OPINION Page 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. C. NO. 1 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All oth-r cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Not hard to do better Friday, September 8, 1989 The Michigan Daily Palestinian schools reopen HILE THE Duderstadt adminis- tration and its supporters wipe away a sentimental tear at the early departure of LSA Dean Peter Steiner, activists for rogressive change on campus cele- rate the end of an era marked by hypocrisy and institutuional racism. The incoming dean, political science Srofessor and former director of the institute for Public Policy Studies Edie 4oldenberg, must overcome the un- ound practices and policies of her pre- decessor. SDuring his tenure, Steiner cautioned the University not to become "another kind of institution where minorities Aould naturally flock in much greater etmbers," and his racist and sexist edmissions policies and hiring practices Ocked up those words. Sor example, there are still no .icano or Chicana professors in the qllege of LSA. 4xLast year, Steiner chaired a committee which overturned the rnanimous recommendation of two scarch committees and refused to hire in eminently qualified Black woman 4ociologist, who had a tenured position at another university. He also helped undermine the implementation of an LSA graduation requirement for the study of race, ethnicity and racism. As Goldenberg takes office she'll %eed to change policies for hiring and tetaining women and people of color, dismantle heavily Westernized stan- dards for hiring faculty to ensure an environment which is supportive of members of underrepresented groups. The exodus in recent years of highly- talented people of color from prominent academic positions at the University should serve as a warning to the new dean. Goldenberg also needs to reshape ad- missions policies to stop relying on standardized tests which have been proven to contain race, class and gender biases, and have been judged ineffective in measuring success in college. Judegement of students should be based on their record and potential, with clear goals toward shaping a University community which accu- rately reflects the population it claims to be serving The dean of LSA has the responsi- bility of seeking out and respecting the input of students in decision-making - a process to which Steiner was particularly indifferent - and supporting student organizations which work to improve the education and atmosphere at the University. Gol- denberg's dote for the proposed race, ethnicity and racism requirement is a welcome sign; her support for anti- racist and alterbative education will be crucial to the development of the col- lege. Dean Goldenberg takes office with some good recommendations (Steiner's notwithstanding), and a good deal of expectation. She has pledged to "understand the issues and consult broadly" as she gets to know her new job. For the sake of the University that understanding should be deeper, and that consulting broader and in better faith, than that of Dean Steiner. by Steve Ghannam Amid skepticism over the seriousness of Israeli intentions to keep West Bank schools open, some 200,000 West Bank students returned to school July 22, fol- lowing a nearly two-year period of contin- ued military closure with a brief two-week interlude in December 1988. Students at- tended at the most 23 days in the 1988-89 school year. The Israeli "civil administration" an- nounced that students of elementary and graduating high school classes are to be al- lowed to resume classes at the point of the curriculum where they had been forced to stop earlier in the year. The military has made no mention of West Bank and Gaza universities which have been closed since the start of the Palestinian Uprising. Meanwhile, the return of preparatory students to school is contingent upon the "maintenance of order," according to Israeli officials. They claim the schools are being used as "centers of incitement and vio- lence," (i.e., opposition to the occupation) particularly during the Palestinian Uprising. What this means, of course, is that Palestinian children who have spent their entire lives under military occupation are not allowed to speak out or demonstrate against it. Palestinian students are ex- pected to accept such policies and live with the continuous fear of another school closure whenever the occupation authori- ties decide. What seems unclear to the Israelis is that a primary objective within the overall Palestinian struggle for freedom and inde- pendence is securing the basic right of ed- ucation for Palestinian youth. Therefore, numerous Israeli attempts to close the schools, while collectively punishing all students, only reminds Palestinian youth that the occupation will always close their schools when it wishes; can never offer them a secure future; and demands that they collectively demonstrate against such an occupation. This contradiction within Israeli policy only fuels the Palestinian Uprising. Another contradiction in Israeli policy concerns the Palestinian campaign for al- ternative education which grew out of frus- tration over repeated school closures by the Israeli government. Alternative educa- Congressional resolution, the Nielson Amendment, calling for the Israeli gov- ernment to open Palestinian educational institutions was passed amid several dis- senting voices among pro-Israeli congres- sional lackeys. Few world leaders can openly side with the Israeli explanation or decision concerning school closures. By opening the schools, the Israelis believe they will lessen international pressure and improve relations with the West. Equally important, the school openings have a psychological effect on