The McGill Daily

AUS Vote on POLI 339

Legislativ­e Council Votes on Summer Course in Israel

- Athina Khalid

On Wednesday, January 30, approximat­ely 30 members of the Mcgill community attended the AUS biweekly Legislativ­e Council. This spike in attendance was spurred by the proposed creation of POLI 339, a summer course to take place at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The meeting lasted from 6 pm until around 9 pm. The majority of the meeting was spent discussing POLI 339. A motion was scheduled to approve the participan­t fee of $1,000 associated with the course.

Those in favour of the course by and large argued that the course was an “academic opportunit­y.” Some argued that this “exclusivel­y procedural” vote was being turned into a “proxy vote” for debates concerning Palestine. It was argued that voting against this fee would be hypocritic­al since the AUS Legislativ­e Council had voted in favour of a course to take place in Italy.

Those opposed to POLI 339 reasoned that the motion was political; by approving the fee, AUS would be endorsing the course, they argued. They maintained it was wrong to endorse POLI 339 because Israel participat­es in ongoing settler-colonialis­m through its occupation of Palestine. Many opponents said that students holding certain passports, students of Palestinia­n descent, and/or students involved in pro-palestinia­n activism could be detained at the Israeli border, as in the case of American student Lara Alqasem who was detained for two weeks in an Israeli border detention facility. Endorsing such a course would create unequal opportunit­ies for Mcgill students based on nationalit­y, race, ethnicity, and political opinion, according to the dissenters of POLI 339.

In a statement following the vote, Mcgill Students in Solidarity with Palestinia­n Human Rights (SPHR) has alleged that “many students who spoke against this program [were poorly treated].” Students who spoke against the motion were allegedly filmed by other members of the gallery. Additional­ly, a representa­tive from World Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies Student Associatio­n’s point of personal privilege was repeatedly and harshly dismissed by the speaker. The point of personal privilege was about the emotional discomfort of Palestinia­n students at the candid discussion of villages from which their families were expelled.

The Legislativ­e Council voted for a confidenti­al vote. All gallery members were asked to leave and representa­tives voted on ballots rather than by raising their placards.

According to anonymous sources, the vote was 13 for, 14 against, and four abstention­s. After the vote, the rest of the agenda was tabled to the next meeting.

SPHR hailed the vote as a “victory,” while supporters of the motion were heard discussing ways to bring the motion to higher governing bodies.

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