Current:Home > ContactHow Columbia University’s complex history with the student protest movement echoes into today -ProfitPioneers Hub
How Columbia University’s complex history with the student protest movement echoes into today
View
Date:2025-04-18 08:50:30
NEW YORK (AP) — College students taking up space and making demands for change. University administrators facing pressure to get things back under control. Police brought in to make arrests. At other schools: students taking note, and sometimes taking action.
Columbia University, 2024. And Columbia University, 1968.
The pro-Palestinian demonstration and subsequent arrests at Columbia that have set off similar protests at campuses nationwide these days and even internationally aren’t new ground for students at the Ivy League school. They’re the latest in a Columbia tradition that dates back more than five decades — one that also helped provide inspiration for the anti-apartheid protest of the 1980s, the Iraq war protests, and more.
“When you’re going to Columbia, you know you’re going to an institution which has an honored place in the history of American protest,” said Mark Naison, professor of history and African & African American Studies at Fordham University and himself a participant in the 1968 demonstrations. “Whenever there is a movement, you know Columbia is going to be right there.”
STUDENTS ARE AWARE OF THE HISTORY
It’s part of Columbia’s lore, students taking part in this month’s demonstrations point out — recognized by the school itself in commemorative anniversary programming and taught about in classes.
“A lot of students here are aware of what happened in 1968,” said Sofia Ongele, 23, among those who joined the encampment in response to this month’s arrests.
The end of an academic year was also approaching in April of that year when students took over five campus buildings. There were multiple reasons. Some were protesting the university’s connection to an institute doing weapon research for the Vietnam War; others opposed how the elite school treated Black and brown residents in the community around the school as well as the atmosphere for minority students.
After several days, Columbia’s president allowed a thousand New York Police Department officers to be brought in to clear most demonstrators out. The arrests, 700 of them, were not gentle. Fists were flying, clubs swinging. Dozens of students and more than a dozen officers were injured.
It’s never been forgotten history. That includes now, when pro-Palestinian students calling on the university to divest from any economic ties to Israel over the war in Gaza set up a tent encampment earlier this month and more than 100 were arrested. It helped spark similar demonstrations at campuses around the country and world.
The storied protest past is one of the reasons Ongele chose Columbia for college and came here from her native Santa Clarita, California. “I wanted to be in an environment where people were indeed socially conscious,” she said.
When it comes to protest, “We have not only the privilege but the responsibility to continue in the shoes of those who came before us,” Ongele said. The goal, she said: to ensure “that we’re able to maintain the integrity of this university as one that is indeed socially aware, one that does have students that do care deeply about what goes on in the world, what goes on in our communities, and what goes on in the lives of the students that make up our community.”
Columbia University officials did not respond to an email asking about the school’s position on the legacy of the 1968 events. Those events, like the current protest, “sparked a huge increase in student activism around the country,” Mark Rudd, a leader of that protest, said in an email to The Associated Press. “Myself and others spent the entire year after April 1968 traveling the country, spreading to campuses the spirit of Columbia.”
NOT EVERYONE SUPPORTS THE PROTESTS
But the echoes of the past aren’t only in inspiration. Then, as now, the protest had its detractors. Naison said the disruption to campus life, and to law and order, angered many at Columbia and outside of it.
“Student protesters are not popular people in the United States of America,” he said. “We weren’t popular in the ’60s. We accomplished a tremendous amount. But we also helped drive the country to the right.”
That has a corollary these days with those critical of the protests, who have condemned what they say is a descent into antisemitism. Some Jewish students have said they have felt targeted for their identity and afraid to be on campus and university presidents have come under political pressure to clamp down and use methods like police intervention.
Columbia University President Minouche Shafik had just testified in front of a congressional panel investigating concerns about antisemitism at elite schools when the camp initially went up. Despite her requesting police action the next day for what she called a “harassing and intimidating environment,” Republicans in Congress have called for her resignation.
“Freedom of speech is so important, but not beyond the right to security,” said Itai Dreifuss, 25, a third-year student who grew up in the United States and Israel. He was near the encampment this past week, standing in front of posters taped to a wall of the people who were taken hostage by Hamas in the Oct 7 attack that set off the current conflagration.
That feeling among some students that personal animosity is being directed against them is a difference between 1968 and now, Naison said. That conflict between demonstrators and their decriers “is far more visceral,” Naison asserts, which he says makes this time even more fraught.
“It’s history repeating itself, but it’s also uncharted territory,” he said. “What we have here is a whole group of people who see these protests as a natural extension of fighting for justice, and a whole other group of people who see this as a deadly attack on them and their history and tradition. And that makes it very difficult for university officials to manage.”
veryGood! (58)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Remember the ice bucket challenge? 10 years later, the viral campaign is again fundraising for ALS
- Jamie Lee Curtis Apologizes for Toilet Paper Promotion Comments After Shading Marvel
- As a historic prisoner exchange unfolds, a look back at other famous East-West swaps
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Top Nordstrom Anniversary Sale 2024 Workwear Deals: Office-Ready Styles from Steve Madden, SPANX & More
- Man gets prison for blowing up Philly ATMs with dynamite, hauling off $417k
- Man shot to death outside mosque as he headed to pray was a 43-year-old Philadelphia resident
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Mýa says being celibate for 7 years provided 'mental clarity'
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- How to watch Lollapalooza: Megan Thee Stallion, Kesha scheduled on livestream Thursday
- Proposed rule would ban airlines from charging parents to sit with their children
- Remember the ice bucket challenge? 10 years later, the viral campaign is again fundraising for ALS
- Messi injury update: Ankle 'better every day' but Inter Miami star yet to play Leagues Cup
- Ohio historical society settles with golf club to take back World Heritage tribal site
- Wyndham Clark's opening round at Paris Olympics did no favors for golf qualifying system
- Drag queen in Olympic opening ceremony has no regrets, calls it ‘a photograph of France in 2024’
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Simone Biles edges Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade for her second Olympic all-around gymnastics title
There are so few doctors in Maui County that even medical workers struggle to get care
Body of 20-year-old North Carolina man recovered after 400-foot fall at Grand Canyon National Park
Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
1 killed and 3 wounded in shooting in Denver suburb of Aurora on Thursday, police say
Connecticut man bitten by rare rattlesnake he tried to help ends up in coma
1 killed and 3 wounded in shooting in Denver suburb of Aurora on Thursday, police say