One of the unique things about attending a Palestinian university is the proximity you feel towards the conflict with the Israeli occupation. For decades, Palestinian universities were at the center of the resistance-where popular movements and social programs were pioneered, and where a large majority of political (and military) activists were recruited. Admittedly, since the end of the first intifada and the disaster that was Oslo, student activism has receded notably, though in no way has it ended.
The first time I realized that I’d be having a pretty different college experience than that of my friends in the US or the Arab world is when, a couple of months into my first semester at Birzeit University, I noticed a new student in my Arab Society class. Naturally, the professor asked him what he was doing showing up two months late. It turns out the student had just spent two years in the notorious Naqab (Katziot) desert prison for political activism, and had just gotten out.
The current head of the Student Union at Birzeit, Fadi Hamad, has been in an Israeli prison for the last 4 months without charge. His deputy, Abdallah Oweis, was arrested barely a month after taking over. He too is being held without charge. The Israeli occupation can ‘legally’ imprison Palestinians for up to six months at a time without charge, placing them in ‘administrative detention’. This can and usually is renewed every six months without any legal process. Some prisoners languish in administrative detention for years on end.
Of course, Israel doesn’t reserve its punishment to activists only. In 1987, it closed down every Palestinian educational institution, from kindergartens all the way to universities, for an entire year. For a whole year, students and children were not allowed to receive their education, a clear violation of international law. Palestinian society responded by setting up local educational committees that organized classes in ordinary homes. These had to take place in secret-if the Israeli army found out the time and place of these classes, all those taking part were arrested.
Although the 1987 closure was the most comprehensive, the universities, particularly Birzeit, Alnajah and Bethlehem, all faced independent closures for varying periods of time. Student dorms are frequently invaded by the army in the middle of the night, and road blocks are set up arbitrarily to impede the ability of students to reach their classes. From 2001 until 2004, the Israeli army set up a permanent checkpoint in Surda, between Ramallah and Birzeit. The route is used mostly by Birzeit students, and the checkpoint made a 15 minute trip an hour long nightmare. Students were turned back randomly, and many had to trek through the muddy hills in winter to get to school. Those that tried to go by road faced humiliation; at times, the soldiers would let students of a certain religion pass through, turning back the rest. Other times, the soldiers would line up the female students in two groups-those they deemed attractive, and those whose looks didn’t quite do it for the occupiers.
Birzeit University was set up in the 70’s as a liberal university, and it has played a leading role in developing social and political activism in support of the Palestinian cause. As such, it is known here as Jam’at al-Shuhada’, the University of Martyrs, in honor of the many alumni that have been killed by Israel since the university's inception. I’ve been at Birzeit for three and a half years – in that time, two students have joined that list.
Last year, Omar al-Thafer was killed by an undercover Israeli force in the heart of Ramallah in a botched assassination attempt that targeted a man eating at the same restaurant as he. Yesterday, Abdellatif Huroob, 20, from the village of Kharas near Hebron, was killed by an Israeli settler on a road near the illegal Israeli settlement of Gilo north of Ramallah. The Israeli army says Huroob was killed in self-defense when he tried to attack the settler. The autopsy revealed that he had been shot in the head at close range, execution style. Today, the Israeli army attacked his family home and ransacked it.
Omar and Abdellatif won’t be the last Palestinian students killed in cold blood by their occupiers, just like Fadi and Abdallah won’t be the last to be imprisoned for months at a time without charge. The truly tragic fact in all this is that such things have become an accepted part of the college experience in Palestine. I wonder if all those squealing in indignation about how Palestinian textbooks do not instruct Palestinian students to recognize the legitimacy of their occupier and oppressor (because plenty of American and Israeli studies have found that there is a shocking absence of anti-Semitism in these books) will ever be willing to raise their voices at the constant abuse of Palestinian students and educational institutions.
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Israel has a problem with education
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KABOBegories: education, human rights, Mohammad, palestine
Friday, February 08, 2008
Turkey Almost Votes for Religious Freedom!
