海角大神

鈥榃e鈥檝e never been as united.鈥 Harvard community rallies despite Trump funding cuts.

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Charles Krupa/AP/File
A sculler rows down the Charles River near Harvard University April 15, 2025, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Harvard community has unified behind the oldest university in America in the wake of Trump administration cuts totaling $3 billion so far.

Harvard Yard is bustling on a bright day in May. With graduation nearing, large white tents stand ready for celebration. Tourists and Cambridge residents enjoy the sunshine, as Harvard students study al fresco for finals. A few SUVs loaded with boxes are parked on the quad in preparation for the end of the semester.

Those students who were willing to speak to a reporter said they were proud to belong to an institution that is taking a stand for what it believes in. Christoffer Gernow, a first-year student from Denmark, says he鈥檚 鈥渧ery supportive鈥 of Harvard fighting back against the Trump administration, and thinks a lot of other students are, too.

鈥淲e鈥檝e never been as united as we are right now鈥 around supporting the university鈥檚 decisions, he says. The federal government鈥檚 is, in his view, 鈥渃ompletely unreasonable and almost somewhat dystopian,鈥 as well as 鈥渃ontradictory.鈥

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The Harvard community is processing the loss of $3 billion in funding from the Trump administration. But ahead of graduation, students, faculty, and local businesses share what is unifying them 鈥 and fueling their pride in the school.

As swiftly as the canceled grants have piled up (so far to a total of $3 billion), so have responses in support of the United States鈥 oldest and most affluent university. After the university filed a First Amendment lawsuit in April and spearheaded an open letter defending 鈥渆ssential freedom鈥 signed by the presidents of more than 400 universities, donations began pouring in at a rate of 88 an hour, according .

The floods of goodwill and small-donor donations stand as a strong contrast to a year before, when the university was awash in protests, its first Black president had resigned amid plagiarism allegations and unsatisfactory testimony in Congress on campus antisemitism, and large-scale donors were pulling their support. From faculty and alumni to area businesses, the expressions of pride in Harvard鈥檚 stance for academic freedom are effusive. Actions by the White House have galvanized people, they say.

鈥淭rump has a way of unifying people 鈥 Canadians, Australians, Harvard faculty, you name it,鈥 says Theda Skocpol, the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology at Harvard.

Dr. Skocpol is one of at least 90 tenured faculty members who have pledged to give 10% of their salary for the 2025-2026 school year to support the school. To date, they have made commitments totaling an estimated $2.5 million. Harvard President Alan Garber has pledged to donate 25% of his salary to support the school.

AP
Students, faculty, and members of the Harvard University community rally for First Amendment rights in the wake of arrests of international students April 17, 2025, in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

鈥淎ll of us at Harvard who are in a position to sacrifice need to do so,鈥 Dr. Skocpol says. 鈥淲e need to do what we can to sustain the sciences and graduate students and lab people, and we need to stand up for the principle of academic autonomy and freedom.鈥

The donation amounts number in the millions and can鈥檛 match dollar for dollar with the billions pulled by the federal government. But Harvard community members say their actions have additional benefits. 鈥淲e think that Harvard can be an example for other schools. We took a strong stand for safeguarding the school鈥檚 independence and that certainly has spread to other universities,鈥 says Eric Maskin, Nobel Prize-winning economist and tenured faculty member.

鈥淚 could not be more proud鈥

People affiliated with Harvard pledge to continue to fight as long as the school pushes back against what they say is an illegal encroachment into how they do things there.

鈥淧ersonally, I could not be more proud,鈥 says Denise Jillson, executive director of the Harvard Square Business Association. She notes she can鈥檛 speak on behalf of the entire business association鈥檚 board, but that she gets the sense that most people in the community support Harvard鈥檚 decision.

She鈥檚 grateful that Harvard is standing up for 鈥渞ighteousness, and they鈥檙e just doing the right thing regardless of the consequences.鈥

Harvard is one of several prominent universities to come under intense scrutiny by President Donald Trump and U.S. Department of Education Secretary Linda McMahon. 鈥淗arvard has in recent years failed to live up to both the intellectual and civil rights conditions that justify federal investment,鈥 dated April 11, criticizing what it characterized as a lack of 鈥渋ntellectual creativity and scholarly rigor.鈥澛燨n May 22, the Department of Homeland Security said it was cutting off Harvard's ability to enroll international students by denying them access to the student visa program, . The White House has also said it is investigating whether to deny Harvard's tax-exempt status. More than a quarter of Harvard鈥檚 students are international, according to enrollment data.

White House officials first said that funding was being cut off because of campus activity in response to the Israel-Hamas war that started on Oct. 7, 2023. Protests on campus led many Jewish students to feel unsafe. It also led to companies refusing to hire students who protested and students鈥 information being doxxed.

