Protests add a new wrinkle to overseas-campus debate
Limits on protest, including the alleged deportation of a graduate student who displayed a keffiyeh during commencement ceremonies, have raised fresh concerns about free speech and academic freedom at New York University’s campus in Abu Dhabi.
Students and faculty members said a doctoral student who pulled out the Arab head scarf and shouted “free Palestine” as they crossed the graduation stage was detained and later removed from the Persian Gulf country. Other students made gestures of protest when receiving their diplomas, they said.
Witnesses asked not to be named because of fears about the consequences of speaking out. An NYU spokesman neither disputed nor confirmed the events when contacted by The Chronicle.
Colleges in the United States have also struggled with how to respond to campus protests over the Israel-Hamas war, which have included disruptions to graduation ceremonies. But the stakes can be heightened at overseas branch campuses in countries where local speech protections are not as strong and students and professors may worry about jeopardizing their visas.
The fallout from NYU-Abu Dhabi’s May 22 commencement has again raised questions about whether American colleges can keep their assurances of free exchange at international outposts.
“What concerns us is that the commitment to academic freedom has been eroded in the aftermath of war,” said Paula Chakravartty, an associate professor of media, culture, and communication and vice president of NYU’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors. “Whatever guarantee there has been has been thrown out the window.”
The faculty-rights organization released a statement criticizing NYU for having “silenced” students and professors in Abu Dhabi. What “should have been a moment of celebration of achievements,” they wrote, “turned into a heavily policed event.”
The Middle East Studies Association also sent a letter to Linda G. Mills, president of NYU, and Fabio Piano, interim vice chancellor of the Abu Dhabi campus, expressing “grave concern” about the events. The group called on administrators to “publicly and forcefully reaffirm your commitment to respect and uphold the free-speech rights and the academic freedom of faculty, students, and staff across all of NYU’s campuses, and to fully protect their safety and well-being.”
Graduating students were told in a May 17 email from Abu Dhabi administrators that they could only wear “approved academic attire” and that they could not decorate their caps or gowns with pins, symbols, or inscriptions. Bags, signs, posters, banners, flags, and flag-like attire were also barred from the ceremony, the message said, asking students and their guests to maintain “high standards of civility and achievement.”
Footage from previous commencement exercises, however, shows graduates wearing keffiyehs and other cultural dress.
One student told The Chronicle she felt “completely defeated” when reading the email. “We’re going to graduate, and we have no voice,” she said. Students said they were searched when entering the commencement venue and again as they lined up to receive their diplomas.
In addition to the student with the keffiyeh, who was allegedly detained for a week before being deported, other graduates made a thumbs-down sign or signed “free Palestine” in American Sign Language, witnesses said. Such gestures of protest are not clear in a recording of the ceremony NYU posted online. Those who protested said they were cut from the video.
Some of the students later faced disciplinary action.
NYU enrolled its first students in Abu Dhabi in 2010. Two years later, it announced a second overseas liberal-arts college, in Shanghai.
In a written statement, John Beckman, an NYU spokesman, said that “in both Shanghai and Abu Dhabi, we have been guaranteed academic authority over our campuses’ scholarly mission, and our partners have lived up to those commitments of academic freedom in our classrooms, research spaces, study areas, and libraries.”
Courses that cover the Israel-Palestine conflict continue to be taught in Abu Dhabi, Beckman said, noting there had not been allegations of “any interference with such courses or research.”
Still, Beckman wrote that students and faculty and staff members must abide by local laws at all of NYU’s locations, including in the United States, and that the university has “no authority over any nation’s immigration or law-enforcement actions or decisions.“
“This reality,” he said, “is why we undertake substantial efforts to make sure our community members understand the culture and laws in which they pursue their studies and scholarship, and advise them clearly and repeatedly about expectations, obligations, and boundaries, including the protocols for the NYU-Abu Dhabi graduation.”
Beckman did not respond to specific questions about whether administrators in New York or Abu Dhabi had set the commencement rules. He also did not answer queries about whether authorities in the United Arab Emirates had asked NYU to put restrictions on protests at graduation or during the academic year.
Mills, the NYU president, and Mariët Westermann, then-vice chancellor of the Abu Dhabi campus who has since left to lead the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation, attended the commencement ceremony, as did some NYU trustees and members of the Emirati royal family. When the administrators congratulated graduates, a number refused to shake their hands, witnesses said.