OPINION Monday, January 23, 1989 Page 4 The Michigan Daily'1* Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sanctioned sexual violence: A view from Vol. IC, No. 80 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. thiopians exploi*ted THE PLIGHT OF Ethiopian Jews has recently become a campus issue, with students from the American Association for Ethiopian Jews (AAEJ) soliciting donations earmarked for, among other projects, the "return" of this community to Israel. Years of media focus on Ethiopia depict a situation of virtually unparalled suffering, not only on the part of this country's ten to fifteen thousand Jews, btof all of its forty million citizens. Tla solution, however, lies not in the tr hsfer of a fraction of Ethiopia's pop- ulation to another part of the world, but rattjer in a comprehensive plan to end th ebrutal civil war, and feed and shel- ter lts victimized people. The Ethiopian people have long been ukd as pawns. The Soviet Union con- ti iies to back the dictatorship of Ethiopian Lt. Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam who, since his ascension to pdver in 1974, has actively prevented relief supplies from reaching those in ncd. Although the United States has chan- neled a substantial amount of relief aid tdEthiopia, according to Dan Cannell of 3rass Roots International, "U.S. aid to Ethiopia has been very selective, w lh the aim of undermining Soviet in- flgence rather than feeding starving people." Although individual efforts to bring aid;into Ethiopia are necessary, a com- ptiensive solution can be reached ory with a recognition of the root causes of this suffering: military ex- papsionism and a profit-motivated worldview aimed at causing third world dependence on the superpowers. An end to the Ethiopian tragedy must comne about within Ethiopia itself. With thr in mind, one must call into ques- tikn the objectives of those who advo- cate Ethiopian emigration to Israel. The Israeli "Law of Return," one of the country's Fundamental Laws, is invoked in order to justify the tremen- dous efforts expended to encourage Jewish Ethiopian emigration. Based on the zionist principle that the Jewish people must "return" to their homeland after having suffered a two- thousand year diaspora, the Law of Return provides all Jews with Israeli citizenship and the right to settle in their 'promised land". Whether or not one accepts this reli- gious and historical argument, it is clear that the Law of Return is, at the very least, used for the purpose of cre- ating a permanent Jewish presence on the ruins of Palestinian villages and lives. The'forced exodus of the Palestinian people from their historic homeland began in 1947, and continues to this day, with the torture and murder of the inhabitants of the militarily occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank, and expro- priation of land and demolition of homes both of these people as well as of those of their compatriots who are Israeli citizens, living in pre-1967 Is- rael. Whether in the Gaza Strip and West Bank or within the internationally rec- ognized borders of Israel, the Law of Return and a myriad of equally nefari- ous laws serve a common objective: ei- ther the transfer of all Palestinians off of their land, or their erasure as a peo- ple and culture. Given this reality, mass immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel, at this juncture, is but a ruse disguised as hu- manitarianism, to provide more occu- piers of Palestinian land. In the name of justice and humanity, it is the Palestinians who must return. By Susan Fair Women in the free world are complain- ing and calling it sexual harassment when males in positions of authority over them do nothing more than verbally make sug- gestive or degrading comments to them. In women's prisons, however, male guards are authorized to do body "shakedowns" on us, where they run their hands all over our bodies. They are allowed to feel the breasts of a woman who is obviously not wearing a bra and therefore could not concealing contraband in the area of her breasts. They may also feel the sanitary pad between a woman's legs, and then send her to be strip-searched to determine the nature of this "unidentified object" they have dis- covered. Women's Words is a weekly column which provides a forum for feminist per- pectives and a voice for women in the community. The Daily encourages re- sponses and contributions from its readers. Contact Amy or Betsy at the Opinion Page for more information Susan Fair is a student at the University and is incarcerated at Florence Crane Women's Correctional Facility. Male guards are employed at all women's prisons in Michigan. At Crane Prison, approximately 80 percent of the staff is male. At Huron Valley, approxi- mately 50 percent of the staff is male. These guards have total authority to do almost anything they want to do to us. They are allowed to walk in on us while we are undressed in our cells or cubicles, and while we are taking showers. The officers' desks are located right next to the bathrooms at Crane, and the bathroom doors must be left open at all times. At all of the women's prisons, the male guards are permitted, even obligated, to walk into the bathrooms on us. Women must deal with these strange men standing over their beds in the morn- ings to