Dozens of students at the University of Mississippi gathered this week to protest against Israelâs war in Gaza and to call for the stateâs flagship university to be transparent in its potential dealings with Israel.
There were hundreds of counter-protesters, in contrast to the few dozen pro-Palestine protesters. The scene evoked memories of the resistance to the civil rights struggle in the US south six decades earlier.
The counter-protesters included individuals waving American flags and Trump flags. At one point, they sang the American national anthem, drowning out the pro-Palestine groupâs chants. The Oxford Eagle reported that one person held a âCome and take itâ flag while another flew a âDonât tread on meâ banner. The pro-Palestine students held signs reading âJesus was a Palestinianâ, âStop the genocide,â and âCut all ties with Israelâ.
Less than an hour after the protest began, police disbanded it â notably after counter-protests threw items, including water bottles, at the pro-Palestine group. Police safely evacuated the pro-Palestine students as the largely white, male group of counter-protesters chanted, âNah, nah, nah, nah, hey, hey, hey, goodbye,â according to Mississippi Today.
Some university leaders and politicians around the US have used the term âoutside agitatorâ to attempt to discredit student-led protests and movements. That label was also evoked frequently during the civil rights movement, during antebellum slavery and 19th and 20th century labour movements and to imply that protesters were motivated not by their own interests and beliefs, but by those of shadowy others.
At the University of Mississippi counter-protest, there were at least two individuals on campus who were reported to be not affiliated with the school, according to the Clarion-Ledger. One counter-protester said he was a student at Mississippi State University, about two hours away, and drove in for the protest. Another told the publication he was a student at the University of Georgia.
There were no arrests, but the actions of the counter-protesters â who shouted âFuck Joe Bidenâ, âWhoâs your daddy?â, âUSAâ, âHit the showersâ, âYour nose is hugeâ, and, in one instance, included a white man making monkey noises at a Black woman â have been widely condemned on social media.
The University of Mississippiâs chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People criticised the counter-protesters in a statement posted on Instagram.
âThe behavior witnessed today was not only abhorrent but also entirely unacceptable,â the statement reads. âIt is deeply disheartening to witness such blatant disregard for the principles of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.â
The Mississippi governor Tate Reeves, who himself recently declared April as Confederate Heritage Month and April 29 as Confederate memorial day, celebrated the counter-protesters in a tweet that some say drew parallels to former Mississippi governor Ross Barnett, a proud segregationist.
Reeves captioned a video of the counter-protesters singing the American national anthem with âthe âprotestsâ at Ole Miss today. Watch with sound. Warms my heart. I love Mississippi!â
In September 1962, Barnett spoke to an all-white crowd of over 40,000 at the University of Mississippi football game against Kentucky. As Confederate flags waved, Barnett said: âI love Mississippi. I love her people. Our customs. I love and respect our heritage.â The next day, an insurrection took place on campus as James Meredith enrolled, becoming the first known Black student in the universityâs history.
In a separate tweet before the protest, Governor Reeves also echoed a statement made by Joe Biden the morning of the protests.
âCampus police, city, county, and state assets are being deployed and coordinated,â Reeves tweeted. âWe will offer a unified response with one mission: peaceful protests are allowed and protected â no matter how outrageous those protestersâ views may seem to some of us. But unlawful behavior will not be tolerated. It will be dealt with accordingly. Law and order will be maintained!â
In Bidenâs statements on the protests around the nation, he said: âWeâve all seen images, and they put to the test two fundamental American principles ⦠The first is the right to free speech and for people to peacefully assemble and make their voices heard. The second is the rule of law. Both must be upheld.â
UMiss for Palestine, the student group that organised the protest, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The group did share a statement on Instagram following the protest, saying the University of Mississippi âis playing host to US military officials who are complicit in the genocide of Palestinian people via an aerospace and defense conferenceâ.
âOur vocal protest outside the library was a peaceful demonstration of our dismay with the behaviour of the university,â the statement continues.
âWe were confronted by counter-protesters who engaged in blind reactionarism that had little to do with the genocide we were protesting as well as our demands. We condemn the hateful actions and rhetoric of the counter protesters, who threw food and made violent threats toward our protesters. We expected our first amendment rights to be better protected and were deeply ashamed that they were not.â
The University of Mississippiâs student newspaper, the Daily Mississippian, spoke with students in support of UMiss for Palestineâs efforts. A junior, named Xavier Black, said: âThereâs a lot of dissension towards this kind of movement.â
âBut as weâve seen throughout history, time and time again, the student movement is never wrong,â he told the paper. âTime and time again, anytime thereâs a student protest, and youâre against it, youâre on the wrong side of history. So I would like to be on the right side.â