Berliner Boersenzeitung - US student protesters dig in as Israel-Hamas war grinds on

EUR -
AED 4.13829
AFN 79.087751
ALL 97.963551
AMD 433.29456
ANG 2.016415
AOA 1033.175425
ARS 1287.232792
AUD 1.747458
AWG 2.03086
AZN 1.912611
BAM 1.954015
BBD 2.275122
BDT 136.904934
BGN 1.954183
BHD 0.424732
BIF 3353.140987
BMD 1.126691
BND 1.457913
BOB 7.803045
BRL 6.381126
BSD 1.126871
BTN 96.218102
BWP 15.247732
BYN 3.687631
BYR 22083.13851
BZD 2.263432
CAD 1.571024
CDF 3234.729232
CHF 0.939491
CLF 0.027662
CLP 1061.511342
CNY 8.122877
CNH 8.126015
COP 4705.623877
CRC 570.179127
CUC 1.126691
CUP 29.857305
CVE 110.164362
CZK 24.90663
DJF 200.662923
DKK 7.46098
DOP 66.399343
DZD 149.701112
EGP 56.399436
ERN 16.900361
ETB 151.750605
FJD 2.551447
FKP 0.848708
GBP 0.842117
GEL 3.08678
GGP 0.848708
GHS 13.860768
GIP 0.848708
GMD 81.681716
GNF 9758.085749
GTQ 8.652096
GYD 235.751958
HKD 8.810096
HNL 29.320215
HRK 7.53339
HTG 147.445305
HUF 402.366074
IDR 18540.653819
ILS 4.001842
IMP 0.848708
INR 96.269185
IQD 1476.151499
IRR 47447.735595
ISK 145.918183
JEP 0.848708
JMD 179.565962
JOD 0.7988
JPY 163.321147
KES 145.59131
KGS 98.529441
KHR 4516.97386
KMF 497.43542
KPW 1014.021666
KRW 1567.666391
KWD 0.346123
KYD 0.939021
KZT 575.514254
LAK 24368.495773
LBP 100965.405927
LKR 337.931291
LRD 225.371119
LSL 20.348012
LTL 3.326825
LVL 0.681523
LYD 6.21732
MAD 10.407093
MDL 19.639623
MGA 5070.525463
MKD 61.533675
MMK 2365.703411
MNT 4026.769715
MOP 9.07739
MRU 44.65121
MUR 52.075343
MVR 17.418096
MWK 1953.975694
MXN 21.9152
MYR 4.834648
MZN 71.995888
NAD 20.348012
NGN 1806.761805
NIO 41.462123
NOK 11.600244
NPR 153.949363
NZD 1.905527
OMR 0.433743
PAB 1.126806
PEN 4.154305
PGK 4.683721
PHP 62.750476
PKR 318.383149
PLN 4.269287
PYG 9000.777568
QAR 4.107148
RON 5.03753
RSD 117.132996
RUB 90.305018
RWF 1613.675995
SAR 4.225821
SBD 9.397084
SCR 16.017983
SDG 676.575663
SEK 10.904446
SGD 1.458079
SHP 0.885402
SLE 25.579909
SLL 23626.141719
SOS 644.031668
SRD 41.216035
STD 23320.223544
SVC 9.859993
SYP 14649.077337
SZL 20.342417
THB 37.244456
TJS 11.634833
TMT 3.949051
TND 3.391502
TOP 2.638824
TRY 43.761231
TTD 7.649012
TWD 33.969841
TZS 3027.984587
UAH 46.89486
UGX 4121.23515
USD 1.126691
UYU 47.007058
UZS 14555.703007
VES 106.141281
VND 29238.188056
VUV 136.467096
WST 3.130538
XAF 655.378654
XAG 0.03458
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.044938
XDR 0.821734
XOF 655.358314
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.029402
ZAR 20.329765
ZMK 10141.562288
ZMW 30.399555
ZWL 362.793959
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.05

