Ne w s
Protesters Travel to Oberlin to Demand Justice
Continued from page 1
place. The Review obtained a letter that Mahallati wrote to Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences David Kamitsuka on Monday, in which Mahallati argues that the protests against him are politically motivated. “Now, 30 years after I left a governmental post, the present campaign against me is politically motivated and is a designed, well-orchestrated character attack using abusive propaganda literature,” Mahallati wrote. Iranian-American College fourth-year Sophie Bernstein expressed frustration about the College’s response to the allegations against Mahallati. “I think that it’s very unreasonable that the administration has not seen the organizers of this event and I think that [it] is trying to cover up something that is undoubtedly true,” Bernstein said. “I think it’s not correct for him to teach specifically ethics and morals as a professor here, especially when he did cover up mass murderings of political activists. I think that a lot of Oberlin students here, we take for granted the freedoms that we have — for example, questioning authority, questioning the government, being gay, being a communist, ... but our people were murdered for that.”
Bernstein was also frustrated that student turnout was underwhelming. “The student turnout is pretty disappointing, especially because we are practicing liberties that Iranian people don’t have to this day,” Bernstein said. “It’s important to note that although we’re talking about the 1980s, this is still happening to this day with the new election of the president Ebrahim Raisi — he also has been found guilty of killing political prisoners and other people that oppose the Islamic Republic.” Conservatory first-year Max Stuart said he had heard about the allegations against Mahallati before arriving at Oberlin, and echoed Bernstein’s sentiment regarding the number of students who came to the protest. “I hope not only does he get fired, but he gets in prison,” Stuart said. “I’m encouraged to see a couple students coming here, but it’s not as much as [it] should be.” This fall, Mahallati is teaching Muslim Oral Culture: Persian Poetry in Translation, Music, and Calligraphy; Islam; and Forgiveness in the Islamic and Christian Tradition remotely.
Protesters hold signs of loved ones who died in the 1988 mass killings in Iran. Photo by Khadijah Halliday, Photo Editor
Israel-Palestine Winter Term Trip Creates Opportunities, Sparks Controversies Walter Thomas-Patterson Senior Staff Writer Over the last two weeks, controversy has developed over a Winter Term trip originally titled “Bridging the Gap: Israel.” In response to a petition with nearly 600 signatures created by Students for a Free Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace, the Bridging the Gap committee issued a response and hosted a forum on Tuesday to address student concerns. On Oct. 18, Oberlin College released its 2022 Winter Term catalog. The catalog lists a description of the project which will be led by Bridging the Gap Founder Simon Greer, Western States Common Good Program Chair Megan Black, and College fourth-year Havi CarrilloKlein. “This project encourages participants to take on the challenge of engaging the deep divides that plague American democracy by thinking deeply about Israel,” the description in the catalog reads. In response to the Winter Term catalog description, SFP and JVP started a petition calling on the College to condemn the project. In their petition, the organizers noted that the title of the project and the description found in the Winter Term
The Oberlin R eview Nov. 5, 2021 Volume 151, Number 5 (ISSN 297–256)
Published by the students of Oberlin College every Friday during the fall and spring semesters, except holidays and examination periods. Advertising rates: $18 per column inch. Second-class postage paid at Oberlin, Ohio. Entered as second-class matter at the Oberlin, Ohio post office April 2, 1911. POSTMASTER SEND CHANGES TO: Wilder Box 90, Oberlin, Ohio 44074-1081. Office of Publication: Burton Basement, Oberlin, Ohio 44074. Phone: (440) 775-8123 To submit a correction, email managingeditor@oberlinreview.org.
