Dismay, frustration follow Dalhousie's update on pro-Palestinian encampment - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 12:48 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Dismay, frustration follow Dalhousie's update on pro-Palestinian encampment

An update from the universitys president and the vice-provost of student affairs about the pro-Palestinian encampment on the south-end Halifax campus was released on July 19 and has prompted disappointed reactions from a variety of people.

Release from administration begs question of encampment's longevity

A group of tents with signs in front them and university buildings in the background
Some of the tents at the pro-Palestinian encampment on Dalhousie's Studley Quad. (Brian MacKay )

An ambiguous statement from Dalhousie University about its plans for the part of its south-end Halifax campus where a pro-Palestinian encampment has stood for two months has left some students, faculty and encampment members outraged.

The university issueda news release on July 19that said it is moving to restore theStudley Quad, where about a dozen tents were set up in May, for use by the entire school community.

When contacted by CBC News for more detail, the university wouldn't say if it plans to dismantle the encampment, or when that might happen.

The release, signed by university president Kim Brooks and student affairsvice-provost Rick Ezekiel, said the move "aligns with requests and demands" from the Dalhousie Student Union and the Students for the Liberation of PalestineKjipuktuk(SLPK).

"While many conversations remain ongoing, and we support continued opportunities for gathering, critical discourse, learning, connection, and demonstration, we have finalized our commitments and are taking steps to return the Studley Quad to be an open space available for the use of our whole community," the release said.

But members of SLPKcountered the statement at a news conference on Tuesday, sayingthat previous talks with the university had failed to meet their demands.

Nine people sit behind several tables.
SLPK members and representatives from student unions for university students taking part in the encampment held a news conference in the Henry Hicks building on the Dalhousie campus on Tuesday. (Meig Campbell/CBC)

The coalition of university students from Dalhousie, Saint Mary's, King's College,NSCADand Mount Saint Vincentwants the university to completely divest itself from Israel byceasing partnerships with Israeli academic institutions and suspending any financial ties to Israel and the war in Gaza.

More than 38,000Palestinians have reportedly been killed since October, according to the Gaza health ministry.

Israel's land and air attacks on Gaza followed the events on Oct. 7 whenHamas-led militants stormed the Israeli border, took 250 hostages and killed 1,200 people, according to numbers from the Israeli government.

The student coalition says itbelieves the university's statement is a preliminary warning for encampment participants to leave before orientation week beginsin September.

Coalition representativessaid at the news conference that they have no intention of leavingthe property until Dalhousie fully divests from Israel.

A sign stating that there are no univeristies left in Gaza due to
A sign from encampment protesters sits by a set of stairs on the Studley Quad at Dalhousie. (Brian MacKay )

The Atlantic Jewish Council also publicly responded to Dalhousie's statement on Tuesday, accusing the university of being biased toward the pro-Palestinian movement.

"Dalhousie has made it quite clear where it stands on the Hamas-Israel conflict, and by doing so it has jeopardized the safety of Jewish students, staff and faculty," said a statement from the Jewish council.

The councilsaidit is taking action to ensure that "the university holds true to its long history of tolerance and apolitical action, and once again becomes a safe and inclusive space for all."

Ongoing violence in the Middle East has prompted numerous pro-Palestinian encampments to emerge on university campuses across Canada in recent months. Within the past month, someencampments have also been dismantled.

Police forcefully removed participants in anencampment at McGill University in Montreal earlier this month. Protesters dismantled their own encampment at the University of Torontoto avoid a similar confrontation with police.

Students at the Dalhousie encampment and the student union were hopeful they could continue to work with the administration to eventually divest from Israel.

"I am deeply disappointed with the recent university update regarding the encampment on Studley Quad," student union president Mariam Knakriah said in a statement sent to CBC.

"The recent communication from the university presents itself as an 'agreement' with the students at the encampment, yet it significantly lacks transparency and detail and fails to mention any clear commitment to divestment."

Last Friday's statement from Dalhousie said the university would continue to support students affected by the violence in Gaza and the academic amnesty implemented in June will still apply until Aug. 31.

Ajay Parasram is an associate professor at Dalhousie and is part of a group of faculty members who have supported the encampment since it was erected. He hopes anencampment removal is not on the table.

"If we go the route of the other universities and force this dismantling of the encampment, I think that would be really terrible for Dalhousie, and I really hope that that's not the intention of the administration," said Parasram.