Words matter. Words can reveal hidden depths or conceal them. Words can bring people together or divide. They can reconcile people or incite violence. We, the undersigned, know this. We know this because we are writing teachers. We work with words.
We also know that silence in times of crisis speaks louder than words. This is why we write now. We cannot remain silent.
On May 6, 2024, our campus community experienced a crisis – violence unleashed against peaceful protestors, arrests and suspensions of peaceful protestors.
This violence was not initiated by students. It was lit by words: the Chancellor’s words. As writing teachers, we write to condemn those words. This writing crossed a line, ironically the very line the administration purports to protect: the line separating speech that can be spoken or written freely and speech that cannot be uttered because it endangers the public.
Words that criminalize
The Chancellor’s email, written and delivered on May 5, 2024, equated to yelling fire on a fireless campus.
In that email, the Chancellor writes in a cold legalistic language that bleeds out the protestors’ humanity and turns them into criminals:
“On May 1, 2024, campus community members and non-affiliates established an illegal encampment near Library Walk.”
Notice how the wording casts a shadow on concerned members of the public who stood with the students at a public university. They become “non-affiliates” lumped into the category of law breakers.
The writer then portrays the administration as benevolent, noting their frustrated attempts to meet with students:
“We have been met with shifting liaisons and claims that the encampment has no organized leadership with whom to reach binding agreements.”
Some of us chose to be faculty witnesses to the encampment. Tested against our witness and multiple other sources, this claim is patently false. Student leaders were observing campuses like UC Riverside and seeing how they could follow suit with a strategy that ended in acknowledgement of their terms and peaceful resolution. At the same time, according to the Chair of the Academic Senate (May 10), faculty members were making urgent requests to the administration that they meet with students in person. The evening before the armed intrusion by police, students and faculty were prepared to open a dialogue. Their requests were met by silence.
Finally, the writer turns to the dangers of the encampment.
“The encampment poses serious safety and security hazards to those inside and outside the encampment area. In the last week, the encampment has limited free movement on campus, created a checkpoint for entry into the camp, and denied access to the fire marshal and health inspectors. As time passes, the threat and potential for violent clashes increases. The presence of a significant number of non-affiliates in the encampment heightens these concerns.”
Note the actor posing the hazard: the encampment. To blame these encampments for violence is, to quote Dr. King, “like condemning a robbed man because his possession of money precipitated the evil act of robbery.” As we saw with UCLA, the threat of violence came from counter-protestors attacking the encampment while police stood by.
As for the camp itself, we saw a different space than the one described. It was safe, secure, joyous. The students had areas for food and prayer. The grounds were cleaned. The nights were tranquil and reflective. Movement along library walk flowed. When the walkway was momentarily blocked, it was for song or dance. There were no checkpoints other than watchful administrative personnel.
Words on the wrong side of history
The Chancellor invokes a campus policy prohibiting encampments to show the law is on his side. From our perspective, the more enshrined democratic rights of free speech and free assembly far eclipse that policy.
If it were determined that protestors broke a law, we might remind the Khosla administration of history: Civil Rights protestors broke the law when they marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. That march was an illegal assembly that was characterized as endangering the public peace.
The sheriff in Selma could have used his words to restrain his policemen. He could have let that march continue peacefully. Instead, he said “Go!” To protect the public peace, he ordered violence. To uphold the law, he unleashed club and whip. Chancellor Khosla’s email, his administration’s talks with police behind the scenes, were the equivalent of that “Go!” Those words placed them on the wrong side of history. Those words broke a higher law that moved protestors across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, that moves students now to encampments.
Word bridges
There is a subtext to the Chancellor’s 5/5/2024 message and the update which further demonized protestors in the wake of the police brutality. This subtext is revealed in an official sign posted after the encampment was forcefully cleared.
The subtext revealed by this sign is that the encampment was “discriminatory” and that its protestors were harassing individuals in the community. What this sign gestures to, then, is the larger framework that these encampments are being misread within: the frame of antisemitism.
As a way of critiquing this framework, we point to two of the most controversial slogans chanted at encampments:
“From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will be Free!”
“There is Only One Solution, Intifada, Revolution!”
We note, based on our witness, that these slogans were chanted next to others:
“The people united can never be defeated!”
“Your liberation is bound up with mine!”
“We can never be free until we are all free!”
But it is important for us, as teachers, to encounter those words characterized as antisemitic.
As teachers, we recognize the ambivalence of the more controversial slogans, the traumas they elicit and the traumas they gesture towards. As one of our Jewish students said, “When my family hears these slogans, they hear a call for the destruction of Israel.” He continued, “But I understand that a Palestinian person hears something completely different: a call for liberation that isn’t necessarily a call to violence.”
His classmate, a Palestinian American, affirmed this. She described the deep-seated Anti-Arab racism that turns her into a monster in the eyes of fellow Americans. She told us of what she sees in her feed: mothers holding their lifeless children, refugees told to flee to sites then bombed. She told us how Anti-Arab racism obscures the meaning of the slogan. For her, it is a call to be acknowledged as human, as dispossessed. It is a call to the same right to exist demanded by her classmate’s mother. Months of peacefully protesting for that demand ended with this student running in tears as police assaulted her friends. “I thought of the people in Rafah running next to bodies,” she said. “The thought of them kept me going.”
Students like these are working through the ambivalence of these slogans. They’re bridging the gap by listening to each other, studying history, seeing what forces shape their perspectives. The university should be a space where this happens, where perspectives meet, where tension leads to a deeper understanding rooted in context, fact, and lived experience. It shouldn’t be a space where the charge of antisemitism shuts down dialogue, hides reality, represses peaceful protest.
