College Protests Against Israeli Military Policy In Gaza Fosters Much-Needed National Dialogue About Palestinians


I was living in Door County, the land of wonderful sunsets and perfect hiking trails, as college students protested in the 1980s against South African apartheid.  While much in favor of cutting financial ties with the racist government and divesting funds, I readily admit to being more mindful of the news about those protests and their reasoning than feeling engaged with it. The feelings I have, however, about protests now underway on college campuses nationwide, as determined and highly motivated young people bring their voices to stopping the military overreach of Israeli forces in Gaza, resonates far more deeply. Due to social media that allows for reports and video from the rubble-strewn homes and streets, along with the scenes of Palestinian deaths and burials, it is impossible to not be engaged in this moment that faces us all.  Rather than acting dismissively of the protesters or reacting angrily to their message, we should listen, as they have something very important to say.

I am struck by some of the comments to be found in news reports from those who think the tents and bullhorns urging a policy change are over the top.  The ones making such claims are doing so from mostly an anti-Palestinian perspective. The fact is these protests are rather tame, lest we forget what occurred in the Vietnam War era, when in 1970, in one of the grand stories about the Richard Nixon presidency buses literally were placed around the White House.  D.C. Transit used buses in a bumper-to-bumper formation to form a ring at the direction of the police.  Nixon and the Secret Service feared that antiwar demonstrators may try to storm the White House.  Over the years of reading about this period, it reminded me of how President Abraham Lincoln might have felt about Confederates coming over the Potomac River from Virginia in 1861 in an effort to take the White House..

While the protest outside the White House was obviously not on a college campus, and while many of the protests in the 1970s over the war had violent moments, it needs to be stated that the vast majority of campus protests underway this month are peaceful.  That does not excuse the very slim number of people who attempt to hijack the protests for their own aims, nor do those at the margins detract from the overriding issue. The justified demands of the protests center on divestiture from firms that support this over-the-top and relentlessly eager war by Israel against the people of Gaza. 

History shows that a strong power occupying another people results in continuous strife and war.  The barbaric and soulless murder and rampaging by Hamsa that occurred on October 7th in Israel absolutely required a military reaction. What we too often fail to talk about, however, or understand, is what Hamas did was not committed in a vacuum. The people of Gaza would have never entertained allowing that group to have a foothold if not for decades of built-up anger over Israeli policies.  Choices were made on all sides.  When Hamas attacked, they had two goals. One was creating terror from the slaughtering, but the second was provoking Israel to overreact.  Knowing the far-right wing in the Israeli coalition government would have to be assuaged for Prime Minister Netanyahu to remain in power and not face his ongoing criminal charges unrelated to this war, Hamas wished to foment a calamity of the kind playing out now in Gaza.  Israeli policymakers chose a scorched earth policy, caring no more for the Palestinians locked into that sliver of ground any more than Hamas does. So far, over 54,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza from this war.

Large swaths of the American public cared no more about Palestinian rights or statehood than the governments of Arab nations who were found mouthing sentiments about this group over the decades.  But all of a sudden, a dam has broken wide allowing young, energized, and vocal college and university students a platform to say what needs to be stated loudly and clearly.  If Israel thought they only had a military war to contend with, one in part of their own making after decades of occupation and hostilities, they surely now know the larger problem they face is worldwide condemnation and revulsion over what they are doing in Gaza. The PR war will likely create far more hurdles for Israel than their land war.

I first studied this region as a freshman in high school, where Mrs. Marge Glad (who left Holland with her family as WWII bore down on Europe) used a full semester to teach Middle Eastern history. She was an exceptional instructor, one I have always stated to be the most consequential in my life.  She hooked me on the region, but sadly, decades later, there are far more scars on the landscape and its people, than peace resolutions and reasons for hope. That is one reason I am with the protesters in spirit as the Palestinian people are too often marginalized and forgotten.  The sobering truth now of what happens when conditions are not improved for dislocated people cannot be easily dismissed.  I applaud and deeply approve of the protests on campuses nationwide.

11 thoughts on “College Protests Against Israeli Military Policy In Gaza Fosters Much-Needed National Dialogue About Palestinians

  1. Solly

    There was a Jewish student on tonight’s local (Madison) news who was walking thru the crowd with a sign disagreeing with the mob. When he was stopped by a reporter, he talked about the viscous attack on October 7 and the killing of innocent people, hostage taking and rape committed by Hamas. The pro-Hamas crowd shouted “Lies!” THAT’S who you’re dealing with. You don’t need Trump’s good people when you have UW Madison’s finest denying the attack that started this whole tragedy. Let’s deny the Holocaust next. Just like Republicans that can’t talk about slavery, the Jews, and Slavs and Gypsies and Fags were given a place to sleep, honest work and at least one meal a day. Oh and by the way, I know you prefer the statistics from the Hamas Health Services, which probably has Baghdad Bob as their spokesman, but you quote 54,000 people killed in Gaza. This is from Al Jazeera:

    Here are the latest casualty figures as of April 29 at 4:00pm in Gaza (13:00 GMT):Gaza

    • Killed: at least 34,488 people, including more than:
      • More than 14,500 children killed
      • 8,400 women

    20,000 people more, give or take. Way too many. Counter-productive to any long-term hopes for peace. But then, tunneling into and hang-gliding over another country’s border to rape and kill is counter-productive too. And then to hide behind innocent non-combatants is cowardly. As to getting your undies in a bunch about the Palestinians’ right to a homeland or land, this area has had 5,000 years of people killing each other and stealing each other’s land. Like a bad marriage, maybe they deserve each other. 

