Student Power Jewish students mobilize to counter call for U-M to divest from Israel. "I realized that although some Jewish students do not play an active role in campus affairs, that is more than fine. In a time of need, the Jewish community does not hesitate to appear and prove themselves, which is what is truly important." — Monica woa West Bloomfield DON COHEN Special to the Jewish News Ann Arbor ast Tuesday night was a "Hail To The Victors" moment at the University of Michigan. Pro-Israel students successfully con- vinced their student government to decisively defeat a resolution that would have created an "advisory committee to investigate the moral and ethical implications" of U-M investments in companies that do business with Israel. The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) overwhelmingly rejected the divestment proposal from the Palestinian-focused Students Allied for Freedom and Equality (SAFE) by a vote of 25-11 with five abstentions. The March 14 victory was all the sweeter since that morning, the cam- pus newspaper, the Michigan Daily, had predicted the resolution was likely to pass. "U of M's Jewish community truly proved itself on Tuesday night," said Monica Woll, a West Bloomfield sophomore who chairs the U-M Hillel governing board. "So many students who could normally not be paid to attend any Jewish event proudly attended the meeting sport- ing blue and white T-shirts and anx- ious faces," said Woll. "I realized that although some Jewish students do not play an active role in campus affairs, that is more than fine. In a time of need, the Jewish community does not hesitate to appear and prove themselves, which is what is truly important." More than 600 students, faculty and community members, almost evenly divided on the issue, packed the ballroom in the Michigan Union. The meeting started 90 minutes late so a room big enough to accommo- date the crowd could be found. The L late start actually increased the atten- dance as other meetings let out and students used their cell phones to call friends to come. The three-hour meeting ended just past midnight. Divestment Roots Divestment has been a hot issue on the U-M campus since the Second North American Conference of the Palestine Student Movement (PSM) was held on campus in 2002. At that time, President Mary Sue Coleman made it clear that U-M would not divest funds from companies doing business in Israel. Nonetheless, last month the student government at U-M Dearborn passed a divestment resolution, prompting U- M spokeswoman Julie Peterson to say in a written statement that "there are no plans to ask the Board of Regents to pursue divestment." Recent efforts to introduce a similar resolution at U-M Flint have stalled, with the res- olution reportedly being redrafted to include a full review of human rights concerns that will not mention Israel by name. Nationwide, PSM has led the largely unsuccessful divestment movement, which has seen only a handful of campuses, mostly small ones, support the effort. "Across the country, divestment has been resoundingly defeated," said Aaron Goldberg, associate director of the U.S.-based Israel on Campus Coalition, a partnership of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life and 30 other organizations. The MSA's rejection of the divest- ment resolution "sends a very strong message on where students on cam- pus are today generally and the resources the pro-Israel students have at their fingertips," said Goldberg. "Generally, politics are local, but this can have a profound impact because these votes cut the legs out from under the divestment movement. "The proponents of divestment live in a world that doesn't reflect reality, but rather one of smoke and mirrors." Students Mobilize About a dozen students involved in pro-Israel activities, many student government mem- bers, came together to lead the U-M campaign against the divestment resolution. "The main players on the anti-divestment plan- ning side were active pro- Israel members of Michigan's student government, American Movement for Israel board members, the Hillel executive board as well as any Jewish student who felt that he or she could contribute in some manner," said U- M Hillel's Woll. "No one was turned away; everyone that wanted to have a part in the planning was welcomed. Jennifer Gonik, a West Bloomfield sophomore who serves on the MSA and is a vice-chair of the American Movement for Israel, was involved from the beginning and knew the task would be difficult. "If the U-M campus is liberal, the MSA is super liberal. If those behind divestment could get support anywhere, the best hope would have been MSA," she said. "[The anti-divestment group] met several mornings at 7:30 a.m. to decide on a message and how to stick to it," said Gonik. The main theme was "It's not just a committee," to drive home the point that the goal of the resolution was to vilify Israel rather than simply set up a committee to investigate the situation. The students were aided by SPE CIAL REP ORT