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US Students Are Hunger Striking for Palestine
Dazed ^ | 5/22

Posted on 05/22/2025 10:23:53 AM PDT by nickcarraway

Students from universities including Yale, Stanford and UCLA have been refusing to eat in solidarity with Palestinians at risk of starvation in Gaza

When I speak to Iman Deriche, she hasn’t eaten in five days. “There are some moments of fatigue,” she says. “But I’m doing well.”

The 21-year-old Stanford University student is one of 24 students and three faculty members who are taking part in a hunger strike in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. They aren’t alone: students and faculty at universities across the US are going on hunger strike with activist organisation Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), from California State University, to Yale, to UCLA. One UCLA student, 23-year-old Maya Abdallah, was recently taken to hospital in an ambulance after nine days of hunger striking.

“A few of my friends had gone on hunger strike at Chapman University about a month before I did,” Abdallah, who is Palestinian and Lebanese, tells Dazed. “Seeing so many non-Palestinian, non-Arab students care enough to put their bodies on the line was really inspiring. We’ve tried so much for Palestine, but I’d never tried to put my body on the line. So that’s what I did.” This chimes with Deriche. “Since October 2023, Stanford students have been taking action and demanding that Stanford take action and end its complicity in the genocide,” she says. When she heard that SJP were trying a new tactic by organising a hunger strike, she volunteered straight away.

It’s difficult to understate how much strain a hunger strike can put on a human body. One striking Stanford student reported experiencing joint pain and extreme exhaustion around day four of the strike, “falling asleep every five minutes”. Striking University of Oregon students are reporting symptoms including brain fog, shakiness and fatigue. Paramedics, who were called after Abdallah lost consciousness on day nine of her strike, told her that her resting heart rate was 40 per cent higher than that of an average person. Abdallah says it was “very scary” to be hospitalised, adding that she had “never been in an ambulance before”.

Still, reflecting on her experience, she believes that the mental challenges were “much harder” than the physical challenges. She kept going by thinking “about the people of Palestine, who haven’t given up for nearly two years”, as well as her own Palestinian grandmother. “She kept the key to her home until her final moments, always hoping to go back.”

The hunger striking movement has grown as the threat of famine in Gaza has mounted. Israel stopped all deliveries of humanitarian aid and commercial supplies to Gaza on March 2, resuming its assault two weeks later and ending a two-month ceasefire with Hamas. On May 19, some aid was authorised to enter for the first time since March, but only five aid trucks had reached Gaza by Tuesday (May 20) afternoon. According to Jens Laerke, a spokesperson for the UN humanitarian office, aid workers had not been permitted to distribute the supplies either.

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher described the paltry aid as “a drop in the ocean of what is urgently needed”, with an assessment by the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification warning that half a million people face starvation if Israel does not allow adequate aid into Gaza; Fletcher told the BBC on Tuesday morning that 14,000 babies could die in Gaza in 48 hours if aid did not reach them in time. Last week, it was reported that 57 children had already died from the effects of malnutrition over the past 11 weeks.

We’ll continue until our university takes action against its complicity in this genocide

“I’ve never felt more grounded or connected to the Palestinian struggle for liberation until now,” Deriche says. “One of the biggest things that keeps me going is knowing that I can break the strike at any time. I have the privilege to access food and healthcare whenever, but our brothers and sisters in Gaza do not.”

22-year-old Phia Dornberg is also taking part in a hunger strike alongside other students and faculty at the University of Oregon. She’s on the second day of her strike when we speak. “I didn’t realise how much I would think about the impact of not being able to eat and have that as part of your routine. There’s a psychological impact on top of the physical impact, which I wasn’t expecting,” she says. Being able to communicate with families in Gaza is getting her through the hardest moments. “Just giving them updates, to give them a little bit of hope… it’s very motivating, and it’s definitely kept me going.”

Hunger striking has long been used as a protest tactic by Palestinians and pro-Palestinian allies. In 1968, less than a year after the 1967 Naksa, Palestinian prisoners in Nablus Prison engaged in a three-day hunger strike to fight for an end to routine beatings and better living conditions within the prison. In 1970, Palestinian women imprisoned in Neve Tirza Prison led a nine-day hunger strike to demand sanitary products. In 1980, three Palestinian prisoners – Rasem Halaweh, Ishak Maragheh and Ali Al-Jaafri – died after being force-fed by Israeli prison guards during a 33-day-long hunger strike for better living conditions at Nafha prison. Many of these strikes were successful in achieving their demands.

Deriche is acutely conscious of the long history of hunger striking in the fight for Palestinian liberation. “Being Algerian, and having older relatives who were part of the Algerian revolution against French colonialism – who faced famine and starvation and participated in hunger strikes as well – I had no doubt I would do this hunger strike,” Deriche says. “[Palestinians] are literally my brothers and sisters [...] I feel and see their struggle every day.”

Alongside expressing solidarity with those in Gaza, the striking students have clear demands. Disclosure and divestment remain a key concern, with students demanding that their universities be transparent about where they get their funding and end their complicity in genocide by divesting from companies that profit from Israel’s continued siege on Gaza (at Stanford, this includes Lockheed Martin, Chevron, and Palantir Technologies). Students are also keen to protect freedom of speech on campus, with the Stanford strikers demanding that university president Jonathan Levin call on District Attorney Jeff Rosen to drop the charges brought against 12 students and alumni arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest in June 2024. Many are also asking their universities to introduce scholarship schemes for Gazan students.

