Faculty and students at the Freie Universitat Berlin defy authorities, call for Israel boycott. Sign letter of support below

27 February 2025

Faculty and students at the Freie Universitat Berlin have voted for a boycott of all Israeli academic institutions. This poses a huge challenge for the German authorities who have hitherto forcibly suppressed all support for Palestinians. Now is the time, therefore, for faculty and students elsewhere to demonstrate their support for this courageous decision. Below is an explanatory statement from the acivists in Berlin, and below that a petition for supporters to sign.


🇩🇪 Deutsche Version

A Call for Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) by Students, Staff and Academics of Freie Universität Berlin

Why Freie University Berlin needs to adopt a policy of academic boycott according to the BDS ethical guidelines towards Israeli universities and other institutions which are complicit in apartheid, occupation, settler-colonialism and/or genocide.

Israel is an apartheid state and an occupation force. Since October 2023, the Israeli state has been carrying out a genocide in Gaza, while waging war and acts of aggression on the populations of Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iran. As we write this call, Israel is illegally occupying new areas and preparing annexations of already occupied lands.

Freie Universität Berlin (FU) as an institution has been complicit in supporting and abetting the Genocide in Gaza. Most immediately, it has been doing so by denying its reality, and even Palestinian suffering as such.

Against this policy, legitimate and justified resistance, principally carried by students with support from staff and faculty formed in the fall of 2023. They have organized different actions on campus, ranging from self-organized lecture series to protests such as sit ins, die ins and rallies, occupations of lecture halls and camps in 2023 and 2024. Increasingly, protesters realized that the universities silence was connected to a deeply entrenched complicity of the FU as an institution in Israeli apartheid, settler-colonialism, occupation and genocide.

The administration reacted by criminalizing and endangering the protesting students, faculty and staff, and intimidating the entire campus community. This included the abandonment of academic freedom and university autonomy, when e.g., the federal minister Bettina Stark- Watzinger or the mayor of Berlin Kai Wegner demanded the police be brought onto campus to crack down on students. Since December 2023 this has led to continuous physical brutalization and hospitalization of students in countless cases. In more than 100 accounts the university itself is pressing charges against its own students, for protesting within the premises of their own university.

Claims by the university that students are rogue protesters or antisemites, while the FU administration is looking for dialogue, are false. On the contrary, the actions and false claims of the FU administration have created and fueled an atmosphere of fear and fake news on campus and beyond. FU arbitrarily is curtailing academic freedom and other fundamental rights on the behest of members of government officials in order to continue cooperations with Israeli universities and other institutions which are complicit in crimes against humanity.

The FU administration willfully does the German states biding by intimidating those who speak out, and by criminalizing those who have taken tangible actions. The FU administration mocks its own motto “Veritas, Iustitia, Libertas” (truth, justice, freedom) by holding that the essence of freedom of academia was the upholding of criminal policies and its ties to Israeli universities and institutions.

The FU administrations actions are not by chance. The FU has been a for long a strategic partner of Israeli universities and institutions. The FU engages in an ideological normalization of apartheid and occupation, facilitating ties which have increased the Israeli states soft power towards German academia and intellectuals, and consequently to broader German society and German policy makers. FU has also contributed to crimes against humanity and the Palestinians by furthering scientific exchange with institutions, which possibly and plausibly enable the Israeli state to develop historical and political narratives, military strategies and weaponry against the Palestinians and other populations to further or uphold occupation and apartheid in different direct and indirect ways.

These connections are laid out in our detailed BDS report, including tangible demands and proposals on how to fulfil academic boycott, published by students, staff and faculty of the Freie Universität Berlin.

The extent and the different forms of complicity are shown among others through (1) the cooperation with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, which offers to host exchange students from FU Berlin on illegally occupied land and in hostels which constitute illegal settlements, (2) through cooperation with the University of Haifa which directly acts as a training ground for officers of the Israeli occupation army or (3) through cooperation with the Israel Institute of Technology (Technion), which is a major hub for military technology development specifically designed to uphold and deepen colonization and apartheid such as the Technion developed D9 remote-controlled bulldozer, infamoussly known for destroying Palestinian villages, streets or crushing the bodies of dead (and living) Palestinians, as during the Gaza Genocide.