According to the print issue of the International Herald Tribune on Feb 8,
Lawmakers voted early Thursday to approve a constitutional amendment to allow women to enter universities wearing Islamic head scarves, a move that many secular Turks view as an attempt to impose religion on their daily lives.Well, I should think so!! Forcing women to choose between their religious beliefs and their education is completely and utterly unacceptable, first off. As it stands in Turkey, you can't study at university, or teach for that matter, if you are a religious Muslim woman who wears the headscarf. You either have to violate your religious beliefs, give up your educational career altogether in anything outside Islamic Law, or opt for a third choice: learning an entirely new language in order to study in another country.
Lawmakers voted 401 to 110 in a preliminary vote in favor of the government's proposed amendment to the Constitution. The government has defended its plan as a reform needed to give its citizens religious liberty and bring Turkey in line with European Union human rights guidelines.
A second, final round of voting was scheduled for Saturday. (AP)
I studied Arabic with a young Turkish woman in Jordan, who was studying to master the Arabic language in order to obtain a bachelor's level degree from the University of Jordan in Psychology. The route to higher education in her own country was closed to her, as she chose to wear hijab.
I view any policy that excludes women for wearing hijab as just as offensive and unacceptable as a policy that excludes women who do not. But fundamental personal religious freedoms aside, it can't possibly be in Turkey's best interest as a nation to encourage bright and ideological young people to leave and put down roots elsewhere for the sake of their education.
Aha! Here's a BBC article on the same topic.
According to it, two-thirds of women in Turkey cover their hair... that's a lot of people not allowed to attend college classes.
The government's plan to change the law has sparked large protest rallies by secular Turks, who want to defend the legacy of the modern state's founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
They fear it may be a first step to eroding the secular system.
Yes! It's a slippery slippery slope, my friends. A SLIPPERY SLOPE! First your religious neighbor's daughter will attend classes with yours, and then there will be NO ALCOHOL SOLD ANYWHERE IN THE COUNTRY!!!!!! ANYWHERE!!!!!
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KABOBegories: academic freedom, education, Emily, hijab, human rights, religion, Turkey
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
American College Opens Up Satellite School In the Middle East
In a move transform NYU into “Global Network University," the New York city-based private university has expanded beyond it's Union Square and Houston reach to include a satellite campus in the Middle East. http://www.nyu.edu/public.affairs/releases/detail/1787
Beth Fertig from WNYC reports on the recent announcement:
"A-BOOO DUHHBEEE* will serve 2000 students when it opens in three years. It's being built by the government of Abu Dhabi, and NYU hopes it will attract students from throughout the Middle East, Europe and South and Central Asia."In a less than 30 second story, Beth Fertig strangely enough closes the piece with a note on campus security:
"NYU will control campus security"What the hell is that suppose to mean? Is the implicit message, "Don't worry, we won't leave the delicate matter of a student's sense of safety in the inept emirate's hands"?????
I have heard of more bombings and psycho mall and school massacres and rampages in the US, than I have ever heard of such a thing coming out of that emirate (I'm only making a campus security comparsion, so before you get all your panties twisted and bark off in tangentals about the UAE's atrocious treatment of foreign workers, just be aware of the subject matter).
*I know, it's better than "Apple Dubai," but still, what's so hard about saying "Abu Dhabi"????
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KABOBegories: education, globalization, Maytha, uae
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Weekend Reading: Lee Bollinger's White Man's Burden
If you thought Lee Bollinger's introduction of Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmedinejad, to speak at Columbia University in September, was among the most ignorant, unprofessional, and uneducated displays to be spewed by a prominent educator, you're not alone.
If you are struggling to understand how such illiterate and racist remarks could come out of a major figure in a major educational institution, the article below will probably not help you make sense of what you heard.