wake them up, and ordering them out of bed in their night clothes. When they have had an unexpected menstrual flow begin during the night, women must ask male guards for sanitary supplies. When women must take care of such in- timate basic needs as changing protection, or douching, or defecating, they must do it with male guards in the bathrooms and showers with them. Lotioning or powdering their bodies after a shower is an almost impossible task to complete with- out a male guard walking in on them. At times when the heat, humidity and lack of ventilation is excessively uncomfortable, women prisoners still must be sure their bodies are fully clothed or covered even while they sleep. In addition to being subjected to all of these "regular duties" of male guards, women prisoners must also endure verbal - 0 inside sexual harassment. If the woman responds to the verbal harassment or protests what is done to them in any way, she may be subjected to intense harassment by multi- ple guards, even to the point of having her, sentence prolonged. These actions and, this retaliatory treatment are not only sanctioned by the prison administration, they are encouraged. This attitude paves the way to even greater abuses of women prisoners. At least three or four women are raped by male guards each year. Far more are threatened into submitting to sexual abuses. When such abuses are reported, the women are punished severely, while more often than not, nothing is done to the rapist-guard. This situation is even more tragic when the demographics of the female prison population are considered. It is estimated that 80 percent of all women prisoners were victims of rape and/or incest prior to their incarceration. Over 70 percent of women prisoners are incarcerated for non- violent offenses, and of those incarcerated for violent offenses, many were the direct result of abuse or coercion by husbands or boyfriends. These women are subjected to endless sexual harassment and abuse of the worst sort as punishment for their crimes, then they are expected to return to the free world and function normally. In a civilized country, permitting and endorsing this kind of treatment is an abomination. It is long past time that the public demanded that it be stopped. This piece was originally published by AGENDA. S 0 No funds for bigots A By Linda Kurtz Recently, the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) decided to derecognize two student groups-Cornerstone Chris- tian Fellowship (CCF) and Tagar (the Tagar decision was later reversed)-for their discriminatory conduct toward people who are gay and people of Arab descent, respectively. This has since been framed as a free speech issue by Tagar, CCF, and the American Civil Liberties Union. Tagar and CCF claim that they have the right to express their opinions and thoughts on the Diag. With this I fully agree. Those who attempt to smother any speech, no matter how erroneous, preju- diced, or reprehensible they may perceive it to be, either become oppressors or open the door to their own oppression. It is important that progressive groups - some of which are calling for the repres- sion of all speech save their own, which they hold to express more morally and so- cially just values and goals than those of conservative groups - consider this. Lest we forget, lesbians and gay men were once (and still often are) considered sick and perverted. Speech advocating an end to their discrimination or literature in- corporating gay themes could easily be banned in a society that wishes to protect its citizens from ideas the majority considers harmful. The question of derecognition of CCF and Tagar, however, is not a free speech issue. Whether or not MSA derecognizes either of these groups, each will still have the right to speak on the Diag; to use (albeit for a fee) University buildings; to place posters on campus; to recruit stu- dents and others to its group; and to hold meetings. These groups are not being de- nied the right to speak or associate, only the right to use student funds to further anti-gay, racist, sexist, and/or colonialist causes. The issue is whether we, as a university community, will aid, sanction, and fund groups whose members work actively to repress other humans for being what they inherently and unchangeably are - female or male; heterosexual, gay, or bisexual; Arab, Black, Asian, Hispanic, Native American, or white - or who advocate the represssion of an ethnic or national group such as the Palestinian people. MSA has taken a stand and said that we will not. Section 42.13 of the MSA Con- stitution states that "[n]o group may dis- criminate on the basis of race, color, sex, sexual preference [orientation]...or any other arbitrary or unreasonable considera- day, Preacher Mike is out on the Diag, calling every man who walks by a homo- sexual and every woman who walks by a whore. His comments perpetuate stereo- typical notions amongst an already homo- phobic populace, validate and sanction anti-gay violence, and intimidate and threaten lesbians and gay men or people who are questioning their sexuality. They also prevent gay people from using the Diag, a hub of activity at the University. What lesbian or gay man is going to feel comfortable there when some preacher is striding up and down screaming vitupera- tions