    Maybe the Pro-Hamas UW-Madison debating society can go over to Gaza during a cease-fire and march for Women’s Rights and Gay liberation.

    1. Equating the protesters who want the carnage against Palestinians to stop, the absurd overreaction from Israel to stop, and the war crimes committed by Israel to stop does not mean the protesters are in any linked or of a mind with Hamas. Hamas does not, nor ever did, care for Palestinians. They used the decades of suffering and economic pain caused by Israel and the anger of being occupied as a way to gain power and influence. I am sure there are loudmouths and agitators in any protest, bombers even at UW-Madison in the Vietnam War era, but that does not mean all protesters in the 1970s were violent, anymore than all the dedicated and principled students from across this nation, and Europe and the streets of Israel as of this past weekend, who are also protesting, are dupes for Hamas.

    2. Last week James and heard the 54,000 dead in Gaza number on television, and the EuroMed site that tallies such statistics in this war has their results as follows. The Israeli army has killed 42,510 Palestinians over the course of its 200-day attack, 38,621 of whom were civilians, including 10,091 women and 15,780 children. The thousands who have died and are buried under debris since the bombing started, are I suspect, what brings the number to what I posted, and was reported on television.

  2. Solly

    Hmmm, tonite I watched the national news and saw “peaceful protesters” hammering thru the windows of Columbia University. Yet Deke waives this off as not representative of the Pro-Hamas UW Naïve Debating Society and other protests around the country. No responsibility there. Hmmm shall we review the CP posts placing the blame for the insurrection and bashing of the Capitol on Donald Trumps “free speech?”

    1. You and I both know the prescribed reason the insurrectionists were in Washington on Jan. 6th was to undermine a presidential election and stop the Electoral Votes from being counted. To try and smear college and university students who are seeking to stop the slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza with the same paintbrush is just not a logical argument.

  3. Solly

    Instead of camping out at various campus public spaces, the Society of Rocket Surgeons across the country should have donated the tents that are being ripped down to the Palestinians. Oh, but that would be a productive action. No problem with them marching and wearing their Birkenstocks out and listening to utopian drivel, but who made them king and lay claim to public land, some of which is going to be used for graduations, etc. Perhaps BB Clark Beach Park would be an acceptable alternative for Naive City. Kudos to the Madison and UW Police for enforcing the law. And the governors around the country R and D, who protect the right to free speech while also protecting public property.

    1. Send tents!! How about stopping the Israeli miliary from wholesale slaughter? What public property on the UW-Madison campus was harmed or torn asunder? God forbid a graduation might be disturbed somewhere in the country as tens of thousands of Palestinians are killed. Or should we not concern ourselves with how the UW and other colleges and universities make money with investments and ties to Israel? You know, the ones killing the Palestinians. Why can’t or shouldn’t students protest at campuses here and align with the protestors in Israel who are also sick over what their government is doing in that region of the world?

  4. Solly

    You’ve lost Mika, Joe and Rev. Al! https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/joe-this-is-not-helping-those-of-us-who-want-to-fight-fascism-in-america/vi-AA1o24Ua?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=cee0cc857ecb462fa1162a964f49b212&ei=16
    I fully believe the statement that most of these students get their news from Tik Tok. And I wonder how many of them could find Gaza on the map. For all of your whining about the Pals. they could have had a settlement, as Joe says getting 97% of what they wanted with the Clinton accords, but Arafat turned it down. When you still believe “From the River to the Sea” why would you settle? And my dear Deke, what happened to the blogger who was so worried that the loony left was going to tank Joe Biden’s re-election. That’s only if they believe in health care for all, right?
    Hope the parents from around the state who come down to see their kids graduate, if the Hamas Debating Society even allows a ceremony, don’t take back stories of an out of control situation.

    1. I have stated for decades the same as Morning Joe did in reference to Arafat and the best offer that was made or likely ever to be made. That does not, however, give license to the Israeli government to slaughter tens-of-thousands of Palestinian in Gaza. And the death toll continues. You are smarter than to lump those who will not bend to the Israeli government as Hamas supporters. That basement argument is akin to what Fox News sells to their silly white angry core of viewers. Come on!

      While a viable two-state solution should have been taken by Arafat during the Clinton presidency so too did Israel miss opportunities to truly dialogue with Palestinians and Arab partners over the decades. Creating the most conservative grouping of coalition members in Israel to keep Netanyahu in power not only prevented a diplomatic solution from being offered but in fact, took their eyes off their own constructed deterrence model which was to have prevented what Hamas was able to achieve.

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