Hundreds of Harvard students walk out of graduation ceremony in Gaza protest
Hundreds of Harvard students in graduation robes walked out of their commencement on Thursday in solidarity with Palestine, and the 13 students who had been barred from the ceremony over protest encampments.
Graduating students from the top Ivy League school stood up during the commencement ceremony on Thursday and walked out chanting “Free, free Palestine” while others shouted, “Let them walk, let them walk,” during the ceremony in reference to the 13 graduates who were not allowed to receive their diplomas alongside their classmates.
During a student address, senior Shruthi Kumar used the moment to declare that “this semester, our freedom of speech and our expressions of solidarity became punishable,” according to the Associated Press.
She also said she was recognising “the 13 undergraduates in the class of 2024 who will not graduate today,” that received cheers and clapping from other graduates.
“I am deeply disappointed by the intolerance for freedom of speech and the right to civil disobedience on campus.”
She explained that over 1,500 students had petitioned, and nearly 500 staff and faculty members had spoken up about the sanctions placed on them.
“This is about civil rights and upholding democratic principles,” she said. “The students had spoken. The faculty had spoken. Harvard, do you hear us?”
The ceremony also heard from Maria Ressa, a journalist, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and a long-standing advocate of freedom of speech, who spoke as the commencement speaker.
“Harvard, you are being tested,” she said. “The campus protests are testing everyone in America… Protests give voice; they shouldn’t be silenced.”
The graduation ceremony took place in the historic Harvard Yard, where pro-Gaza protests and an encampment was established last month.
The camp was disbanded on 14 May after the university announced that protestors agreed to end the encampment after an agreement was reached between students and Harvard leaders.
At the start of the week, the faculty announced it had restored the 13 students to a list of those eligible to graduate, Harvard’s governing board later overruled this after they were found to have violated the university’s policies by their conduct during the encampment protest.
The board said in a statement on Wednesday that the students were “not in good standing” so they could not “responsibly vote to award them degrees at this time.”
“In coming to this determination, we note that the express provisions of the Harvard College Student Handbook state that students who are not in good standing are not eligible for degrees,” the Harvard Corporation said, but added there was a possibility of appealing this.
Ms Kumar announced that she would be walking out as she could not “in good conscience celebrate when their families are in pain.”
A swarm of students also walked out and reconvened at a Methodist church near Harvard Square, where they reconvened for a “people’s commencement,” and spoke amongst each other of people who had lost their lives in Gaza, the New York Times reported.
The ceremony was also met with someone in the audience holding up an Israeli flag, according to the outlet, while half a dozen or so people bore Palestinian flags during the ceremony.
A small plane also circled above the graduates, trailing an Israeli and US flag and a truck was parked outside the campus with a billboard of some of the pro-Palestinian protestors’ names and images under a banner that said ‘Harvard’s Leading Antisemites.’
Protests have sparked up in the US and across the world ever since the 7 October Hamas attacks on Israel, which killed 1,200 people, which led to the ongoing Israeli attacks on Gaza, which have killed more than 35,000 Palestinians, according to some of the latest figures.
Demonstrations and encampments on campus have also led to other breakaways from tradition surrounding commencement ceremonies, such as universities like USC cancelling their main stage ceremony last month.
The protests and encampments have led to 3,000 arrests across universities in the United States.