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Israel’s repression of Palestinian students reached new level during Gaza attack

121127 hebrew university Israel’s repression of Palestinian students reached new level during Gaza attack

Israeli police arrest a Palestinian protester during a protest at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, 20 November 2012. (Mahfouz Abu Turk / APA images)

Right from the beginning of the latest Israeli attack on Gaza, Israel’s academic institutions displayed their boundless support of the military. This was not in itself surprising: Israel’s universities have a habit of rallying behind the military on these occasions. What was different this time was that the repression of Palestinian students in Israel reached a new level of ferocity.

The complicity of universities with the attack was exemplified by the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, a private college. Israelis belonging to its student union set up a “war room” to send out messages in support of the attack on social media websites like Facebook and Twitter (“University students make case for Israel,” Israel Hayom, 21 November 2012).

More than 70 overseas students were recruited to help the Herzliya student union “market Israel” and the attack. This “war room” coordinated its activities with the Israeli Ministry of Information and received updates directly from the Israeli military and the office of Benjamin Netanyahyu, the prime minister. One of its products was the “Israel Under Fire” Facebook page.

Students arrested

Meanwhile, Israeli police brutally attacked Palestinian students at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem on 20 November. The students were holding a peaceful demonstration against the assault on Gaza at the campus’ entrance. Four of them were arrested.

As reported by the website Arabs 48, the authorities at Tel Aviv University banned protest activity by Palestinian students, citing “security reasons,” although similar protests have been allowed in the past.

And at the University of Haifa, Palestinian students were widely denounced simply for exercising their right to protest. On 15 November, Palestinian students gathered to observe a minute of silence in solidarity with Gaza and its martyrs. This peaceful act was followed by bullying from Israeli students.

Yona Yahav, Haifa’s mayor, called for a ban on further protests by Palestinian students, alleging that the demonstrators were supporters of “terrorist organizations.”

In a letter to Amos Shapira, the university’s president, Yahav wrote: “It’s good that educational institutions allow for democracy and freedom of expression for various political and social positions. However, cynical abuse of this natural right in order to advance the ideology of terrorist organizations, who hail the killing of children and innocent civilians, is beyond the pale of human values and decency … I expect a firm denunciation by university’s administration of this behavior, and an action by all possible means to prevent radical and negative elements from disseminating their evil propaganda in the campus” (“Protests over Gaza violence disrupt Israeli campuses,” JTA, 16 November 2012).

The students union at Haifa University declared its support for the Gaza attack, and the university’s administration issued a similar statement, saying: “University of Haifa supports the soldiers of the IDF [Israeli army] in defending the state and sends its condolences to the bereaved families in Kiryat Malachi [a town in southern Israel where three people were killed by a rocket fired from Gaza on 15 November]. The university’s administration has taken and will take all legal measures in order to prevent any provocation on the campus” (“University of Haifa denounces students who mourned Jaabari,” Arutz Sheva, 16 November 2012).

Moreover, on 18 November, the dean’s office at Haifa University issued a ban on all public activities on the campus for two weeks. The ban was criticized as a violation on freedom of speech by the Association of Civil Rights in Israel. Palestinian students responded by holding a protest just outside the campus entrance the following day.

Discrimination

It is significant that the authorities in Haifa University allowed a pro-Israel demonstration on the day the ban was declared. Zionist students and staff assembled to express support for the attack on Gaza. Some of the participants chanted racist slogans, including “Death to Arabs.”

This gathering was attended by Amos Shapira, the university’s president, who explained: “I’m here because I’m an Israeli, president of an Israeli university, sixth generation in the country, a former soldier and now individuals from my family are soldiers … Of course, I identify with the residents of southern Israel and IDF [Israeli army] soldiers. This flag is my flag.”

At the end of this demonstration, Aryeh Eldad and Michael Ben-Ari, far-right members of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, visited the campus, along with extremist provocateurs Itamar Ben-Gvir and Baruch Marzel. The university’s willingness to allow them visit is in stark contrast to how it has constantly prevented some Palestinian political leaders, including Haneen Zoabi and Sheikh Raed Salah, from visiting the campus.

Venomous atmosphere

The venomous atmosphere on campuses was reflected by comments on social media websites. Racist posts and petitions were widely circulated and attracted thousands of anti-Arab hate comments. For example, one petition which called for the punishment of those Palestinian students who observed a minute of silence at Haifa University has been signed by almost 2,400 persons.

In another case, a post was circulated about a Palestinian student activist at Haifa University. Calls were made for “Jewish students” to report her personal information in order “to deal with her in a way that is commonly used with Arabs.” Moreover, people were asked to request that Facebook close her account.

Ayoub Kara, a member of the Knesset with Netanyahu’s party, Likud, urged that Palestinian students at Haifa University should be punished for observing a minute of silence. In an opinion piece published by the newspaper Maariv, he wrote: “According to the law not much can be done. However, in practice, each one of these students should know that he will be punished for being ungrateful.” Kara urged students and lecturers who supported the military action not to grant any requests from Palestinian students who opposed it. He also argued that scholarships should be denied to protesters.

