To Be the Difference

A Photographic Record of the UCSD Gaza Solidarity Encampment

On May 1, 2024, a quiet patch of grass at UC San Diego transformed into a scene of protest. Beneath handmade banners and clusters of tents, students established one of hundreds of Gaza Solidarity Encampments that emerged on campuses around the world. Their central demand was that the university divest from corporations with ties to the Israeli military’s occupation and surveillance of Palestinian territories—including Boeing, Hewlett-Packard, and Caterpillar.

For several days, the encampment grew. Students held teach-ins, vigils, and open discussions centered on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. The space became a rare kind of classroom—one shaped by grief, solidarity, and a sense of political urgency. Like many encampments across the United States, however, it was short-lived.

On May 6, university administrators deployed police in riot gear. Officers dismantled the encampment, detained students and faculty, and cleared the area in a matter of hours. Sixty-four people were arrested. What began as a call for ethical investment quickly escalated into a broader confrontation over the boundaries of protest, academic freedom, and institutional response.

Similar scenes unfolded across the country. Students were suspended or expelled; faculty faced disciplinary action. Universities rewrote protest policies, restricted the time and place for campus gatherings, and accelerated conduct proceedings. While many Jewish students and faculty actively participated in the encampments, accusations of antisemitism were used by some institutions and political leaders to justify crackdowns, sparking renewed debate about the conflation of anti-Zionism with antisemitism, and the diversity of Jewish political thought.

As of June 2025, the tents are gone, but the consequences endure. International students who took part in demonstrations now face legal uncertainty, with some at risk of visa revocation or deportation under new federal guidance. For many, the cost of protest has moved beyond campus discipline to questions of livelihood and citizenship.

To Be the Difference is a photographic record of this moment, tracing the arc of the UC San Diego encampment from its creation to its removal and examining the broader social and institutional forces that shaped its rise and fall. The project aims to document, rather than editorialize—to bear witness to how young people are navigating dissent, risk, and responsibility in a time of global crisis.

To Be the Difference is a documentary photo essay covering the Gaza Solidarity Encampment at UC San Diego and the events that followed its dismantling in spring 2024. While working as a photojournalist for The Triton, I followed the encampment’s development closely—photographing not only protest and police presence, but also the quieter, more nuanced moments of community, conflict, and change.

This project traces the arc of a campus movement: from its creation and collective energy to its forced removal and the reshaping of public space in its wake. In the weeks that followed, I continued documenting how the physical and emotional landscape shifted—through rallies, counter-protests, and institutional responses that spoke volumes without always saying much.

Rooted in journalistic practice, this work is guided by clarity, restraint, and a deep respect for the people and spaces involved. It seeks to record without flattening, to observe without reducing, and to offer a sustained visual account of how protest leaves marks long after it ends.

This project builds on my reporting for The Triton and continues as an independent body of work.

Author’s Note

For licensing inquiries, press requests, or to collaborate on related visual stories, contact me at mckenziefotos@gmail.com

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