New NYC law targets protesters near K-12 schools — but not colleges that are ground zero for hateful anti-Israel rallies
- US News
- World News
- Page Six
- Sports
- Post Sports+
- Sports Betting
- Business
- Opinion
- Entertainment
- Shopping
- Lifestyle
- Health
- Real Estate
- Alexa
- Media
- Tech
- Science
- Astrology
- Video
- Photos
- Pod Force One
- NY POSTcast
Switch between CA and NY editions here.
EditionRecommended
Skip to main content MetroNew NYC law targets protesters near K-12 schools — but not colleges that are ground zero for hateful anti-Israel rallies
By Carl Campanile Published June 30, 2026, 8:29 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The New York Post on GoogleThe NYPD must now officially report to the City Council about how it prevents protesters from harassing people around K-12 schools — but not colleges, where most hateful anti-Israel rallies occur.
The council passed legislation Tuesday night requiring the report in response to Mayor Zohran Mamdani vetoing a bill in April that aimed to create buffer zones around educational institutions including colleges.
Mamdani said that bill would have restricted free-speech rights.
4
Proponents of the new law, which was passed with a veto-proof majority, hailed it as still an important step in protecting people.
But some critics said that while a move in the right direction, it doesn’t go far enough.
Explore More
Jewish ex-staffer says California college’s chaotic pro-Palestinian takeovers threatened her safety
Hail Cornell’s prez for refusing to let student brats take him prisoner
Bragg and Columbia BOTH ensured anti-Israel student goons would walk
“There hasn’t been many protests near K-to-12 schools,” a council source said.
Still, it’s “good to send a message” to prevent protesters from intimidating students and staffers, the source added.
The City Council’s revised measure, sponsored by Democratic Councilwoman Elsie Encarnación of East Harlem, also applies to childcare centers but not to libraries or teaching hospitals.
4
The new law requires Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch to submit a “transparency report” to the mayor and Council Speaker Julie Menin detailing the NYPD’s policies involving the “security perimeters” it sets up around the specified educational facilities.
The report will include when the NYPD decides to use a security buffer zone and how it ensures such a perimeter “neither curtails the rights to free speech, assembly, or protest, including student walkouts, nor impedes emergency access to, or egress from” the facility.
“This legislation ensures children and families can safely access schools without fear or intimidation while protecting constitutional rights, which are sacrosanct,” Menin said.
4
Councilman Eric Dinowitz (D-Bronx), a co-sponsor of the bill, said, “Every child in this city deserves to walk into school without fear of being harassed or intimidated.
“Whether you’re in 2K or high school, you should be able to get into and out of your school without being grabbed or having epithets hurled at you, and this bill makes sure there’s a clear, public plan to keep students safe while fully protecting every New Yorker’s right to protest,” he said.
Jewish Community Relations Council of New York CEO Mark Treyger called the bill a “major victory,” as did the UJA-Federation of New York.
Follow live updates on Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s socialist agenda and the latest in NYC politics
“Our tradition teaches that the measure of a society is how it protects its children. This legislation answers that call,” Treyger said.
“The urgency could not be clearer. One of these early childhood programs operates in a Queens synagogue in Rego Park that was targeted in a chilling antisemitic hate crime, with swastikas scrawled across the property. Moments like these remind us that safety cannot begin after a crisis,’’ he said.
“It must be built before one.”
4
But the council source said the bill is “symbolic” because it excludes colleges and universities where the most violent lawless protests have occurred, such as Columbia University and CUNY’s City College.
The council also passed another law allowing the NYPD to set up buffer zones around synagogues and other houses of worship.
In addition, Gov. Kathy Hochul and the state legislature approved a law establishing a 50-foot buffer zone around houses of worship, including synagogues, churches, mosques or other religious centers to prevent harassment of congregants during protests.
The new state law creates a new penalty for “criminal interference with access to a place of religious worship” — a class B misdemeanor carrying a sentence of up to 90 days in jail and a maximum $500 fine.
“Everywhere from universities to museums to teaching hospitals could face restrictions,” Mamdani said in a statement at the time.
“This could impact workers protesting ICE, or college students demanding their school divest from fossil fuels or demonstrating in support of Palestinian rights.”
.
Filed under- antisemitism
- city council
- college protests
- discrimination
- israel
- Israel-Hamas war
- palestinians
- protests
- 6/30/26
Trending Now on NYPost.com
-
This story has been shared 88,714 times.
88,714
Mystery of explosive diarrhea parasite outbreak in the US — as experts try to figure out what’s causing it
-
This story has been shared 76,303 times.
76,303
Chilling photo shows bloodied Texas mom after allegedly being stabbed by twisted teen Cookie
-
This story has been shared 75,779 times.
75,779
Heartbreaking photos show Florida hiker, 31, who was killed, dismembered by alligator as boyfriend desperately tried saving her
-
This story has been shared 48,817 times.
