Pro-Israel group rallies in front of Cathedral
By Lindsay Carroll / Assistant News Editor
published: Fri, 5 Mar, 2010
Students and members of the community rallied outside the Cathedral of Learning earlier this evening to show their support for Israel.
Pitt student group Panthers for Israel organized the event because its members thought Students for Justice in Palestine, a group that protests the Israeli government’s treatment of Palestinians, was going to rally as well — but it didn’t.
The rally comes at a time when college campuses across the nation and the world have become a stage for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Groups like Students for Justice in Palestine hold events for what they call Israeli Apartheid Week, while pro-Israel groups respond with events for Israel Peace Week.
Jonas Moffat, president of Students for Justice in Palestine, said in a phone interview that the group usually has a monthly vigil called “Stand for Palestine” on Thursdays but decided to cancel because of spring break and midterms.
“It wasn’t like we didn’t have it because [members of Panthers for Israel] were there,” Moffat said.
Micah Toll, a junior and the business chair of Panthers for Israel, said he was there to show that students on campus support Israel and its right to exist.
“We just think that Israel as a country has a right to defend its borders, like any other country under attack, and live peacefully,” Toll said.
He said he “didn’t really understand” the pro-Palestinian side of the issue and that visiting Israel influenced his views.
“I’ve always been pro-Israel,” he said. “But I feel like until you go there, you don’t have the same perspective ... It was very different to actually go there and talk to the people.”
Rebecca Yasner, a Carnegie Mellon student who attended the event, said she wanted to emphasize Israel’s status as a democracy.
“To say that is an apartheid state makes no sense,” she said.
She said people can be misled by “random bits of information that are taken out of context,” referring to some arguments made by those who are pro-Palestinian.
“I think a lot of times, people at college campuses get caught up with being liberal and proactive,” Yasner said. “They need to look at the facts.”
Moffat said that after spending time in Israel and the West Bank, he has seen policies that make Israel seem to him like an apartheid. For instance, some roads in the West Bank can only be traveled by Jewish drivers, and it’s difficult for Palestinians to pass through Israeli checkpoints to get to and from the West Bank, he said.
He said Palestinians have one license plate color while Israelis have another.
“If that isn’t apartheid, I don’t know what is,” Moffat said.
Another issue, he said, is that Israelis are moving Palestinians from East Jerusalem, which is located beyond the West Bank border. The government has encouraged Israeli settlers to move into that part of the city, he said.
At the rally, Yasner said that Israeli parliament has representatives from many different races and that such a democracy is not an apartheid state.
She said she doesn’t agree with everything Israel does and thought it was fair to criticize decisions made by countries.
“I sympathize with the Palestinian people in the sense that they need to pick themselves up and get good leadership,” Yasner said.
Moffat said he believed that Palestinians had good leadership, despite in-fighting within Palestinian political entities.
“There is great leadership that’s going on there,” he said. “Nonviolent demonstrations are happening all throughout the West Bank and Gaza.”






Comments
Israel and Apartheid
The writer questioning Mr. Moffat's understanding of the meaning of apartheid is correct. Mr. Moffat does not know of what he writes. Apartheid was a South African invention and practice before the change of govennment led by Nelson Mandella. I suggest that Mr. Moffat do some reading about the nature of that system as it existed in South Africa and then do the intellectually honest thing, acknowledge that he was wrong and apologize. If he were to read the new book about Israel's economic development, "Start-up Nation" he will see that an element of Israel's strength is self-examination and the ability to learn and progress from the mistakes one has made.
Peace
Peace class in session. Can a simple cardboard robot succeed where world leaders and educators have failed? Tune into Pax_101 on Facebook and Twitter - @Pax_101 and decide for yourself. Join the Pax evolution in Israeli-Palestinian peace-brokerage and social media. Civil dialogue and respectful debate are the roads to the future.
Moffat Doesn't Know What He Is Talking About
Mr. Moffat makes several errors:
He states "For instance, some roads in the West Bank can only be traveled by Jewish drivers.." WRONG! These road are open to ALL Israeli citizens - including ARABS. Since these roads are open to Arabs, it can hardly be likened to "apartheid."
He states "Israelis are moving Palestinians from East Jerusalem." This is utter nonsense. Let him produce some proof. (By the way, why did the editor publish the word "East" (as in "east Jerusalem" with a capital "E." That implies that there is a city called "East Jerusalem." There has never been a city called "East Jerusalem." Even when the Jordanians occupied the eastern part of the city from 1949-1967 they did have the temerity to rename the part of the city that they controlled. This is another attempt at historical revisionism at Israel's expense.)
As for Mr. Moffat's concern about the security checkpoints that Palestinians must pass through, let him answer these questions.
1) How many attempted acts of terror have been stopped at these checkpoints stopped? (I'll give you a hint .. many. The proof? That after these checkpoints were put in place the number of homocides commited by Palestinians has plummeted.)
2) There were no checkpoints for decades. What made the placing of these checkpoints necessary? Are American airport security checkpoints also a manifestation of apartheid?
I think Mr. Moffar said it best when he said, “If that isn’t apartheid, I don’t know what is.” He is quite right, he does not know what apartheid is!
Questions for Mr. Moffat:
1) Name the last (or any) king, president, prime minister of the State of Palestine? (Here's a hint... There has NEVER in recorded history been a soverign State of Palestine.)
2) The PLO has never changed its charter calling for the destruction of Israel as was required in the Oslo Accords. Did you still want to support the Palestinian Authority which is run by the PLO?
3) As the for Palestianians' "good leadership," where are the millions upon millions of dollars/euros in international aid that was siphoned off by these good leaders? Why didn't the PA make a counter-proposal to then Prime Minister Barak's very generous offer for boundaries of a Palestinian state? Even President Clinton blamed Arafat for the failure of peace talks!
There you go again Pitt News,
There you go again Pitt News, I'm sure if there were a Pro-Palestinian Protest you would have little or no quotes from the other side, but Jonas Moffat gets half the damn article.
Agreed!
Agreed!
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