By Nov. 18, the General Union of Palestinian Students at San Francisco State University were scurrying to cover their tracks and were searching for a suitable way to respond to the allegations of hate speech. There has been no indication they have ever considered an apology. There is no indication of any remorse over how their actions have embarrassed their school and have discredited their cause.
GUPS held an emergency meeting on Nov.19 and students were urged to cover their tracks. Once public accounts became password protected. Photos and posts that were once public vanished.
GUPS originally posted this appeal, that has since been removed. A screen shot exists at the Elder of Ziyon Website
Zionists: Hands off our San Francisco State University Students!
Support AMED and GUPS against a Zionist smear campaign/charges of Anti-Semitism
Dear Friends of AMED and GUPS:
This is an urgent message to make you aware of and call upon you to
support the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Initiative (AMED)
and the General Union of Palestine Students (GUPS) at San Francisco
State University. We have been subjected to a smear campaign by Tammi
Benjamin and AMCHA Initiative.
In an email to SFSU President
that was copied to members of the California legislature, San Francisco
Board of Supervisors, and countless others (please see below), Benjamin
claimed that the November 7th event commemorating the 6th anniversary of
the Palestinian Cultural Mural honoring the late Professor Edward Said,
We Speak for Ourselves: Honoring our Forbearers, was “an anti-Semitic
on-campus activity that encourages students to glorify the murder of
Jews.” To support her unfounded claims, Benjamin refers to two stencils
on a table in the Malcolm X Plaza during the afternoon of the event one
is of Leila Khaled and the other inscribed with the statement, MY HEROES
HAVE ALWAYS KILLED COLONIZERS.
Aiming at invoking xenophobia
and enlisting the “war on terror” in order to portray Palestinian campus
activism as dangerous, illegal and outside the bounds of acceptable
discourse, Benjamin refers to Leila Khaled as “a member of the U.S.
State Department-designated terrorist organization Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)…. responsible for several plane
hijackings, suicide bombings that killed several Jews, and the
assassination of a Jewish member of the Israeli Knesset.” Had she done a
quick search as academics usually do, Benjamin would have found that
Leila Khaled’s image is a popular icon frequently used by Palestinians
and non-Palestinians alike to symbolize Palestinian women’s roles in
anti-colonial resistance and to counter Orientalist and racist
portrayals of Arab (and Muslim) women as docile, oppressed and unable to
speak for themselves.
As a matter of fact, a few years ago,
following the meeting of the SFSU Curriculum Review and Approval
Committee (CRAC) that discussed and approved the Minor in Race and
Resistance Studies (RRS), students and faculty of RRS gathered outside
the meeting room to take a group photo to be posted on our website. RRS
students unfurled a banner that they had made a long time ago on which
Leila Khaled’s picture was stenciled. I asked the students then to put
away the banner lest an impression is formed that I was behind it, being
mindful of exactly the sort of smearing campaigns Benjamin has now
undertaken. I recall that both RRS students and faculty laughed it away,
probably thinking that I was exaggerating the effect of holding up such
a banner and insisted on keeping it in the group photo. The Benjamin
attack is yet another proof that we (people who support justice for/in
Palestine) will continue to be targeted for our political stands.
As for the second stencil MY HEROES HAVE ALWAYS KILLED COLONIZERS,
contrary to Benjamin’s claim, Palestinian students were not calling for
the murder of Jews or Israelis. In fact, the implication of Benjamin’s
argument --that all Jews have the same political stands vis-à-vis Israel
or that all Jews are colonizing Palestinian lands, lends itself to
anti-Semitism. And notwithstanding her simplistic linkage of Said’s
anti-colonial intellectual work, the Palestinian Mural anniversary,
Palestinian students, and AMED, the stencil was not originally created
to specifically target Israel. It was more inclusive of the plight of
Indigenous people and their historical resistance everywhere.
The stencil was made by Indigenous activists for an event marking the anniversary of genocide in the Americas https://www.facebook.com/events/521584261240884/ on October 14, 2013. Posted on the Native American Indian Network https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/bay-area-native-american-indian-network/udfjGGr5Mi4/TJNmLPvAIAoJ as the Second Annual
‘My HEROES Have Always Killed Colonizers: Stories of Global Indigenous
REZistance’, the event aimed at countering the depiction of the
“Indigenous warrior who has been labeled a terrorist, unpatriotic,
and/or savage while defending the land, the people, and our traditional
ways.”
The announcement of the event was also reproduced on the website of the Global Exchange
<http://www.globalexchange.org/events/speaking-event-my-heroes-have-always-killed-colonizers-0>. Silk screening was only a part of the event that included:
[A] night of song, words, and resistance, a celebration of every global
indigenous warrior who's been labeled a terrorist, unpatriotic, and/or
savage while defending the land, the people, and our traditional ways.
