logo
Columbia University professor files grievance over 'termination'

Columbia University professor files grievance over 'termination'

Middle East Eye31-01-2025

An esteemed Columbia University professor has filed a formal grievance with the university she taught at for 25 years to investigate the department responsible for upholding anti-discrimination rules for its collusion in anti-Palestinian racism.
Law professor Katherine Franke said she has endured harassment from students, colleagues and the university administration since she spoke about former Israeli soldiers who are students spraying pro-Palestinian student activists with a chemical at Columbia last January, which led to multiple hospitalisations.
During a Democracy Now! interview, she said that students who 'come right out of their military service' have 'been known to harass Palestinian and other students on our campus'.
The interview's aftermath resulted in two Columbia colleagues reporting to the Office of Institutional Equity (OIE) that she harassed the Columbia community based on their national origin. The OIE upholds the university's compliance with federal anti-discrimination laws. The OIE then launched an investigation.
Franke's comments were then mischaracterised during highly publicised congressional hearings on campus protests last year, where she was erroneously quoted by Republican Elise Stefanik (nominated to be the next US ambassador to the United Nations) as saying, 'all Israeli students who have served in the IDF are dangerous and shouldn't be on campus'.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
Then-Columbia university president Nemat Talaat "Minouche" Shafik did not correct Stefanik.
Since being publicly named, Franke told Middle East Eye she has endured harassment both on and off campus. She says the hostile environment, including being yelled at and surreptitiously filmed, led her to ask the university if she could move her retirement forward.
Late last week, she announced in a statement that she had "reached an agreement" with the university to retire after serving 25 years as a law faculty member. But while the university may call this change in status "retirement", Franke said, it should be "understood as a termination dressed up in more palatable terms".
"I have come to regard Columbia Law School as a hostile work environment in which I can no longer enter the classroom, hold office hours, walk through the campus, or engage in faculty governance functions free from egregious and unwelcome harassment on account of my defense of students' freedom to protest and express views that are critical of Israel's treatment of Palestinians."
Franke says that Columbia University would agree only if she forfeited previously agreed retirement benefits such as having an office for five years post-retirement, an assistant, and the status of emeritus professor.
Columbia University Senate did not respond to MEE's request for comment.
A larger fight
The university's decision has sparked an outcry from members of the law faculty, and the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) issued a letter, which Middle East Eye has seen, to the university senate asking them to review Franke's grievance.
Over 45 Columbia Law School professors also signed a letter earlier this month calling for a Columbia University Senate inquiry into the controversial departure of their colleague Franke, marking an escalation in the dispute over academic freedom and protest rights on campuses.
The 15 January letter, addressed to Columbia's senior leadership, including the interim president and board of trustees, requests an investigation into what the signatories describe as Franke's 'constructive termination' following her stance on pro-Palestinian protests.
Columbia colleague Joseph Howley, an associate professor at the Department of Classics, expressed concern about the way Franke had been treated.
'Her treatment by representatives of the university when she was named before Congress in April was appalling. Nothing warranted the circumstances of her departure," Howley told MEE.
Dozens of Columbia University law faculty demand inquiry into professor's 'termination' Read More »
"It is a worrying sign for all of us that the retirement of a long-serving faculty member could be interfered with as a result of political and legal pressure simply because she had the courage to speak up for the rights and dignity of Palestinians.'
Franke believes that what happened to her is just part of a larger climate of targeting academic freedom.
'The people behind it are quite clear what their agenda is. If you look at what is happening on our campuses, it has been about anti-Palestinian racism, which gets dressed up as fighting antisemitism. That's not where they stop - that's low-hanging fruit," Franke told MEE.
'Where they go next is critical legal studies, critical race theory, feminism, queer theory, all the stuff the right-wing has identified as dangerous ideas.'
She added that a lot of this has been tested out in Florida, where they (Republicans) are reforming the education system, or as Franke put it, potentially 'breaking it'.
'What happened to me is an example of what all members of the academy should be worried about,' Franke warns.
Structural flaws
She also believes she was targeted at the congressional hearings because she is queer, 'All three members of faculty named are queer. We are vulnerable on several grounds, partly because of how we speak about Palestine, and partly for being queer.'
She said she found the lack of a fight being put up by universities 'disheartening'.
'Faculty are putting up a fight, and when they do, things like what's happening to me happen. But presidents of our universities are going to Congress and collaborating in the dismantling of liberal education institutions,' Franke said.
Franke says the change in culture is a result of the increasing corporate makeup of the boards of trustees over the last 20 years and the treatment of universities as companies rather than as places with 'unique missions'.
Franke added that universities' growing dependence on federal money renders them vulnerable to the threat of losing that funding.
'Even though they are private institutions, they are actually publicly funded because they are so dependent on federal funding… It's a terrible business model, how to run a private research institution and render yourself vulnerable to blackmail.'
Since coming into office, US President Donald Trump ordered a pause on federal grants and loans, which has since been blocked by a judge, and could affect universities. The Associated Press reported this week that the Trump directive has universities nationwide "scrambling to determine how a funding freeze could affect their research programs, students and faculty".
She says that moves like this are why universities such as Harvard and NYU were capitulating to adopt the controversial IHRA definition of antisemitism and believes that Columbia would also do so.
She said Columbia was adopting a position of neutrality to evade taking "a public position on a genocide".
"The university is also adopting policies of institutional neutrality. In the past, the president of Columbia spoke out about the murder of George Floyd or the invasion of Ukraine. They now regret taking a position on these matters as they are now being asked to take a public position on a genocide. They don't want to. The way they are getting around it is saying they are committed to academic neutrality."
While Franke's teaching career at Columbia has ended, her advocacy has not.
'I care about the dignity and rights of Palestinians. I never picked this fight with Columbia. I don't think it's a worthy fight. I now have more time to focus on what I care about which is addressing a genocide, to focus on the human rights issues which motivated me to get involved in Palestinian solidarity work to begin with.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US army vehicle displaying word ‘kafir' in northeast Syria seen as ‘provocation'
US army vehicle displaying word ‘kafir' in northeast Syria seen as ‘provocation'