48,817
Boyfriend desperately tried to save hiker as massive alligator ripped her apart in three feet of water
Listen Now
Most Commented Join the conversation
-
This story has 2.1K comments.
2.1K
Trump issues dire warning about fate of Iran after punishing Islamic Republic for Strait of Hormuz attacks
-
This story has 1.7K comments.
1.7K
Supreme Court rules ballots arriving after Election Day can be counted, in win for Dems
-
This story has 1.6K comments.
1.6K
JD Vance tells Bill Maher how ‘America wins’ with or without Iran deal
Columnists
-
Rikki Schlott
Mamdani-backed DSA candidate’s win in NY-13 leaves residents reeling: ‘No real roots in the neighborhood’
-
Charles Gasparino
Legendary NYC restaurateur launching private club — where the food will be a main attraction
See All Columnists
Page Six Style
-
Jon Hamm, Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson and Adam Brody can’t get enough of these luxury socks
-
Sharon Stone returns to the runway after 33 years in glossy hip-high boots
-
Paige DeSorbo’s Daphne is having a rare sale — and the ‘perfect’ button-up she wears on repeat is 30% off
Now on Page Six
-
Nicola Peltz disses Harper Beckham with post celebrating ‘dream sister’ as feud with husband’s family rages on
-
Spencer Pratt makes heartbreaking claim about Daveigh Chase’s tragic death after bombshell AIDS reveal
-
Taylor Swift’s plane lands in New York area days before wedding to Travis Kelce
Video
-
Supreme Court releases closely watched decision on birthright citizenship and allows ban on trans athletes
Image gallery
More Stories
Page Six
‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ is now streaming — Here’s how to watch at home
Decider
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Louis C.K.: Ridiculous’ On Netflix, The Comedian Slowly, Crudely, Comes To Grip With The Inevitability Of Mortality
NYPost
Mystery of explosive diarrhea parasite outbreak in the US — as experts try to figure out what’s causing it
© 2026 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved Terms of Use Subscription Terms Privacy Notice SitemapYour California Privacy Rights
How Norway’s Viking Row has captured the American imagination
How Norway’s Viking Row has captured the American imagination

The Viking row has become a popular ritual for players and fans alike Lars Baron/Getty Images
By Patrick IversenJune 30, 2026 10:28 pm EDT UpdatedARLINGTON, Texas — The drum descended the stands like a sanctified relic, passed hand over hand through sections of fans who wouldn’t let it touch the ground.
By the time its journey began from the fans gathered in the third deck to the pitch at Dallas Stadium, Norway had already done the hard part: a 2-1 win over Ivory Coast, sealed by Erling Haaland’s 86th-minute winner — the country’s first knockout-round win in its World Cup history.
Captain Martin Ødegaard took the drum from the stands, placed it on the grass with his teammates sat behind him, and raised the stick high.
What happened next has become familiar to anyone who has followed Norway’s run through this tournament. The crowd above (red and blue, with Viking helmets scattered throughout) needed no instruction. They sat down in their seats, in the aisles. They reached forward, pulled back, and shouted “RO!” in time with the drum, the chant building speed as the beat quickened, arms moving in unison through a stadium full of many people who, a month ago, had no real reason to know what any of this meant.
The ritual is called the Viking Row, and it works the same way every time, whether it’s happening on a pitch in Arlington or a subway platform in Queens. Fans sit down in a line, one behind the other, lean back and pull their arms toward their chests in unison, as if hauling an oar through water, while a leader keeps time on a drum and the group chants “ro” — Norwegian for “row” — faster as the beat speeds up.
Fans doing the viking row during the sixth inning of a game between the New York Mets and the Chicago Cubs (Ishika Samant/Getty Images)It has done what its creators hoped, giving a country without a World Cup appearance in nearly three decades something simple to rally around. But it has also done something they didn’t fully anticipate: it has become one of the defining images of the North American World Cup, performed by people with no connection to Norway at all.
The gesture went viral in the U.S. after a video of Norwegian fans rowing up a Boston escalator gained millions of views. Since then, it’s been done on the floor of a New York City subway car, in the middle of Times Square, and by a section of fans at a Mets game who probably needed a distraction from their team.
Norway fans are doing a “Viking Row” up the escalator at Boston’s South Station before heading to the World Cup
Adding this to the list of things I’ve never seen before and probably never will again pic.twitter.com/j8NvltOvfk
— Jeremy Siegel (@jersiegel) June 16, 2026
The trend now attracts participants regardless of soccer ties; in Arlington on Tuesday, free agent NFL quarterback Jameis Winston taught Dallas Mavericks star Cooper Flagg how to row. As Norway’s plane landed at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport on Sunday, officers from the Dallas police department and the airport police were seated on the tarmac, doing their own version of the row just outside the aircraft.
“My buddy showed me a video of it like two weeks ago, and I was like, ‘That’s kind of awesome’, and now I’m doing it here with people I met today,” said Brett Couch, 37, of Fort Worth, outside the stadium post-game. Behind him, a family of four Norwegian fans sat on the grass doing the row as a foreign correspondent urged them on with a camera.