Through storytelling, spoken word and performance we will collectively
Re-Indigenize our heroes, such as Leila Khaled, Boukman, Lapu-Lapu, Toy
Purina and Geromino so that they may claim their true role in history.
Finally, the November 7th Palestinian Mural Anniversary was not solely
sponsored by GUPS and AMED, as Benjamin implies in order to isolate and
target Palestinian activists. All the Murals on the walls of the Cesar
Chavez Student Center http://www.sfsustudentcenter.com/about/murals.php
belong to the student center, including the murals of Cesar Chavez,
Malcolm X, the Indian, Filipino and Native American struggles, and they
all reflect student commitment to and activism on questions of justice
relevant to struggles in their communities.
The Palestinian Cultural Mural honoring the late Professor Edward Said http://www.sfsustudentcenter.com/about/murals.php#palestinianmural,
inaugurated on November 2, 2007, the birthday of Edward Said, was the
direct result of a long and difficult but successful campaign by a broad
coalition of students, faculty, and staff at SFSU, working hand in hand
with community members and organizations. Led by the General Union of
Palestinian Students (GUPS), the coalition included other student
groups, such as the Student Kouncil for Intertribal Nations (SKINS) that
was founded by Richard Oakes, the Indigenous student who in 1968 led
the take-over of Alcatraz; Black Student Union (BSU) that, along with
the 3rd World Liberation Front (TWLF), led the successful 1968 Student
Strike for a College for 3rd World Studies at SFSU; as well as other
student groups that have been part of the rich history of San Francisco
State University, such as the League of Filipino Students (LFS), La Raza
Student Organization, and Movemento Estadiantil Chicano De Aztlan
(MeCHA). The Deans of the College of Ethnic Studies, Ken Monteiro, and
the College of Education, Jake Perea were instrumental in the success of
the mural. Activists and organizations in the Palestinian, Arab and
Muslim communities, Indigenous communities and communities of color, as
well as anti-Zionist Jewish organizations, civil liberties, trade unions
and feminist and queer groups, united around the principle of justice
for Palestine as an integral and an organic part of justice for all,
came together to insist that the mural see the light after a battle that
lasted several years during which a strong campaign was unsuccessfully
waged by the Jewish Community Relations Council and other SF Bay Area
Zionist organizations against the mural and for that matter any campus
presence of Palestine.
The history of the Palestinian mural at
SFSU with its broad based coalition of communal and campus alliances,
on one hand, and the multiple sites that clearly show that that the
stencil originated with Native American activism and spoke about
colonized people everywhere, on the other, debunk the most recent
slander campaign of Benjamin and Company. Why would Benjamin and AMCHA
then ignore all these facts and insist on smearing Palestinian activism?
As the movement for justice in/for Palestine gains grounds and grows
broader beyond the Palestinian, Arab and Muslim communities, Benjamin
and Company have escalated their campaign. Their goals are to arrive at
an official position that equates criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism
in order to discredit us and prevent us from speaking up. When they
fail to do so, as the HR 35 affair shows, they try to manipulate the
truth and exact statements of condemnation from university officials by
making a lot of noise and mobilizing their list-serves to create the
impression that lack of statements amounts to acceptance of
anti-Semitism. When all else fails, their last resort is to make enough
noise to keep us occupied so we won’t have the time or energy to speak
up for the truth.
Benjamin and her group are not looking for
constructive discussion. All they seek to do is silence speech on
justice for/in Palestine. What we need to do is to be firm on academic
freedom and against smearing institutions, programs and faculty who
support the right of students to organize ourselves, speak our minds and
pursue justice wherever injustice occurs and irrespective of the
powerful groups that seek to silence us.
What you can do to support GUPS and AMED:
1. Attend an emergency meeting called for by GUPS and its allies
tonight, Tuesday, November 19th, at 6pm, in the conference room of the
College of Ethnic Studies, 116 Ethnic Studies and Psychology Building,
SFSU http://www.sfsu.edu/~sfsumap/
2. Write or call the office of SFSU President, Dr. Leslie E. Wong
presidnt@sfsu.edu to counter the campaign waged by Benjamin and AMCHA
Initiative.
3. Support GUPS statement by signing the petition ……
4. Organize events on your campus to educate and publicize the struggle
for justice in/for Palestine as an indivisible part of justice for all
and insist on our right to academic freedom and campus activism.
For more information, please call or email AMED at (415) 505-2668 or
amedstaf@sfsu.edu or GUPS at (415) 338-1908 or sfsugups415@gmail.com.
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