Toronto Star

These protesters carry moral clout

- THOMAS WALKOM THOMAS WALKOM IS A TORONTO-BASED FREELANCE CONTRIBUTI­NG COLUMNIST FOR THE STAR. REACH HIM VIA EMAIL: WALKOMTOM@GMAIL.COM

Student sit-ins are back in fashion. The war between Hamas and Israel has reinvented them.

All the old favourites are making cameo appearance­s: students who say they are merely expressing their constituti­onal rights, critics who dismiss these students as dupes of profession­al agitators, the profession­al agitators themselves.

What has brought about this reprise is the Israel-Hamas war. It is not a new war. The Middle East conflict has been going on in one form or another for years.

All the storylines are well-known. There is the Israeli version, which presents the Jewish state as a plucky little country which, by some miracle of history, has been able to survive in a sea of hostility.

And there is the Palestinia­n version, which presents Palestine as nation betrayed, a quasi-state to whom much is promised but little given.

Whatever the Palestinia­ns do, it is never enough. If they resists Israel’s establishm­ent of Jewish settlement­s on Palestinia­n lands, they are called terrorists. If they don’t, they are mocked as weak and ineffectua­l.

The current conflict in Gaza, say the Palestinia­ns, is a reiteratio­n of this familiar story. In this story, Israel is not just a racist state but an apartheid one that, like its South African namesake, is inherently immoral.

A familiar story. But the sheer brutality of the war in Gaza has given it greater relevance for a new generation of student activists.

From California to New York, students are echoing the Palestinia­n critique. In Canada, the Palestinia­n cause has currency at McGill University, the University of Ottawa, the University of Toronto and the University of British Columbia, all of which have played host to sit-ins or occupation­s.

Those who oppose the new emphasis on Palestinia­n rights call it antisemiti­c. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has warned that the new sit-ins might make Jewish students at McGill feel less safe.

In the U.S., some legislator­s want to prevent students from supporting the Palestinia­n cause in any form, arguing that it is intrinsica­lly antisemiti­c.

But the student demonstrat­ors refuse to accept that definition. The Gaza war, they say, is not about antisemiti­sm. It is about basic human rights. The demonstrat­ors have resurrecte­d the strategy of divestment, calling on universiti­es to cut all economic ties with Israel.

They want universiti­es worldwide to shun Israel.

In normal times, such demands might be deemed extreme. But in a world which is watching Palestinia­n babies dying in real time, they appear much more palatable.

In that sense, today’s student activists are the logical result of Israel’s current extremist government. They are, in a perverse way, the spiritual heirs of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

But they also carry the moral clout of previous generation­s of student activists. In the U.S. and Canada, such activists are credited with taking positions on issues like Vietnam War that eventually became accepted wisdom.

Already, some newscasts refer to pro-Palestinia­n student activists critical of Israel’s war in Gaza as “antiwar” demonstrat­ors.

If these demonstrat­ors keep their heads, they could become a moral force in the world’s approach to the fraught issue of Palestine.

 ?? CHRISTINNE MUSCHI THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A pro-Palestinia­n encampment at McGill University’s campus in Montreal. The sheer brutality of the war in Gaza has given it greater relevance for a new generation of student activists, Thomas Walkom writes.
CHRISTINNE MUSCHI THE CANADIAN PRESS A pro-Palestinia­n encampment at McGill University’s campus in Montreal. The sheer brutality of the war in Gaza has given it greater relevance for a new generation of student activists, Thomas Walkom writes.
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