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.4050

    91.505

    -0.44%

  • SCS

    -0.1400

    10.36

    -1.35%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    12.79

    -0.86%

  • BCE

    0.0250

    21.585

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.55

    +0.38%

  • BTI

    0.6650

    43.305

    +1.54%

  • GSK

    0.0550

    37.695

    +0.15%

  • RIO

    -0.5100

    62.13

    -0.82%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.02

    -0.18%

  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    64.5

    +2.33%

  • AZN

    0.5700

    69.38

    +0.82%

  • BP

    -0.4900

    29.27

    -1.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    10.9

    +1.83%

  • VOD

    0.1600

    9.61

    +1.66%

  • RELX

    0.2590

    54.829

    +0.47%

US student protesters dig in as Israel-Hamas war grinds on
US student protesters dig in as Israel-Hamas war grinds on / Photo: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU - AFP

US student protesters dig in as Israel-Hamas war grinds on

Yazen has slept on Columbia University's south lawn almost every night for more than a week now, one of several dozen students living at the prestigious school's "Gaza Solidarity Encampment."

Text size:

The 23-year-old Palestinian-American has been splitting his days between his medical studies at Columbia's historic Butler Library, adjacent to the smooth green lawn, and the upkeep of the colorful tents on the school's main campus, in the heart of New York City.

Since last Monday, dozens of students and alumni have come together to express solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza, where Israel is waging war against militant group Hamas.

They are demanding Columbia divest from companies with ties to Israel -- and the demonstrations are spreading to other campuses around the United States.

A burgeoning number of protesters now keep vigil daily at Colombia, though numbers ebb and flow from the dozens to the hundreds as students join just for the day, leave to study -- or, in Yazen's case, go home to feed his cat.

"Millions of Palestinians in Gaza are sleeping out in the cold every single night without access to food and shelter," said Yazen, who did not give his surname.

"We have tents, they don't have tents," he said.

He's determined to stay, even after the university last week called in the police, leading to the arrest and suspension of more than 100 students.

"As a Palestinian, is it my responsibility to be here and show my solidarity with the people in Gaza? Absolutely," Yazen said.

- School 'made it worse' -

Universities have become the focus of intense cultural debate in the United States since Hamas's October 7 attack and Israel's overwhelming military response, as a humanitarian crisis grips the Palestinian territory of Gaza.

The protest at Colombia has hosted speakers and music performances, Islamic prayers and seder meals for the Jewish holiday of Passover, which began Monday.

But the Middle East conflict is inflammatory in the United States, and as the death toll in Gaza rises -- and university authorities up the pressure on the demonstrators to dismantle the encampment -- the mood on campus has become uneasy.

This week, in-person classes at Columbia were cancelled.

University authorities are caught between condemning anti-Semitism while allowing the protesters to exercise free speech.

But it is a thin line. Tensions reached their peak last week when university authorities called in the police, but it is not just the demonstrators who are feeling the heat.

Melissa Saidak, a Jewish graduate student at Columbia's School of Social Work, said the protest has also drawn throngs of more aggressive and often violent outsiders to Colombia's gates.

"A person was yelling at me, screaming at me, calling me a Zionist and a murderer. They were banging a pot or something," said Saidak, who wears a dog tag in solidarity with Israeli hostages in Gaza and Star of David around her neck.

"It was causing me a lot of physical pain, this was just me trying to get home."

She thinks Columbia is not doing enough to protect Jewish students -- particularly with being transparent and explicit about the harm done to them.

"School has continued to make it a lot worse," she said.

- 'What's necessary' -

University president Minouche Shafik had set a deadline of midnight Tuesday to resolve the unrest.

Immediately after that announcement, which came near midnight, hundreds more people flocked to the protest, their numbers spilling over the sidewalks and another lawn.

In a frenzied confusion, demonstrators rushed to clear the camp, carrying half-disassembled tents and bags of supplies away.

But then the deadline was extended for another 48 hours. By Wednesday morning the encampment had returned to regular programming.

For now -- despite the new looming deadline -- it shows no sign of letting up.

D.P., a 22-year-old student who only gave her initials and works security for the encampment, is among those who've decided to stay.

"It seems clear to me that it's what's necessary for this right now," she said.

"I can't stand the thought of not being at camp," she said. "I think that this whole place is only working because everyone is putting everything they have into it."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)