Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (2024)

Pro-Palestinian students and their allies set up about 15 tents on the steps of UC Berkeley’s Sproul Plaza on Monday afternoon, vowing to stay put until the university system officially calls for an end to the deadly Israel-Hamas war, cuts its study-abroad program with Israel and divests from companies with ties to the country.

Some of the several hundred protesters, many wearing the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh around their heads and some waving “boycott, divest, sanction” signs, said they plan to camp out until the university system meets their demands and challenged police to arrest them. By late afternoon, about 50-100 people were sitting, reading poetry and chatting.

“We’ve been out here, and we’ll continue to be out here,” said Matt Kovac, a spokesman for UC Berkeley Divest Coalition, which organized the midday rally. “I don’t see mobilization stopping until the U.S. and UCs begin to take this seriously.”

In a statement Monday, the coalition that represents 75 student, staff, faculty and alumni organizations calling for UC to divest from companies doing business with Israel, said the University of California system invests in more than $2 billion in companies that supply arms.

UC Berkeley spokesman Dan Mogulof said there are no plans to change the university’s investment policies and practices, and that with three weeks left in the semester, Berkeley is prioritizing students’ academic interests over disruptions on campus.

“We will take the steps necessary to ensure the protest does not disrupt the university’s operations,” Mogulof said.

The Israel-Hamas war, now in its seventh month, began after Hamas militants breached Israel’s border defenses on Oct. 7, 2023, rampaged through communities unchallenged for hours, killing about 1,200 people, most of them civilians, while taking roughly 250 hostages back to Gaza. It was the deadliest assault in Israel’s history. Hamas has been designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, Canada and the European Union.

Retaliatory airstrikes by Israel have since killed more than 34,000 Palestinians, according to Palestinian health officials, at least two-thirds of them children and women. It has devastated Gaza’s two largest cities and left a swath of destruction in the narrow, 25-mile-long territory governed since 2007 by Hamas. Around 80% of the territory’s population have fled to other parts of the besieged coastal enclave.

The United States is on track to approve $26 billion in additional aid to Israel, its close ally. The aid package approved by the U.S. House of Representatives on Saturday includes around $9 billion in humanitarian assistance for Gaza, which experts say is on the brink of famine, and $4 billion for Israel’s missile defense. The U.S. Senate could pass the package as soon as Tuesday, and President Joe Biden has promised to sign it immediately.

As the war rages, ideological divides have collided at college campuses across the country.

Columbia University canceled in-person classes on Monday after protesters rallied throughout the weekend at the Ivy League school’s New York City campus, where police last week arrested more than 100 pro-Palestinian demonstrators who had set up an encampment.

Since those arrests, pro-Palestinian demonstrators have set up encampments on other campuses around the country, including at the University of Michigan, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Yale University, where several dozen protesters were arrested Monday morning after officials said they defied warnings to leave.

Stanford University in February shut down a similar demonstration after 120 days in which pro-Palestinian protesters had camped out at White Plaza starting Oct. 20. Eighteen pro-Palestinian protesters who disrupted a family weekend event at the campus in February were arrested and issued misdemeanor citations, the Stanford Daily reported.

UC Berkeley and other universities are under scrutiny from Congress, where lawmakers are investigating complaints about anti-semitism and the safety of Jewish students.

Monday’s protest at Berkeleycomes just two months after a campus event featuring a speaker from Israel was canceled and its attendees escorted to safety after some 200 protesters surrounded Zellerbach Playhouse and broke down the doors, according to university officials. University chancellors said those actions of the protesters violated “some of our most fundamental values.”

Ori Rabina, one of a handful of Jewish students observing the protest, said he wants to believe that the protest was not held intentionally on Passover, one of Judaism’s holiest observances, which this year begins at sundown April 22.

