The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

Pro-Palestine Protesters Disrupt Convocation Ceremonies, One Arrested in Confrontation with Police

At least 100 students walked out during the University’s convocation ceremonies on June 1 in protest of the University’s decision to withhold the degrees of five graduating students involved in the pro-Palestine encampment.
Pro-Palestine+protesters+rally+in+front+of+a+convocation+event+near+Ida+Noyes+Hall.
Peter Maheras
Pro-Palestine protesters rally in front of a convocation event near Ida Noyes Hall.

More than 100 pro-Palestine students walked out during the University’s convocation ceremonies on June 1. After the walkout, police arrested one individual after physical altercations between police and protesters broke out at a closed intersection.

During the convocation ceremony on the main quad, students wearing keffiyehs and holding Palestinian flags stood with their backs to the stage. Some also held signs reading “UChicago Funds Genocide” and “Let Our Classmates Graduate.” After a few minutes, a large group of students walked out of the ceremony through the center aisle chanting “Let them graduate” and “Disclose, divest.”

The protest comes as five graduating students had their degrees withheld due to their participation in the pro-Palestine encampment last month. Four of the students were informed on May 24 that their degrees would be withheld pending disciplinary proceedings. A fifth student in the Master of Arts Program in the Humanities was notified on Friday, May 31.

Several faculty members, including mathematics professor Denis Hirschfeldt, who spoke to the Maroon in an interview, allege that the University violated its disciplinary rules by appointing an ad hoc faculty chair to the disciplinary committee overseeing encampment-related cases without first consulting existing members of the committee. Hirschfeldt claims the appointment of the ad hoc chair allowed the University to withhold degrees and circumvent the preexisting committee faculty chairs.

Convocation speaker John A. List, Kenneth C. Griffin Distinguished Service Professor of Economics, placed a t-shirt reading “I [heart] UChicago 2024” on the podium before his convocation address, saying, “There’s my sign,” which was met with a mix of cheers and boos from the crowd.

At the same time, approximately 40 protesters gathered at the intersection of 57th Street and South University Avenue for a rally, which was first announced on UChicago United For Palestine’s (UCUP) Instagram on May 29.

“Graduation can’t go on as usual when it isn’t graduation for all of the class of 2024––and when there is NO graduation in Gaza,” the post read. The protesters at the intersection were joined by the group that walked out of convocation.

Around 10:25 a.m., University of Chicago Police Department (UCPD) officers blocked off access to part of South University Avenue, instructing Allied Security officers not to let anyone through. Chicago Police Department (CPD) officers were also present. The street had already been closed to cars but UCPD officers previously allowed pedestrians to pass through.

Protesters gathered in the intersection at 57th Street and South University Avenue and formed a circle, chanting “Free Palestine” and “Brick by brick, wall by wall, apartheid has got to fall.” They then approached the UCPD barricades on South University Avenue, continuing their chants over megaphones.

Youssef Hasweh, one of the fourth-year students whose diploma is being withheld, spoke to the crowd of protesters.

“How is any parent supposed to feel when a university that was meant to protect their child and allow their child to learn has arrested him, criminalized him, brutalized him, fired him, and withheld his degree,” Hasweh said. “But the University has forgotten one thing: I’ve completed every credit hour. I was at graduation for five minutes, which means after today I am a UChicago alum. You can’t get rid of us that easily, Paul, and we will continue to fight until the University divests, discloses, and repairs.”

After Hasweh’s speech, protesters marched south on South Woodlawn Avenue. As they approached Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, where students were assembling for the Law School’s diploma and hooding ceremony, protesters chanted “Out of the tents and into the streets” towards the graduates.

Protesters continued their march across the south end of campus, gathering again at a police barrier at the intersection of 59th Street and South University Avenue.

A line of CPD and UCPD officers block off South University Avenue. Courtesy of Walter Smith.

As protesters gathered around the police barricade, protesters and police began wrestling over plastic barriers placed in the center of the street. UCPD officers lunged into the crowd to push protesters back and regain control of the barriers, with at least one officer using a baton.

Following the altercation between protesters and police officers, an unidentified individual was taken into custody by UCPD. A Maroon reporter witnessed an officer grabbing an individual who had been pointing and yelling at the police line by the arm from the group of protesters and pulling them behind police barricades, where they were wrestled to the ground by at least three officers, one of whom carried a baton. The individual was later placed in a UCPD car.

As they were arrested, protesters chanted “Shame on you” at the officers, who pushed protesters back from the barricades.

Several protesters also alleged that UCPD used pepper spray on them. A video jointly posted on Instagram by five organizations, including that of UCUP and SJP UChicago, shows a UCPD officer spraying a substance at protesters. In another video posted by UCUP on Instagram, individuals can be heard shouting “They sprayed us,” and calling for water.

In a statement to the Maroon, the University confirmed that one person was arrested.

“The University of Chicago is proud to celebrate its 538th Convocation ceremony today, welcoming thousands of graduates and their families to campus. A group of students walked out early in the ceremony. The program concluded without further incident. The University is fundamentally committed to upholding the rights of students to express a wide range of views,” the University said.

“At approximately 11:00 a.m., in an incident outside of the main Convocation ceremony, demonstrators at a protest on East 59th Street and South University Avenue attempted to access a closed street and break through a barrier erected by the University,” the University added. “A small number of protesters acted violently; one protester, who is unaffiliated with the University, was arrested. Charges are being sought for battery.”

