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New York Times
29-05-2025
- General
- New York Times
Harvard's Graduation Day Blends Protests and Pride
As Harvard graduates gathered on Thursday to embrace commencement rituals in Harvard Yard, they were surrounded by both beaming parents and visible reminders that the university is embroiled in an existential fight with the Trump administration. Before the ceremony, about two dozen people gathered in Harvard Square with signs protesting the government and its attacks on the university. In a separate protest, targeting campus antisemitism, a truck passed near the ceremony and displayed photos of individuals labeled 'Harvard's Leading AntiSemites.' And throughout the morning, small groups of alumni stood at each gate to campus, handing out stickers that read 'Crimson Courage,' the name of a new alumni group created to galvanize support for the university. Mark Dyen, who graduated from Harvard in 1970, said that he has never been prouder to be an alumnus. 'Harvard stood up for itself, for us, for higher education and democracy,' he said as he passed out stickers. 'And by doing so, it created space for people who are more vulnerable.' The day of celebration came as the Trump administration continues its attempts to crack down on the university, a broad campaign it has framed as an effort to curb antisemitism at the school. The government has already withdrawn or frozen billions of dollars in federal funding, threatened to revoke Harvard's tax-exempt status and sought to block its ability to enroll international students. The university has forcefully resisted, calling the attacks a violation of academic freedom and the First Amendment. At graduation on Thursday, about half a dozen family members of graduates, most visiting from other countries, declined to give their names to a reporter, saying that they feared retribution from the Trump administration. One, an Indian actor from Mumbai who said he was celebrating his cousin's graduation, shook his head sadly when asked about the attacks on Harvard. To some, the ceremonies felt like reassurance that the university's mission would endure. 'Harvard trains people who wants to change the world, to make the world a better place,' said Kwabena Fosu, who traveled from Ghana to watch his wife receive a master's degree in public administration. 'That's what they came here to do, and that's what they will continue to do.' Outside the commencement, Casey Wenz, a Cambridge resident, stood in Harvard Square with a large sign that read, 'Harvard Thank You for Your Courage.' She said she lives a few blocks from campus and has many friends at the university who are professors and international students. 'I think it takes tremendous courage to stand up to Trump, and if Harvard's not going to do it, who would?' she said. 'I'm just super grateful.'


New York Times
28-05-2025
- General
- New York Times
Trump's Attacks Have Helped Heal a Deeply Divided Harvard
A leading pro-Palestinian student demonstrator led chants for a crowd of hundreds gathered in front of the gates to Harvard Yard on Tuesday evening. A former Jewish leader on campus who has criticized pro-Palestinian campus activism delivered the first speech. A professor who is one of Harvard's most prominent critics then joined them to urge people to defend the university. Harvard in recent years has been the site of bitter acrimony over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, free speech and the future of American higher education. But the Trump administration's attack on Harvard has infused the campus with a sense of unity it has lacked over the last year and half, as the university prepares for commencement this week. 'School pride is probably at an all-time high,' said Abdullah Shahid Sial, a sophomore from Pakistan and one of Harvard's two undergraduate student body presidents. He said he had not seen the campus so unified. 'I hope it continues.' The Department of Homeland Security announced last week that it had barred Harvard from enrolling international students, a move that sent shock waves through higher education. The government has also frozen more than $3 billion in grants and contracts in its battle against the university. The extraordinary attack has caused many in the Harvard community to set differences aside at what they say is an existential moment for the 388-year-old university. Wherever one falls on the Middle East conflict, Mr. Sial said, 'everyone is on the side that cracking down on international students will not solve any of those issues.' The Trump administration has said it is punishing Harvard because it has not done enough to stop antisemitism and has created an environment that is hostile to conservatives. The campus has banded together because what President Trump is doing 'is completely beyond the pale,' said N. Gregory Mankiw, an influential conservative economist. Professor Mankiw, who worked in the George W. Bush administration, said he would like more viewpoint diversity on campus but added that he had always felt appreciated and treated 'extremely well' at Harvard. 'Double parking is a problem,' he said. 'But we don't start executing people who double park.' While some students and faculty members remain critical of Harvard, the rally on Tuesday seemed to capture the prevailing mood on campus. A new group, formed to oppose Trump administration demands, organized the event as a show of support for Harvard's international students. Jacob M. Miller, who in 2023 served as the student president of Harvard's Hillel chapter, a center for Jewish life on campus, frequently appeared on national television after the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel to say Harvard's administration was not doing enough to combat antisemitism. At the rally on Tuesday, he said Harvard's Jewish community rejects the Trump administration's narrative that the federal government's actions are intended to protect Jewish students. 'We will not allow our identities to be invoked to undermine institutions of higher education,' Mr. Miller said. 'And we will not allow the administration to wield our identities as a pretextual prop in the political persecution of our peers.' Nuriel Vera-DeGraff, a junior at Harvard who delivered speeches at a pro-Palestinian encampment on campus last year, introduced Mr. Miller at the Tuesday rally. Afterward, he said in an interview that despite their differences, they could 'still fight the common fight together.' Mr. Miller said that Mr. Trump's fight with Harvard had pushed 'people to expand their horizons and to create friendships outside of the immediate groups of people with whom they already agree.' Tim, an admitted student from Ukraine who asked to be identified by his first name for fear of actions by the government, said international students had been encouraged by Harvard's decision to swiftly sue the federal government. The action signaled that the university would fight for its students, he said in an interview from his home in Ukraine. The atmosphere of relative unity at Harvard stands in contrast to Columbia University, which capitulated to some demands from the Trump administration. While Harvard also tried to work with the Trump administration, it has been aggressive in rejecting some demands and has now sued the federal government twice. Last week, Claire Shipman, Columbia's acting president, received a chorus of boos during commencement. Harvard's commencement will be Thursday. On Tuesday, Harvard's president, Alan M. Garber, addressed undergraduates in the class of 2025 during a speech at the university's annual baccalaureate service. As Dr. Garber took the stage, someone in the crowd of graduating seniors cheered, 'My boy!' In his remarks, Dr. Garber urged the seniors to defend the values of education as they pursued their professional careers. 'The best way to acknowledge Harvard and what this time has meant to you is to advocate for education,' Dr. Garber said, adding, 'Everything we might achieve — morally, scientifically, technologically and even economically — is grounded in knowledge.' On Tuesday night, thousands of people attended a webinar put on by Crimson Courage, a group started by Harvard alumni, to support their alma mater and higher education. Maura Healey, who is the governor of Massachusetts and graduated from Harvard in 1992, said during the call that the university was the fourth biggest employer in the state and contributed more than $6 billion to its economy. The attacks on international students are 'undercutting our ability to attract the world's talent,' Governor Healey said, adding, 'People are going to take their talents elsewhere.' The need for faculty and administrators to unite to defend the university has 'taken priority over other divisions among us,' said Vincent Brown, a history professor. Dr. Brown had recently criticized university actions, including urging leaders to take a stronger posture against the Trump administration when it adopted a conciliatory stance. Now, he said, 'everybody is united behind President Garber and anybody else who is willing to defend the academic sector against the assault of the Trump administration.'