College students are speaking out and protesting Israel-Hamas war

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protesters holding flags
Supporters of Israel and Palestinian supporters gather at the Israeli Consulate in New York, Monday, Oct. 9, 2023, in the wake of an attack on Israel by Hamas. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)  

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Posted October 10, 2023 | Updated on Apr 10, 2024

In short: Israel declared war on the Palestinian militant group Hamas after it launched an attack on Israeli soil on Oct. 7, taking at least 100 hostages. The attack comes after months of heightened tensions due to Israel’s ongoing treatment of Palestinians in Gaza and recent violence at a site sacred to both Jewish and Muslim people. In the U.S., student groups across the country have voiced their stances on the matter, including a statement signed by 34 Harvard University groups holding Israel responsible for the violence. The statement faced backlash both from the university’s former president and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.

What’s going on in Israel?

Hamas launched an attack on Israeli soil on Oct. 7 and took at least 100 hostages.

What is Hamas?

Hamas, also known as the Islamic Resistance Movement, “is a militant group that governs the Gaza Strip, a 25-mile-long, densely populated enclave of more than 2.1 million people.” Hamas, which won elections in Gaza in 2006, doesn’t recognize Israel’s existence and wants to replace it with a Palestinian state. The U.S. designated the group a terrorist organization in 1997.

Hamas said the attack was in response to “Israeli attacks on women,” Israeli police raids on a sacred mosque in Jerusalem, and Israel’s treatment of Palestinians in Gaza.

How long has Israel occupied Gaza?

Israel has occupied Gaza since 1967 and has imposed a blockade on the region, regulating movement in and out. The Israeli government has also maintained a policy of land confiscation, where land is taken from Palestinians and given to Israeli settlers, since the start of the occupation. Human Rights Watch has called Gaza an “open-air prison.”

 

Israel responded to the attack by retaliating with airstrikes and declared war on Hamas. Israel also sealed off Gaza from any incoming food and water, as well as cutting off electricity for the region’s 2 million Palestinian residents, half of whom are under the age of 19.

An Israeli military official said Hamas had “opened the gates of hell” into Gaza, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would “return fire of a magnitude that the enemy has not known,” and that “the enemy will pay an unprecedented price.”

The death toll on both sides combined is at least 1,600.

What happened at Harvard?

After the fighting broke out in Israel, 34 Harvard University student groups issued a statement blaming Israel for the violence.

“The apartheid regime is the only one to blame,” the statement read. “Israeli violence has structured every aspect of Palestinian existence for 75 years. From systemized land seizures to routine airstrikes, arbitrary detentions to military checkpoints, and enforced family separations to targeted killings, Palestinians have been forced to live in a state of death, both slow and sudden.”


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The statement – signed by multiple Palestinian and Muslim student groups, Harvard Jews for Liberation, and the African American Resistance Organization – was condemned by former Harvard president Lawrence Summers and Democratic and Republican federal lawmakers alike, many of them alumni of the university.

Harvard’s current president, Claudine Gay, condemned the Hamas attack.  

What’s happening on other campuses across the U.S.?

Campuses across the country have seen groups organize events after the fighting broke out, including a vigil in support of Israel at the University of Vermont and multiple events in support of Palestinians being organized by local chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine.

There also have been several other events in the news:

International students in Israel were also killed in the fighting, and three Northeastern University students were safely evacuated from Israel.  

U.S. college campuses have become a hot spot on the issue of Israel and Palestinians. In 2021, the last time there was a flare-up of violence between Hamas and Israel, student groups supporting both Palestinians and Israel issued statements and organized events.

Those supporting Israel say that the statements and protests cause an uptick in “antisemitism and anti-Israel rhetoric,” while those who support Palestinians say that Palestinian voices are often silenced, and many receive death threats.

Antisemitism is on the rise in the U.S. and antisemitic incidents increased by 36% from 2021 to 2022. There is an ongoing debate over whether criticism of Israel is inherently antisemitic.

In 2021, Palestine Legal, a group that provides legal aid to those who support Palestinians, took on 280 cases defending supporters from suppression of their views. This is a 31% increase from 2020. More than half of these incidents happened on college campuses across the country.

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