Defining Peace
Steven Overly
Issue date: 11/28/07 Section: News
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The conference caught the attention of Jewish student groups on this campus, at least two of which sent student representatives to rally behind their respective stances on the countries' deep-rooted issues. Both the Union of Progressive Zionists - a student activist group that tends to promote peace with concessions on both sides - and the Zionist Organization of America sent students. The Zionist Organization of America also supports peace but typically with a pro-Israel bent.
Four students from the university's chapter of the Union of Progressive Zionists were among a chanting crowd that waved signs reading: "Peace is Pro-Israel" and "Two States for Two Peoples" outside St. Anne's Church.
"They're talking together," said sophomore Ari Brian Schwartz, a sociology major at the rally. "They don't usually talk together. That's amazing."
Speakers from the Union of Progressive Zionists addressed the crowd, advocating the formation of separate, autonomous states for Israel and Palestine. Aimee Mayer, a sophomore and co-president of the university's chapter, also addressed the crowd.
She urged Jews here and across the country to use the peace talks as a springboard for discussions about "taboo" topics such as finalizing each country's borders and deciding who should occupy the holy city of Jerusalem.
"We're trying to make this something more than just a mere photo-op," Mayer, a government and politics and psychology major, told protesters.
"A lot of the big issues that are being talked about today can't be talked about in the Jewish community," Mayor added yesterday.
To start those conversations in a comfortable environment, the university chapter plans to host a game of Taboo in front of the Stamp Student Union today, where students can play the card game with terms related to the Middle East conflict.
Freshman Yonah Meiselman helped demonstrate the game for the crowd at yesterday's rally, which he attended in hopes of dispelling the myths about his Zionist beliefs.
"I really don't like the idea that peace and Zionism are mutually exclusive," said Meiselman, a mathematics major. "I like the idea that negotiation is possible without compromising our beliefs."
Closer to the U.S. Naval Academy, where the actual conference was held, a much more rambunctious protest was brewing with people from different points of view.
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