In this light, it becomes apparent why today, the German state attempts to further criminalize Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) through resolutions which effectively call on state institutions, including universities, to arbitrarily curtail fundamental rights to fight the BDS movement: to cover up its own complicity in these crimes. This vicious response, however, shows that BDS as in the case of South Africa is an effective tool to ideologically question apartheid, and to materially and politically isolate unjust regimes.

In December 2024, the FUs students’ general assembly, in which 1600 students attended, voted with an overwhelming majority for the FU administration to acknowledge the Gaza genocide as well as Israeli apartheid and occupation. This general assembly called for appropriate measures to be introduced to contribute to stopping these atrocities.

Students, staff and faculty who are issuing this call for BDS at FU hold that an academic boycott according to the BDS ethical guidelines towards Israeli and other institutions in order to end genocide, the regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid is the only appropriate and sufficient measure for FU Berlin to take under the current circumstances.

The academic boycott of institutions which facilitate or support these crimes is a legitimate form of non-violent resistance and a moral obligation for today’s academic community. If the FU’s academic community wants to achieve this goal, it must also take a stand against government and state policies that call fundamental rights into question. Admittedly, it is difficult to adopt and fulfil such a stance under the current conditions. However, being able to take this stance is precisely the essence of academic freedom.

Above all, however, the demand for and implementation of an academic boycott with the aim of protecting human rights and achieving essential rights of self-determination for Palestinians is more than a fundamental right. In the face of the Gaza genocide, it is our fundamental duty.

Freie University Berlin, February 19th 2025

Impressum

🇩🇪 Deutsche Version

Letter of Support with Students, Staff and Academics at Freie University calling for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS)

Why Freie University Berlin needs to adopt a policy of academic boycott according to the BDS ethical guidelines towards Israeli universities and other institutions which are complicit in apartheid, occupation, settler-colonialism and/or genocide.

We, the undersigned, call on the administration of Freie University Berlin to immediately seize the criminalization and racist discrimination of its students, staff and faculty, and to honor fundamental rights and the freedom of academia.

We, the undersigned, hereby support the call of students, staff and faculty of Freie University Berlin to implement an academic boycott according to the BDS ethical guidelines towards Israeli and other institutions which facilitate the regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid.

This call is based on an extensive report, published in February 2025, which outlines how the Freie University Berlin normalizes and outrightly facilitates Apartheid, settler-colonialism and genocide through its various institutional ties to Israeli universities and other institutions.

This is proven by e.g. (1) the cooperation with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, which offers to host exchange students from FU Berlin on illegally occupied land and in hostels which constitute illegal settlements (2) through cooperation with the University of Haifa which directly acts as a training ground for officers of the Israeli occupation army or (3) through cooperation with the Israel Institute of Technology (Technion), which is a major hub for military technology development specifically designed to uphold and deepen colonization and apartheid, as with the Technion developed D9 bulldozer, infamoussly known for destroying Palestinian villages, streets or crushing the bodies of dead (and living) Palestinians, as it happened during the Genocide in Gaza.

We, the undersigned, encourage the proliferation of such a movement to other German universities, as BDS in order with its accompanying ethical guidelines, encourages critical discussions and reflections which question the ruling narratives of imperial and colonial power, while materially contributing to the struggle for equality and liberty. The success of BDS campaigns has been shown in the case of South Africa, as they isolate states engaged in genocide, occupation, colonization and apartheid.

It is unusual that academics and intellectuals from institutions or countries other than the respective university in question sign such letters of support. However, we need to acknowledge the severe infringements on freedom of academia and fundamental rights at Freie University and in Germany. These have been outlined by respected international organizations such as Amnesty International or the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights. In this light, we see it as our moral duty, to amplify the voices of students, staff and faculty of Freie University which the German state is attempting to silence with the help of university administrations.

We, the undersigned, pledge to communicate this call as well as the infringements on academic freedom and fundamental rights at Freie University in the wider international academic community through our research, written commentaries, lectures or contributions in academic conferences and protests.