against her or him? Tagar, in its support of Likud and Zionist policies, advocates the repression (PSC). It is ironic, then, that they shout that their freedom of speech will be abridged because they must pay $8 to rent a megaphone from A-1 Rental or cannot display a banner on the Diag. Every day their heterosexist, racist, sexist, colonial- ist ideals are manifested in our domestic and foreign policy and in the news media. Because these ideals are the ideals of the majority in this culture, many of us do not even notice their existence, and accept them as "truth." To cite but one example: the opinion page staff of the Daily who views itself as liberal, anti-racist, and supportive of the Palestinian cause. Yet this paper chose to print a cartoon of Ronald Reagan wearing a keffiyeh (Arab headscarf) and saying, "I know a terrorist 61 'MSA would not fund a group that supported the policies of the white supremacist South African government; neither should it fund Tagar.' * JESSICA GREENE /Daily. -A Palestinian woman flees her home after Israeli soldiers shot tear gas into it. Stop the A RECORD NUMBER of Palestinians have been killed with Israeli "non- lethal" plastic bullets in the past week. This is the latest in a series of brutal re- ptessive measures used by the Israelis to quell the Intifadah, the Palestinian struggle for recognition and a homeland. 'The Israeli Iron Fist has produced broken bones, live burials, death squads, house demolitions, tear gas provoked miscarriages, permanent curfews, sniper fire on demonstrators, settler brutality and murders, concen- tration camps, school closures, food blockades, deportations, well poison- ings, and the list goes on. The gross injustice perpetrated against the Pales- tinian people is compounded by the continued daily killings in the occupied territories and the continuous Israeli bombing of Palestinian refugee camps bloodshed possible with a yearly U.S. subsidy of billions of dollars. The United States must take responsibility for the crimes the Israeli government commits. It is time to force the Israelis to the negoti- ating table and seek an equitable and just solution. Land must be given up to obtain peace. Israelis cannot demand that Palestinians lay down their stones without also laying down their guns. There is an urgency for a negotiated settlement in the Middle East. Human decency alone should dictate that the daily killings be stopped and that the brutal and unjust acts perpetrated against the Palestinians be brought to a halt. A conflict in the Middle East has al- ways been considered the most likely cause for the start of a nuclear ex- change. The United States must not allow intransigent Israel to hold the w,,nrl A Ihnotna tote r~ ih of a of and violence toward a particular ethnic and national group - the Palestinian peo- ple. It is highly ironic that Tagar chose a bus to represent its cause on the Diag, while every other group represented there has chosen a shanty. A shanty because the Black South Africans and the Palestinians are being driven from homes which have belonged to their people for centuries. While the Jewish colonists were seeking refuge in Palestine from the persecution of anti-Semites in other countries, in finding it, they wrested a land from its original inhabitants and began a similar, although not identical, sort of persecution.Tagar supports the policies of the Israeli gov- ernment, policies which differ only in their particulars from those of the gov- ernment in South Africa. MSA would not fund a group that supported the policies of the white supremacist South African gov- ernment; neither should it fund Tagar. The contention that derecognition, by denying Tagar and CCF access to MSA funds, University amplifying equipment, the glassed-in bulletin boards in the Union, use of University rooms free of charge or for a nominal fee, and the right to place banners and structures on the Diag abridges these groups' rights of free speech fails upon closer examination. No group in Ann Arbor, whether comprised when I see one." Many Middle Eastern men wear keffiyehs; very, very few are terrorists. At a time when the Daily was condemning Tagar for its racist act on the Diag, it was itself perpetuating the very stereotypes it was decrying. Actions and speech like those of Tagar, CCF, and the Daily are the manifestations of a deeper problem: economic, social, and political structures that, by their very na- ture, oppress. For this reason, repressing the speech of more blatantly prejudiced groups and individuals will not bring about an end to discrimination. What will end it is a change in our social and eco- nomic institutions and a concomitant change in the ideology that supports them. Socioeconomic and ideological change are involved in a feedback process, neither one completely determining the other. La- GROC, PSC, and their supporters are calling for a change in the ideology that helps support our social, economic, and political structures. We are asking that people take a leap forward in their think- ing and acknowledge a fundamental truth: sexual orientation, race, and sex are innate, immutable characteristics. Other characteristics - political affiliation, reli- gion, and so on - are acquired or, if learned from childhood, changeable. Groups that discriminate against people on A Wi