鈥淸Antisemitism] was something that the Harvard administration was already working to address. We don鈥檛 need the federal government to step in for this to be dealt with,鈥 says Dr. Maskin.

Dr. Maskin, who is donating part of his salary, alluded to an antisemitism task force that Harvard created, which published a 200-plus page report that found antisemitism on campus. Another report found instances of聽Islamophobia. Harvard has vowed to address both challenges. Dr. Maskin, who is Jewish, also says that antisemitism at the school is not as pervasive as the government would suggest.

He says that he will continue to help Harvard as long as the school continues to fight back. 鈥淎nd the benefits of that research go to everyone. This is not charity to Harvard. This is an investment, because Harvard has a proven track record of producing great results.鈥

Dr. Maskin and other faculty say that Harvard doesn鈥檛 need the government having a say in who can get hired, what students can be admitted, or what disciplinary actions Harvard doles out.

The university argues the cuts violate both the Constitution and laws governing grants. A hearing is scheduled for July. In the meantime, the school has made several moves to plug funding gaps, such as pledging $250 million toward research. But the first big gesture came from the faculty.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a moral case for people who are well off trying to help out vulnerable people, vulnerable people who through no fault of their own are affected,鈥 says Dr. Maskin.

The effort for faculty to make financial commitments was spearheaded by Dani Rodrik, a professor of economics at the Kennedy School of Government.

鈥淲e already had hundreds of faculty members who had expressed a very strong view about resisting the Trump administration鈥檚 unlawful demands on the university,鈥 Dr. Rodrik says. That letter was signed March 24 by more than 600 faculty members who urged the governing body of the school to resist attacks on colleges.

Dr. Rodrik says he and others reached out to those faculty members. They were promised anonymity and that they could withdraw donations if the university didn鈥檛 stand firm. Professors who can鈥檛 give 10% are helping out students in other ways.

鈥淲e did think about this as possibly as an example to other faculty at other universities. Given Harvard鈥檚 name and standing and prestige, we thought this might spark similar initiatives elsewhere,鈥 Dr. Rodrik says. He says that he has heard from faculty at other schools who are willing to step up to a financial pledge if it is organized on their respective campuses.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be morally supported鈥

Caitlyn Gonzalez, a first-year student having lunch with a friend, calls Harvard鈥檚 stand against the Trump administration 鈥渧ery powerful.鈥 鈥淚 think [it] is a beautiful thing that a university is standing up for their students,鈥 she adds.

The friend Ms. Gonzalez is lunching with is international and asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal. Interviewed before the latest development on student visas,聽she聽says she wishes the university had taken more 鈥渃oncrete鈥 steps to support international students this semester. Still, she feels that Harvard has held on to its 鈥渕oral soul鈥 by standing up to the Trump administration.

鈥淚t shows we鈥檙e going to be morally supported by this institution, and to me, personally, that鈥檚 a very important thing and that鈥檚 something that I really value,鈥 she says.

While faculty members sought to encourage colleagues in academia at other schools, they also ended up rallying people inside Cambridge city limits.

Jacob Posner/海角大神
Kari Kuelzer, owner of restaurants The Sea Hag and Grendel鈥檚 Den in Harvard Square, says she feels relieved that the university is standing up to the Trump administration. Sitting at a table in Grendel's Den on May 16, she says that without academic integrity, all that would be left is a 鈥渘ice, shiny price tag.鈥

Kari Kuelzer owns neighborhood institutions Grendel鈥檚 Den, which has been around for more than 50 years, and The Sea Hag. She feels not just pride but also 鈥渞elief鈥 that Harvard is not giving in.

鈥淢y concern is that the alternative bad feeling [in the community] that might result from some sort of capitulation would damage my business,鈥 she says.

Her restaurants have always given 鈥減eople a chance to come out with a big group of people from all walks of life and share ideas and learn and socialize,鈥 she says.

She also worries 鈥渢he best and the brightest鈥 will be replaced by only the wealthiest.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not here to serve the wealthy,鈥 she says, but rather future inventors of a killer app or a cure for cancer.

If Harvard loses its academic integrity, all the university has left is a 鈥渘ice, shiny price tag,鈥 she says.

Ms. Jillson, of the Harvard Square Business Association, believes the square will get through this period of turmoil, as it has done throughout its long history. Harvard has been around since 1636, she notes, and many of the businesses in her association were founded over 100 years ago.

鈥淲e will do as we have done, whether it was the [1918] pandemic, or the two world wars,鈥 she says.

Editor鈥檚 note: This story has been updated to include news of the Trump administration鈥檚 decision to cancel Harvard鈥檚 ability to obtain visas for international students.

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