Podcasts

‘The Encampments’ Documentary: An interview with Co-Director Kei Pritsker

'The Encampments' is a powerful and intimate look inside the student-led divestment movement that brought some of the nation's most powerful institutions to their knees, and inspired thousands across the country to demand an end to the Gaza genocide.

In this latest episode of the Mondoweiss podcast, Mondoweiss’ Yumna Patel speaks with Kei Pritsker, journalist at BreakThrough News and co-director of The Encampments — a powerful new documentary chronicling the student-led divestment movement on U.S. college campuses in response to Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Co-directed with Michael Workman and produced by BreakThrough News and Watermelon Pictures, the film offers an intimate look inside the protest that began at Columbia University and spread to more than 100 campuses across the U.S.

The official movie poster for the documentary film 'The Encampments' (Photo courtesy of Watermelon Pictures)
The official movie poster for the documentary film ‘The Encampments’ (Photo courtesy of Watermelon Pictures)

In April 2024, Columbia students set up an encampment demanding the university divest from companies complicit in Israel’s assault on Gaza. Within days, riot police stormed the campus, arresting over 100 students. But the repression did not deter the students at Columbia, and in turn inspired a nationwide wave of encampments at universities across the country.

The backlash was swift. Universities cracked down, police raided campuses, and media figures smeared students as radicals and antisemites to deflect attention from the atrocities they were protesting against.

The film follows organizers like Mahmoud Khalil, whose arrest by ICE under President Trump’s “Catch and Revoke” crackdown prompted the filmmakers to accelerate its release.

Through months of on-the-ground footage, The Encampments captures not only the political urgency of what many are calling the ‘student intifada’, but a broader generational call to resist empire, genocide, and complicity. Students connected Palestine to climate justice, Indigenous sovereignty, and global anti-colonial movements — declaring, simply: Palestine is everywhere.