Columbia University cancels main graduation ceremony in wake of protests
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[May 07, 2024]
By Julia Harte
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Columbia University on Monday canceled its main
graduation ceremony after weeks of pro-Palestinian protests roiled the
Ivy League college's campus, but it will still hold smaller,
school-based events.
"Holding a large commencement ceremony on our campus presented security
concerns that unfortunately proved insurmountable," said Columbia
spokesperson Ben Chang. "Like our students, we are deeply disappointed
with this outcome." Graduation had been scheduled for May 15.
Chang said the university had sought an alternative venue but was unable
to find one that could accommodate the students, families, and guests in
attendance, who normally exceed 50,000.
The protests at Columbia, which drew national attention, have inspired
similar demonstrations at dozens of universities around the country.
Students have called for a ceasefire in Gaza and have demanded their
schools divest from companies with ties to Israel.
U.S. rapper Macklemore dropped a new track on Monday summing up many of
the protesters' views.
On Monday, the Palestinian militant group Hamas agreed to a Gaza
ceasefire proposal from mediators, but Israel said the terms did not
meet its demands and pressed ahead with strikes in Rafah while planning
to continue negotiations on a deal.
During the seven-month-old war more than 34,600 Palestinians have been
killed in Israel's military operations in Gaza, according to health
officials in the Hamas-ruled Palestinian enclave.
The war began when Hamas militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing
about 1,200 people and abducting 252 others, of whom 133 are believed to
remain in captivity in Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.
As protests gathered steam at U.S. colleges, some universities,
including Columbia, called in riot police wielding batons and flash-bang
grenades to disperse and arrest hundreds of protesters, citing a
paramount need for campus safety. Civil rights groups have decried such
tactics as unnecessarily violent infringements on free speech.
The turmoil on campuses has prompted colleges across the United States
to relocate, modify or cancel commencement ceremonies altogether. The
University of Southern California also called off its main-stage
ceremony, one week after canceling the valedictorian speech by a Muslim
student who said she was silenced by anti-Palestinian hatred.
Columbia said on Monday it had consulted with student leaders in
deciding how to handle graduation. The majority of the smaller
ceremonies, which had been set to take place on its upper Manhattan
campus, where most of the protests have taken place, will take place at
the main athletic complex about five miles (8 km) away.
A block away from campus, about 200 pro-Israeli demonstrators staged
their own protest on Monday to commemorate the Holocaust and denounce
what they see as antisemitism and anti-Jewish harassment coming from
campus protests.
"We can understand that there is evil in the world and that some people
can do horrific and terrible things. But how can we understand the
response by far too many people, including the so-called elites,
including so-called Ivy League universities?" Elan Carr, chief executive
of the Israeli American Council, told the demonstration.
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Protesters link arms outside Hamilton Hall barricading students
inside the building at Columbia University, despite an order to
disband the protest encampment supporting Palestinians or face
suspension, during the ongoing conflict between Israel and the
Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in New York City, U.S., April 30,
2024. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs/File Photo
Across town, pro-Palestinian protesters marched on the Met Gala, a
glitzy ball to benefit the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Police said they made multiple arrests but there were no reports of
injuries.
The demonstrations have emerged as a political flashpoint during a
contentious U.S. election year as Democratic President Joe Biden and
Republican former U.S President Donald Trump face off in a rematch
for the White House.
RALLY FOR ISRAEL, JEWISH STUDENTS
Republican U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson -- who
condemned Columbia's administrators, accusing them of being too
lenient on demonstrators during a campus visit in April -- blasted
them again on Monday, saying the decision to cancel commencement
denied thousands of graduates the recognition they deserved.
Johnson also called on the school's board of trustees to remove
university President Minouche Shafik, adding that the cancellation
showed she would rather "cede control to Hamas supporters than
restore order."
New York City police cleared a Columbia building last week that had
been barricaded by pro-Palestinian protesters, arresting more than
100 people in and around the campus and dismantling an encampment.
Other U.S. universities have continued grappling this week with how
to clear their campuses of protesters.
Protesters at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge
near Boston mostly cleared a pro-Palestinian encampment after
administrators said they would face immediate suspension unless they
left.
"Given developments over the past several days, I must now take
action to bring closure to a situation that has disrupted our campus
for more than two weeks," MIT President Sally Kornbluth said in a
statement announcing the order to vacate.
But hundreds of protesters returned later on Monday evening, tore
down police barricades surrounding the encampment, and locked arms.
At nearby Harvard University, interim President Alan Garber said on
Monday that protesters who continued participating in a two-week-old
encampment would be referred for "involuntary leave," meaning they
may not be able to sit for exams, reside in Harvard housing or be on
campus until reinstated.
(Reporting by Julia Harte, Doina Chiacu, Joseph Ax, Brian Snyder,
Ross Kerber and Daniel Trotta; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Cynthia
Osterman and Michael Perry)
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