Anti-semitic riots at San Francisco State University
ANTI-SEMITIC RIOTS AT SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY
An email from the Hillel director of San Francisco State University
Subj: problems at one campus
Date: Monday, May 13, 2002 1:06:04 AM
Dear Colleagues,
Today, all day, I have been listening to the reactions of students, parents, and
community members who were on campus yesterday. I have received email from
around the country, and phone calls, worried for both my personal safety on the
campus, and for the entire intellectual project of having a Jewish Studies
program, and recruiting students to a campus that in the last month has become a
venue for hate speech and anti-Semitism.
After nearly 7 years as director of Jewish Studies, and after nearly two decades
of life here as a student, faculty member and wife of the Hillel rabbi, after
years of patient work and difficult civic discourse, I am saddened to see SFSU
return to its notoriety as a place that teaches anti-Semitism, hatred for
America, and hatred, above all else, for the Jewish State of Israel, a state
that I cherish. I cannot fully express what it feels like to have to walk across
campus daily, past maps of the Middle East that do not include Israel, past
posters of cans of soup with labels on them of drops of blood and dead babies,
labeled "canned Palestinian children meat, slaughtered according to Jewish rites
under American license," past poster after poster calling out "Zionism=racism,
and Jews=Nazis."
This is not civic discourse, this is not free speech, and this is the Weimar
Republic with brown shirts it cannot control. This is the casual introduction of
the medieval blood libel and virulent hatred smeared around our campus in a
manner so ordinary that it hardly excites concern-except if you are a Jew, and
you understand that hateful words have always led to hateful deeds. Yesterday,
the hatred coalesced in a hate mob.
Yesterday's Peace In The Middle East Rally was completely organized by the
Hillel students, mostly 18 and 19 years old. They spoke about their lives at
SFSU and of their support for Israel, and they sang of peace. They wore new
Hillel t-shirts that said "peace" in English, Hebrew and Arabic. A Russian
immigrant, in his new English, spoke of loving his new country, a haven from
anti-Semitism. A sophomore spoke about being here only one year, and about the
support and community she found at the Hillel House. Both spoke of how hard it
was to live as a Jew on this campus how isolating, how terrifying.
A surfer guy, spoke of his love of Jesus, and his support for Israel, and a
young freshman earnestly asked for a moment of silence, and all the Jews stood
still, listening as the shouted hate of the counter demonstrators filled the air
with abuse. As soon as the community supporters left, the 50 students who
remained praying in a minyan for the traditional afternoon prayers, or chatting,
or cleaning up after the rally, talking -- were surrounded by a large, angry
crowd of Palestinians and their supporters. But they were not calling for peace.
They screamed at us to "go back to Russia" and they screamed that they would
kill us all, and other terrible things. They surrounded the praying students,
and the elderly women who are our elder college participants, who survived the
Shoah (Holocaust), who helped shape the Bay Area peace movement, only to watch
as a threatening crowd shoved the Hillel students against the wall of the plaza.
I had invited members of my Orthodox community to join us, members of my Board
of Visitors, and we stood there in despair. Let me remind you that in building
the SFSU Jewish Studies program, we asked the same people for their support and
that our
Jewish community, who pay for the program once as taxpayers and again as Jews,
generously supports our program. Let me remind you that ours is arguably one of
the Jewish Studies programs in the country most devoted to peace, justice and
diversity since our inception.
As the counter demonstrators poured into the plaza, screaming at the Jews to
"Get out or we will kill you" and "Hitler did not finish the job," I turned to
the police and to every administrator I could find and asked them to remove the
counter demonstrators from the Plaza, to maintain the separation of 100 feet
that we had been promised. The police told me that they had been told not to
arrest anyone, and that if they did, "it would start a riot." I told them that
it already was a riot.
Finally, Fred Astren, the Northern California Hillel Director and I went up
directly to speak with Dean Saffold, who was watching from her post a flight
above us.
She told us she would call in the SF police. But the police could do nothing
more than surround the Jewish students and community members who were now
trapped in a corner of the plaza, grouped under the flags of Israel, while an
angry, out of control mob, literally chanting for our deaths, surrounded us. Dr.
Astren and I went to stand with our students. This was neither free speech nor
discourse, but raw, physical assault.
Was I afraid? No, really more sad that I could not protect my students. Not one
administrator came to stand with us. I knew that if a crowd of Palestinian or
Black student had been there, surrounded by a crowd of white racists screaming
racist threats, shielded by police, the faculty and staff would have no trouble
deciding which side to stand on. In fact, the scene recalled for me many moments
in the Civil Rights movement, or the United Farm Workers movement, when, as a
student, I stood with Black and Latino colleagues, surrounded by hateful mobs.
Then, as now, I sang peace songs, and then, as now, the hateful crowd screamed
at me, "Go back to Russia, Jew." How ironic that it all took place under the
picture of Cesar Chavez, who led the very demonstrations that I took part in as
a student. There was no safe way out of the Plaza. We had to be marched back to
the Hillel House under armed SF police guard, and we had to have a police guard
remain outside Hillel.
I was very proud of the students, who did not flinch and who did not, even one
time, resort to violence or anger in retaliation. Several community members who
were swept up in the situation simply could not believe what they saw. One young
student told me, "I have read about anti-Semitism in books, but this is the
first time I have seen real anti-Semites, people who just hate me without
knowing me, just because I am a Jew." She lives in the dorms. Her mother calls
and urges her to transfer to a safer campus. Today is advising day. For me, the
question is an open one: what do I advise the Jewish students to do?
Laurie Zoloth, Director, Jewish Studies Program

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