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Hundreds more US arrests made in Gaza campus protests - BBC News Hundreds arrested as Gaza protests sweep US universities - BBC News
(32 minutes later)
Bernd Debusmann Jr Large crowds of pro-Palestinian protesters, many of them students, have been gathering at an increasing number of universities in the US.
Reporting from New York Hundreds have been arrested in the last two weeks.
For some observers, the protests But what do they want?
at Columbia and other US college campuses echo the 1960s, when Many of the activists are calling for universities to stop investing school funds into companies involved in weapons manufacturing and other industries supporting Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza.
demonstrations against the Vietnam War rocked the country. "Our university is complicit in this violence, and this is why we protest," Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
Among those who see parallels is
Marianne Hirsch, a literature professor who also specialises in Holocaust
studies.
Speaking to reporters this week,
Hirsch - who participated in the 1960s protest movement - said that in her
opinion, the war in Vietnam and the current war in Gaza made it "impossible to
continue business as usual".
“People in this world are
feeling that what is happening in Gaza is unbearable and that they have to
act,” she said.
Another veteran of the 1960s
protest movement and author of a book on the movement and mass arrests
that took place in Columbia at the time, Oren Root, told the BBC that while he
saw significant parallels, he believed opposition to the protests today was much more intense.
“The politicisation is much more
extreme,” said Root, a 1969 Columbia graduate. “There were certainly
conservative politicians in 1968 who were opposed and severely criticised the
protest movements, but the world is different now.”
“The internet and social media
are a big factor,” he said, adding that it helped amplify accusations that the
protests were antisemitic.
“It ramps up emotional, political and personal
aspects of the opposition in ways that are really unfortunate.”
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