Those who have been reluctant to support an academic boycott of Israel should reflect on what has happened recently. These recent cases show how Israeli universities identify completely with the State of Israel and go out of their way to drum up support for its crimes against the Palestinian people. These cases illustrate, too, how Palestinian students are denied their rights in Israel.

Yara Sa’di is a postgraduate student and activist from Haifa.

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UC Irvine Students Vote to Divest From Israel

On Tuesday November 13, just days before Israeli missiles began to pelt Gaza, a motley group of students, one after another, made the case for why the Associated Students at the University of California, Irvine should urge the school administration to divest from companies profiting from Israel’s occupation of Palestine. Thousands of miles and dozens of checkpoints removed from the region, the students at UCI spoke passionately about human rights violations in the Occupied Territories, comparing the situation with South Africa’s Apartheid.

In the end, the Associated Students voted unanimously, 16-0 with no abstentions, to pass the resolution. The room that had reverberated with tense anxiety while the board of students were deliberating, erupted in cheer at the verdict. For UCI, this small victory was monumental. Traci Ishigo, president of UCI’s Associated Students, addressed the room, capturing the students’ conviction saying, “We are agents of change in this world.”

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has roused heated discussions on college campuses across the country for about as long as the conflict itself has endured. In this regard however, UCI has historically been a unique case, to put it mildly. Protests and debates have snowballed into disciplinary suspension of a student group, criminal convictions of students, and a nationwide media spectacle, transforming the otherwise sleepy Southern California campus into a free-speech battleground.

Despite a well-deserved reputation for sidestepping student rights and suppressing free speech on the issue of Israel, UCI is the first California campus whose student body passed the resolution for divestment. Both UC Berkeley and UCSD made similar attempts to push for divestment through their legislative student bodies, but were unsuccessful. “The decision made by ASUCI’s Legislative Council clearly shows the strength and integrity of students utilizing their collective power to protect human rights on a global scale,” Ishigo said in a press release. While the overwhelming consensus on the resolution was a historic step for the student body, the UCI administration delivered a swift response in rejecting the resolution the very next day. The administrators released a statement saying that, “such divestment is not the policy of this campus, nor is it the policy of the University of California. The UC Board of Regents policy requires this action only when the US government deems it necessary. No such declaration has been made regarding Israel.”

The administration turning a cold shoulder to the resolution comes as no surprise to anyone. UC leaders had addressed the divestment campaign at UC Berkeley in 2010, sharply turning it down by claiming that it unfairly targets Israel and said in a statement, “This isolation of Israel among all countries of the world greatly disturbs us and is of grave concern to members of the Jewish community.”

And at UCI, in February of the same year, the administration sternly punished the Muslim Student Union for its alleged involvement in planning a disruptive protest of Israeli Ambassador, Michael Oren. Many remained convinced the administration operated at the behest of external pro-Israel groups, who have elbowed their way into campus politics, pressuring the school to take a strong stance on student dissent against Israel. The 11 students who had interrupted Oren while speaking were charged and convicted with misdemeanors, an unprecedented and decidedly harsh punishment for students involved in a campus protest.

So, while ASUCI’s resolution to divest has no teeth in repealing financial support from Israel, it is an impressive victory for pro-Palestinian students on campus, who have honed their strategy in reigniting the Israel-Palestine debate on campus by steering clear of affiliating with certain student groups (namely the Muslim Student Union) and garnering diversified support through passing the resolution through the Associated Students governing body. In fact, with the exception of the Asian Pacific Student Association and Jewish Voice for Peace, students spoke only as individuals and represented no groups on campus.

Most importantly however, the passing of the resolution in a climate of intimidation by school administration and off-campus interest groups is a testament to the resilience of the students who have not let the school’s thorny past quiet their voices of opposition to Israel’s policies in the Occupied territories. ASUCI’s historic move created little stir on campus between pro-Palestine and pro-Israel student groups, but has caught the eye of those off-campus organizations who have a demonstrated interest in the campus proceedings, and are skeptical that this development isn’t indicative of friction between student groups. “It’s upsetting when so many people have watched that campus and feel that that campus is making progress, to see something like this happen,” saidRabbi Aaron Heir of the Simon Weisenthal Center. “Disconcerting is a nice way of putting it. Some people feel this is egregious, and it harkens back to that same menacing spirit that dominated campus during the Oren episode.”

While the students who had brought forth the resolution had been working on it for three years, external pro-Israel groups are looking to undermine the students’ efforts by denigrating the resolution as a rash and ill-informed strategy to fan the flames of tension on campus. “The resolution indicates that the students really don’t understand the situation very well at all. It’s so misguided,” said Roberta Seid, Education/Research Director of Stand With Us and lecturer at UCI. “Its real goal is not so much to get divestment implemented as much as it is to force debate, so that they can spread these canards against Israel, and make them seem normal or even familiar to students- it’s a way to turn people against Israel.”