Middle East Eye

time36 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

US army vehicle displaying word ‘kafir' in northeast Syria seen as ‘provocation'

Residents in northeastern Syria have described a US military vehicle patrolling the area and displaying the word "kafir" - infidel in Arabic - on its front as "offensive" and a "provocation". Middle East Eye observed the vehicle, which also displayed a Christian cross, on the morning of 31 May near the city of Hasakah, as part of a convoy of around a dozen armoured vehicles bearing the American flag. Shortly afterwards, US soldiers stopped the car carrying the MEE team and demanded they stop photographing the convoy, offering no explanation or justification. The word "kafir" gained global notoriety through its frequent use by the Islamic State (IS) and other extremist groups during the Syrian civil war, where it was used to justify violence against those IS deemed non-believers - including Muslims who did not share their ideology. Nevertheless, residents interpreted the display of the word "kafir" as the soldiers deliberately self-identifying as infidels, to make a statement to the local population - despite the fact that IS no longer has a presence in the region. 'It's a provocation. We have nothing to do with IS, we don't consider Americans to be kuffar [plural of kafir], and even less so the Christians who have always lived in Syria," Jihan, a 34-year-old Kurdish woman, told MEE. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters 'It's so stupid that it's hard to even analyse the message behind it.' Mohammed, 42, said, "Unfortunately, it reflects the hatred Muslims have faced from Americans since 9/11, and the way they perceive us." US to reduce military presence It remains unclear whether the graffiti was painted during the period when IS still controlled large parts of Syria, or, as some interviewees suggested, by young Syrians, with or without the approval of American soldiers, "just to provoke the extremists". MEE reached out to the US administration for comment but had not received a response by the time of publication. The graffiti echoes the controversy sparked in March by a tattoo on the bicep of US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, featuring the word "kafir" beneath a slogan associated with the Crusades. The tattoo was widely criticised as Islamophobic. US rebuffed Israeli demands to keep more US troops in northeast Syria, sources say Read More » On Tuesday, Thomas Barrack, the US special envoy to Syria, announced that the United States would reduce its military presence in the country, scaling down from eight bases to three, with the final goal of maintaining only one base, in the Hasakah region. 'What I can assure you is that our current Syria policy will not be close to the Syria policy of the last 100 years because none of these have worked,' Barrack said. There are currently an estimated 2,000 American troops in Syria, deployed to support the fight against IS. That number is expected to be halved. Residents interviewed by MEE reported that numerous US vehicles have already departed from the Deir Ezzor and Rmeilan military bases, reportedly heading towards Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan.

Israel's victims in Gaza are nameless in western media. These are their names
Israel's victims in Gaza are nameless in western media. These are their names

Middle East Eye

timean hour ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israel's victims in Gaza are nameless in western media. These are their names

