Confronting the Israel-Palestine conflict
Penn for Palestine’s memorial for lives lost in Gaza was met with mixed reactions on campus
· January 19, 2010, 6:09 am
One-thousand-four-hundred white flags and thirteen blue flags wave on College Green, representing the Palestinian and Israeli lives lost, respectively, in last winter's conflict in Gaza.
On Thursday, Penn for Palestine held a memorial for the lives lost in the conflict with Israel in Gaza last winter. Reactions to the memorial were mixed, with many responding positively to the memorial and its purpose and others taking issue with the political statement they considered implicit in the event’s message.
According to Dara Elass, Engineering junior and president of Penn for Palestine, the group’s aim was both to remember the loss of life and to raise awareness of what they call the “Gaza Massacre.”
One-thousand-four-hundred white flags and thirteen blue flags were placed on College Green, representing Palestinian and Israeli lives lost, respectively. The numbers came from Amnesty International, Elass explained.
In addition to the flags, posters were hung around the memorial itself and on Locust Walk.
One poster read, “After 18 months of blockade, Gazans were massacred.” Another referred to Israel’s use of white phosphorus in military operations as illegal.
Penn Israel Coalition co-President and Wharton junior Seth Bluestein took issue with these posters. He said the slogans were either factually incorrect or taken out of context.
For example, he said the use of white phosphorus powder as a screening device is not illegal.
Regardless, College sophomore and Hillel’s Israel Sector Chairwoman Rachel Baker said the incendiary nature of these posters was what elicited a response from PIC.
PIC created and hung up fliers of its own. Baker said some of these fliers were torn down by Penn for Palestine members.
Elass made it clear that her group has a policy against ripping down posters, but admitted that on this occasion one group member did take down a number of PIC fliers.
According to this member, the only fliers taken down were taped directly onto Penn for Palestine’s posters, while the posters taped to poles throughout campus were left alone.
According to Baker, however, many of those posters were torn down by unknown individuals. She said she regretted what she felt was a limitation of free speech and discourse.
One of PIC’s two fliers cited the 4,000 rockets fired into Israel from Gaza and asked the rhetorical question, “What would you do?”
This prompted Lee Veeraraghavan, a first-year Ph.D. student studying ethnomusicology, to write her own personal note and hang it up along with the other posters.
She said she felt the question implied that Israel’s response and the resulting loss of life was justified, an idea that outraged her.
The note was later ripped down by an unknown individual.
Veeraraghavan said in such political arguments, it is “easy to forget we’re talking about people.”
Reflecting on the day as a whole, she considered the event a success. She said in spite of some “knee-jerk reactions,” the event sparked what she thought was a much-needed conversation.





Comments (7)
Ali
January 19, 2010, 1:54 pm
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As twisted by anti-semites:
http://webcast.un.org/ramgen/ondemand/conferences/unhrc/special/12th/hrc091016am1-eng.rm?start=01:21:35&end;=01:24:18
rbake
January 19, 2010, 1:59 pm
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Over 8,000 rockets have been fired indiscriminately onto Israel civilians. Not 4,000.
Ali
January 19, 2010, 2:19 pm
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We're traveling the same road it's just that Britian had a headstart.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/terrorism-in-the-uk/6917777/British-universities-seats-of-learning---and-loathing.html
Ali
January 19, 2010, 2:24 pm
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Is there a clash of civilizations? You bet there is.
Not a single one of the 57 Moslem countries has accepted the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights which enshrines the most cherished values of our western civilization -- such as: freedom of religion, freedom from religion, equality of religion, freedom of conscience, equality of men and women. On the contrary, ALL 57 Moslem countries subscribe to the Cairo Declaration of Human Rights in Islam which enshrines the most cherished values of Islam. The CDHRI officially asserts that Islam is superior to all other religions, and that the ONLY source of human rights is Islamic sacred law, the Sharia. Since these two value systems are mutually incompatible, this is the best proof of the existence of the "clash of civilizations". Since the Sharia is based on the Koran and the Hadith (sayings of Muhammad), the Sharia is considered Allah's law; and ALL religious Moslems are required to believe it, to follow it and to strive for its implementation throughout the world.
Therefore, a religious Moslem cannot be loyal to the American constitution and to the values of western civilization. Only a non-religious Moslem can do that.
avanoah28
May 27, 2010, 8:32 am
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July 19, 2010, 5:45 am
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