Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
UCLA - Yael Korin call Israel a
"rogue state"
http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/2009/mar/02/prot/
Protesters
speak out against Israeli incursion into Gaza
Juliana Gabrovsky
Published: Monday, March 2, 2009
Approximately 50 people protested
outside Royce Hall at the performance of Israel’s Batsheva Dance
Company on Saturday night in hopes of drawing attention to the
recent Israeli incursion into Gaza.
The protest was organized by the
recently created U.S. Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott
of Israel, which saw its membership rise from 15 to more than 230
academics since its inception in January. The demonstrators were
mostly professors, but many students participated as well.
“There were repeated efforts to
initiate the boycott, but it was not taking off. This last Gaza
incursion pushed people over the edge,” said Sherna Berger Gluck, an
organizing committee member and professor emeritus of women’s
studies and history at California State University, Long Beach.
“I believe that this was a massacre.
A horrible, huge, monstrous massacre,” said Edie Pistolesi, an
organizing committee member and art professor at Cal State
Northridge, referring to the most recent activity in Gaza.
According to Palestinian officials,
some 1,300 Palestinians – at least half of them civilians – were
killed in the Israeli military incursion that began in late
December. Thirteen Israelis were also killed, three of them
civilians.
Organizing committee member Dennis
Kortheuer, who is Jewish, of Cal State Long Beach said that during
the 1967 Arab-Israeli War he thought Israel was “a David against a
Goliath.” It was not until 1991 when he visited the Palestinian
territory as a student to assess the situation for himself that his
opinion changed when he encountered many roadblocks and saw that
some of the villages were closed off to any access at all.
“It was like a siege,” Kortheuer
said.
While some of the concertgoers
expressed sympathies with the Palestinian position, many still
disagreed with the dance concert as a forum for a protest.
“There’s not a black or white view
on this. They’ve both wronged each other horribly on this. But (the
dancers) don’t have anything to do with government officials making
decisions,” said concertgoer Emmaly Wiederholz.
Wiederholz said the protest just
appealed to people’s emotions without actual substance. She
questioned the accuracy of the protesters’ claim that 400 children
died.
Others expressed frustration with
the protesters.
“It really pisses me off as a Jewish
girl,” said Judith Flex, a concertgoer. “If the Palestinians were
the performers here, Israelis won’t be demonstrating against their
culture. If they’d stop doing things like this they’d have their
country by now,” Flex said.
Protesters disagreed that the dance
performance was an inappropriate place to express their opinions.
“People feel that you can separate
art and politics. But you can’t,” said Christine Browning, a program
assistant at USC.
Many of the protesters maintained
that the Batsheva Dance Company described themselves as Israel’s
leading ambassador.
Ohad Naharin, artistic director and
choreographer of Batsheva Dance Company, recently told the
Pittsburgh Post-
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