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Opinion

With campus protests, lecturers – not students – are the real problem

Don’t say we weren’t warned if we see the level of unrest in American colleges coming here

May 8, 2024 09:56
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Activists from London Student Action for Palestine in March Credit: Ron Fassbender/Alamy Live News
3 min read

Of course, it is fun to be a student and play act at being a revolutionary. At Manchester University’s campus “occupation” there are drumming workshops and lessons in Arabic chanting, community meals of lentils and even a mock “Shabbat”, along with a session on the key question, “Why are we here?”.

Amid the newly bought tents getting hammered by the rain and the Amazon-bought keffiyehs is a chilling flag – more chilling even than chants of “From the River to the Sea”. It is one belonging not to the young revolutionaries but their teachers. “University of Manchester UCU for Palestine” it proclaims.

For the last two weeks I’ve been talking to Jewish students about their experiences as a new contagion of “occupations” spreads from across the Atlantic. They have been bullied off campus, they’ve lost friends simply for being Jewish, endured whispering campaigns and ridicule, been told they are not allowed in certain “apartheid-free” zones (oh, the irony!). Even the toilets are littered with swastikas.

It has exposed a bullying culture among young adults who claim to be the most anti-racist “woke” generation. But most worrying of all, it has also shown that this Jew-hatred disguised as Israel-hatred is being taught at our universities. Students told me of Israel demonisation being inserted in lectures as diverse as dentistry and drama, history and sport. They told how they have sent pages of complaints only to be told they shouldn’t complain about “free speech” and that hearing difficult things was part of a university education.