ESJP Wall Torn Down, EPD Investigates

Information about Israel as an apartheid state on this wall, constructed by Emory Students for Justice in Palestine (ESJP), was torn down by perpetrators Sunday night. Photo by Stephen Fowler / Student Life Editor.

Information about Israel as an apartheid state on this wall, constructed by Emory Students for Justice in Palestine (ESJP), was torn down by perpetrators Sunday night. Photo by Stephen Fowler / Student Life Editor.

Information about Israel as an apartheid state on this wall, constructed by Emory Students for Justice in Palestine (ESJP), was torn down by perpetrators Sunday night. Photo by Stephen Fowler / Student Life Editor.

At least one perpetrator tore down and ripped apart a display constructed by Emory Students for Justice in Palestine (ESJP) on the Dobbs University Center (DUC) Terraces on Sunday night and Monday morning, according to ESJP members. The display, a wall that referred to Israel as an apartheid state, meant to raise awareness of Israel’s oppression of Palestinian people.

Senior Vice President and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair sent out an all-Emory students email on Tuesday afternoon detailing the bias incident.

“The destruction of the display runs counter to our community’s commitment to debate and dialogue,” Nair wrote in the email. “Emory University unequivocally affirms that our community members have the right to open expression without interference.”

The Emory Police Department (EPD) is currently investigating the incident, and the Bias Incident Response Team and Open Expression Committee​ were “made aware of the incident,” according to the email.

A spokeswoman for the EPD declined to comment on the investigation.

College sophomore and ESJP President Jonathan Hussung, College senior Kolia Kroeger, College junior Dina Masri and two other members who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue, assembled the standing display from around 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday​, according to Hussung, who added that they returned to the DUC around 10:30 p.m. the same day to find the collage’s bare frame. (Hussung identifies as a non-binary gender and prefers the gender-neutral pronoun “they.”)

Hussung promptly called EPD, which then began its investigation, Hussung said.

The following morning, Hussung said they began stapling sheets of paper containing information previously displayed by the wall collage onto the frame around 12:50 p.m. on Monday. Hussung returned to the DUC around noon to find the perpetrator tearing those sheets down as well.

“I heard someone screaming ‘Fuck you and your fucking wall!’” Hussung said. The student who took down the papers, before heading upstairs to the second floor of the DUC, told Hussung to “eat shit, you motherfucker” as Hussung attempted to film him using a cell phone camera.

Hussung did not know the identity of the perpetrator, and again called EPD. Hussung said they submitted a Bias Report on Monday around 8:15 p.m. for the vandalism and verbal assault that occurred over the previous two days.

“I was not feeling very safe,” Hussung said of the Monday encounter. “What made me feel that way was the fact that they would hurl such hurtful words at me just because I was associated with a wall that was supposed to educate you.”

ESJP constructed the wall as part of Israeli Apartheid Week, an annual international awareness week that seeks to draw attention to harsh policies of the Israeli government on the Palestinian territory, which lies within Israel’s boundaries, according to ESJP member and former Palestinian citizen Dina Masri, who added that the act of vandalism hit her on a personal level.

“That’s hurtful to me — to try to take the truth away — because there is oppression going on there,” she said. “I know. I’ve lived there.”

Masri was born in the U.S. and moved to Palestine with her family at age three. She returned to live in the U.S. during second grade but said she moved back after the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. She said she understood the Israeli Apartheid was “an emotional issue” but added that ESJP did not mean to discriminate against any nationality.

“This is in no way anti-Semitic — it is not okay to discriminate against any nationality,” Masri said, adding that she has faced plenty of such discrimination herself.

“I’ve had people come up to me and scream at me, saying that I’m a terrorist,” she said. “That kind of discrimination is not okay.”

Hussung added that the group had not meant to target Jewish people.

“One of the most important distinctions we want to make in this issue is that being Jewish is not the same as being Israeli, or as agreeing with Israeli foreign policy,” Hussung said. “People are demonizing us without even reading what’s on the wall, and they can’t, because people keep tearing it down.”

ESJP reassembled the wall, which read in spray-painted letters, “Israel is an apartheid state,” late Tuesday morning. The wall stood at the Terraces as of late Tuesday afternoon.

“We will not be silenced by fear,” Hussung said.

In his email, Nair wrote that free expression is open to all students but also offered a cautionary message.

“…we understand that – while the demonstration wall is an expression of free speech – it may be painful for some members of the Emory community,” Nair wrote. “We ask all members of our community to weigh these responsibilities carefully when exercising their right to open expression. Let us deliberate ideas, ideologies, and policies with which we disagree, rather than target individuals or groups with whom we disagree.”

Regarding Nair’s recommendation for students to “carefully” exercise their free expression rights, Hussung wrote in an email to the Wheel that ESJP members “have facts on the wall, facts about Palestinians’ human rights being violated by the state of Israel.”

Hussung wrote that “it may be painful for some people to face those facts,” but that “it is essential that we have all those facts, because the pain experienced by Palestinians who are living (and dying) under apartheid cannot be eclipsed by the pain of wrestling with the reality of the consequences of Israel’s actions.”

Andrew Alter, vice president of Israel Affairs for the Jewish student group Emory Hillel, sent out an email regarding ESJP’s Israeli Apartheid wall to Hillel members around 10 p.m. on Sunday.

In his email, he urged Hillel members to post pictures of themselves in Israel or Israel-supportive websites on social media on Tuesday, to stop by Hillel’s Wonderful Wednesday table this week and to attend a question and answer session event on Thursday at 7 p.m., the location of which was yet to be determined.

“We think [the wall] is counterproductive towards a conversation on the oppression and suffering of people in the Middle East,” Alter said in an interview with the Wheel. As for the email, he said Hillel members thanked him for urging them to show their pride of the Jewish state.

Alter added that the Jewish student group sent a message to members discouraging them from tampering with the wall.

“We do not support this,” he said. “No one [in Hillel] I talked to supported this.”

Read more here: http://emorywheel.com/esjp-wall-torn-down-epd-investigates/
Copyright 2024