two fronts producing similar results: the interna- tional media, and the indigenous Palestinian population. By opening the schools the Israelis hope to create an im- age of stabilization and control in the Occupied Territories, as well as the illu- sion that the Uprising is now on the downswing. The Israeli's hope the international press will concentrate on school openings to signifying a new process of stabilization rather than the dramatic increase in human rights abuses: the expulsion of eight Palestinian political prisoners and the in- crease in random settler vigilantism against Palestinian villages to name a few. Recent moves for opening Palestinian schools do not fulfill the basic right of education for the Palestinian population. The underlying problem, clearly, is the Israeli occupation itself, the very apparatus which will always deny the right of educa- tion for the Palestinian population so long as Palestinians demonstrate for their free- dom and independence. Closing the schools is a symptom of the occupation. Opening them acts as a pain-killer. The occupation is the disease. So long as this disease is allowed to fester, the Palestinian population can only be expected to rise up against it. Steve Ghannam is a member of the Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSC). *1 0 tion is a key objective of the self-help "popular committees" in the West Bank and Gaza. A recently issued Israeli military order stated that any form, even the con- cept, of alternative education is a crime and grounds for imprisonment. Hundreds of committee organizers as well as educa- tors and students have been imprisoned. Why then, if the Israeli government is now so concerned about providing educa- tion for Palestinian children, is alternative education a crime and these educators still in prison? The Israelis have their own reasons for opening the schools at this time. A pri- mary reason is international pressure com- ing from even within the U.S. Congressional hearings. A recent Help stop the rape culture By Sharon P. Holland Israeli smokescreen 6N JULY 30 the Israeli High Court of Justice "intervened" on behalf of lalestinian rights for the first time swince the Intifada began 22 months ago. In a smoke-screen decision the court ruled that Palestinians have the tight to appeal to Israeli civil and military courts before their houses are blown-up or bulldozed by the Israeli army. Though civil libertarians herald this ruling as a landmark decision, and Israeli defense officials privately con- demn it because they fear restrictions in tjeir attack against Palestinians, the decision in its practical effects is quite hollow. In the first 20 months of the Intifada over 270 homes were destroyed by the Israeli military. The collective punish- ment of families and communities by the military has been used as a tactic to intimidate and to impede the Palestinian struggle for self-determination. Usually the military demolishes homes of al- leged participants in the movement, most often before a formal charge has been brought against the accused. Usually it is not the accused who is punished, but rather family members, for the accused are either in jail or dead (NYT, 7/31/89). Family members dften have less than one hour - in 40me cases as little as 15 minutes - to collect their belongings before their house is razed by the Israeli army. Although it appears that the move on tie part of the High Court is landmark ii that it would restrain the military from bull-dozing without court ap- proval, it still does not deny the mili- tary's carte blanche terrorism. Houses can still be sealed off from their occupants for indefinite periods of t me, forcing people to live in tents outlide of their homes. The Court is Aso considering extending the period of administrative detention in which ,aspects can be held without charges or trial from six months to one year. Giving Palestinians opportunity to appeal to the Court of the system which is in fact the oppressing them is quite ironic. In all actuality Palestinian homes are no safer now than they were before - they might stand a little longer, but the families can still be dislocated. In all probability such a move on the part of the High Court is rather an act to blow smoke in the eyes of the inter- national community which is outraged by the treatment of the Palestinians by the hands of Israel. South Africa, Israel's ally, also creates such media- hype over Court decisions which ap- pear to be positive. Earlier this year, the South African court ruled against the government's attempt to relocate 9,000 people into the homeland, Bophutatswana. The court decided that before the government could force the relocation it had to prove that such a move was nec- essary. Though the court ruled against the move, the army, following the government's policy of making South Africa for whites only, pursued the move. These activities have not been covered by the mainstream media which was blinded by the court's petty liberal acts of good faith. The forced relocation of South Africa's 25 million Black residents into the slave-economy homelands continues, even if it is unapproved by the courts. It appears that in all reality the Israeli High Court decision was nothing but a bone thrown to silence those who op- pose Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. The terrorism by the Israeli government against those who oppose its policies continues. On the same day that the Court made its decision three Palestinians were killed. The death toll continues to rise...the houses continue to be razed. It was the winter of my junior year in college when I first witnessed what rape could really do to a survivor, to a friend and to a community. On ray campus we were