2
catalog did not make any reference to Palestine or Palestinians. In order to combat this perceived erasure of Palestine from the project’s goals, SFP and JVP included in their petition a brief overview of the history of Palestine and expressed its concerns with the trip. “The Winter Term project puts the needs of a predominately wealthy, privileged Oberlin student population above the rights and realities of Palestinians experiencing genocide and ethnic cleansing,” the petition reads. “Many Palestinians are barred from returning to Palestine because of Israel’s discriminatory laws and policies, so why should nonPalestinian Oberlin students have the right to take a school-sponsored trip?” The petition characterized the College’s promotion and endorsement of the eight-day visit to cultural and religious sites in the Israel-Palestine region as an oppressive stance because the initial framing depicts the situation in the region as the IsraeliPalestine conflict with two sides of equal power and responsibility, and not as a settler-colonial project, as the petition states. In response to the petition, the founding members of the trip released a statement acknowledging that Editors-in-Chief
Anisa Curry Vietze Kushagra Kar Managing Editor Gigi Ewing News Editors Ella Moxley Kush Bulmer Opinions Editor Arman Luczkow Cont. Opinions Editors Emma Benardete Arts Editors Maeve Woltring Lilyanna D’Amato Sports Editor Zoe Kuzbari Cont. Sports Editors John Elrod Zoë Martin del Campo Photo Editors Mads Olsen Khadijah Halliday Senior Staff Writers Eric Schank Walter Thomas-Patterson Sydney Rosensaft River Schiff Web Manager Ada Ates
they made a mistake when initially advertising the program. “The original program description, which has now been modified, didn’t reflect the full scope and nuance of the project’s design,” the statement reads. “We apologize for the oversight.” A new project description was released at the end of their response, and the project was renamed “Bridging the Gap: Israel, Palestine, and the Politics of Division Here at Home.” Yet for both the organizers of the Winter Term and SFP and JVP, the establishment of the program has meant addressing a deeper question of how Israel-Palestine should be addressed in the Oberlin community. For Black, the project’s goals address what she, Greer, and CarrilloKlein see as a major issue: the current discourse surrounding Israel and Palestine has fractured progressive grassroots movements and made countering rising authoritarianism on the far right difficult. “We’re really concerned that the left and the progressive movement don’t know how to talk about and don’t take antisemitism seriously,” Black said. “We want to use this project to also invite people into a more intentional conversation about antisemitism as a form of racialized Ads Manager Production Manager Production Staff
Layout Editors Illustrators
Distributors
Yuyang Fu Katie Kunka Eric Schank Claire Brinley Ivy Smith Sumner Wallace Yuhki Ueda Isaac Kucher Kathleen Kelleher Liz Kannon Lia Fawley Grace Gao Elizabeth Aduwo Adrienne Hoover Clair Wang Danny Valero Holly Yelton Olivia Lee Thomas Xu
oppression that sits alongside other similar things like anti-Asian sentiment and Islamophobia.” For SFP and JVP, engagement with the Israeli side of the conflict is a tacit endorsement of the Israeli treatment of Palestinians in the region. “The program justifies itself by stating that ‘the situation’ is ‘complex,’ and that the program ‘bridges the gap’ and emphasizes ‘different perspectives,’” their petition reads. “The use of ideological ‘both sidesisms’ frames the Occupation of Palestine as a conflict and not a settler colonial project carrying out genocide.” However, for Carrillo-Klein, the program is an opportunity to hold a more complex conversation about a multifaceted and personal issue. “I grew up in a mixed-race household,” she said. “I’m Mexican and I’m Jewish. My whole life I have had two really important issues that were very personal, which were immigration reform and antisemitism. One issue in particular that came up for me as soon as I got to … Oberlin’s campus was that the conversation around Israel and Palestine lacked nuance. Students didn’t have the chance … to be able to voice their opinions freely.”
Corrections: In “Off the Cuff with Ohio Teacher of the Year Kurt Russell” published on Oct. 22, 2021, Francine Toss is named “Ms. Francine Tall,” and it is stated that she works at the Carlyle Flower Shop. This was an incorrect characterization. Toss is the co-owner of the Carlyle Flower Shop. The Review regrets this error. In “Education on the Ballot for 2021” published on Oct. 29, 2021, City Councilmember Ronnie Rimbert is described as a “Lorain County commissioner.” However, Rimbert never served as a Lorain County commissioner. The Review regrets this error.