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Former Israeli PM lecture results in removal of protestors

By Pam Carmasine

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Published: Friday, October 23, 2009

Updated: Friday, October 23, 2009

PROTEST

Attendees protest Ehud Olmert's lecture at the University of Chicago last week. Courtesy of Tom Tian/Chicago Maroon

CHICAGO -- Between 20 and 30 protesters were forcibly removed from former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s lecture at the University of Chicago last week for disrupting the speech with accusations of war crimes and wishes for his death.
Colm O’Muircheartaigh, dean of the Harris School for Public Policy at the University of Chicago, was ignored as he admonished protesters to find a more civil way of making their opinions known.

Due to constant interruptions, the speech, part of the annual King Abdullah II Leadership Lecture Series, lasted an hour-and-a-half instead of its scheduled 20 minutes. While no Northwestern students were reportedly thrown out of the speech, several NU students were present among the protesters. Their presence was reported by the U of C weekly paper, the Chicago Maroon, as well as other news outlets.

“Olmert went up there and tried to talk, and people just snapped on him,” said Yusuf Salah, a Weinberg senior who attended the protest. “There was anger, especially on the side of the Palestinian supporters. (Some) were very composed and articulate. (Others) were shouting, ‘You’re a war criminal! Shame on you for Gaza! You shouldn’t be here!’”

Olmert was the prime minister of Israel from 2006 to early 2009, when he resigned amid accusations of corruption, according to the New York Times. Indicted on three charges of corruption on Aug. 31 of this year, Olmert waged a month-long war in Lebanon in 2006, which was followed by a war in Gaza in January 2009 known as Operation Cast Lead.

“My problem is not with his being controversial,” said Salah, an executive board member of the Inner-City Muslim Action Network. “This is a leadership lecture. (He is) a person who is by all accounts ... an absolutely terrible example of leadership ... You can’t honor someone who has done such a bad job as Olmert. Doesn’t matter if he’s Israeli, Palestinian or Costa Rican.”

Both the Israeli government and Palestinian militants face charges of war crimes from the Gaza offensive, written by a U.N. court of inquiry headed by Judge Richard Goldstone. If the charges hold, the parties could be referred to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands.

“Olmert was prime minister when Israeli Defense Forces killed close to 1400 Palestinians,” said Dana Shabeeb, Weinberg senior and a member of the Muslim-cultural Students Association. “Bringing someone like that is not constructive, and the reaction showed that. I think that people should want to know why America is so staunchly and blindly pro-Israeli.”

While no cameras were allowed in the event, a pro-Palestinian Web site called the Electronic Intifada snuck in a camera and posted a video of the heckling on YouTube and their own site. Web site founder Ali Abunimah can be seen in the video yelling, “War crimes are not free expression!” The video continues to show Abunimah being removed from the audience. Abunimah coordinated the attendance of protesters from neighboring universities, Shabeeb said.

“A university cannot allow for a political group to disrupt and to ignore (the dean),” said Prof. Elie Rekhess, the visiting Crown chair in Middle East Studies for the Crown Family Center for Jewish Studies. “This was well-planned, mind you. They had planted protestors in the midst of the audience to create more of a disruption.”

This is not the first instance in which NU students have been linked with controversial protests both for and against Israel. When Students for Justice in Palestine brought the Jewish, pro-Palestinian speaker Norman Finkelstein to campus in February 2009, groups such as Students for Israel and Students Helping to Organize Awareness of the Holocaust protested the event.

“Finkelstein is an anti-Semitic propagandist masquerading as a scholar on the conflict,” wrote the group’s organizers in a guest column printed in the DAILY a day before his speech.

Yet the tone at each event was distinctly different.

Finkelstein “a very disputed person and highly critical of Israel, was invited to speak and spoke. The audience was well-behaved,” Rekhess said.

Rekhess also said during the Gaza siege, Israeli forces had “no alternative but to hit these areas knowing that civilians will be hurt,” since Hamas had hidden their headquarters in the midst of hospitals and schools.

