Alumni for Justice in Palestine

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ALUMNI FOR JUSTICE IN

PALESTINE

Realizing that many fellow alumni were as passionate as he was about supporting Palestinian rights, Darío Pomar ’19 reached out to them to reflect on their university activism and its roots at King’s Academy. BY DARIO POMAR ’19

W

hen I asked Sama Zoubi ’19 how she persists with her Palestinian activism, she told me that she felt an innate need to persist and that there was no option not to persist. She went on to say that this conviction encourages her to persevere and fuels her desire to collaborate and connect with other activists and organizations in her community and beyond: “We all share the same struggle for liberation which drives us to one another,” she said. I believe it is this same sentiment that led me to reach out to Sama and other King’s alumni in the first place. It was revelatory to realize how many of my close friends were either presidents of their universities’ Justice for Palestine societies (like me) or were somehow highly involved in Palestinian activism. This excitement was bolstered by the further realization that we did not just have Palestinian activism in common, but also King’s Academy. Intrigued by this interconnected network of dedicated activists that I found myself proud to be a part of, I decided to interview six friends and formalize some of the conversations that have often come up casually when we call or see each other. I had many questions: is it just coincidental that so many King’s Academy students are vocal advocates for an apartheid-free and liberated Palestine? Can King’s be partly thanked for our dedication to leading the global youth movement for Palestine? How does our collective love of Palestine and our desire to liberate its people express itself differently in each one of us? A call with Anais Amer ’18 seemed like the perfect place to start. A senior at Wellesley College, Anais came to King’s in her sophomore year as an Arabic Year student, in search of a “safe space” to contrast the alienating anti-Palestinian atmosphere that permeated her previous school. As Anais reminisced about her years at King’s, it became clear that she had indeed found this safe space. She explained how King’s had given her the gift of actually being able to communicate 12

BEYOND KING’S

Anais Amer ’18

in her mother tongue. With this link re-established, Anais fell back in love with everything that emboldened her identity, and started to see an overlap between her love of Arabic and her love for Palestine. At Wellesley, Anais is president of the Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) society that she established in her freshman year. She is also a community organizer on her campus and around Boston, and has established a large following on social media as @BintFalisteen. Anais explained to me how her now strong


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