Schooled in ‘social justice,’ more students flock to Palestinian cause


A wave of student activism has roiled college campuses across the United States since Oct. 7, when Hamas militants massacred 1,200 civilians in southern Israel and took more than 200 hostages.

While some young people have voiced solidarity with Israel in its military campaign against Hamas, the plight of Palestinians in Gaza – where 17,000 have been killed, according to Gaza officials – has galvanized many more to join rallies, marches, and sit-ins. 

Why We Wrote This

A generational divide over Israel has roiled college campuses and led to the resignation of one Ivy League president. For many, views about the conflict reflect the context in which they came of age.

Polls show a generational divide on the issue. While older Americans recall Israel as the underdog in a hostile region, fending off Arab armies in the 1960s and ’70s, today’s college students came of age in a different era – one colored by pandemic disruptions and the racial justice protests of 2020. Many student activists cast the struggles of Palestinians as mirroring those of Black victims of police violence, accusing Israel of “structural racism” in its “occupation” of Palestinian territories. 

“For a lot of younger activists, they’ve seen Israel mostly in the context of the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza,” says Thomas Zeitzoff, an associate professor of public affairs at American University. “Israel is seen as just a much stronger actor.”

When campus police removed Selena Lacayo from a pro-Palestinian sit-in on the night of Oct. 25, it was her first arrest. She was one of 56 students and one employee at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who were later charged with trespassing outside the chancellor’s office.  

But it wasn’t Ms. Lacayo’s first protest. Last spring, she marched with fellow students under the banner of prison abolition to call for the eviction of the university’s police force from campus. 

To Ms. Lacayo, a first-generation college senior whose major is women, gender, and sexuality studies, resisting the “prison-industrial complex” and Israeli military actions in Gaza is part of the same struggle. The common enemy is “Western imperialism” that, as she sees it, oppresses people in formerly colonized countries and those living in marginalized communities. 

Why We Wrote This

A generational divide over Israel has roiled college campuses and led to the resignation of one Ivy League president. For many, views about the conflict reflect the context in which they came of age.

Even students in the United States have “been directly affected by war and militarism” and need to organize to defend their rights, she says.

Her protest was part of a wave of Israel-related student activism that has roiled campuses across the U.S. since Oct. 7, when Hamas militants massacred 1,200 civilians in southern Israel and took more than 200 hostages. While some young people have voiced solidarity with Israel and supported its retaliation against Hamas, the plight of Palestinians in Gaza, where 17,000 have been killed according to Gaza officials, has galvanized many more students to join rallies, marches, and sit-ins. 

To these students, U.S. support for Israel is complicity with a punitive military campaign that compounds the suffering of Palestinian civilians under Israel’s thumb. Polls show a generational divide on the issue, with younger voters more sympathetic to Palestinians than older voters are – a divide that threatens to undermine President Joe Biden’s reelection bid. 

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