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Harvard temporarily suspends library privileges for faculty involved in ‘study-in’ protests – Winnipeg Free Press

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — In the latest wave of pro-Palestinian protests at Harvard University, students and faculty members have engaged in “study-in” actions at university libraries, as protests at other campuses nationwide have also begun to pull in teachers.

About two dozen Harvard faculty members who participated in an Oct. 16 “study-in” in support of students who had been temporarily banned from the library for holding a similar demonstration were themselves given two-week library suspensions, according to the student paper The Harvard Crimson.

The practice involves protesters silently reading materials related to free speech while propping up signs about dissent and University policy next to them or taped to the back of their laptops. Pro-Palestinian protests have roiled and divided Harvard and other campuses for much of the year.


Harvard temporarily suspends library privileges for faculty involved in ‘study-in’ protests – Winnipeg Free Press
FILE – Graduating students hold Palestinian flags and chant as they walk out in protest over the 13 students who have been barred from graduating due to protest activities, during commencement in Harvard Yard, at Harvard University, in Cambridge, Mass., Thursday, May 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

Kerry Conley, director of communications for Harvard Library, said, “We do not comment on individual matters related to library access or privileges.”

Faculty members were told their borrowing privileges from the library had not been affected and that they would still be able to access other locations in the library system. However, they would not be allowed inside Widener — the University’s flagship library, according to the Crimson.

The paper said library administrators charged faculty members with gathering in the library “with the purpose of capturing people’s attention through the display of tent-card signs,” which administrators said violated library policies.

The group Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine said the school issued library suspensions to more than 60 Harvard Law School students for a similar pro-Palestinian study-in.

In response, the group said more than 50 additional students, faculty, and staff joined a study-in Thursday to speak out against what protesters have described as Harvard’s “complicity in Israel’s genocide in Palestine and campus repression.”

Thursday’s study-in is the fourth of the semester, activists said.