Concluding, we pledge to revisit and potentially suspend planned or future institutional ties and exchange programs with Freie University, and for that matter with other German institutions where similar circumstances exist, if those circumstances should prevail in the future.


  1. Dr. Shir Hever, Freie Universität Berlin
  2. Prof. Lina Meruane, Former Simon Fischer Professor at Freie Universität Berlin
  3. M.A. Georg Ismael, Freie Universität Berlin
  4. B.A. Lior Kahana, John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Freie Universität Berlin
  5. B.A. Student Lorenz Deutsch, Otto Suhr Institut für Politikwissenschaften, Freie Universität Berlin
  6. M.A. Johanna Saggau, Lateinamerika Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
  7. Wim Lenkeit, Freie Universität Berlin
  8. M.A. Isla Karademir, Freie Universität Berlin
  9. M.A. Dennis Klinke, Freie Universität Berlin
  10. Jorge Vega, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
  11. M.A. in Philosophy Pablo Abufom, Universidad de Chile
  12. Dr. Rodrigo Karmy, Universidad de Chile
  13. Prof. Dr. Pamela Stoll Dougall, Universidad de Alicante
  14. Profersora titular Facultad Comuniciòn e Imagen, Faride Zerán, Universidad de Chile
  15. Prof. MarĂ­a Soledad Falabella Luco, Universidad de Chile
  16. Prof. Maria Eugenia Dominguez saul, Universidad de Chile
  17. Profesora Inglesias Saldaña Margarita, Universidad de Chile
  18. Profesor Dino Pacani C., Universidad de Chile
  19. Prof. Feliciano Castaño Villar, Universidad de Chile
  20. M.B.A. Mikhael Marzuqa, Oficina de InformaciĂłn Palestina
  21. Profesor PhD, Bernardo Subercaseaux, Universidad de Chile
  22. Doctora en Historia. Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Ariadna Biotti Silva, Universidad de Chile
  23. Professor Albert Zeppelin, Universidad de Chile
  24. Doctor Jorge Ferrada Sullivan, Universidad de Los Lagos
  25. Prof. Marcela Chahuán, Universidad de Chile
  26. Prof. Javier Barreda Sureda, Universidad de Alicante
  27. Hesham Abu-Sharar, Universitat Autorenoma de Barcelona
  28. Dr. Ana Harcha Cortés, Universidad de Chile
  29. Dr. Dolores Vázquez, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
  30. Prof. Christina GarcĂ­a Cecilia, Universidad de Alicante
  31. Associate Professor Andreas Malm, Lund University, Sweden
  32. Dr. Dror Dayan, Liverpool John Moores University
  33. Xenia Shakhin
  34. Dakhli Leyla, CNRS, France
  35. Dr. Rune Steenberg Reyhe, Palacky University Olomouc, Czechia
  36. B.A. Robert Lisney
  37. Carolyn Doidge, Hertie School
  38. Prof. Dr. Emirata Sabine Broeck, University of Bremen
  39. M.A. Carlos Ortega Sánchez, University of Istanbul
  40. Dr. Sai Englert, Leiden University
  41. Dr. Sruti Bala, University of Amsterdam
  42. Dr. Esther Edelmann, Leiden University
  43. Dr. Michiel Bot, Tilburg University
  44. Samuel Ballin, Radbout University
  45. Dr. Christian Henderson, Leiden University
  46. Prof. Alvaro Arguelles, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
  47. Prof. Pablo Garcia, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
  48. Dr. Theo Aalders, University of Bonn
  49. M.A. Micely DĂ­as Espaillat, University of Bonn
  50. Dr. Angela Last, University of Leicester
  51. M.Sc. Inès Bakhtaoui, University of Bonn
  52. M.A. J.P. Arellano, The Institute of Environmental Science and Technology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
  53. M.A. Giacomo Delgado, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich
  54. Dr. Zainab Khalid, COMSATS University, Pakistan
  55. Alexander Müller, Martin-Luther-Universität (Halle/Saale)
  56. Fatema Hubail, Berlin Graduate School Muslim Cultures and Societies

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