Zoom & Big Tech Censor Online Palestine Classes

Issues: Censorship, Academic Freedom, False Accusations

In September 2020, right-wing Israel advocacy groups pressured tech companies to censor an online class featuring Palestinian activist Leila Khaled.

The class was jointly organized by San Francisco State University (SFSU) professors Rabab Abdulhadi and Tomomi Kinukawa. It featured a panel of Palestinian, Black, Jewish, and South African activists.

The open classroom event was scheduled to take place on Zoom, the platform that SFSU was using to teach classes during the pandemic. But the tech company threatened to terminate the license for the entire California State University system if the class included Khaled, because of her involvement in two hijackings fifty years ago and her alleged role in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

The professors cited their academic freedom and refused to change the content of their lesson. Zoom responded by unilaterally canceling the class session, and SFSU failed to provide the professors with an alternative platform for the class to take place.

The professors attempted to livestream the class through off-campus Facebook and YouTube accounts, but those tech giants also blocked the stream, leaving students with no access to the class. 

In December 2020, Abdulhadi and Kinukawa filed a claim against SFSU for violating their rights and initiated a separate internal grievance process at the university in 2021.

In October 2021, the SFSU Faculty Hearing Committee found that the university had violated the professors’ academic freedom and called on the university to issue a public apology, a public letter of support for faculty with regards to academic freedom, and provide a site for rescheduling the event with Leila Khaled on an alternate platform, without interference.

In November, SFSU President Lynn Mahoney vetoed the decision, sparking widespread outcry from faculty around the country and calls for her to resign.

In the aftermath of these events, Palestine Legal received multiple reports of social media users having accounts suspended, placed under review, or partially disabled for sharing the events or even posting about the censorship.

Solidarity events also canceled >>

In October 2020, on the one-month anniversary of the censored class, professors from across the country and around the world planned a series of solidarity events featuring a video of Leila Khaled.

Events at the University of Hawai‘i-Manoa and at New York University were blocked by Zoom, while eight events at other universities went ahead as scheduled.

Like SFSU, the University of Hawai‘I and NYU failed to pressure Zoom to respect academic freedom and failed to provide professors an adequate alternative that would allow them to go forward with live events. At both schools, the panels had to be recorded privately and posted online.

Zoom blocked a similar event at the University of California, Merced in April 2021.

Timeline >>

Aug. 28, 2020: San Francisco State University professors Rabab Abdulhadi and Tomomi Kinukawa announce that their respective departments, Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies (AMED) and Women & Gender Studies (WGS) are co-hosting an open classroom webinar entitled “Whose Narratives?: Gender, Justice & Resistance” on September 23, 2020. The event includes Palestinian activist Leila Khaled, an icon of the Palestinian revolutionary movement.

Sept. 14, 2020: The Lawfare Project, a right-wing, pro-Israel legal harassment group, sends Zoom a letter incorrectly claiming that providing video conferencing services for the class will violate federal material support for terrorism provisions by giving a platform to Ms. Khaled, who is alleged to be a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

Sept. 17, 2020: Zoom’s Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer Lynn Haaland writes to SFSU representatives suggesting that providing a platform to Ms. Khaled for a classroom event violates material support provisions and threatens the termination of Zoom accounts for the entire California State University (CSU) system should the event take place.

Sept. 18, 2020: SFSU Provost Jennifer Summit reaches out to the course professors, who confirm that Ms. Khaled is not speaking as a representative of the PFLP or receiving an honorarium or payment for her talk.

Sept. 21, 2020: Zoom’s compliance officer writes to CSU that the university has until the end of the day to confirm that Ms. Khaled is not an active member of the PFLP or face consequences for violating Zoom’s terms of service under the false claim that allowing Ms. Khaled to speak to a classroom will violate federal law.

Sept. 21, 2020: CSU’s deputy general counsel responds to Zoom that the university system protects the rights of free speech and academic freedom, that Ms. Khaled is not on any State Department list of prohibited individuals, and that the event does not violate material support provisions.

Sept. 21, 2020: Member of Congress Doug Lamborn writes to Trump’s Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos urging her to cut federal funding to SFSU for hosting the event.

Sept. 22, 2020: An app affiliated with the Israeli government encourages users to go on a “mission” to pressure CSU leadership to cancel the event.

Sept. 22, 2020: Zoom’s compliance officer informs CSU that the event violates Zoom’s terms of service and that the university must not use Zoom to host the open classroom event. When SFSU does not cancel the event, citing academic freedom, Zoom itself terminates the webinar. SFSU refuses to provide an alternative venue for the course, violating the academic freedom of the professors and students.