Students know this. As another Jewish student told one of us, “My mom says be careful because protestors are antisemitic. I haven’t seen what she sees on the news at all.” He continued, “My roommate is Palestinian. He was pepper sprayed twice at the protests. My mom asked if it is hard to be friends with him. I told her no, not at all.”
We are inspired by such students for cutting through the noise. We see them doing what adult “leaders” cannot do: using words rather than bombs and clubs to move towards a shared future.
We are moved by another type of speech in the classroom that goes beyond slogans: an ecstatic cry for humanity that says “Why, why, why can’t more people see the wrong of dropping bombs on innocent people, of spending tuition dollars on bombs, of our university’s complicity in warfare and genocide!”
As writing teachers, our classrooms have become the blank page for that cry to be written. Students from Palestine, students with Zionist parents, students who have no connection to Palestine or Israel are hearing that cry. It is being inscribed deep in their hearts and in ours.
Words that conceal, words that reveal
Days after police violently cleared the encampment, that official sign remained on library walk. But something had changed, a revision of sorts.
That is the type of writing we cultivate in our classrooms: words drawn from lived experience rather than from distant observation, writing that invites readers in and reveals the hidden depths.
We praise that writing.
We condemn writing that does violence by concealing the depths.
Writing, like that of the Khosla administration, that criminalizes peaceful protestors and demonizes them in the official record.
Writing that claims to prioritize the safety of the campus but behind the scenes invites a small army of militarized riot police to confront our students.
The slick corporate writing of weapons manufacturers and climate killers that lures students to their world-killing work.
Writing, written in shadows, that hides the destructive corporations where student tuition and university endowments are invested.
Writing that erases history while weaponizing historical trauma.
Writing that turns Palestinians into non-people whose lives and deaths are marginal notes in history.
Writing that hides away the Palestinian dead under a rubble of uncontroversial words and obscure bylines.
Writing that refuses to use the precise words “apartheid” and “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing” to describe the systemic violence being unleashed on Palestinians.
Words as billy clubs, as bullets, as bombs.
To close, we echo that anonymous writer’s words to those who unleashed violence on our campus last week:
You woke them in the cruelest way.
You wrote them in the cruelest way.
In solidarity,
Niall Twohig, Lecturer, Warren Writing
Jorge Mariscal, Professor Emeritus Literature/Former Director, TMC Dimensions of Culture
Page duBois, Distinguished Professor, Literature
James Deavenport, Lecturer, Seventh College, Synthesis Writing
Lily Hoang, Interim Director of the MFA in Writing, Professor of Literature
Anna Joy Springer, Associate Professor of Literature/Writing
Amy Sara Carroll, Associate Professor of Literature and Literary Arts
Jac Jemc, Full Teaching Professor of Literature
Luis Martin-Cabrera, Associate Professor of Literature and Latin American Studies
Tina Hyland, Lecturer, Sixth College
Anthony Kim, UCSD Alumni, Literature PhD
Rosiangela Escamilla, Professor at San Diego Mesa College
Lilly Irani, Associate Professor, Communication
Erin Hill, Assistant Professor, Communication
Reece Peck, UCSD Alumni, Communication PhD
Brandon Som, Associate Professor of Literature and Writing
Carolina Montejo, Lecturer, Muir College
Muhammad Yousuf, TA, Dimensions of Culture Program
Chris Perreira, Associate Professor, Ethnic Studies
Matthew Irwin, Lecturer, Sixth College
Ashvin Kini, UCSD Alumni, Literature PhD
Arielle Katzschner, Undergraduate Student
Glen Motil, Library Assistant Manager, Alumni Literature BA and MA
Bayan Abusneineh, Assistant Professor, Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, UCSD Alumni PhD
Theodora Dryer, UCSD Alumni PhD
Elizabeth Sine, UCSD Alumni, History PhD
Zulema Diaz, UCSD Alumni, Literature
Yumi Pak, Associate Professor of Black Studies, UCSD Alumni Literature PhD
Rohan Grover, BS Bioengineering Revelle 2018
Joe Babcock, Adjunct Assistant Professor of English, University of San Diego
Isabelle Yan, UCSD Alumni Class of 2020
Aundrey Jones, Assistant Professor of African American Studies at Lake Forest College
Benjamin Balthaser, UCSD Alumni, Literature PhD 2010
Amy Kennemore, Lecturer, Latin American Studies UCSD
Simeon Man, Associate Professor of History
Rihan Yeh, Associate Professor, Anthropology
Violeta Sánchez, UCSD Alumni, Professor MiraCosta College
Megan Turner, UCSD Alumni
Mollie Twohig, Caregiver, Relative of UCSD faculty
Melissa Martinez, UCSD Alumni, Professor at Palomar College
Davorn Sisavath, UCSD Alumni, Ethnic Studies PhD
John Rieder, UCSD Alumni, Professor at Southwestern College
Linh Thủy Nguyễn, UCSD Alumna, Ethnic Studies PhD
Tanner Smith, UCSD Alumnus
Erin Cory, UCSD Alumna, Communication PhD
Antonieta Mercado, UCSD Alumnus, Communication
Emma Uriarte, Lecturer, Warren Writing
Clare Rolens, UCSD Alumni, Professor at Palomar College
Josen Diaz, Faculty, University of San Diego
Dillon Chapman, Lecturer, Dimensions of Culture
David Serlin, Professor of Communication
Ishika Rathi, Program Coordinator, Warren Writing
We invite all those whose conscience calls to sign.
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