NEW YORK – Amid pro-Palestine protests at Columbia University that have led to more than 100 arrests, forced classes online and left Jewish students and faculty feeling unsafe and unwelcome, the university’s Catholic chaplain says the path forward “must first ensure that such malevolent protests, brimming with anti-Semitism, be stopped”.
Father Roger Landry, who is Columbia’s Catholic chaplain, said that while many protests have remained peaceful, many have also turned “ugly, as some in the crowds chant and behave in ways inimical to peace on campus, in the Middle East, or anywhere”.
“If the protests happening on and around Columbia’s campus were peaceful, I don’t think Jewish students would feel endangered,” Father Roger Landry told Crux via email late on 22 April. “Protests that feature pro-Hamas slogans or justifications for Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks, that chant ‘From the River to the Sea’ that Jewish students interpret as a call for the elimination of the State of Israel, and that praise the Al-Qassam brigades are not peaceful, but downright hostile.”
“The solution is going to require prioritising among values and being more clear and decisive,” Landry, a priest of the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts, said. “I think that the educational mission of the university and the safety and protection of its students have to be vigorously defended, rather than, de facto, allowing protests to control the university’s agenda and milieu.”
Landry said he has witnessed many pro-Palestine protests that have taken place in and around the New York university since mid-October – when Israel began its retaliation against Hamas in Gaza after the insurgent-terrorist organisation on 7 Oct. killed more than 1,400 people, and took more than 200 hostages. Since Israel retaliated, thousands of Gazans have died and more than 1.5 million are now displaced amid a Holy Land that appears inexorably broken.
Landry said he has “concern and sadness over what’s happening” and laments that at a time in which students should be preparing for exams, writing final papers and enjoying spring, the campus is essentially under lockdown, with Jewish students feeling unsafe and unwelcome, student protestors are getting arrested and classes are being cancelled or moved online.
On 23 April, the university announced that students will have the option to attend class remotely for the rest of the semester.
Landry also lamented that “division, hostility and class warfare are being fomented, and various outside elements are trying to use Columbia as a backdrop to push their political agendas”.
He added: “The students who have come here for an education are being forgotten, it seems, by those in positions of leadership on all sides, as the toxic animosities of Middle Eastern conflicts have overflowed onto campus.”
At the same time, he said, on the campus “the principles, prudence and courage necessary to help resolve the conflict have been wanting”.
Current protests at Columbia University boiled over last week, when students set up an encampment on the university’s South Lawn to oppose Israel’s military action in Gaza, and demand that the university divest from companies with ties to Israel. Ultimately, more than 100 demonstrators were arrested after the university called in police to help dispel the crowd.
Protests have continued this week, with protestors now turning up to stand in solidarity with those arrested last week. On 23 April, about 150 demonstrators were arrested for defying a university order to leave the South Lawn.
Landry said that when he’s passed the current encampment at Columbia University it has been “tranquil, and a more silent form of protest”. The challenge, he said, is that the protest movement shows no signs of shutting down on its own and that “every day that nothing happens in consequence, some among the protestors get bolder”.
“He added: “Under the present dynamics, it seems bound to grow.”
In his role as a Catholic leader on Columbia’s campus, Landry said he is working with the university’s Catholic students to help them recognise the importance of prayer and love, and that they’re called to be peacemakers. He also said he is helping students focus on what they can do to improve the situation, and informing them of how Pope Francis and the Holy See have addressed the war.
Similar Pro-Palestine protests have erupted at US campuses across the country, mainly in some of the most prestigious universities, such as Yale University, the University of California in Berkeley, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Tufts and Emerson. Writing for Spectator World, Ben Appel visited the Columbia campus and highlights that “so many of the ‘occupiers’ are women”, while noting the use of trans flags amid Palestinian ones and the wearing of face masks by so many young students attending the protest.
“We’re praying each day for the situation and trying to reach out to those immediately affected – Jewish students, Palestinian students and those from Gaza and others – to make sure they know we have their back,” Landry said.
Photo: A pro-Palestinian protester uses a bullhorn during a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall on the UC Berkeley campus, Berkeley, California, 22 April 2024. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall on the UC Berkeley campus where they set up a tent encampment in solidarity with protesters at Columbia University who are demanding a permanent cease fire in war between Israel and Gaza. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images.)
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