Sept. 22, 2020: Right-wing pro-Israel legal harassment group the Lawfare Project claims victory for canceling the open classroom event.

Sept. 23, 2020: Event organizers attempt to host the event on Facebook and YouTube. Facebook removes the event page and threatens to suspend the accounts of groups that promote the event. YouTube removes multiple streams of the classroom webinar minutes after it starts.

Oct. 2020: Universities and academic groups plan a National Day of Action Against the Criminalization and Censorship of Campus Speech in response to Zoom’s cancelation of the SFSU event. The Day of Action encourages faculty to host Palestine webinars on their university Zoom accounts featuring a recorded video from Palestinian activist Leila Khaled on October 23rd.

Oct. 8, 2020: After the Lawfare Project urges the federal government to investigate the SFSU event, a representative from the Department of Education responds that she forwarded the concerns to the Department of the Treasury and the State Department.

Oct. 19, 2020: Right-wing pro-Israel organization StandWithUs sends Zoom a letter urging the company to cancel at Oct. 23 lecture at the University of Hawai’i - Manoa. The request does not mention any of the other scheduled Day of Action events.

Oct. 21, 2020: Zoom unilaterally cancels the scheduled event at the University of Hawai'i two days before the webinar is set to take place.

Oct. 22, 2020: Palestine Legal and a coalition of civil rights groups send legal letters against Zoom’s censorship and violation of academic freedom to Zoom, the University of Hawai’i, NYU and the University of Massachusetts.

Oct. 23, 2020: Most of the National Day of Action Against the Criminalization and Censorship of Campus events take place successfully, but Zoom censors three university talks - at the University of Hawai’i, NYU, and the University of Leeds in England. NYU refuses to provide an alternative platform despite requests from the hosting faculty. Facebook also deletes an event at the University of Western Ontario within hours of it being posted, and organizers have their accounts immediately disabled.

Dec. 21, 2020: SFSU professors Rabab Abdulhadi and Tomomi Kinukawa file a government claim against the California State University system for violating their rights to free speech and academic freedom.

Apr. 9, 2021: AMED Studies announces an April 23 event titled “Whose Narratives? What Free Speech for Palestine?” co-organized virtually at SFSU and the University of California, Merced featuring Leila Khaled and Black, Jewish and South African activists from the censored 2020 event.

Apr. 13, 2021: Zoom issues a company policy statement claiming to support academic freedom in providing virtual classroom services. Separately, Facebook shuts down the page of AMED Studies.

Apr. 14, 2021: The Lawfare Project, a right-wing, pro-Israel legal harassment group, sends a letter to Zoom and the chancellor of UC Merced urging them to cancel the event.

Apr. 21, 2021: Member of Congress Doug Lamborn sends a letter to the chancellor of UC Merced implicitly threatening the university’s funding if it allows the event to take place.

Apr. 22, 2021: Zoom cancels the UC Merced event scheduled for the next day, and hastily organizes an event on antisemitism to take place at the same time, describing it as “counter programming.”

June 21, 2021: The Electronic Frontier Foundation files a Freedom of Information Act request for records from the State Department to find out whether the federal government directed technology platforms to censor Leila Khaled’s speech.

Sept. 29, 2021: Dr. Abdulhadi and the AMED Studies program testify before a faculty panel in the first of two grievance hearings against SFSU for violating academic freedom by permitting the censorship of Dr. Abdulhadi and Dr. Kinukawa’s classes.

Oct. 14, 2021: A faculty panel at SFSU agrees that SFSU violated Dr. Abdulhadi’s academic freedom. The panel recommends that SFSU apologize to Dr. Abdulhadi and provide an alternative venue to reschedule the censored event.

Nov. 5, 2021: SFSU president Lynn Mahoney overturns the faculty panel’s decision and refuses to apologize for violating Dr. Abdulhadi’s academic freedom.

Jan. 20, 2022: The Electronic Frontier Foundation sues the State Department over its failure to respond to their request for files related to the censorship of Leila Khaled under the Freedom of Information Act.

Apr. 12, 2022: A second faculty panel at SFSU holds a grievance hearing over SFSU’s violation of Dr. Kinukawa’s academic freedom.