preparing for a Take Back the Night March -- it would be my first time orga- nizing as well as attending any woman- centered event on campus. That night we walked a route through campus and stopped for a moment of si- lence at sites where sexual assaults had oc- curred. We were prepared for about 5 such stops along the route. What happened was astonishing - over 25 women stopped our silent demonstration to speak about their own experiences of sexual assault. This couldn't have been easy for women attending such a small Ivy League institu- tion which often showed little respect for its women - outnumbered 5 to 1 by men - who were actively recruited for private parties such as the "rape and pillage night" held by the campus "Eating Clubs." During our four-hour march in the rain I also heard about a woman who was as- saulted in front of one of the above "Clubs." When she escaped from her as- sailant, she knocked on the first door she came to; when a man opened the door, she asked for help and he said, "do you really think that you'd be safer in here than out there." He shut the door. That night empowered me tremendously as a woman. As a woman of color, it sad- dened me a great deal. I knew several women of color who had been assaulted but did not feel empowered to speak, did not feel empowered to move from the pro- tective shadows of the crowd. The reason for this reticence became all too clear at the end of the March. When we neared what students there called "Club" row, the men on the street were ready for us. They had been sitting outside drinking and partying for four hours. They yelled, "Go get raped" at the marchers, along with other similar state- ments. But, their most insulting, degrad- ing and racially specific statements were reserved for the women of color on the march. For us, there was special treatment like, "Go get raped you nigger bitch" as well as "you especially asked for it, didn't you, you whore." When I left my former University, the Women's Center there was demanding a rape crisis counsellor and a centralized grievance procedure for sexual harassment cases. It was also in the process of advo- cating for a woman who was sexually as- saulted in one of the "Clubs" - ironi- cally, the same one which turned away a woman who had just been assaulted on the street. When I arrived at Michigan, I found that the same problems existed here that I faced at my old University. I eventually found the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC) and became a counsellor on its 24-hour crisis line. I I know I will never forget what hap- pened to me and other women of color on that street in late April of 1986. I work on the SAPAC crisis line because I think the presence of women of color is important in any woman-centered organization if it challenges notions of white feminism and expands the working agenda. I also work on the line, because I want other women of color to know that I am there. Most importantly, I am there because of my own personal experience with rape cul- ture -- I was in a battering relationship for some time and have survived. If I can do nothing else with that experience, I can at least take what I once thought was a weakness and make it into a strength. That's why I'm on the line. Sharon Holland is a graduate student in the English Department and a member of SAPAC's 24 hour crisis line. 0 "Operation Rescue" means: Harassment and intimidation 0 By Camille Colatosti "Are you a communist?" an anti-choice protester asked me. "Why are my politics your business?" I responded. We were both standing near the door of Womancare Clinic in Ypsilanti. I escorted clients into the health clinic; she harassed them as they tried to enter. The car of another client pulled up, and we both approached the driver's door. "I'm with the clinic," I said. "Would you like an escort?" The patient was young, maybe eighteen years old, maybe twenty. The anti-choice woman started shouting, "Don't butcher your baby! They'll tell you lies in there!" "Don't harass her," I shouted. "I can harass her if I want to," she replied. tivists engage in verbal and often physical assaults against women. They call clients names like "whore," "bitch," and "murderer." They grab clients and, by physically blocking their entrance through clinic doors; interfere with their right to obtain medical care. "Both the means and the ends," writes Phillip Green in a recent article in The Nation, "do harm to particular women and intend that harm. Forcing your way through a restrictive and abusive picket line [of anti-choice activists] while preg- nant is not harmless; risking giving birth is not harmless; changing your life to have an unwanted baby is not harmless. Pregnancy itself is not an assault, but forced pregnancy is. In short, the Civil Rights movement was a movement of civilly disobedient persons... But there is nothing civil about Operation Rescue" a woman's life. In addition, despite the fact that fetal lungs do not develop an independent capac- ity until at least the twenty-third to twenty-fourth week of pregnancy, medical tests, including an ultra-sound and possi- bly amniocentesis, must be performed on a fetus thought to be twenty weeks old in order to determine viability. These tests have negative physical and emotional ef- fects upon women, making the termina- tion of a pregnancy more stressful than it needs-or ought-to be. More importantly, these tests drive up the cost of an abortion at least two hun- dred and fifty dollars, making the price of an abortion even more prohibitive than it already is for poor women. Since the pas- sage of the Hyde Amendment in 1977, no federal medicaid funds can be used for abor- tion services. Last fall's proposal A ended: *1 11 Kft :; 4 Luru.IaLwl