4B s Wedneday, 014 . 5B 've always been aware of the Palestinian struggle and the Palestinian cause before coming to college," said LSA senior Bayan Founas. "But at the time, I never understood how important it was to connect it to my personal identity." Founas is a member of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality - a campus organization thatpromotes activismregardingissues related to Palestinian social justice and human rights. She said her experiences with identity politics and Arab- and Muslim-American issues at the University pushed her to get involved in the Arab-Israeli debate on campus. For many students, the history and politics of the conflict between Palestine and Israel might have been issues that were made familiar to them by their upbringing. But for others, these topics may be completely new. "Before you're aware of all these things, you don't really engage with them," said LSA senior Yazan Kherallah, referring to many of the same issues Founas brought up, such as identity politics and challenges faced by Arabs and Arab-Americans. Kherallah, SAFE's Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions chair, became motivated to engage in issues related to the conflict as a freshman in response to the Arab Spring, a wave of government-topplingcivil protests that started in Middle Eastern countries in 2010. As a Syrian, Kherallah said he wanted to learn more about the region and even his own identity. "The Arab Spring, what it really spurred me to do is just to engage with things and figure out what can you do on a concrete basis to improve situations, and stand up for my rights and other people's rights," Kherallah said. LSA sophomores Erica Mindel and Becca Levin, of I-Lead and the Israel Cohort, respectively, said they became more engaged in the issues surrounding the conflict early on. Both took a gap year in Israel before coming to the University. "I think that I've always been aware that there's a conflict in the region," Levin said. "I definitely see my awareness of it and my interest in it starting in high school and then growing in Israel because I was able to explore it firsthand as much as I could." Other students did not become involved in the issues of the region until they came to the University. "I think when you're in high school, you don't necessarily see the link between yourself and BDS," said LSA senior Farah Erzouki, SAFE co-chair. "But once you step onto a campus where the funds of the University are going to these companies, there's a much more direct link." However, for most University students, what's going on in the Middle East or how it may factor into their lives as students isn't something that they're often exposed to. In the early hours of Dec. 10, SAFE members and supporters went to six residential dorms and slipped mock eviction notices under the doors of 1,500 residents as a part of the group's boycott and divest initiative. The notices referred to Israel's practice of settlement building in Israeli-occupied areas following the Six Day War in 1967. These areas, which include the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, are generally already populated by Palestinians. The mock eviction notice charged that Palestinian residents are forcibly evicted in order to make room for the Israeli civilians who inhabit the settlements, and asked students to imagine themselves going through the same experience. Overall, the goal of SAFE's Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign is to call on the University to sever its financial ties with several companies that hold contracts with the Israeli military that are involved in abuses of Palestinian human rights and the occupation of the territories. These companies include General Electric, Caterpillar, Heidelberg Cement and United Technologies. The sparks of the debate As students woke up to the mock eviction notices throughout the day, questions and arguments were sparked across campus. LSA sophomore Micah Nelson, executive board member of JStreet Umich, a student organization that supports a two-state solution - a right to a homeland for both Israelis and Palestinians - said that for her, the reactions to the mock evictions were almost more upsetting than the evictions themselves. "It felt like an argument on campus to me, between Hillel and SAFE, and I didn't feel really comfortable in either of those spaces," Nelson said. Hillel is one of the largest Jewish organizations on campus, and provides programming for Jewish students on a variety of issues relating to politics, faith and culture. Many students and campus organizations tweeted in support of SAFE with the associated hashtag, #UMMockEvictions, but a large number of students also expressed feelings of being triggered and targeted by the eviction notices. This, in turn, led to further backlash. The discussion not only involved BDS movements, but also examined why the mock evictions made people uncomfortable, questioning what it meant to hold Jewish, Israeli or Palestinian identities on campus. Several months later, these questions are still ongoing, reinvigorated by the submission of a divestment resolution to Central Student Government. The resolution, which would call on the University to establish a committee to investigate the conduct of the four companies and divest from them, was indefinitely tabled by the CSG Student Assembly on March 18, leading to asit-in protest by SAFE members and supporters. The debate surrounding both actions has prompted the question:What is the appropriate way to address these issues of identity and climate on campus? In this case, most of the disconnect seems to come from drastically differing views on what student activism is and what it should achieve. Navigatingidentities Students with identities tied to the conflict, suchasIsraeli,JewishandPalestinianstudents, often find the political biases, stereotypes and ramifications of the conflict hard to avoid even on days where there aren't protests. I LSA sophomore Mohammed Hamdan, students as thi Palestinian Student Association executive Middle Easter board member, gave the example of walking representation into a campus dining hall