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (1)

    A Pro-Palestinian protester holds a Palestinian flag while in front of Sproul Hall during a planned protest on the campus of UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall where they set up a tent encampment and are demanding a permanent cease-fire in the war between Israel and Gaza. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (2)

    Pro-Palestinian protesters protest in front of Sather Gate during a planned protest on the campus of UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall where they set up a tent encampment and are demanding a permanent cease-fire in the war between Israel and Gaza. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (3)

    Pro-Palestinian protesters stand in front of Sather Gate during a planned protest at UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (4)

    Pro-Palestinian protesters begin to set up tents in front of Sproul Hall during a planned protest on the campus of UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024 (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (5)

    Pro-Palestinian protesters gather in front of Sproul Hall during a planned protest on the campus of UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall where they set up a tent encampment and are demanding a permanent cease-fire in the war between Israel and Gaza. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (6)

    A Pro-Palestinian protester holds a Palestinian flag while in front of Sproul Hall during a planned protest on the campus of UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall where they set up a tent encampment and are demanding a permanent cease-fire in the war between Israel and Gaza. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (7)

    Banan, a UC Berkeley graduate student with Justice for Palestine, (did not want to give her last name) speaks to Pro-Palestinian protesters gathered in front of Sproul Hall during a planned protest on the campus of UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration in front of Sproul Hall where they set up a tent encampment and are demanding a permanent cease-fire in the war between Israel and Gaza. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (8)

    Pro-Palestinian protesters gather in front of Sproul Hall during a planned protest at UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Monday, April 22, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

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The Jewish students from Tikvah: Students for Israel and Students Supporting Israelhung back and largely kept to themselves during the event. Rabina said demonstrators have a right to gather and advocate for their cause, including camping out on campus. He asserted that pro-Palestinian students and Jewish and Zionist students agree on wanting the violence in Gaza to end.

Tyler Gregory, CEO of the Jewish Community Relations Council, said he also didn’t believe the timing of the protest was intentional, but it would have an impact.

“People were already going into Seder ready to talk about Columbia (University). Now people are really worried about whether (the UC Berkeley demonstration) is going to stay peaceful or not,” Gregory said. “There’s just a heightened moment of fear because of what happened in Columbia.”

The protesters said their rally also comes amid escalating repression of pro-Palestine speech at UCLA and Pomona College in Southern California.

The demonstrators called their protest site “Free Palestine Camp,” chanted “disclose, divest, we will not stop, we will not rest,” and “1,2,3,4 occupation has to go … 5,6,7,8 Israel is a terrorist state,” and played recordings of what they said was a noise similar to one Gazans hear from Israeli drones overhead.

Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (9)

Berkeley Law student Malak Afaneh gave the speech she was stopped from giving last week when she and other protesters were asked to leave a backyard lunch hosted by Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky.

“I will keep shouting this speech from the rooftops until Palestine is free,” Afaneh said Monday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on UC Berkeley campus, vow to stay until the university divests from companies in business with Israel (2024)

FAQs

What was the issue the students at UC Berkeley were protesting about during the 1964 65 school year? ›

The Free Speech Movement began in 1964 when UC Berkeley students protested the university's restrictions on political activities on campus.

What was the main issue that provoked the free speech protests at UC Berkeley? ›

Sparked by the university's restrictions on political activities on campus, it symbolized the fight for free speech and academic freedom. Under leaders like Mario Savio, students organized sit-ins and protests, which culminated in the arrest of over 800 students.

At what California University did the era of student protest begin? ›

The Free Speech Movement (FSM) was a massive, long-lasting student protest which took place during the 1964–65 academic year on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley. The Movement was informally under the central leadership of Berkeley graduate student Mario Savio.

What were the students at the University of California Berkeley demanding? ›

It's been nearly two weeks since protest tents first went up at UC Berkeley. The tents are filled with pro-Palestinian protestors, demanding the school divest from any company that does business with Israel and support calls for a ceasefire.

Is UC Berkeley known for protests? ›

Berkeley became the media symbol of student unrest. The FSM mobilization inspired subsequent national campus mobilization to protest the escalating Vietnam War. There was also no doubt that Berkeley earned the title of the nation's most activist campus.

