This article first appeared in New English Review. It was written on May 16, the day after police broke up the encampment and occupation of a building at UC Irvine. As an update, the final arrest toll is 47, including 26 students, 2 employees, and 19 non-UCI affiliated persons.
Having taught at the University of California at Irvine for 18 years and living in the neighborhood, I followed the encampment issue at that campus with interest. On two occasions, I went to the campus, first to observe the goings-on at the encampment, and later to attend a march on campus in memory of the victims of the Holocaust. When I observed the encampment, what I saw was about 50 or so young people in Palestinian scarves, many covering their faces, and the usual assortment of Palestinian flags. The encampment was set up in a quad area surrounded by science classrooms and research buildings. There was the constant blare of the usual chants by people taking turns with a bullhorn, accompanied by the beating of drums. Needless to say, it was not a conducive learning or research atmosphere in the adjacent buildings.
Then, yesterday, on May 15, the situation
changed. Up to then, Chancellor Howard Gillman, while calling the
encampment a violation of campus rules and disruptive to students and staff,
continued to negotiate with the protesters.
Yesterday, however, the little rascals decided they were going to
“liberate the university for Palestine” by occupying one of the adjacent
buildings. At that point, Gillman decided enough was enough. He not only sent
his campus police to the scene, but called for assistance from Orange County
law enforcement, including the Irvine PD, the OC County Sheriffs, the
California Highway Patrol, and various police departments in the county.
Literally hundreds of police arrived on campus. They issued a dispersal order,
which was ignored. They declared it an unlawful assembly. Finally, in a highly
organized manner, they advanced gradually to the encampment, began removing
barriers, and arrested some 50 people, including at least one professor (from
the Global Studies Department, don’t you know?) who was positively hysterical,
shouting, “I am a tenured professor” as she was led away by the gendarmes. By
11 pm, police operations had terminated.
All this time, I had gotten a call from friends who lived
next to the university. One of them was on the scene and was feeding me
reports. I decided not to go to campus myself. Rather I preferred to go home
and post the reports on my own blog. At the same time, I was able to monitor
the campus newspaper, the campus alerts, and other sources. By nightfall, all
the local Southern California news outlets were live on the scene covering the
story. It broke nationally as well as Fox News reported on it. Of course, to my
knowledge, the local news said nothing about the anti-Semitic aspect to this
story.
In today’s New University, the campus newspaper, Chancellor
Gillman says he is heartbroken.
While I applaud Gillman’s decision yesterday and the
professional manner in which it was carried out by police, Chancellor Gillman
should have been heartbroken for the past several years, heartbroken over what
his Jewish students have had to endure for years at the hands of these pro-Palestinian
thugs and thugettes, including outside agitators and faculty. For years, we
have been complaining, sending letters to the university administration, the
president of the University of California system, the UC Regents, petitions,
all for nought.
I should point out that it is a tiny minority of students at
UC Irvine who are guilty. There are about 36,000 students enrolled at UC
Irvine. The overwhelming majority-99.9%- have nothing to do with this. Yet, the
campus climate for Jewish students has been hostile for years, thanks to the
pro-Palestinian activists, the Muslim Student Union, and Students for Justice
in Palestine (SJP).
And it’s not just the Irvine campus. Virtually every UC
campus up and down the state has had similar problems. Look at UCLA since
October 7. Chancellor Gene Block is under pressure from all sides. The
pro-Palestinian side is condemning the attack by outsiders on the encampment
followed by the break-up of the encampment by police. They say Block has made
the campus unsafe for them. Yet, for years, Jewish students have been appealing
to the university to do something about the harassment they been suffering at
the hands of the pro-Palestinian students-and faculty. Block has done nothing.
As I write, the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights
Under Law is filing a suit against
UC Santa Barbara on behalf of a Jewish student-the president of the student
government- who has been the target of non-stop abuse and harassment because
she is Jewish and supports Israel.
I could go on and on, and need I mention the insane asylum
at UC Berkeley?
Are we, the public, not fed up with the shenanigans going on
at our universities, many of which are tax-payer funded? Have we not seen
enough of these feckless, sniveling campus chancellors and presidents, who for
years, have turned a blind eye to campus anti-Semitism? I have no illusions
that the situation is going to turn around in California because this is a
one-party state, and that party (Democrats) is on the side of the protesters-not
the Jewish students. It is heartening to see states like Texas and Florida
crack down, but they have sensible government leaders, unlike California. What
we can do, however, is bring financial pressure to bear in terms of asking
donors to send their millions elsewhere. Lawsuits brought against universities
that refuse to protect Jewish students is another avenue I favor, like the
Brandeis action against UC Santa Barbara.
Pressure must also be brought upon university leaders to be
fired or resign. The example of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania
stand out. UCLA Chancellor Block is stepping down July 1 though there is
mounting pressure from all sides for him to resign now. Well he should.
As I have been claiming for years, with a few exceptions,
most of the major Jewish organizations are not speaking out forcefully enough
on this topic. They must step up to the plate and do better. Working with the
universities through the “system” has not worked. Many of these organizations
spent years denying the problem of anti-Semitism on our campuses. They stood in
the way of all our efforts to shine the light on what was happening on our
campuses. As to UC Irvine, that is something I can personally testify to.
I fervently hope that the arrests at UC Irvine will be
followed, where appropriate, by prosecution. Enough is enough. It is time to
clean house in terms of disruptive students and professors who encourage hate
and disrespect for the law. Expulsions
and firings are in order at UC Irvine and other campuses. Our universities need
to get back to being centers of serious learning in a tranquil atmosphere
rather than training grounds for activists and centers of indoctrination. Just
as importantly, they need to be safe and welcoming to our Jewish students.
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