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Pro-Palestinian demonstrations grow at UNT, without police response; rabbi offers insight

Leaders of the University of North Texas Palestinian Committee lead protesters in chants and a march from the Willis Library mall to Hurley Administration Building and back Tuesday.
Lucinda Breeding-Gonzales
/
Denton Record-Chronicle
Leaders of the University of North Texas Palestinian Committee lead protesters in chants and a march from the Willis Library mall to Hurley Administration Building and back Tuesday.

Hundreds of University of North Texas students joined a walkout in support of Palestinians in Gaza on Tuesday afternoon.

News helicopters hovered over UNT鈥檚 campus and television reporters jogged to keep up with students who walked out of classes in protest. Since the previous demonstration during the , the number of students protesting on Tuesday appeared to surge.

UNT students demonstrated against the backdrop of , where students have agitated administrators to divest 鈥 to sell off their universities鈥 investments in companies that have businesses or investments in Israel. Some protesters have created encampments on their campuses to extend and expand their demonstrations, and at some schools, including the University of Texas, .

The UNT demonstration on Tuesday was peaceful, and campus police watched from a distance.

Hillel International, a global Jewish student organization, has tracked antisemitism on college campuses and reported on its website last week that , when Hamas struck Israel. The militant group struck with rockets and moved into more than 20 locations outside of the Gaza Strip. By the close of 2023, the Hamas attack had killed more than 1,300 Israelis and wounded more than 1,000 more. The group also took more than 100 hostages.

Hillel reports that between Oct. 7 and Nov. 7, it tracked 306 reported incidents of antisemitism on 129 campuses. Fifty-nine of those campuses reported multiple incidents during that time.

Leaders of the University of North Texas Palestinian Committee lead protesters in chants and a march from the Willis Library mall to Hurley Administration Building and back Tuesday.
Lucinda Breeding-Gonzales
/
Denton Record-Chronicle
Leaders of the University of North Texas Palestinian Committee lead protesters in chants and a march from the Willis Library mall to Hurley Administration Building and back Tuesday.

On Tuesday at UNT, protesters chanted, 鈥淒own with Zionism, up with Judaism,鈥 and focused on UNT administrators, Texas legislators and President Joe Biden for the United States鈥 billions in support for Israel and what they called censorship of Palestinian, Arab and supporters鈥 voices.

Talia Irshad, a UNT junior and vice president of the UNT Palestinian Solidarity Committee, which organized the walkout, said the group will continue to press the UNT administration to meet four demands:

  • Publicly apologize for allowing two members of the Israeli army to join an Israel Week session hosted by UNT鈥檚 Hillel student organization.
  • Cease any disciplinary action against student leaders who have organized demonstrations.
  • Disclose all investments made through the UNT Foundation.
  • Reject

In an email sent to UNT faculty on Tuesday, Provost Michael McPherson said some faculty members had been asked to join the demonstration.

鈥淭his week is a stressful time for our students,鈥 McPherson said. 鈥淢any are presenting their end of semester projects, participating in final exam review or even taking early finals. Disrupting our educational mission and foregoing our responsibility by cancelling classes is not acceptable.鈥

McPherson acknowledged that faculty are citizens as well as members of the UNT community, and instructed them to speak as citizens and not representatives of the university. He also reminded faculty that they can鈥檛 use university resources to further personal expression, including email.

Irshad said state legislators have tried to chill free speech on college campuses.

鈥淲e鈥檙e disgusted at attempts to silence students who are fighting this just fight,鈥 Irshad said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e disgusted by administrations like [University of Texas] and Colombia [University] who suspend their students for demanding that their universities cut ties with genocide, cut ties with apartheid.

鈥淲e understand that what is happening in Palestine is a 75-year-long colonial project and occupation of Palestine. And we鈥檙e disgusted that, when people rightfully protest ... they are met with state violence, and they are met with police violence and met with militarization of their campuses. They are met with forced homelessness because they are kicked out of their campus accommodations.鈥

Nancy Stockdale, who teaches Palestinian history at UNT, said she thinks the surge in support for Palestinians is related to the history education students have received.

鈥淚 have noticed over the years more and more students who essentially are kind of blank slates to this history,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd when they actually learn about the history of Palestine and its interactions with the Israeli state, they recognize that as oppressive. You couple that with people who are not really on either side, and then they see this really disproportionate response from Israel, that has killed at least 34,000 people.鈥

Stockdale said students have learned about the scale of the devastation in Gaza, with tens of thousands of people wounded and the displacement of millions.

鈥淚t鈥檚 coming into their phones every single day through social media. So they鈥檙e saying enough is enough,鈥 Stockdale said.

Rabbi Geoffrey Dennis, who serves Congregation Kol Ami and teaches in the UNT Jewish Studies program, said he went to the recent Israel Week session that was met with protest. He wasn鈥檛 able to get into the session, and instead talked with students who came to protest the event. Dennis said it looked as if a confrontation was brewing, but, he said, a conversation unfolded.

鈥淚 went into full professor mode, and I talked about things like the interference with sovereignty transfer. I talked about Ottoman land law, and the arcane things that actually make the difference in the history of modern Israel. And they were engaged.

鈥淎s a general rule, I had some very positive conversations with them,鈥 he said.

Protesters continued talking as attendees left the Israel Week session on campus.

鈥淭he people coming out of the event were not harassed because most of the protesters were, I鈥檇 say, constructively engaged in talking and arguing with Jews gathered outside,鈥 Dennis said. 鈥淪o it was it was intense, but it wasn鈥檛 violent or confrontational. I consider that all a plus.鈥

Dennis said there鈥檚 no way to understand what all the participants mean as they protest, even as their chants push buttons that make many Jews nervous. 鈥淔rom the river to the sea, Palestine will be free鈥 is heard as some as a call to exterminate Jews. The same could be true of the chant 鈥淭here is only one solution 鈥 intifada, revolution.鈥

鈥淭hat could mean any number of things,鈥 Dennis said. 鈥淎nd in fact, it probably does mean any number of things to the thousands of people reciting it.鈥

One protester might be chanting for the creation of two states where Israelis and Palestinians have equal rights. Another might be chanting to exterminate every Jew in Israel.

鈥淔or Jews, the anxiety is the intersection of declarations that lie between, or whatever it is that we鈥檙e hearing that and what exactly do they mean. And we don鈥檛 know, and that lack of knowledge produces fear,鈥 Dennis said.

鈥淚鈥檓 probably most disturbed by the G-word,鈥 he said. 鈥淏y people declaring that the Israelis are engaging in genocide.

鈥淥nce you declare your opponent to be committing genocide, there鈥檚 really nothing to negotiate. There鈥檚 no compromise. There鈥檚 no talk. You鈥檝e labeled them Nazis and they need to be destroyed.鈥

Dennis said Israel isn鈥檛 perpetuating genocide, though demonstrators across the country and UNT say it is.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that most protesters understand the definition of genocide,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey may not know that there is a definition of genocide. But I do know the definition of genocide. And Israel鈥檚 definitely not engaged in that, however terrible some of the policy decisions of the Israeli government are. ... And so that鈥檚 a fighting word for me.鈥

Dennis isn鈥檛 about fighting, though. He hopes for dialogue.

鈥淭he clearest thing I want people to come away with is the understanding is that most Jews, most Israelis, they want peace, too,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hey want a ceasefire. But reasonable ceasefire means, at the very least, the return of the kidnapped. A unilateral ceasefire without some gesture from Hamas is not going to be acceptable.鈥

LUCINDA BREEDING-GONZALES can be reached at 940-566-6877 and cbreeding@dentonrc.com.