Why did UC Berkeley not allow tables to be set up on the corner of Bancroft and Telegraph? ›

The Dean announced that the corner of Telegraph and Bancroft was really University Property; hence the prohibitions applied to our traditional free speech arena. The ruling came down shortly before the climax of the 1964 electoral campaign, and the response of the student organizations was heightened by this fact.

What is the controversy with UC Berkeley? ›

Billboard accuses UC Berkeley law school students of antisemitism. The billboard, commissioned by Accuracy in Media, publicly identified eight UC Berkeley law students who President Adam Guillette said signed a proclamation banning any speakers that support the state of Israel. BERKELEY, Calif.

Why do you believe that members of the Berkeley faculty supported the Free Speech Movement? ›

Students and many faculty, united by the liberalism of the times, began to see the FSM as a moral obligation. Savio continued to insist that the First Amendment was the only valid guideline for student activities, especially political, and he condemned the administration's rules as “prior restraint.”

What was a result of the Free Speech Movement at the University of California, Berkeley that furthered students' rights? ›

Through unprecedented mobilization, rejecting the expansion of McCarthyist-inspired rules to strangle political activities on campus, and a refusal to allow the administration's efforts to split the movement, students won their basic rights to free speech on campus.

What happened at UC Berkeley in the late 60s? ›

The 1960s Berkeley protests were a series of events at the University of California, Berkeley, and Berkeley, California. Many of these protests were a small part of the larger Free Speech Movement, which had national implications and constituted the onset of the counterculture of the 1960s.

What happened at the protests on college campuses in 1970? ›

The most prolific university protest of the Vietnam War happened at Kent State University in Ohio in May 1970. Students started protesting the Vietnam War and the U.S. invasion of Cambodia on their campus on May 2. Two days later, the National Guard opened fire into a sea of antiwar protesters and passerbys.

Why many college students were protesting in the 1960s? ›

Among many causes, student activists sought to further the goals of the African American Civil Rights Movement, to end United States military involvement in Vietnam, to abolish ROTC programs on college campuses, and to protest police brutality.

Is Berkeley the hardest UC to get into? ›

The odds of getting into the UC system can drastically differ depending on which campuses a student applies to. UCLA and Berkeley are the most competitive campuses, with just 10% and 17% of California applicants, respectively, admitted to each in 2021.

Why is UC Berkeley so prestigious? ›

Berkeley was also a founding member of the Association of American Universities and was one of the original eight "Public Ivy" schools with a quality of education comparable to the Ivy League. It is often regarded as one of the most prestigious and elite universities in the world.

What is the hardest major to get into at Berkeley? ›

What are the Admit Rates & GPA For High Demand Majors?
Impacted MajorAdmit RateEnroll GPA Average
Computer Science4%3.89-4.00
Economics22%3.68-4.00
Global Studies17%3.59-3.93
Media Studies26%3.58-3.88
7 more rows
Nov 15, 2022

What were the Berkeley protests in 1966? ›

The 1960s Berkeley protests were a series of events at the University of California, Berkeley, and Berkeley, California. Many of these protests were a small part of the larger Free Speech Movement, which had national implications and constituted the onset of the counterculture of the 1960s.

What was significant about the Berkeley Free Speech Movement of 1964? ›

In 1964, Mario Savio and 500 fellow students marched on Berkeley's administration building to protest the university's order. He and other leaders called for an organized student protest to abolish all restrictions on students' free-speech rights throughout the University of California system.

What were the US student protests in the 1960s? ›

The student-led Free Speech Movement became a catalyst for additional protest on college campuses throughout the United States. For example, another prominent form of protest against what was viewed by students as racial discrimination came in 1968 when students commandeered several buildings at Columbia University.

What happened at the UC Berkeley strike of 1969? ›

Under the banner of the third world Liberation Front, University of California Berkeley (UCB) students protested a series of cuts to the Ethnic Studies Department by holding rallies, sit-ins, building occupations, and a hunger strike resulting in a five point Agreement in Suppout of Ethnic Studies.

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