Posted on 04/09/2010 5:03:42 AM PDT by SJackson
Machete attack against pro-Israel students illustrates why ban on anti-Israel campus agitation needed
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Machete attack against pro-Israel students illustrates why ban on anti-Israel campus agitation needed
TORONTO, April 7, 2010 Bnai Brith Canada has called on Canadian universities to ban anti-Israel agitation on campus in light of an alleged machete attack on pro-Israel students. Reportedly, on April 5th, two Ottawa students, both well-known for their pro-Israel views, were assaulted when they left a local lounge in the early hours of the morning, by a large group of anti-Israel agitators, one of whom was wielding a machete.
It is simply outrageous that pro-Israel students have been assaulted in our nations capital for nothing more than their pro-Israel views, said Frank Dimant, Executive Vice President of Bnai Brith Canada. One of the assaulted students, who is not Jewish, was reportedly first struck in the back of the head, and then chased with a machete swinging within inches of his neck. The Jewish student, who along with his friend was called numerous derogatory and antisemitic slurs during the assault, was a local organizer of Bnai Briths recent Imagine With Us pro-Israel campus initiative an initiative which was banned by York University.
We have been warning about the spill-over effect of anti-Israel hate-fests such as Israeli Apartheid Week for years. We reiterate our call to university administrations across Canada to ban anti-Israel agitation from their campuses. We simply cannot continue to put up with the situation where antisemitic hate-fests such as Israel Apartheid Week are permitted to disseminate their hatred, leading to pro-Israel students being assaulted on our streets, while events in support of the Jewish State are banned.
-30-
Bnai Brith Canada has been active in Canada since 1875 as the Jewish communitys foremost human rights agency
Adding a machete to the bitter campus divideAdam Daifallah
Henceforth it will be inaccurate to call the ongoing campus battle over Israel and Palestine a war of words. A new weapon has been introduced into the conflict: a machete.
Early Sunday morning, two Carleton University students -- Nick Bergamini and his Israeli roommate, Mark Klibanov--were leaving an Ottawa-area bar when a group of men began verbally accosting them. The men yelled at them, in Arabic, for being Zionists. Bergamini, a known campus conservative activist of Italian heritage, was hit in the back of the head. He took refuge with some bouncers and left soon after.
The two roommates were walking home when the same men reappeared, this time in a car. According to Bergamini, one of them rolled down the window and said, "I'm the one who hit you, you f---ing Jew."
The trunk of the car opened. One of the men reached inside and pulled out a machete. "F---ing Jew," he said again. Bergamini and Klibanov ran for their lives and escaped unscathed, although Klibanov claims the machete came within a foot of his friend's head. Bergamini says he recognized one of the men as a fellow Carleton student. Police are investigating.
Of course, we have to tread carefully here. Stories like this are often embellished or even made up. Two Jewish students at York recently claimed to have been assaulted at a pro-Israel event, but camera footage later showed no physical contact took place. Nonetheless, I have met Bergamini a few times and I have no reason to believe he would lie about this. He claims there were witnesses to the machete incident.
If you're shocked about the alleged assault, don't be. This is the point we've reached at several university campuses across the country. Bitter fighting between supporters of Israel and those who oppose the Jewish state used to be mainly confined to Concordia and York. Now it is spreading at breakneck speed to other schools like Carleton.
The Israel-Palestine issue has increasingly become an important part of student politics. At one time the debate was confined to campus organizations that exist to support one side or the other, such as Hillel. Now student governments themselves are right in the thick of it. Also in contrast to past generations, a clear bright line has developed between supporters of both sides: Israel supporters are becoming more and more associated with conservatism and the Conservative party, and many aren't even Jewish. Those who oppose Israel are nearly unanimously of the left.
Why? Stephen Harper's Tories have worked hard to bring Jewish voters and supporters of Israel into the party fold. But it is also because support for Israel has become virtually inseparable from other conservative stances such as strong opposition to radical Islam and support for the war on terror.
The debate on campuses now pits one group--supporters of Israel and Western values such free speech, democracy and tolerance -- against another which opposes Israel's right to exist and believes that controversialists like Ann Coulter have no right to speak and that America and the use of military force are evil.
This debate has always been a difficult one for me. My paternal heritage is Palestinian, and I want justice for the people inhabiting Palestinian lands. However, one can support Palestinians without approving of their leaders or Arab regimes. Khaled Abu Toameh, an Arab Israeli journalist, said it best at a recent talk at McGill when he described himself as both pro-Israel and pro-Palestine at the same time. To be truly pro-Palestinian is to oppose the murderous kleptocrats running the Palestinian Authority and to oppose the use of violent intimidation in the campus debate.
Unfortunately, that is not a view shared by most Palestinian activists. The younger generation is more radicalized. Nary a day goes by without a new outrage. As Barbara Kay noted here yesterday, young Muslim men attending a speech by a notorious anti-Semitic speaker were captured on video yelling appalling things at pro-Israel protesters outside Palestine House in Mississauga, Ont. Among the phrases captured on video were "We need another Holocaust" and "We love jihad! We love killing you!"
Wake up, Canada. It's getting scary out there.
National Post
If youd like to be on or off, please FR mail me.
..................
If youd like to be on or off, please FR mail me.
..................
Well at least they kept them safe from the words of that awful Ann Coulter. /s
Ahhh....liberal tolerance and respect for diversity. How refreshing and uplifting!
I don’t think this will do anything about those who “speak machete.”
How many professors would be organizing protests during classroom time if these were Black, Hispanic, Muslim, Gay students... or a combination of all of the above?
So much for ‘hate speech laws’. No words are neccessary when one is weilding a machete. /sarcasm
Quick solution; blow the f*cker's head off and nail his carcass to the dean's door. In fact, do that with all of them. Unfortunately Canada went belly-up like the Aussies and the Brits years ago, but I believe they can still have their shotguns.
I’m not a fan of banning any political opinion. On the other hand, the Muslim Brotherhood, which seeks conquest should be banned. And the anarchists and communists who use violence should have no protections.
coming soon to a campus in the US
This stuff is getting out of hand.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.