Inside From the Outside on U of T Encampment
"First fact is that strict majority of people I talked to are neither students nor affiliated with our university. We have something like 100,000 students and tons of staff, so it's not hard to find them! But yeah, 'student encampment' is just objectively wrong as a description.""They took down one piece of fencing on the quad where convocation events happen next week, and have a handful of [masked] people controlling entry.""I walked round the 'sign-in' and no one noticed for ten minutes or so. But it's [not] free entry."The 'security' and 'spokesperson' both explicitly said that if you don't support the collective's view on Palestine, you aren't welcome and they will remove you.""Actually, I was specifically told to leave now or 'it would become more uncomfortable'.""I don't really get why we'd allow this. All have the right to protest! Free country. But letting a group of masked [non] students control entry to quad, letting them turn it into a campground with tents: you can just take down the tents and entry gate without touching anyone."Kevin A. Bryan, economist, associate professor, University of Toronto business school
He
was skeptical about the identities and purpose inherent in the
anti-Israel protests taking place at the University of Toronto, where
students and clearly others had set up an encampment inside King's
College Circle. So he decided that he'd go out and have a look around,
himself. It wasn't particularly difficult for him to infiltrate the
group, illegally assembled with their posters and banners, tents and
expressions of hatred for Zionists and Israel. He just began by walking
about nonchalantly. And engaging others in brief conversations.
What
the professor found damning and disconcerting was that the protesters
took it upon their assumed authority to block anyone from accessing the
area other than those whom they scrutinized and questioned to ensure
that they were singing from the same vitriolic hymnal. The university
environs are private property, and none of the groups assembled across
Canada and the United States at various universities have secured
permission of the various university administrations to stage their
volatile confrontations.
Professor
Bryan walked among the protesters for a good half-hour before he was
identified as an outsider, asked to leave on the basis of the revelation
he failed to share the outlook and values of the organizing groups. He
did eventually leave under some duress and then shared his observations
on social media, expressing his opinion that many of the protesters had
no link to the university. "A
short note on the encampment that's now set up here in Toronto @UofT. I
snuck into it today [I told them I was a fellow comrade who'd stepped
out to get a cigarette.] I think it's only fair to talk to the folks and
see what's going on before judging."
Well, he did see what was going on, he did speak to protesters to discuss with some that the huge "Honour to the Martyrs"
poster, logically interpreted as pro-violence since martyrdom as it is
meant in the Gaza conflict has a sinister Islamist ring to it that
martyrdom is achieved by killing Israelis and Jews. The person to whom
he spoke was insistent that he misunderstood; martyr and intifada are
not, she said, violent terms.
As
for the group demanding that the university divest its funds from any
entities, businesses or individuals having anything to do with Israel in
any way, shape or form, he remarked to them that U of T has no such
investments. "The
university response right now is basically 'let it peter out'. They
have campus security in case a fight breaks out But they're still
complicit in allowing the 'entry gate'." The Professor
videoed what he came across at the protest site, but just to ensure he
had documentation of what he was commenting on.
Photo by Ernest Doroszuk /Toronto Sun/Postmedia Network |
"...I'm not going to post my video. I didn't even take a phone out until a kid made an implicit threat.""But I do think @UofT needs to understand what's actually happening, and the embarrasing @utfaculty letter implying faculty support, this needs to be retracted.""And, last last thing: Just want to be really clear that I didn't take a census.All I know directly is, majority I talked to weren't Uof T affiliated.""We also know that the protest was partly organized by USW [United Steelworkers Union]. Beyond that, you'll have to do some journalism yourself!"Professor Kevin A. Bryan
Labels: Anti-Israel Protests, Anti-Zionism, Illegal Presence, Outside Agitators, University of Toronto, University Quad Encampment
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