Most are still waiting for their universities to engage with them. The University of Oregon administration is yet to sit down with the striking students. Abdallah claims that despite UCLA being aware of her hospitalisation, she has still not heard “anything” from the university. Stanford has been similarly reluctant to engage meaningfully with student activists. Deriche says their concerns have been brushed off and they have been urged to consider different forms of protest that do not jeopardise their health. “It’s ironic, knowing that we’ve tried almost every tactic you can think of, and they’ve never come to the table in good faith,” she says. “We know the risks. The whole point of the hunger strike is to put your body on the line to make a political statement. We’ll continue doing this until Stanford finally decides to sit at the table.”

One thing is clear: despite all the setbacks, intimidation, and even criminal charges, the pro-Palestinian student movement isn’t going anywhere. “We’ll continue until our university takes action against its complicity in this genocide,” Deriche says. “We are watching a genocide unfold. We will continue to take action until our institutions wake up and heed the call of the Palestinian people. Palestine has called for decades. Now we must answer.”


TOPICS: Gaza; Israel; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: antisemitism; colleges; education; hungerstrike; jewish; palestine; palestinkians; universitities
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

You summed it up, right there. I agree 100%.


41 posted on 05/22/2025 10:51:24 AM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: nickcarraway

Up next? Self immolation?


42 posted on 05/22/2025 10:51:44 AM PDT by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this💩? 🚫💉! 🇮🇱👍!)
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To: nickcarraway

If theyu starve to death, the surplus pro Palestine population will be reduced


43 posted on 05/22/2025 10:52:56 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. +12) Where is ZORRO when California so desperately needs him?)
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To: nickcarraway

Starve, you ignorant b*stards.

CC


44 posted on 05/22/2025 10:53:08 AM PDT by Celtic Conservative (My cats are more amusing than 200 channels worth of TV.)
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To: 1ScrappyArmyMom

LOL, All the fat pink haired white liberal women protestors will flock to the pig roast instead of standing up for their muzzie friends. Great Idea!


45 posted on 05/22/2025 10:54:08 AM PDT by jpp113
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To: nickcarraway

“US Students Are Hunger Striking for Palestine”

Until TikTok tells them it’s snack time?


46 posted on 05/22/2025 10:56:22 AM PDT by antidemoncrat (In a way ge is right as)
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To: PGR88

When will they douse themselves with gasoline for Gaza?


47 posted on 05/22/2025 10:56:46 AM PDT by crusty old prospector
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To: nickcarraway

“US Students Are Hunger Striking for Palestine”

Until TikTok tells them it’s snack time?


48 posted on 05/22/2025 10:57:07 AM PDT by antidemoncrat (In a way ge is right as)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

That was SO well stated!


49 posted on 05/22/2025 10:59:45 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: nickcarraway

Somehow I don’t think they have Bobby Sands’ level of committment.


50 posted on 05/22/2025 11:00:31 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: nickcarraway
When Gandhi went on hunger strikes, it was effective, because ...

1) Everybody believed he had the self discipling to starve himself to death.
2) He alone stood between the Raj and violent revolution.

Compare that to these punks.

51 posted on 05/22/2025 11:02:49 AM PDT by Salman (Lasu Eŭropon bruli!)
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To: nickcarraway

enforce a 60 day food strike by putting them in solitary


52 posted on 05/22/2025 11:06:16 AM PDT by Mouton (There is a new sheriff and deputy in town to now!)
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To: dfwgator

GMTA.

I’m willing to let them show us we’re wrong.


53 posted on 05/22/2025 11:07:53 AM PDT by kosciusko51
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To: Salman

Angus Barbieri (1938 or 1939 – 7 September 1990) was a Scottish man who fasted for 382 days, from 14 June 1965 to 30 June 1966. He subsisted on tea, coffee, sparkling water, vitamins and yeast extract while living at home in Tayport, Scotland, frequently visiting Maryfield Hospital for medical evaluation. Barbieri went from 456 pounds (207 kg) to 180 pounds (82 kg), losing 276 pounds (125 kg) and setting a record for the length of a fast.


54 posted on 05/22/2025 11:09:19 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Mouton
enforce a 60 day food strike by putting them in solitary ...

... and throw away the key ...

55 posted on 05/22/2025 11:10:16 AM PDT by BlueLancer (Orchides Forum Trahite - Cordes Et Mentes Veniant)
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To: nickcarraway

US Students Are Hunger Striking for Palestine

That is the best news I have heard all week.   I wonder if they could hold their breaths at the same time?

56 posted on 05/22/2025 11:10:20 AM PDT by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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To: nickcarraway

Starving Nazi youth.
Hopefully they all drop dead of hunger.


57 posted on 05/22/2025 11:12:43 AM PDT by right way right (“May we remain sober over mere men, for God really is our only true hope.)
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To: dfwgator

“Somehow I don’t think they have Bobby Sands’ level of commitment.”

Agreed.

If you get a chance, read “Ten Men Dead” by David Beresford. It’s an account of the 1981 IRA Hunger Strike.

Agree or not agree, those guys were seriously hardcore. And if public opinion hadn’t forced the IRA to shut it down, there were more volunteers ready to join the hunger strike.


58 posted on 05/22/2025 11:18:37 AM PDT by MplsSteve
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To: nickcarraway

No…Don’t…Stop…


59 posted on 05/22/2025 11:19:43 AM PDT by Jan_Sobieski (Sanctification)
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To: nickcarraway

Let them starve. No one cares if they don’t want to eat.


60 posted on 05/22/2025 11:26:33 AM PDT by EastTexasTraveler
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