Documents >>

Statements and Action Alerts >>

Drs. Rabab Abdulhadi, Tomomi Kinukawa, et. al: We Will Not Be Silenced!: In solidarity with Palestinian sumoud and intellectual integrity

Palestine Legal:

ACLU: Time and Again, Social Media Giants Get Content Moderation Wrong

American Association of University Professors:

Electronic Frontier Foundation:

International Campaign to Defend Professor Rabab Abdulhadi:

Jewish Voice for Peace:

Middle East Studies Association: MESA Statement on Academic Freedom and Corporate Control of Digital Platforms

National Students for Justice in Palestine:

Palestinian Feminist Collective: Permission to narrate Palestinian feminisms

US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel:

Zoom: On Academic Freedom for our Higher Education Users

Media >>

972 Magazine: From Palestine to China, Zoom has no business censoring dissent (Oct. 26, 2020)

Academe Blog: Zoom, YouTube, and Facebook Censor Event at SF State (Sept. 23, 2020)

Artforum: NYU Professors Accuse Zoom of Censoring Political Speech (Oct. 27, 2020)

Buzzfeed News: Zoom Deleted Events Discussing Zoom “Censorship” (Oct. 24, 2020)

The Electronic Intifada:

Inside Higher Ed:

The Intercept:

Middle East Eye:

Mondoweiss:

The New York Times: What Zoom Does to Campus Conflicts Over Israel and Free Speech (Jan. 22, 2021)

NPR: 'Welcome To The Party, Zoom': Video App's Rules Lead To Accusations Of Censorship (Nov. 23, 2020)

The Palestine Chronicle: ‘Whose Narratives?’: On the Suppression of Palestinian Speech (Sept. 28, 2020)

Slate: Is Zoom More Like the Phone or Facebook? (Dec. 18, 2020)

Washington Report on Middle East Affairs: Google, Apple and Social Media are Helping Israel Commit Politicide (Dec. 6, 2020)

Learn more >>

Read more about censorship and backlash efforts against Palestine advocates:

Palestinian Students & Angela Davis Overcome Censorship Attempts at Butler University

Palestinian Students & Angela Davis Overcome Censorship Attempts at Butler University

Despite repeated efforts to exclude Palestinian voices from campus conversations, students at Butler University in Indiana have persevered in asserting their right to organize for Palestine, including a successful campaign in October 2020 against student government resolutions that aimed to silence them and the reinstatement of an April 2021 event with Angela Davis that was canceled following complaints about her support for Palestinian rights.

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City College of New York Censors Pro-Palestinian Book Talk

City College of New York Censors Pro-Palestinian Book Talk

In April 2018, the City College of New York cancelled a Students for Justice in Palestine-organized book event for fear it would generate negative publicity.

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Palestine Children’s Book: Threats & Censorship

In November 2017, a New York City book store was compelled to hide copies of a children’s alphabet book, P is for Palestine, behind the cash register, and ultimately release a statement denouncing boycotts for Palestinian rights after local Israel supporters and a prominent local synagogue complained about the book.

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George Washington U Bans Palestinian Flags on Campus

University then apologizes to student publicly, promises equal application of policy

Inspired by the many flags he had seen hung outside residential hall windows during his three years at George Washington University (GW), Mr. Abounaja, a junior biomedical engineering major, hung a Palestinian flag out his dorm window in October 2015. On October 26, a campus police officer came to Mr. Abounaja’s door, instructed him to remove his flag because of complaints the department had received, and filed a police report. The following week, Mr. Abounaja received a ‘Warning Letter’ from GW threatening future sanctions should he be named in a “subsequent report.”

In the following weeks, Mr. Abounaja attempted to discern what policy he violated, writing the university, calling, and emailing several times. “I felt like I was being singled-out, because of my heritage and the viewpoint of my speech, for something I’ve seen dozens of students, fraternities and other student groups do in my three years at GW. . . ,” Mr. Abounaja wrote.

“The events of the last week have left me feeling humiliated, upset and like I can’t even feel safe in my own dorm room. I’ve had finals this week and have found it very hard to study or to think about anything else.”

For weeks, Mr. Abounaja received no communication from GW explaining what rule he had allegedly broken. GW failed to provide him with a hearing or any opportunity to respond to the allegations against him.

On December 7, Palestine Legal wrote GW, explaining that the university’s actions appeared to be based on complaints by other students who disagreed with the viewpoint of Mr. Abounaja’s message. In its letter, Palestine Legal requested that the ‘Warning Letter’ be removed from Mr. Abounaja’s file, that GW issue an apology and clarify that its policies would not be discriminatorily enforced against students based on the viewpoint of their message or their national origin.

On December 10, after a large public outcry, GW President Knapp called Mr. Abounaja and apologized for GW’s treatment of Mr. Abounaja. Later that evening, the apology was posted on GW’s website, along with a statement that GW would revise its policies so that they were applied evenly. 

The ‘Warning Letter’ issued by GW to Mr. Abounaja has been rescinded and removed from his file. 

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