The University did not comment on the allegations that UCPD used pepper spray on protesters.

The group of protesters moved from 59th Street and South University Avenue to a graduation stage in front of Ida Noyes Hall, where they chanted “I believe that we will win” for several minutes before dispersing in small groups.

Peter Maheras contributed reporting.

 

Correction, June 12, 11:15 p.m.: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated that all five students whose diplomas were withheld were informed on May 24. Four of the students were informed on May 24 that their degrees would be withheld pending disciplinary proceedings. A fifth student in the Master of Arts Program in the Humanities was notified on Friday, May 31.

Editor’s note, June 12, 11:15 p.m.: This article was updated to include a link to a video jointly posted on Instagram by five organizations, including UCUP and SJP UChicago, which shows a UCPD officer spraying a substance at protesters.

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About the Contributors
Nathaniel Rodwell-Simon
Nathaniel Rodwell-Simon, Deputy Photo Editor, News Reporter
Nathaniel is a first year in the college studying history and Education and Society. He is a News Reporter and Deputy Photo Editor for the Maroon.
Peter Maheras
Peter Maheras, Head News Editor
Peter is a third-year student in the College from Brookline, Massachusetts. He is studying political science and Law, Letters, and Society. For The Maroon, Peter often writes about the relationship between the University and its neighbors as well as about Chicago politics. Outside of The Maroon, Peter is an avid podcast consumer and Love Island fanatic.
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Comments (9)

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  • G

    Gaby O, AB'05 / Jun 7, 2024 at 12:39 pm

    As an alumna and former employee of the university, the comments in this section are disappointing and unsurprising. We forget that student protests have often served as catalysts for change on campuses, including our own. For example, in 1962 students protested the university’s segregated housing practices and while the action did not have immediate results, it did bring the issue to the attention of administration. Last I checked, we no longer have segregated housing practices at UChicago.

    We never like activists when they are doing the work–the majority of the US did not like MLK when he was out marching, protesting, and disrupting. Yet, I would argue, that we have all benefited from the work of the Civil Rights Movement, which we also forget frequently involved breaking policies, laws, and traditions.

    Additionally, if we are truly trying to live up to the spirit of exchanging ideas and having lively discussions, then let’s set a better example as alumni rather than calling students “worthless weeds” and hiding behind anonymity.

    Reply
    • A

      Alum / Jun 8, 2024 at 5:49 pm

      If you wish to generate “change,” go volunteer at the nearest homeless shelter. Instead, like Mrs. Jellyby (that’s Dickens, a dead white male, in case you’re fed nothing but a diet of DEI), you promote and celebrate abstract and remote causes. The idea that we self-actualize as students and scholars through cosplay activism is 1960s nonsense. We should spend our school years in scholarship, gentlemanly conduct, and the pursuit of virtue.

      Reply
    • P

      Ploni Almoni / Jun 8, 2024 at 11:59 pm

      As a current student, I’m willing to tolerate protests as speech.

      But if we’re serious about both that and the rules we have as a community, protestors shouldn’t get to hide behind anonymity either — specifically since it inhibits the ability of administrators to hold accountable students, faculty, and other community members who break rules (as happened last week at Columbia).

      The University should ban all face coverings during allowed protests, rallies, and demonstrations in the public spaces of campus.

      Reply
      • A

        Alum / Jun 9, 2024 at 5:59 pm

        You’ll change your mind when you look back and need to rely on the prestige and value of your degree. Whether you like the sound of protests or not, the university must be a place of high learning, serene scholarship, excellence, and gentlemanly conduct. It should not be a weird therapeutic camp for maladjusted adolescents who self-actualize by screeching. We all suffer when the university debases itself.

        Reply
    • O

      Observer / Jun 10, 2024 at 5:43 am

      Like so many of the protesters, you are missing two key points.

      Protest is admirable and certainly an important instrument of change. However, the means, infringing on the ability of students and the university at large to conduct its work of education, should not be tolerated. What is so hard about that? Moreover, the perceived attitude that they are there to “tell” the rest of us they are right is not winning many people to the cause.

      Reply
      • A

        Alum / Jun 11, 2024 at 7:14 am

        Honestly, “protest” and “change” should have no place at a university as they have no place at a chip-making factory, a bakery, or a library. If that’s how you spend your parents’ investment in your education, you belong in some sort of Soros advocacy camp, not in a high institution for serene and deep learning. Let us let go of the 1960s nonsense.

        Reply
  • O

    Observer / Jun 6, 2024 at 11:21 am

    The underlying premise of these protestors – because they believe their case is “just”, they are above the law, not subject to rules and laws that apply to everyone else. I hope Nondorf and the admissions office has taken note and adjusts admissions criteria to avoid those who may have these predilections.

    Reply
  • J

    John Chase / Jun 5, 2024 at 11:37 am

    As a parent attending the graduation of my son it was very disappointing that this group disrupted the ceremonies. I commend the UChicago and Chicago Police for their professionalism in keeping these unruly arrogant individuals at bay.

    Reply
  • A

    Alum / Jun 4, 2024 at 4:14 pm

    Who admitted these freaks? All this DEI and BLM-y nonsense must seem like a bad idea now. Back when we were normal, the university experience consisted of much time spent in the library, and in lively discussions about history, philosophy, and the ways of the world. Never have we assumed that “expressing ourselves” should consist of screeching and disrupting solemn traditions. These are worthless weeds growing in the otherwise well-manicured garden of the university.

    Reply