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HAMAS-ISRAEL WAR

Harvard University president to stay after anti-Semitism row

Harvard University's president, under fire over testimony she gave about anti-Semitism on campus, will remain in her job after a meeting of the institution's governing body issued a statement backing her on Tuesday.

Claudine Gay has been engulfed by criticism after she declined to unequivocally say whether calling for genocide of Jews violated Harvard's code of conduct as she testified before Congress alongside the heads of MIT and Pennsylvania universities.    

"It depends on the context," she told lawmakers in one tense exchange.

The Harvard Corporation, one of the university's two governing boards, said in a statement, "we today reaffirm our support for President Gay's continued leadership of Harvard University."

But the body did criticize the university's initial response to Hamas's Oct. 7 attacks that Israel said killed 1,200 people inside Israel and saw around 240 people taken hostage.

Israel's offensive has reduced much of Gaza to rubble and killed at least 18,200 people, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's health ministry.

President Gay's 'failures'

In the United States, the controversy has come as a rise in hate attacks and violent rhetoric targeting Jews and Muslims, including at universities, since the eruption of the current Israel-Hamas war fuels debate on the norms of free speech in the United States.

"So many people have suffered tremendous damage and pain because of Hamas's brutal terrorist attack, and the University's initial statement should have been an immediate, direct and unequivocal condemnation," the corporation said. 

"Calls for genocide are despicable and contrary to fundamental human values," it added. "President Gay has apologized for how she handled her congressional testimony."

Penn University's president Liz Magill resigned in the wake of her responses to Congress, and pressure had mounted on Gay both inside and outside of Harvard to follow suit.

More than 70 lawmakers including two Democrats called for her resignation, while a number of high-profile Harvard alumni and donors have called for her departure.

In excess of 700 Harvard faculty members signed a letter supporting Gay.

Gay, 53, was born in New York to Haitian immigrants and is a professor of political science who in July became the first Black president of 368-year-old Harvard University, in Cambridge, outside Boston.

Ryan Enos, professor of government at Harvard, said ahead of the corporation's endorsement of Gay that "the reason that she has been pressured to resign is because of political pressure from politicians trying to shape universities in their image."

"One of the bedrocks of a free society, one of the most important things for a free society, is that universities are not run by the state."

Former student and multi-million-dollar donor Bill Ackman claimed in a letter to Harvard's governing boards that "President Gay's failures have led to billions of dollars of cancelled, paused and withdrawn donations to the university."

Some donors have responded to Harvard's handling of protests over the Israel-Hamas war by making protest donations of just $1, financial newswire Bloomberg reported.




Harvard University's president, under fire over testimony she gave about anti-Semitism on campus, will remain in her job after a meeting of the institution's governing body issued a statement backing her on Tuesday.

Claudine Gay has been engulfed by criticism after she declined to unequivocally say whether calling for genocide of Jews violated...