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  • Channeling Conflict

    CHANNELING CONFLICT
    By Michael Alexander

    Daily Pilot
    October 23, 2008 10:42 PM PDT
    CA

    UCI students of various ethnic and religious backgrounds discuss
    their experiences from trip to Israel and Palestine.

    Isaac Yerushalmi wasn't quite sure what he would find on his trip to
    Israel and Palestine, but the moment that burned its way into the
    president of Anteaters for Israel's brain was an encounter with a
    soldier who went to Lebanon in war and wished it had been in peace.

    "His job was to find where Hezbollah was shooting missiles from,"
    he said. "He talked about how Lebanon, in those hills, it was such
    a beautiful country. He wished he was there not to be fighting this
    war but to see the country and appreciate its beauty."

    Yerushalmi was just one of 14 Muslims, Jews, Christians, Druze
    and otherwise-affiliated students who took part in the Olive Tree
    Initiative, a joint trip to the conflict-torn regions in September.

    They spent equal amounts of time in Israel and Palestine and met with
    people from all persuasions and walks of life.

    Thursday night, they shared their experiences to hundreds in a
    campus forum titled "Beyond Stereotypes: Faces and Voices of the
    Israeli-Palestinian Conflict."

    UCI has had a history of tension between Jewish and Islamic groups
    on campus, including allegations of anti-Semitism from speakers and
    threats to student safety.

    But the members of the Muslim Student Union, Anteaters for Israel,
    Hillel, Society of Arab Students, Middle Eastern Studies Initiative
    and other groups didn't raise the $60,000 for the trip just to trade
    accusations; they were changing their lives together.

    >>From sitting in a cab and hearing the driver speak "Ara-Hebrew,"
    to going to the city of Hebron and seeing Jews and Muslims praying
    separately at the tomb of Abraham across a barred window, students
    poured out anecdotes that had shocked and surprised them.

    One remembered seeing two roads splitting off in the same spot: one
    for Jews, and one for Muslims. Another, however, remembered a famous
    restaurant owned by a Jew and a Muslim that had outlasted being bombed
    and kept bringing people together.

    The students, who on their own asked questions of business leaders
    and politicians and other residents, made an impression wherever they
    went, professor Manuel Gomez said.

    Most memorable to him was the mayor of an Israeli settlement who said:
    "I'm impressed with you guys. I invited Condoleeza Rice here and she
    was afraid to come here. You guys had the courage to come here and
    look with your own eyes."

    Several students talked about a moment that crystallized the whole
    trip for them. On a rooftop in Jerusalem, the whole group sat down
    on a Friday night for Jewish Shabbat dinner.

    For Shahrooz Shahandeh, who went unaffiliated with any campus group,
    it was his first.

    "It was in the old city, in between the Christian and the Armenian and
    the Muslim and the Jewish quarters, on a rooftop," Shahandeh said. "Up
    on this rooftop you had Muslims and Jews and Druze and Christians,
    sitting there and breaking bread and laughing and singing. It was
    incredible. I would never have thought that this would have been
    possible in a city with this history of turmoil and conflict. I
    thought, 'This is what it could be like.'"

    Not every moment was a hopeful one, but even those brought forth
    a kind of urgency, students said. Former Society of Arab Students
    president Amanda Naoufal got an earful from the group's own bus driver.

    "He tells me in Arabic, 'You know you guys are just wasting your
    time,'" she said. "'I've been doing this for 15 years: brought people
    from the United States, taken them all over Israel, all over Palestine,
    and they've cried for Israeli children, cried for Palestinian children,
    and then they go home and forget, and nothing changes.'"

    But Naoufal said she took it as a challenge, not a reason to give up,
    and students had plenty of ideas on things to do back stateside.

    One student had ideas about a radio show on KUCI to debate the
    issues in a civil setting, while many others called for the Olive
    Tree Initiative to happen over and over, bringing as many people as
    possible to the experiences they had had.

    But in a way, graduate student Daniel Wehrenfennig said, the very
    fact they had gone sent a message. He recalled a Palestinian who was
    shocked to see that any place in the world could produce a group of
    people from so many conflicting backgrounds working on a common goal.

    "For us the chance is, the mission is, to maybe be the broken link,"
    he said. "A lot of people here have friends and family one side or
    another. Some of them, they cannot talk to each other, for physical
    reasons or maybe emotional reasons, but maybe they can talk to us."
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