“I think that it’s a flaw in expectations to hold Israel to the same standard as Hamas — one is a country, one is a terrorist organization,” said Wildcats for Israel Co-President Nathan Enfield, a Weinberg sophomore. “I don’t think that protesting (Olmert) for Operation Cast Lead is related or appropriate.”

According to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights in Gaza, 1,417 people were killed during the offensive, including 926 civilians. In contrast, Israel said 1,166 people were killed, only 295 of which were non-combatants.

“Where I look at the Palestinian-Israeli conflict in general I see an injustice. You feel like you need to fix something. You gravitate towards these events,” Salah said.

pamelacarmasine2013@u.northwestern.edu

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4 comments

LAG
Sat Oct 24 2009 17:54
So now nobody can criticize shooting rockets from hospitals unless they personally see one? If you have some legitimate sources claiming that they have never shot rockets from schools then you can complain about israeli propaganda.

Secondly nobody said that the citizens were complicit and should be killed, but if there are some civilian casualties that is unavoidable. By all accounts i have read the Israelis have done a remarkable job of preventing civilian casualties (much better than the US) in an environment where it is impossible to completely prevent them. If the palestinians would create and army or attack from non-civilian areas, i'm sure Israel would be thrilled to stop all attacks in which citizens could be harmed.

While the Palestinians may have some legitimate grievances, I believe at the end of the day they are the ones forcing violence. Some may disagree, but i think the Israelis would be happy to live and let live, they have never been given that option. If rockets are being fired into Israel than any and all deaths that result on the palestinian side are the fault of those launching rockets, and the Israelis. Unless you can show that the intentionally used the rockets as an excuse to attack civilians, i hold their government blameless. Stops the rockets/suicide bombings then we'll talk.

Your name
Fri Oct 23 2009 19:45
Why are the Palestinians shooting rockets at all? No matter if they are shooting them from schools, mosques, and hospitals or not, they are still being aimed toward Israeli civilians...When the Palestinians have a legitimate issue with Israel they need to raise it in a more constructive manner. Shooting rockets will just provoke Israel to strike back. And then a whole new round of violence starts. This doesn't help EITHER side.
Interesting to note that the violence happens more between Gaza and Israel, and not the West Bank and Israel, even though Israel continues to build settlements in the West Bank (which I find troubling to the whole peace process).
The only way both Israelis and Palestinians can get what they want is through diplomacy and negotiations...something's got to give. This violence will just get everyone further away from what they want to achieve long term.
Your name
Fri Oct 23 2009 16:25
mom?
Did you ever try to understand whats really going on in Palestine? And how do you know rockets are shoot from " the courtyards of schools, the roofs of mosques and near hospitals" Did ever witness one? Or you just repeating israeli media or so called "israeli defense forces" propaganda. As to " they are complicit in the act of war against the Israeli people"
your statement reminds me II World War when Nazis murder entire village as collective punishment. If I'm not mistaken these days is a war crime.
mom
Fri Oct 23 2009 04:25
Palestinian Center for Human Rights. That's an oxymoron if I ever saw one. When the people of Gaza stop shooting rockets into Israel, trying to kill whomever happens to be around, women, children, the elderly, then I will listen to their cries. But, as long as they are allowing this kind of activity from their land, they are complicit in the act of war against the Israeli people. Is it OK for the Palestinians to shoot rockets into Israel from the courtyards of schools, the roofs of mosques and near hospitals? Isn't that putting innocent people at risk? They do it on purpose from those places so they can cry out " OH woe is me, the mean evil Israelis are killing innocent people." While inside, they know that the Israelis are just shelling the place where the rocket was launched from. Who is the war criminal here. By the way, my grandmothers birth certificate says she was born in Palestine. I want peack in my grandmothers birthplace. But until the Palestinians do more than just say they want peace, and actually try to be peaceful, I fear it will not happen.

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