UCI students demonstrate against hate
Marisa O’Neil
Students and administrators gathered on campus Thursday to denounce
acts of hate and the destruction of a symbolic wall built by Arab
students.
Members of UC Irvine’s Society of Arab Students used cardboard
boxes last week to build a 6-by-8-foot replica of Israel’s
controversial security barrier. The wall had caution tape,
photographs of the actual wall and quotes from speakers like Malcolm
X on it.
Early May 21, someone torched the wall in what university police
have classified as a hate crime.
“We want to show whoever did this crime -- this hate crime -- that
it won’t silence us,” said Vanessa Zuabi, vice president of the
Society of Arab Students. “Arabs, students, the community, we all
stand united against hate.”
Students with strips of caution tape tied around their arms
chanted “obliterate the hate” and carried signs with anti-hate
slogans like “We are not the enemy, hate is.” Speakers from campus
and Arab and Islamic groups spoke at the peaceful rally.
“The flame that burned the wall has invigorated us to realize we
can never stop fighting for our rights, said Viken Jermakian,
cultural director of the Armenian Student Assn.
That organization felt sympathy for the Arab students’ loss, he
said, because some of their own posters on campus have been ripped
down.
The wall was built in the campus’ Free Speech Zone on Monday and
torched, along with a sign put up by the group, in the early-morning
hours on May 21. Students had university permission to keep it up for
one week.
“It’s hard for someone to put themselves in our shoes,” said
biomedical engineering major Kareem Elsayed, who helped construct the
display. “A lot of us built the wall and it took us a whole day to do
it. It’s just an attempt at intimidation.”
Osama Abuljebain, president of the Society of Arab Students, said
they will work closely with university administrators to find ways to
investigate hate crimes and prevent future ones.
His father, a Palestinian who lived in Kuwait with his family
before moving to the United States, said the hatred behind the
symbolic wall’s destruction made him worry about his son’s safety on
campus.
“I consider it a criminal, hateful act, something I didn’t expect
in America,” said his father, Nader Abuljebain, former president of
the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee’s Orange County
chapter. “That is why we came here, so we could express ourselves.”
Manuel Gomez, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the
university supports free speech and students’ rights to protest, but
not acts of hate or discrimination.
“I hope whoever is responsible for burning the peace wall is not
one of our students and I hope it was not a hate crime,” he said.
The Society of Arab Students is planning to rebuild a “symbolic
statement” but not necessarily a wall, Osama Abuljebain said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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