with a Michigan PSA is something t t-shirt. settings. He sa "Wearing that shirt, I could just personally from a variety feel like it was not just oh, Palestine, there's heard or values dabke, music, the food - it was more like 'oh, "At some lev OK, the BDS movement, the Israeli-Palestine as I do that conflict, that protest that happened on the Diag that's really last week,"' Hamdan said. important," Nelson, of JStreet UMich, said she often Stanzler runs into politicized misperceptions of what a said. "Then Jewish identity means on campus. you have to "I think a lot of times, people just assume try to be as that if you're Jewish, you have a connection proactive to Israel which is not true for everyone," as possible Nelson said. "And I think a lot of times that's in terms overgeneralized like, 'oh, Zionist.'" of helping Even in spaces where individuals are to create a specifically designated as students, such as classroom University classrooms, identity still comes into climate play. where that Erzouki, from SAFE, said that because of can actually her identity as a Palestinian solidarity activist, happen." she's not always comfortable in the classroom. "I'll give University professors credit where A polarized it's due; I have been in classes where I feel like discussion it's a safe space to express my views," Erzouki said. "But there definitely are situations where For some I feel very intimidated to express myself." students, LSA junior Eli Batchelor, advisor to the focus the PSA, said Palestinian students often of student feel misrepresented in campus academic activism is discussions on the issue, some of which are led to alleviate by Jewish professors, even if those professors tension in cami attempt to remain neutral. I-Lead and "Even if the Jewish voice is offering a affiliated cam Palestinian narrative, it's still a Jewish representative voice," Batchelor said. "There's not the equal umbrella orga representation within academia. And a lot of Israel-affiliated Palestinian students feel withdrawn. They expressed con don't want to take those classes for that very felt was currei reason. They don't want another Jewish person Mindel charact telling them their story." Nelson said Jeff Stanzler, a lecturer in the School was effective of Education who teaches a class in which caused increase University students mentor high school "It simply ju ey go through a simulation of n affairs, said marginalized of both Jews and Palestinians hat worries him in classroom id he's not confident students of identities have their voices understood. el, as an educator, if you accept A lot the ti on this Caml institutional sometimes have view of what LSA senior Y pus climate. J Street Umich, two Israel- pus groups, as well as a from the Israel Cohort, an nization under which most d groups on campus operate, all cerns about a campus that they ntly very polarized, something terized as discouraging. that though the mock eviction in raising awareness, it also ed polarization on campus. ist pushed people back to their corners," she said. The groups' ideal outcome is a non-polarized, non-binary campus - a place where the focus is on dialogue between the two groups. "We think no solution can be reached in any situation without bringing together and hearing the opinions and the needs of everyone involved, so that's why we think dialogue is the perfect opportunity for people to come } .together and ime activism express their concerns," Levin said. pus is reall LMindel added that I-Lead lized. People understood why dialogue might not a very sanitized be viewed as the most direct route t activism is. to change. For her group, the importance was its ~ potential azan yierall h long-term impact. "Maybe nothing has been tried beyond dialogue right now because we feel like there isn't alot of dialogue, and we don't know what else we can do," Levin said, citing the need to hear and celebrate all narratives. "I don't think we're looking to just stop at dialogue, but the point is that we need to get back to dialogue." Overcoming dominant viewpoints In contrast, both SAFE and PSA representatives, two Palestinian-focused groups on campus, viewed actions like the mock evictions and the BDS campaign as necessary in challenging and overcoming what they see as a pro-Israel dominant viewpoint on campus and beyond. "We live in a society where there is a very one-sided discourse on Israel and Palestine, and the mock eviction challenged that," Kherallah said. When it comes to an ideal outcome, both SAFE and PSA are striving to avoid perceived one-sidedness of the issue. For SAFE that means developing mock evictions and BDS campaigns, dialogues and teach-ins. For PSA that means n creating opportunities for Palestinian students to share and celebrate their cultural identity, instead of a politicized one. Kherallah said SAFE chose to take a more controversial action like the mock evictions, which have occurred on other campuses as well, to have a more far-reaching impact. "A lot of the time activism on this campus is really institutionalized," Kherallah said. "People sometimes have a very sanitized view of what activism is. With this, it was really groundbreaking in the sense that people who never heard about this issue - the conflict or the fact that their tuition money is invested in this - had their eyes opened." Erzouki said that SAFE felt actions like the evictions were ultimately about expanding the discussion and information available on the issue. "The University is a place where all of your views are going to be challenged," Erzoukisaid. "The mock evictions didn't target anybody. They may have challenged political views, and I don't think there's anything wrong with that. I think we're at this University to receive an education, and to be challenged on what we've been taught, and formulate on our opinions on - those bases." PSA's Batchelor expressed a similar sentiment. He said that he viewed BDS and similar campaigns as an opportunity to expand the discussion to include more perspective from the Palestinian perspective, not halt it. SEE PAGE 8B FOR MORE defining stud ent activism: the israeli-palestinian conflict at the university by Shoham geva