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The Independent Student Newspaper Volume LXXIV, Number 5
B r a n d e is U n i v e r sit y S i n c e 1 9 4 9
Tuesday, October 5, 2021
JEWISH HIGH HOLIDAYS
■ Brandeis, unlike many
neighboring schools, gave days off for the Jewish holidays. By LEAH BREAKSTONE
JUSTICE CONTRIBUTING WRITER
One of the holiest days for Jewish students, Rosh Hashanah, fell on one of the first days of classes this year. Yom Kippur, another one of the holiest holidays, came 10 days later, and Sukkot, Shmini Atzeret and Simchat Torah all came less than two weeks after that. When the Justice spoke to some Jewish students at Brandeis, they voiced their gratitude for the University’s support of their holidays and religious practices. Such support included offering kosher dining options, canceling classes on major holidays and planning vibrant and varied Jewish religious, educational, cultural and social programming. The majority of American universities do not cancel classes for major Jewish holidays. Jewish students at these schools were faced with a tough decision: observe the holiday and miss some of the first days of classes, or attend classes at the expense of their religious obligations. Molly Khabie, a freshman at Boston University — which, according to Hillel International, has a Jewish population of about 22% — told the Justice that she grappled with balancing going to class and observing the holidays, and expressed disapproval for BU’s decision. “I don’t think that the university made the right decision to have classes because many of my friends struggled with going to classes, and it also forced me to
use my computer/phone, which I would have rather not used on the holidays,” she told the Justice on Sept. 26. Jewish life on campus is very important to Khabie, she said, and was influential in her decision to attend BU. She believes that the university should “take off for high holidays [so] that [you] don’t force Jews to compromise their practices in order to keep up with classes.” For students celebrating holidays for the first time away from their families, the opportunity to attend services at college among their peers is a great comfort, said Brandeis first-year Dina Millerman in an interview with the Justice on Sept. 29. “It was strange to celebrate away from home and I missed my family and my synagogue. That being said, I still felt like I was in a supportive Jewish community and that I celebrated the holidays in an adequate way,” Millerman explained. While Brandeis is officially nonsectarian, the strength of the Jewish community often plays a large role in the decision of Jewish students to apply and/or commit to Brandeis, according to Brandeis Hillel President Sarah Bernstein ’23. “When looking into colleges, I wanted an experience similar to what I was used to. I wanted somewhere that had a big Jewish community and a community where I wouldn't feel isolated for being Jewish, and that community was and still is Brandeis,” she told the Justice on Sept. 25. While not the deciding factor for her, Millerman said that “knowing that Brandeis has a large and lively Jewish population definitely made it stand out against schools that have constant reports of antisemitism. I never feel unsafe as a Jew on campus.”
Students participate in global climate protest ■ Climate activists at Brandeis
retold their experience protesting at climate strike. By JACKLYN GOLOBORODSKY JUSTICE EDITOR
On Friday, Sept. 24, young people across different countries protested for government action for the ongoing climate crisis. According to Reuters, this was the largest global climate protest since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. A climate activism organization, Fridays for the Future, was responsible for organizing many of the strikes across the world, including the one in Boston. Their
website states that their mission is a “struggle for a better future for all; a future where people and the planet are prioritized.” The University’s commitment to social justice shone through when over 100 Brandeis students participated in the Boston climate strike. Prof. Sabine Von Mering (GRALL) organized for Brandeis to provide transportation for students from the University to the strike, Maggie Del Re ’22 said. “Considering how our world leaders are failing to take action, failing to distribute budgets properly, failing to uplift voices of indigenous activists, failing to listen to our youth and failing to act on scientists' recommendations, it just felt like our duty to be out in the streets,” Aileen Cahill ’23 said. See CLIMATE, 5 ☛
Waltham, Mass.
Image Courtesy of CREATIVE COMMONS
PROFESSOR IN NEWS: Hill's new book "Believing: Our Thirty Year Journey to End Gender Violence" discusses change.
Anita Hill speaks about new book ‘Believing’ ■ The Justice spoke with Hill
about her new book, "Believing: Our Thirty Year Journey to End Gender Violence." By ARIELLA WEISS
JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
In 1991, a 35-year-old Anita Hill testified against United States Supreme Court Justice nominee Clarence Thomas at his Senate confirmation hearing. She was the first person to ever testify against a Supreme Court Justice nominee with claims of sexual harassment, but she would not be the last. In September 2018, Christine BlaseyFord testified against Supreme Court Justice nominee Brett Kavanaugh for the same reason. Both Kavanaugh and Thomas are acting associate justices with life tenure and the power to shape reproductive and equal opportunity laws on a national level. Hill teaches at the University’s
Heller School for Social Policy and Management as well as in the Legal Studies, African and African American Studies and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies departments. In a phone interview with the Justice on Sept. 23, she looked back on her feelings while watching BlaseyFord testify, much like Hill herself did decades earlier. “There’s no complaint system for [Supreme Court Justice nominee hearings] and that’s totally absurd –– there’s no process,” Hill said. She said that she had hoped BlaseyFord would be treated differently, but was ultimately disappointed. However, she added that since the early 1990s, the attitude of the American public changed for the better. “70% of Americans believed Christine Blasey-Ford’s testimony –– that’s very different from the public response I got,” she said. When asked how she would have advised her 1990s self on trial, or other people thinking of filing a sexual harassment complaint, Hill said, “find out what the system
is: know what you’re getting into and what your resources are for navigating it.” She explained that at the time, resources “were not something I sought out. I was fortunate because my friends who are lawyers came together to help me. They volunteered and have never been compensated for that.” However, she clarified that her book “Believing: Our Thirty Year Journey to End Gender Violence” addresses violence and victimhood of all kinds, not just sexual harassment. “I view bullying, domestic violence in relationships, and even school shootings as relating to gender-based violence. I do this because victims and survivors for years have said that these behaviors are connected,” she said. Hill said that we tell young girls “‘he’s teasing you because he likes you’ or ‘that’s just how boys are.’ This does a disservice to the girl, because she thinks ‘I have to experience pain if someone likes me,’ and boys think this is the way to show affection when it's the opposite of
See HILL, 5 ☛
Dorm Disasters
Printmaster Interview
Vaune Trachtman talks about her newest exhibition, ‘NOW IS ALWAYS.’
Students voice issues with mice, mold and contaminated water.
By VICENTE CAYUELA
By LEAH BREAKSTONE, JULIANA GIACONE, CAYENN LANDAU and ISABEL ROSETH
FEATURES 6
Waltham, Mass.
INTERVIEW WITH ACCLAIMED PROFESSOR
University supports Jewish students on high holidays
Image Courtesy of ZIV SUITEMATES
of
Prof. speaks about future of humanities
NEWS 3
By HANNAH TAYLOR
Autumn symbolizes a time of change By ANASTASIA OWEN
FORUM 9
Men's and women's soccer teams compete Image Courtesy of CREATIVE COMMONS
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By AKI YAMAGUCHI and MEGAN GELLER
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