A man in a green shirt stands in a Gaza hospital, phone in hand, making a call. "Hello, Hany, come to the hospital. Hany, please come. Send someone. My children died, Hany. Both my sons - they're gone." He hangs up, whispering: "Oh Allah…" Another man, who seems to know him, approaches and asks: "Abu Muhannad, what happened?" He breaks down in tears. "My sons died. Muhannad and Mohammed. They both died. They're gone. I swear to God - they're gone. My sons are gone." New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters This is not fiction. It's a video from one of Gaza's hospitals, where grief is documented in real time. This is not the lonely cry of one man echoing through a hospital corridor. It is one of countless screams confirming that a genocide is unfolding - one body, one child, one neighbourhood at a time. As Israeli ground troops begin their policy of ethnic cleansing in northern Gaza, civilians across the south are - once again - being herded into ever-shrinking spaces where there is no safety from the bombardment. Scrolling horror I spend hours each day scrolling through Telegram channels showing what Amnesty International has described as a "live-streamed genocide". The pain, the horror, the fear, the blood - along with forced starvation and expulsion - are all visible on our screens. Wounded people flood into Al-Awda Hospital in central Gaza after an F-16 air strike on the Al-Hassayna UN school in al-Nuseirat refugee camp, where displaced families had sought shelter. The pain, the horror, the fear, the blood - along with forced starvation and expulsion - are all visible on our screens The names of those killed begin to scroll: five martyrs - Ayda, Asmaa, Yasir, Ismail, Ashraf. Then three more: Awni, Alaa, Mohammed, and many others still uncounted. Soon, videos of the massacre begin to surface. Footage from Al-Awda Hospital in Deir al-Balah shows rows of wounded children. A baby lies in blood-soaked clothes while doctors wrap bandages around his head. He cries while sucking his fingers - perhaps from hunger, perhaps for comfort. In another clip, a father cradles his injured daughter while medics fight to save her shattered limbs. These are the images millions of Americans and Europeans will never see, protected in their bubbled living rooms by corporate propaganda news that shields them from such sights - atrocities that may lead them to question what their governments are supporting. Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war Then another video of the same massacre: Mahmoud Allouh, a correspondent for Al-Ghad TV, rushes into the hospital carrying his bloodied daughter. He darts between the wards, searching for space. There are no beds left. He lays her beside another wounded child. The girl starts to cry. A voice behind the camera murmurs: "What happened?" Mahmoud points at his daughter: "Here is what happened." "She's lucky," my all-too-aware son whispered behind my shoulder. "At least she has a bed - and a father." Not every child in Gaza does. 'Where should we go?' More news floods in. This time, from my hometown, Khan Younis, where more evacuation orders have been issued and desperate families are fleeing again. A video shows a man running through rubble-strewn streets with his elderly mother on his back, crying out: "Where should we go?" Many will go to Al-Mawasi - perhaps to be bombed in tents rather than their own homes. The news doesn't stop. The Abu Daqqa family home was targeted in eastern Khan Younis. Jumana Abu Daqqa, the mother, was killed along with her four young children - Wesam, Julan, Jilan and Siraj. Israel killed my family and destroyed my home. The world just kept scrolling Read More » Another artillery strike hit the Al-Omur neighbourhood in Al-Fukhari, also in east Khan Younis, wiping out an entire family: Safaa al-Omur and her six daughters - Sama, Lamma, Saja, Leen, Layan and Nada. All gone in the blink of an eye. Then came the bombardment of a makeshift encampment in Al-Mawasi - the hell zone - what the Israeli army misleadingly called a "safe zone". In less than an hour, around 10 strikes hit the area. One of them obliterated the Kassab family's tent in the southern part of Al-Mawasi, wiping out the entire family. Abeer, the mother, was killed along with her six children: her four daughters - Qamar, Samira, Abeer and Shireen - and her two sons, Imad and Ghali. The attacks come so fast, one after another, it's hard to catch my breath. It feels as though the Israeli occupation forces are racing against time to annihilate as much as they can, as quickly as possible. The Israeli human rights organisation B'Tselem has declared: "Israel is carrying out a deliberate, systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing in the Gaza Strip." 'They are killing us like chickens' Still, the news doesn't stop. In northern Gaza, Israeli forces bombed the power generators at the besieged Indonesian Hospital - one of the last remaining medical lifelines in the north. The rest are out of service. This caused a total power outage that now threatens the lives of every patient still breathing. Calls to the Palestinian Red Crescent Society to coordinate firefighting efforts go unanswered. Similarly, Khan Younis's Nasser Hospital is "suffering immensely" from a shortage of medical supplies after an Israeli attack hit a medical warehouse in the early morning on 19 May. This is not collateral damage. It is a deliberate strategy - a methodical execution of a declared plan, since the much-argued bombing of the al-Ahli Hospital on 17 October 2023, which killed about 500 people. As I write, all hospitals in northern Gaza are currently out of service. Then Gaza City was struck. The target: the al-Khour family in the Sabra neighbourhood - where I lived for two years in the 1990s, after I began working in Gaza. Six members of the family were killed, and many others were wounded. Still, the news floods in faster than I can absorb. I am reminded of words my brother said to me almost a year and a half ago: "We survived, but we don't know what tomorrow holds. It is like living in a chicken coop, waiting to be slaughtered. Every day, they come and pick 300, 400 or 500 to slaughter. Our turn is yet to come." Molly Moore in The Washington Post quoted an older woman in southern Gaza saying much the same more than 20 years ago: "They are killing us like chickens." Dying nameless And yet on and on it goes - back to 1967 and 1948. The horror of that woman in southern Gaza in 2002 is now seen multiple times a day all over the coastal territory. Then we at least had names. Now we die nameless - no western journalist fighting to learn our names, to tell the story of the headless men, women and children killed as they slept in their homes or tents. Each day brings a tally of more than 100 Palestinians killed. Since Nakba Day on 15 May, Israel has killed nearly 150 people a day. On 15 May alone: 120 lives lost. On 16 May: 125. On 17 May: 146. On 18 May: another 140. The numbers mount. The horror deepens. States could acknowledge the genocide. They could impose arms embargoes, block Israeli ports, and sever diplomatic and economic ties. But they choose not to Amid the smoke, the rubble, and the silence of the world, the question remains for the two million souls trapped in the Gaza concentration camp and on the move from one place to another: Where should we go? Israel's policy is not just rhetoric - it is a genocidal policy in action. Yet the world's response remains swallowed by moral decay disguised as diplomacy. Finally, after more than 54,000 Palestinians have been killed - the vast majority women and children - Britain, France and Canada issued a joint statement threatening "targeted sanctions" against Israel if its expanded attack on Gaza continues. While such measures may appear to be a step in the right direction, they are woefully insufficient in the face of genocide, in the face of Gaza's killing fields and the systematic erasure of entire families. This is not just a failure of politics or diplomacy - it is a collapse of our shared humanity. Palestinians are not asking for sympathy. We are demanding accountability under international law. As legal scholar Noura Erakat reminds us, this is not a failure of law: "There is sufficient law to end the genocide. To lift the blockade. To end the occupation. And to realise Palestinian self-determination." The world has the legal tools to act. States could acknowledge the genocide. They could impose arms embargoes, block Israeli ports, and sever diplomatic and economic ties. But they choose not to. They choose impunity. Until foreign governments choose differently, Palestinians will continue to live in a world where journalists carry their injured children instead of cameras, where doctors operate by torchlight, and where a child's scream is the only proof of life. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Libya: UN raises alarm over ‘gross violations' after scores of bodies found at militia sites in Tripoli
Libya: UN raises alarm over ‘gross violations' after scores of bodies found at militia sites in Tripoli

