We’re Publishing the Speech That Harvard Divinity School Suppressed for Mentioning Genocide
“I wanted to center Palestine,” a Harvard commencement speaker told The Intercept. Read and watch her speech.
“I wanted to center Palestine,” a Harvard commencement speaker told The Intercept. Read and watch her speech.
The Anti-Palestinian groups working with the Trump Administration are doxxing students. They are responsible for the arrests of: Mahmoud Kahlil, Rümeysa Öztürk, Momodou Taal, and others who were arrested by ICE for protected speech.
The administration is already conducting social media vetting for students seeking visas or residency in the US.
Support among 18- to 34-year-olds for allowing controversial or offensive speech has dropped sharply.
After being banned from campus buildings following peaceful sit-ins, students said the disciplinary processes broke from school policies.
Harvard released dueling reports on antisemitism and anti-Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim bias. Guess which one the Times emphasized?
A bomb threat at Barnard College targeted the “terrorists/communists that are protesting.” But you wouldn’t know that from the school’s statements.
In an escalation of the college student arrests, an attorney detained at a Detroit airport for representing someone targeted for speech speaks out.
A Cornell student suing the Trump administration over free speech — and now facing deportation threats — shares his story on The Intercept Briefing.
Trump officials are having trouble explaining why they violated Mahmoud Khalil’s First Amendment rights of free speech and protest.
Protesters rallied following the arrest of Columbia University student Mahmoud Kahlil—a green card holder who didn't commit any crimes.
Columbia University could hardly have been more draconian in the last year and a half since students began speaking out against Israel’s assault on Gaza. In early November 2023, four months before the Columbia Gaza solidarity encampment even began, the university banned its chapters of Students…
A Muslim woman was forced to remove her hijab for a booking photo after being arrested at a pro-Palestinian demonstration on the University of Tennessee campus.
After congressional criticism and subpoenas, Columbia suddenly decided to skip speaking to student protesters and go to hearings.
The university recently deposed tenured law professor Katherine Franke as part of an investigation stemming from an interview she gave to “Democracy Now!” in January.
As students leave Columbia University to head home for the Summer, some are left dealing with disciplinary charges from their participation in campus protests against Israel’s war in Gaza.
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