“Whoever invented the rowing has patented it, I hope,” head coach Stale Solbakken said on Monday.
The chant is older than it looks, dating back more than a year to Norway’s qualifying win over Italy. But the Viking framing was deliberate: a musician and a member of the team’s fan club, who dreamed up the chant together, built it around the image of Vikings “returning” to a continent they’d reached long before Columbus. It was a hook that turned out to travel much farther than anyone in Norway expected.
After Norway’s 3-2 win over Senegal in East Rutherford, New Jersey, which clinched their knockout-stage spot, Ødegaard banged the drum, and the team rowed with their fans on the field. With the team’s full adoption of the ritual, a post-game tradition appears to have taken hold. And the players, the sight of it spreading beyond their own fans hasn’t gone unnoticed.
Erling Haaland, front right, and the rest of the Norway team have embraced the row (Lars Baron/Getty Images)“They mean so much to us. It’s amazing to see so many Norwegians coming over, and everyone’s getting involved in the rows as well. So it’s brilliant,” midfielder Kristian Thorstvedt said. Asked how much the team looks forward to doing it themselves, as they did Tuesday, he didn’t hesitate. “It’s something we look forward to, and of course, this has to be a thing now. We have to keep doing it.”
Defender Torbjørn Heggem said the setting in the Dallas Cowboys’ home stadium gave it an extra charge. “It’s actually really fun. The first time was great, and now with this stadium and the acoustics and everything, it was unbelievable.”
“It’s like the wave, but better, because you get to yell,” said Valerie Brackett, 27, of Dallas.
That’s more or less the point fans and organizers keep making about why it has traveled so well. It doesn’t require knowing the words to a song or the history behind a banner. It requires sitting down, moving your arms and bellowing when someone tells you to.
A high-angle view of the Norway fan Viking row 🤯 pic.twitter.com/CJIda5U7ed
— Interesting things (@awkwardgoogle) June 24, 2026
It’s traveling in the other direction, too. “Back home, my mom is doing this in the kitchen, my whole family group chat is just rowing videos now, it’s out of control,” said Erik Stensrud, 31, from Norway, who flew over for the knockout rounds.
He is not exaggerating. Back in Norway, the row has spread well past stadiums and living rooms. A kindergarten class outside Oslo lined up shoulder to shoulder and rowed together in a video that Haaland himself shared. At a nursing home in the country’s north, residents set their alarms for the middle of the night to catch a match, then pulled on Viking hats and rowed before kickoff. Members of Norway’s Parliament have done it too, with the prime minister joining in.
Members of the Norwegian parliament doing the row (Håkon Mosvold Larsen / NTB / AFP via Getty Images) / Norway OUTSo why has it spread in the U.S., too? Part of the explanation is timing: this is the first U.S.-hosted World Cup since 1994, arriving in a country where soccer fandom has spent three decades borrowing chants and rituals rather than inheriting them, and American sports culture already runs on simple, teachable group gestures like the wave.
The Viking Row fits that mold exactly — no chant, no language beyond a single syllable. Anyone can join in (and some Ivory Coast fans did on Tuesday) and get it right within four beats. It also travels well on social media, resolving into one clean, sweeping motion built for a tournament, followed in short clips by people who couldn’t afford a ticket.
Of course, anything viral will attract some pushback. One journalist labeled it an “introvert’s nightmare” due to social pressure. During the Senegal match, a Norway fan who refused to join was singled out online; he later dismissed the gesture as a copy of Iceland’s Euro 2016 “Thunderclap”. While the physical movements differ (overhead claps versus seated rowing), shared Viking heritage from some fanbases has led to some friction.
Swedish defender Gustaf Lagerbielke admitted to reporters last last week, after Norway’s first win, that Swedish players “just sigh” when the row gets shown on TV.
“But whatever floats your boat,” he added with a shrug.
None of it seems to have slowed the row’s momentum down in the United States, though.
What You Should Read Next
Erling Haaland, a striker so good he doesn’t even need to touch the ball
Norway's talisman was kept quiet for long spells by Ivory Coast but exploded into life when it mattered
Even Norway’s manager seems bemused by how far past the team it has spread. “I think that’s a question for culture journalists and people who follow trends,” he said when asked why the United States seems so enamored with the ritual. “Every woman and man from 100 years old to two years old is rowing in Norway now. And when we arrive in airports around the states, they are rowing there as well. It’s fun for togetherness.”
Whether the Viking Row outlives this tournament is a separate question, and many stadium traditions don’t survive the run that made them famous. But for one afternoon in Texas, with Haaland’s goal still fresh and Norway’s captain’s arm raised over that well-traveled drum, that wasn’t the point. Everybody knew what to do next.
Jul 1, 2026Connections: Sports Edition
Spot the pattern. Connect the terms
Find the hidden link between sports terms
Tagged To: CultureFIFA Men's World CupSoccerNorway