Megha Vemuri, Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s 2025 class president, was banned from participating in her graduation commencement ceremony last week, after she accused the university of having “aided and abetted” Israel’s “assault on the Palestinian people” during a speech on campus the day before.
On Thursday, Vemuri took to the stage at the OneMIT commencement ceremony, donning a keffiyeh — a traditional scarf worn by Arab communities that has been a symbol of Palestinian nationalism for decades — over her graduation gown. During her speech, Vemuri denounced Israel’s war in Gaza and criticized the university for its ties to the country’s military.
“Right now, while we prepare to graduate and move forward with our lives, there are no universities left in Gaza,” Vemuri said. “We are watching Israel try to wipe out Palestine off the face of the earth, and it is a shame that MIT is a part of it.”
According to the Hamas-run Palestinian Health Ministry, at least 54,418 people have been killed and 124,190 injured in Gaza amid Israel’s ongoing attack in the region since Hamas’ terrorist attack in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. That attack killed more than 1,200 people in Israel and took around 250 hostage, according to Israeli counts.
Vemuri’s speech starts around the 55:30 mark, and her remarks related to Gaza begin at the 56:00 mark:
At the end of her speech, Vemuri referenced a decades-old MIT tradition in which graduating students turn their class rings, featuring their university’s mascot, “Tim the Beaver,” outward, symbolizing that their time at MIT is now in the past.
“As you lift it off your fingers, notice that the beaver is no longer facing you; it is now facing the world,” Vemuri said. “This is a world that we will be entering with an immeasurable responsibility. We will carry with us the stamp of the MIT name, the same name that is directly complicit in the ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people. And so we carry with us the obligation to do everything we can to stop it.”
After Vemuri finished her speech, Sally Kornbluth, the university’s president, tried to settle the crowd. “At MIT, we believe in freedom of expression. But today is about the graduates,” Kornbluth said.
Without naming Vemuri, MIT confirmed that she had been banned from Friday’s events, after they said she delivered a speech a day earlier that was not the one provided to the school in advance of the event.
Right now, while we prepare to graduate and move forward with our lives, there are no universities left in Gaza.








