Harvard students walk out on accused groper John Comaroff

More than 100 Harvard University students walked out of a class taught by a professor who was allowed to return after being accused of forcibly kissing and groping students.

Video footage showed anthropology professor John Comaroff awkwardly sitting at the front of his 3 p.m. class Tuesday as a series of students started to stand.

“We don’t want to be taught by someone who has still not been held accountable for, or made amends for their sexual misconduct,” one female student then said, reading from her phone.


Students starting the protest against professor John Comaroff as he smiles at the front of class.
Professor John Comaroff awkwardly smiled as the students started the protest against him.
Twitter / @rosiecouturee

“John Comaroff spent his career harassing, silencing and retaliating against students,” she continued, as others pulled out signs and stood in protest.

“He does not belong at Harvard,” the ringleader continued, calling for those who “agree” to walk out “because enough is enough.”

Most of the students then started to file out of the room, chanting “Justice for survivors” and “No more Comaroff, no more complicity.”


Portrait of Harvard professor John Comaroff.
Comaroff “categorically denies” the accusations as well as being a threat to students, his attorneys said.

Comaroff — who was returning to teaching after two periods of unpaid administrative leave — broke into a smile and nodded at the protesters, the video shows.

“Smile in hell, a–hole,” one of the last to leave told him, according to the Harvard Crimson.

Only two students remained in the classroom, the student newspaper said. Three students remained enrolled in the class as of Tuesday, while only one student was still registered for Comaroff’s other course, the Crimson noted.


Harvard students protest after walking out of the classroom.
Only two students remained in the class as more than 100 protested outside.
Twitter / @LiliaKilburn

The professor was first put on paid leave in 2020 after an investigation by the paper found that at least three female graduate students had complained of harassment and professional retaliation.

He was put back on unpaid administrative leave last year after two internal investigations found he’d violated Harvard’s sexual harassment and professional conduct policies, the Crimson noted.

Three accusers — Lilia Kilburn, Margaret Czerwienski and Amulya Mandava — sued the school last year, alleging a “decade-long failure to protect students from sexual abuse and career-ending retaliation.”

It accused Comaroff of having “kissed and groped students without their consent, made unwelcome sexual advances, and threatened to sabotage students’ careers if they complained.”


Accusers Lilia Kilburn, Margaret Czerwienski and Amulya Mandava.
Lilia Kilburn, Margaret Czerwienski and Amulya Mandava have sued Harvard over Comaroff’s alleged sexual misconduct.
Boston Globe via Getty Images

Kilburn said she had an emotional response to Tuesday’s walkout. “When I saw what Harvard undergrads did today, I wept,” she tweeted.

“Because no one should have to go through what I went through with John Comaroff to get an education.”

One of the activist groups behind the walkout, Our Harvard Can Do Better, called for his resignation, saying his continued presence on campus was shameful and a danger to students.


Kilburn's tweet about how the protest left her in tears.
Kilburn tweeted that she “wept” at the supportive protest.

“His employment sends the message that sexual abuse and misogyny are acceptable at Harvard & beyond,” the group tweeted.

Comaroff’s attorneys have said he “categorically denies ever harassing or retaliating against any student.”

They told the Crimson that the professor also “categorically denies that he ought to resign” and “is doing nothing to create unsafe conditions for any Harvard student.”


Protest signs on Comaroff's door during Tuesday's protest.
Protesters stuck signs and copies of the lawsuit on Comaroff’s door.
Twitter / @LiliaKilburn

“He is fully authorized to teach Harvard students who sign up for his courses,” they wrote, adding that “the claim that he poses a danger is ludicrous in light of the actual facts.”

A Harvard spokesperson declined to comment to the student paper, as did university police.