However, if you want to understand Bollinger's comments in some perspective, and understand the lack there of, on the Columbia president side, then this great article by renowned Columbia, Iranian-American Professor Hamid Dabashi, is well worth reading:
Read the articleThe only reason that the world at large should care about the contankerous exchange between an irresponsible and sensationalist president of a beleaguered and increasingly illegitimate Islamic Republic and the racist president of an Ivy League university in the United States is that in the brief encounter between the two dwells the symptoms of a much more frightful malignancy now afflicting our globe--the fact and phenomenon of an Empire least equipped to rule the world and yet flaunting a vulgar audacity to issue pronouncements about its ills and afflictions--at once creating, promoting, and supporting undemocratic regimes in its domain of influence (from the Saudis to the Taliban) and yet unable to deal with their criminal consequences, while at the same time having the audacity to give itself the moral authority to be the arbiter of truth in the world, carrying the white man's burden to set the course of history aright.
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A close reading of Bollinger's statement when introducing Ahmadinejad is today the closest text analogue of what exactly happens when the legitimate criticism of the atrocities of the Islamic Republic quite imperceptively degenerates into the propaganda warfare against a soverign nation state, to be waged by the self-proclaimed moral authority of the United States, and from there further mutating into the oldest racist assumptions of the white man's burden to civilize the world. Reading Bollinger's statement is to witness a closely-knit packing of assertions of fact about the horrors of the Islamic Republic, combined with the most ridiculous clichés of the neocon propaganda machinery, wrapped in the missionary position of a white racist supremacist carrying the heavy burden of civilizing the world.
Furthermore, Iranian university chancellors wrote Mr. Bollinger a letter calling him on the double standards and lack of professionalism.
[Tarboush tip: Mike A7A]
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KABOBegories: american politics, education, Fayyad, iran
Friday, October 19, 2007
Nostaglic InRANTation: Stop Co-opting My Culture!
Long before (and by "long" I mean, a month before the "kuffiyeh kraze" first graced this lovely blog) I vitriolically slammed New York Hipsters for ignorantly wrapping the ever so dead kuffiyeh around their "red" necks on KABOBfest, I did just that on my myspace blog. Check it out:
Thursday, October 05, 2006
| STOP CO-OPTING MY CULTURE!!! to serve your desires of journalistic career advancement or to add an avant-garde twist to your sense of fashion (if I see another white chick outfitted in an ode to 80s garb-crushed black flat boots with black tights and an oversized amorphous sweater rocking a Palestinian kuffiyah as a scraf-I'm going to "ka-sar" some "ras"!!!!) Scene: An overly-crowded classroom of underwhelmed anthro grad students waiting for their caffeine jolt to kick watch the clock tick and tock in the absence of substantive material to write. There's an obvious disconnect between the people's interest and the topic at hand. As such, I'm taking every opportunity to catch up on my email replies and research on Malcolm. However, something did momentarily tear me away from myspace profile browsing practices. In a discussion concerning the difference between interpretation and language, an older Mary Quck Gates-type (okay, only two people at most reading this blog will understand this reference, but the correlation is so pricelessly accurate it's worth sacrificing some level of lucidity) chimed in with a "relevant" example to the discussion at hand.
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KABOBegories: Arabic, Arabic culture, education, kuffiyah, may's inRANTations, Maytha
Monday, October 01, 2007
The lies are starting to smell

There was an incident at the Obama rally that none of the mass media reported, which means this is a KABOBfest exclusive:
A one Maytha XX-XXXXXX, female, gorgeous and curvacious, upon hearing the Senator from Illinois utter that "We should build schools! In the Middle East! Where students can learn Maths! and Science! Instead of hatred!", said female individual then belted out like a siren, to the confusion and consternation of all those surrounding, the words: "THAT'S A LOAD OF BULLSHIT!!!!"
Thanks Maytha, good that you spoke up for the ones who were too cowardly to react, like yours truly.
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KABOBegories: american politics, education, may's inRANTations, Mehammed "Abou" Mack

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