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Pro-Palestinian protesters shut down Jewish UC Berkeley students’ event

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UC Berkeley police evacuated an event organized by Jewish student groups after pro-Palestinian demonstrators broke open a door to the building and shattered a window.

At one point, about 200 protesters gathered outside the event site, Zellerbach Playhouse, holding up signs that read, “Stop the genocide,” and at times chanting, “Long live the intifida,” videos posted on social media showed.

University officials called the incident “appalling” and said police had to cancel the event and escort students to safety because of the number of demonstrators and the threat of violence.

“We had to make that choice between doing what was necessary to let the event go on, or protecting the people in the building,” said Dan Mogulof, spokesperson for the university.

In a message sent to university staff and students Tuesday afternoon, UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ and Provost Benjamin E. Hermalin called the incident “an attack on the fundamental values of the university.”

The featured speaker at the event was Ran Bar-Yoshafat, an Israeli attorney and former member of the Israeli military. It was organized by Students Support Israel at Berkeley and Berkeley Tikvah, according to the Daily Californian, UC Berkeley’s student newspaper.

Messages to the organizations seeking comment were not immediately returned.

Since the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas in Israel and subsequent attacks by the Israeli military in Gaza, the university has seen multiple protests at its campus. But Mogulof said Monday’s incident was unlike past incidents.

“We’ve had other demonstrators, but not who were breaking down doors and windows,” he said.

Social media posts encouraging demonstrators to show up to the campus helped increase the turnout outside the event. Mogulof declined to give specific numbers, but said police dispatched more officers Monday night than it had to any other protest on campus since Oct. 7.

School officials’ concerns were heightened when they became aware of a social media post by Bears for Palestine, a group on campus, calling for protesters to “shut it down.”

In the post, the group claimed Bar-Yoshafat was invited to “spread settler colonial Zionist propaganda about the very genocide he has participated in” and called demonstrators to show up by 6 p.m.

Messages to the group seeking comment were not immediately returned.

In social media posts, the group noted when the event was moved from one location to Zellerbach Playhouse, and posted video of demonstrators marching toward the building, chanting, “Yoshafat, you can’t hide.”

Other videos of the incident posted on social media showed protesters banging on closed glass doors.

In one video, UC Berkeley Chief of Police Yogananda Pittman is seen taking the microphone in a theater and evacuating the room.

“We are asking all persons to leave,” she says. The seats of the theater appeared mostly empty.

In the statement to the university, Christ and Hermalin confirmed the building was evacuated “to protect the speaker and the members of the audience.”

“We want to express our deep remorse and sympathy to those students and members of the public who were in the building, fearing for their safety,” the statement read. “We deeply respect the right to protest as intrinsic to the value of a democracy at an institution of higher education. Yet, we cannot ignore protest activity that interferes with the rights of others to hear and/or express perspectives of their choosing. We cannot allow the use or threat of force to violate the First Amendment rights of a speaker, no matter how much we might disagree with their views.”

School officials said no one was treated for injuries at the scene and no arrests were made. Still, UC Berkeley officials said they are reaching out to staff and students and urging them to let the university know if they were injured.

Since the Monday incident, Mogulof said, the university has received multiple messages from staff, students and the community expressing concerns about the incident and its potential to lead to other violent incidents.

“We’re taking those messages to heart,” he said.




UC Berkeley police evacuated an event organized by Jewish student groups after pro-Palestinian demonstrators broke open a door to the building and shattered a window.

At one point, about 200 protesters gathered outside the event site, Zellerbach Playhouse, holding up signs that read, “Stop the genocide,” and at times chanting, “Long live the intifida,” videos posted on social media showed.

University officials called the incident “appalling” and said police had to cancel the event and escort students to safety because of the number of demonstrators and the threat of violence.

“We had to make that choice between doing what was necessary to let the event go on, or protecting the people in the building,” said Dan Mogulof, spokesperson for the university.

In a message sent to university staff and students Tuesday afternoon, UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ and Provost Benjamin E. Hermalin called the incident “an attack on the fundamental values of the university.”

The featured speaker at the event was Ran Bar-Yoshafat, an Israeli attorney and former member of the Israeli military. It was organized by Students Support Israel at Berkeley and Berkeley Tikvah, according to the Daily Californian, UC Berkeley’s student newspaper.

Messages to the organizations seeking comment were not immediately returned.

Since the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas in Israel and subsequent attacks by the Israeli military in Gaza, the university has seen multiple protests at its campus. But Mogulof said Monday’s incident was unlike past incidents.

“We’ve had other demonstrators, but not who were breaking down doors and windows,” he said.

Social media posts encouraging demonstrators to show up to the campus helped increase the turnout outside the event. Mogulof declined to give specific numbers, but said police dispatched more officers Monday night than it had to any other protest on campus since Oct. 7.

School officials’ concerns were heightened when they became aware of a social media post by Bears for Palestine, a group on campus, calling for protesters to “shut it down.”

In the post, the group claimed Bar-Yoshafat was invited to “spread settler colonial Zionist propaganda about the very genocide he has participated in” and called demonstrators to show up by 6 p.m.

Messages to the group seeking comment were not immediately returned.

In social media posts, the group noted when the event was moved from one location to Zellerbach Playhouse, and posted video of demonstrators marching toward the building, chanting, “Yoshafat, you can’t hide.”

Other videos of the incident posted on social media showed protesters banging on closed glass doors.

In one video, UC Berkeley Chief of Police Yogananda Pittman is seen taking the microphone in a theater and evacuating the room.

“We are asking all persons to leave,” she says. The seats of the theater appeared mostly empty.

In the statement to the university, Christ and Hermalin confirmed the building was evacuated “to protect the speaker and the members of the audience.”

“We want to express our deep remorse and sympathy to those students and members of the public who were in the building, fearing for their safety,” the statement read. “We deeply respect the right to protest as intrinsic to the value of a democracy at an institution of higher education. Yet, we cannot ignore protest activity that interferes with the rights of others to hear and/or express perspectives of their choosing. We cannot allow the use or threat of force to violate the First Amendment rights of a speaker, no matter how much we might disagree with their views.”

School officials said no one was treated for injuries at the scene and no arrests were made. Still, UC Berkeley officials said they are reaching out to staff and students and urging them to let the university know if they were injured.

Since the Monday incident, Mogulof said, the university has received multiple messages from staff, students and the community expressing concerns about the incident and its potential to lead to other violent incidents.

“We’re taking those messages to heart,” he said.

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