US-Campus-Hatred Week
When David Horowitz returns to Columbia University next Friday to mark his
organization's much-hyped "Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week" (IFAW), he
will find a determined opposition, coming from a coalition of concerned
students and up to nine of Horowitz's "101 Most Dangerous Professors."
"The week of October 22-26, 2007, the nation will be rocked by the biggest
conservative campus protest ever? a wake-up call for
Americans, "claims the Terrorism Awareness Project, which is sponsoring
IFAW together with the Young America's Foundation. Between them, the sponsors
have tens of millions of dollars in their war chest for occasions just like
this.
The week will feature petitions denouncing "Islamo-Fascist jihad,"
pamphlets like "The Islamic Mein Kampf," "teach-ins" and
"sit-ins" at Women's Studies Departments, and speeches by the likes
of Horowitz, Ann Coulter, Rick Santorum, and Daniel Pipes. Doing their part for
the war, the sponsors urge their foot soldiers: "If you want to help our
brave troops who are fighting the Islamo-Fascists abroad - bring Islamo-Fascism
Awareness Week to your campus."
"NOT ON OUR CAMPUS," counter the flyers being circulated by the
hundreds from
"We're just a group of concerned students feeling equally angry, frustrated and tired of what's going on," explained Keondra Prier, an activist with Students Promoting Empowerment and Knowledge (SPEaK), after a coalition meeting last week.
"Certain people are tolerated on the campus while certain people are not. And it's very evident as to who is and who's not, and why? This is about my life, personally, and this is about everyone's lives in this room." "What it does," added Noah Baron of Columbia Students for a Democratic Society, "is it builds on people's fears? And it makes it more difficult to discuss things that are already difficult to discuss? racism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, Islamophobia, and things like that.
This is not the first showdown of its kind at
The Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Culture (MEALAC) came under siege in 2005 for its pro-Palestinian professors.
Horowitz, calling the university a "national scandal," cooked up a blacklist of radical faculty. In 2006, the media crucified student activists after they confronted the Minutemen on campus. And then, of course, there was Ahmadinejad.
With IFAW, Horowitz, an ex-Leftist-gone-Right,
is taking on two of his favorite enemies: Left-wing faculty and Muslim youth.
In a recent statement, he claimed that "the progressive left is the
enabler and abettor of the terrorist jihad," and in the same document, he
called the Muslim Students Association (MSA) a "front for the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hamas."
Nationwide, Muslim students and other advocates have launched a rapid response
to IFAW and the Horowitz offensive. The MSA recently announced its "Peace
Not Prejudice Campaign." As national organizer Asma Rehman put it,
"The MSA is trying to reclaim the discourse from the hands of intolerant
extremists who smear and distort Islam to further their own racist
agendas."
Ibrahim Ramey, Human and Civil Rights Director for the Muslim American Society
(MAS Freedom), added that, in his view, countering IFAW is also about
countering "the longer-term political agenda of Horowitz and company to
further consolidate American state power, military power, and transnational
capital at the expense of real democracy and social justice."
Many students see the situation in a similar light, in which
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