A group of prominent Harvard University alumni has condemned a pro-Palestinian statement issued by students, accusing Israel of responsibility for the ongoing violence in the region. They are urging the university to take action against the signatories of the statement. The statement comes in the wake of the recent attack by the terrorist group Hamas on Israel, marking the most significant breach of the country’s defences since the Arab-Israeli War in 1973. Israel has responded with airstrikes on Gaza, resulting in hundreds of casualties in both Israel and Gaza.
A coalition consisting of 34 Harvard student organizations released a statement asserting that they hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for the ongoing violence, citing decades of occupation. They specifically mentioned that “the apartheid regime is the only one to blame” for the situation. The signatories encompassed a diverse range of organizations, including Muslim and Palestinian support groups, Harvard Jews for Liberation, and the African American Resistance Organization.
Harvard President Claudine Gay and senior leadership, including 15 deans, issued a statement expressing their heartbreak over the violence resulting from Hamas’s attack on Israel. However, their statement did not directly reference the student letter or the reactions it generated.
Harvard University holds substantial influence in U.S. politics, having produced eight former presidents and four of the nine current Supreme Court Justices. Several Harvard alumni, including former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, criticized the current Harvard leadership for what they perceive as a failure to respond adequately to the situation.
Lawrence Summers, who served as U.S. Treasury Secretary under Democratic President Bill Clinton and was a former Harvard president, expressed his discontent on social media, stating that the silence from Harvard’s leadership had allowed the university to appear neutral towards acts of terror against Israel. He expressed his strong disapproval, saying, “I am sickened.”
While universities have traditionally been seen as bastions of free speech and platforms for expressing radical ideas, the pro-Palestinian statement from Harvard students has resonated within the political establishment. Republican U.S. Representative Elise Stefanik, herself a Harvard graduate, characterized the statement as “abhorrent and heinous,” accusing it of excusing the “slaughter of innocent women and children.”