Middle East Eye

timean hour ago

  • Middle East Eye

Libya: UN raises alarm over ‘gross violations' after scores of bodies found at militia sites in Tripoli

The UN has demanded an independent probe into evidence of extrajudicial killings by an armed Libyan group following the discovery of dozens of bodies in mass graves across Libya's capital Tripoli. The bodies were found at sites run by the Stabilisation Support Apparatus (SSA), one of the city's most powerful militia groups, once led by Abdel-Ghani al-Kikli who was assassinated in May. Al-Kikli, also known as "Gheniwa," was among Tripoli's most influential militia commanders and faced allegations of extrajudicial killings and serious human rights violations. Before his death, he had come into conflict with other armed groups. His killing triggered armed clashes across the capital, the deadliest since August 2023, when rival factions in Tripoli battled for control, leaving 55 people dead. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters In the wake of the violence, the UN human rights office (OCHR) said 10 badly charred bodies were discovered at the SSA headquarters in the Abu Salim neighbourhood, while 67 more bodies were found 'in refrigerators in various states of decay' in hospitals in Abu Salim and Al Khadra. Exclusive: Greece to lobby Egypt against Haftar endorsing Turkey-Libya maritime deal Read More » Another suspected mass grave has also been reported at the SSA-run Tripoli Zoo. The identities of the victims remain unknown. Volker Turk, the UN's high commissioner said the revelations confirmed the UN's 'worst-held fears' of gross human rights violations perpetrated by the group at these sites, adding that the bodies were found along with "suspected instruments of torture and abuse, and potential evidence of extrajudicial killings'. Turk noted that forensic authorities have not been allowed into the sites and called on the Libyan authorities to seal them to preserve evidence and ensure international access. The recent revelations follow the discovery of two mass graves in Jakharrah and Al-Kufra in February, containing over 100 bodies of refugees, who are particularly vulnerable to human trafficking, forced disappearance and killings in Libya. The SSA has long been suspected by the UN Support Mission in Libya and independent rights experts of being the main perpetrators of violence inside Libya's detention centres. Officially tied to the Presidential Council under the internationally recognised Government of National Unity (GNU), the group is one of the many factions competing for power in Libya's capital.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store