The Epitaph Volume 61, Issue 2, 2023-24

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e The Epitaph hhsepitaph.com

Homestead High School 21370 Homestead Rd, Cupertino, CA 95014

Volume 61, Issue 2

November 3, 2023

Community responds Community respondsas asIsrael-Hamas Israel-Hamaswar warescalates escalates By Lindsey Steel and Nicole Pimenta Innecco

Photo illustration by Nicole Pimenta Innecco Photos courtesy of Yara Avu Saude and Pelleg Shani

Students have gathered both in and outside of school to show solidarity for Israel and Palestine, mourning, remembering and protesting for the people lost.

I

t has been nearly impossible to be on and asked to remain unnamed for fear of social media in the past month without retaliation, said she also has family in direct seeing posts and stories concerning the danger. She, along with many other Palesviolence unfolding in Israel and Palestine. tinians, have lost lives in recent weeks. Tensions and conflict between Israel and “My grandparents, who are both AmeriPalestine have been occurring for over 70 can citizens, are in Palestine right now in the years, since the creation of the state of Israel West Bank,” the source said. “They were on in 1948, according to NPR. But on Oct. 7, vacation for a few months over the summer, Hamas terrorists launched a surprise attack, but right now they can’t come back because firing thousands of rockets into Israel and ina lot of the flights in the area have been canvading towns, killing 1,200 and holding 200 celed. I also have a friend who lives here and hostage, according to the New York Times. has a lot of family in Gaza who have been Since the initial attack, Israel killed because of the airstrikes.” declared war In response to against Hamas, the Oct. 7 attack, My friends who support Palestine responding with superintendent a barrage of Graham Clark sent expect me to be pro-Palestine and airstrikes targetan email to the not have any layers to it. My friends ed at the Gaza FUHSD commuwho are Israeli, they expect me to be Strip, killing over nity on Oct. 9, propro-Israel without any layers to it. 7,000 Palestinviding a general And I cannot.” ians, according crisis response as to Gaza’s Minwell as resources Harshdeep Singh (12) istry of Health, to support students’ who is quoted by well-being, Clark AP News. Israel also declared a complete said. However, Gafter said she felt the resiege of the strip, blockading all food, fuel sponse was insufficient in acknowledging and water into Gaza, according to the New the severity of the situation. York Times. “They didn’t need to say we stand with As one of two Palestinian territories, the this, we stand with that,” Gafter said. “At the Gaza Strip, home to over two million Palesend of the day, there was a terrorist attack tinians, is referred to as an “open-air prison” in Israel and they just said the bare miniby the UN. It is nearly entirely dependent mum and [referred to it as] a ‘conflict.’ It is on humanitarian aid, as it is joint-blockaded not a casual conflict. This is the worst thing by Israel and Egypt by air, land and sea, acthat’s happened to Jewish people since the cording to NPR. Since 2006, Gaza has been Holocaust.” Clark issued a follow-up email the next controlled by Hamas, which has been designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. day, on Oct. 10, which included an apology for hurting “members of the community,” State Department since 2007, according to according to the email. But some students AP News. felt the email did not maintain the neutral Senior Noam Gafter said the ongoing stance the district claimed, senior Harshwar has touched the lives of every Jewish deep Singh said. or Israeli community — including her own. “The second email was framed in a way “Israel is such a small place [where] to talk about one side over the other,” Singh everyone is connected,” Gafter said. “My said. “One thing I noticed in the email was, grandma is really close to the border and the it said ‘Gaza versus Israel’ instead of referterrorists that came in and started shooting ring to the region as Palestine. [Clark failed] were all really close to where she was. My to recognize the entire state of Palestine, other grandma who lives on the other side which is wrong and doesn’t respect the geoof Israel is impacted by sirens all the time.” politics and sovereignty of Palestinians.” A junior, who identifies as Palestinian

Singh, who said he considers himself neutral, said the environment at school feels very divided right now, with people feeling pressured to “pick a side.” “Those who feel very affected want to feel supported by their peers,” Singh said. “But people want to know what the other is supporting, even when they have no clue what is going on in the region. My friends who support Palestine expect me to be pro-Palestine, and not have any layers to it. My friends who are Israeli, they expect me to be pro-Israel without any layers to it. And I cannot.” While sophomore Imaan Syed said she “stands for Palestine”, she said it is also important for people to understand what is meant when someone says they support a cause. “I condemn Hamas, there is no justification for what they did,” Syed said. “What people need to get in their heads is that if you stand for Palestine, that does not mean you stand for Hamas. When I say I stand with Palestine, I stand with the innocent people of Palestine.” Since the initial attack, the death toll on both sides has exceeded 8,000 as of Oct. 26, with many more thousands injured, according to AP News. The toll the war is tak-

ing is incalculable and difficult for many to understand, Gafter said. “It’s really hard to be so far away when something like this happens,” Gafter said. “It’s really hard to see so many people you’re close to in so much pain, and the loss that Israel is suffering right now, I can’t even comprehend it. It just makes you feel helpless.” Community members have responded in different ways, with faculty being encouraged to remain neutral, principal Greg Giglio said. “We understand that there’s going to be people on both sides that are going to be hurt throughout this war,” Giglio said. “We’re here to try and provide a safe place for everybody. Some people were looking for us to do a whole lot more and some people were looking for us to do a whole lot less.” Although staff have been encouraged to maintain an inclusive environment for all voices, not all students believe they have done so, Syed said. “There was a ‘We Stand with Israel’ flag posted in [a teacher’s] classroom,” Syed said. “It has recently been taken down because it was making some students uncomfortable.”

See Israel-Hamas War, page 2

Healthcare strikes hit home National three-day strikes impact local community

By Kevin Miao Hundreds of strikers gather in front of the Kaiser Permanente on Homestead road from Oct. 5-7 as part of the nation’s largest healthcare workers strike, representative for Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers, Sonia Avila Rivas said. The strike is for new contracts that will give the workers raises and bonuses that were kept from them last year, pro-

testor, lab assistant Yvonne Duque said. The strike comes after frustration, as company higher-ups received bonuses, while regular healthcare workers were told the company did not make enough money to give them their bonuses, Duque said. “Doctors got a bonus, admins got a bonus [and] managers got a bonus [from the company],” Duque said. “We worked through the pandemic and all we got was a bonus from the government, while [higher-ups] got both.”

See Kaiser strike, page 3

Opinion

Lifestyles

Arts & Culture

Sports

Editorial: New dress code impedes on students First Amendment rights

POV: Pressures resulting in sleep deprivation: Reflection on causes for lack of sleep

‘For All The Dogs’ is for the pound: Drake album review

The battle of the bell: football prepares for Bell Game

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