caused the protests at several US universities to escalate, with a few anti-Semitic incidents also being reported. At New York’s renowned Columbia University, police arrested more than a hundred people. Teaching has been restricted to online lectures. Europe’s press looks behind the scenes and draws historical comparisons.


In.gr (GR) /

Listen to all points of view

News website In defends the right to freedom of expression:

“There is no doubt that the conflict in the Middle East is complex, and that all sides bear responsibility. But that doesn’t mean we can’t discuss it. ... And discussion involves listening to different views, holding events, organising demonstrations. So just as we would rightly be up in arms if someone proposed banning a pro-Israeli event, or if those who advocate Israel’s right to self-defence were not allowed to speak, we must oppose any attempt to silence pro-Palestinian points of view.”

Lefteris Charalampopoulos
L’Opinion (FR) /

Intolerance posing as progressiveness

L’Opinion draws comparisons with the 1960s and 1930s:

“The current scenes are the exact opposite of those of the 1960s, when black pupils could only get into their classrooms under police protection amid racist jeers. Sixty years later, intolerance has changed sides and is now, one might say, ‘progressive’. Do these historically ignorant jeerers even know that Jewish students were banned from studying in Europe in the 1930s? We can already hear the hateful responses to our outrage: ‘And the children in Gaza, doesn’t that bother you?’ ... But why should the suffering of some only be recognised if the suffering of others is ignored?”

Jean-Dominique Merchet
Corriere della Sera (IT) /

Radicalisation and prosperity

Corriere della Sera also dares to make a historical comparison:

“In 1968 there was the Vietnam War, now there is Gaza. ... The protests are radicalising. .... The outrage over the ongoing humanitarian tragedy in the Gaza Strip often goes hand in hand with open support for Hamas violence. ... There is another parallel: sociological studies of this great youth uprising have shown that the 1968 generation was the first to grow up in prosperity. The explosion of protests was the result of the economic boom, which had also created new needs, purchasing power, consumer behaviour and unprecedented freedom for young people. Today, Generation Z, as those born between 1997 and 2012 describe themselves, is also benefiting from unprecedented prosperity.”

Federico Rampini
Zeit Online (DE) /

Biden in a bind

The protests could prove dangerous for Joe Biden, Zeit Online observes:

“The protests at the universities are the preliminary climax of a clear dissatisfaction with the president’s Middle East policy that has been building up for months. Young, left-wing voters are already frustrated that 81-year-old Biden wants to be president again. ... For their part, Jewish citizens — traditionally a Democratic voting bloc — are also watching closely as Biden tries to navigate the crisis on both foreign and domestic policy. Biden cannot afford to lose either group of voters if he wants to win against Donald Trump on 5 November.”

Rieke Havertz
Politiken (DK) /

If not here, then where?

Politiken praises the students for getting involved:

“Universities are centres of knowledge and learning where the world’s future thinkers and leaders are often born. If a conflict as tragic and controversial as the Gaza war should not be discussed at universities, what should? ... At the same time it is of course completely unacceptable that Jewish students at Yale and elsewhere felt threatened and intimidated by the protests. There must be room for everyone and, ideally, a debate that makes everyone wiser and changes the world.”

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