Regardless of the students’ motives, they have unintentionally invited these external groups to meddle on campus once again. “We’re certainly monitoring the situation, it’s disappointing,” said Heir. “I think the University should condemn it and if there is any more instances of these kinds of anti-Israel measures I would expect the university to take a more active role.” As was the case with the Irvine 11 incident however, many UCI students do not feel threatened in the face of pressure from the administration or its influential friends. “The resolution has nothing to do with campus climate, and is not on the basis of a campus conflict,” said Sabreen Shalabi, a UCI student and a co-author of the resolution. “I think University students have always been on the frontlines for fighting for social justice, especially in the UC system, and they will continue to be on the frontlines of social justice.”

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Thousands of Afghan students protest against Israel over recent Gaza offensive

3272759747 Thousands of Afghan students protest against Israel over recent Gaza offensive

Afghan protesters set fire to representations of U.S. and Israel flags as they shout slogans during a pro-Palestinian demonstration in Jalalabad November 26, 2012. Photo by Reuters

Several thousand university students were demonstrating in eastern Afghanistan to denounce Israel’s recent offensive in Gaza, burning Israeli and U.S. flags, as well as a Christian cross.

The students in Monday’s protest have also blocked a highway leading into Jalalabad, the capital of Nangarhar province, and denounced Pakistan for its recent border artillery shelling into Afghanistan.

Nangarhar University student Abdul Gayr said that the protesters also voiced their opposition to the death sentence given to Afghan National Army soldier Abdul Sabor, who was convicted earlier this year for killing five French soldiers in January.

He said the protesters don’t think the Afghan soldier should be executed when international forces are not punished when their military operations result in the death of Afghan civilians.

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Overwhelming US support for onslaught was given in prejudicial disregard of Palestinian perspective — Scholars

We, the undersigned Directors of the International Council for Middle East Studies (ICMES), join the international community in condemning the recent Israeli military offensive, “Operation Pillar of Defense,” which has involved targeted assassination, attacks on non-military locations, and the killing or injury of at least 1,000 Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip—all illegal acts under international law. These Israeli attacks primarily against an occupied, largely unarmed civilian population are neither warranted nor justified, whether in light of the facts or in view of the alternative avenues available for peaceful resolution to the regional conflict of which Operation Pillar of Defense is emblematic.

We believe that overwhelming U.S. government support for Operation Pillar of Defense has been offered brazenly and prejudicially, without a careful or balanced review of the facts and in blatant disregard for Palestinian perspectives and experiences. Official Israeli military and government reports have been accepted at the expense of such perspectives and experiences, and the objections of a small but significant number of dissenting Israelis have also not been considered. In turn the U.S. mainstream media has supplied a distorted representation of the situation in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories that fosters misinformation and ill-advised reactions, thus further endangering human lives.

In truth, facts about the Israeli offensive are readily available, and a good deal of them contradict information being supplied about it by U.S. government and mainstream media sources. These facts include:

• rockets from Gaza in the current situation were fired only after Israeli military strikes into Gaza, which killed not only a few alleged terrorists but also several Palestinian civilians;

• it was the Israeli government, not the Hamas leadership in Gaza, which shattered an albeit tenuous truce agreed to last week by both sides;

• many more innocent Palestinians in Gaza areas, from which rockets have not been fired, have been killed or injured in recent days than have Israeli Jews, a few of whom have been injured;

• the Israeli government and military continue to keep the 1.7 million Palestinians in Gaza under constant threat of siege and segregated in prison-like conditions;

• the vast majority of Palestinians in Gaza, living under Israeli occupation, are severely oppressed, as they have been for years;

• the timing of the Israeli attacks likely signals Israeli political and ideological motivations beyond those suggested by the apparent facts.

Most international human rights organizations, including some comprised primarily of Jewish Israelis, numerous governments, countless observers and commentators, including distinguished scholars, have regularly accumulated these facts and have cited them in documenting their protests against the Israeli government and its actions. It is incumbent upon governments and media to consult the broad range of accessible facts before reporting on a situation of such gravity or advancing a political position regarding it.

In view of the above, we ICMES Directors reject the unconditional U.S. support which has been lent Operation Pillar of Defense, and likewise disapprove of concurrent U.S. mainstream media representation of the Israeli offensive for its one-sided reportage favoring official Israeli explanations and marginalizing when not entirely ignoring Palestinian views and experiences and those of their supporters, sympathizers, and other conscientious objectors in Israel and around the world.

We believe that such ongoing disregard for Palestinian perspectives and explanations, and for the alternative means they and others suggest for resolving the situation, grossly impedes a genuine resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the achievement of a just and lasting peace throughout the region.

Signed,

Dr. Terri Ginsberg

Dr. Fouzi El-Asmar

Professor Raymond W. Baker

Dr. Ghada Karmi

(Board members, ICMES) Contact: Dr. Terri Ginsberg terri.ginsberg@icmes.net

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