SJP — Students Justifiably Perplexed
Omri Rahmil
Last weekend, another group calling itself
SJP — Students for Justice in Palestine — spent three days on the
Stanford campus at a conference they said would “create space for a
critical discussion on solidarity.”
We felt that this was an important goal and
expected SJP members to stand with Palestinians who are in favor of
peace with Israel. Such pro-peace Palestinians need all the help they
can get, because the two Palestinian governments in power today refuse
to accept the principle of “two states for two peoples.” In Gaza, Hamas
rules with an iron fist and continues to prepare for war against Israel.
In the West Bank, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’
four-year term expired in 2009, but he has refused to hold new
elections. And In both places, Palestinian security forces intimidate
and jail dissidents who criticize their leaders.
We studied the SJP conference program. None
of the Palestinian governments’ human rights violations were mentioned.
Instead, the program was filled with euphemisms about the importance of
destroying Israel, the most progressive state in the Middle East. Is
this what it means to stand in solidarity with Palestine?
Elsewhere in the Middle East, oppressed
peoples are in great need of support: Women who want to drive in Saudi
Arabia, anti-theocratic bloggers in Iran, Christians in Egypt and even
Palestinians fleeing the civil war in Syria. There is no mention of
these cases in the SJP conference program.
Why does SJP only mobilize to promote
reactionary forces? What will it take for SJP to show solidarity with
progressive, pro-peace groups? Are anti-Israel extremists the only kinds
of people who are worthy of SJP support?
We don’t get it. We are trying to figure it out. And until we do, we are Students Justifiably Perplexed.
Omri Rahmil is a fourth-year Political science Major.
Grant Fineman is a second-year at UC Berkeley.
Matt Lurie is a second-year at UC San Diego.
Grant Fineman is a second-year at UC Berkeley.
Matt Lurie is a second-year at UC San Diego.
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