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Posts Tagged ‘American University’

Gay Jews Meet AU [NULJS Conference]

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Anybody from AU knows that our homonymic nickname is “Gay Jew,” given the University’s large population, and administration and student support of, both the LGBT and Jewish communities on campus. But this weekend at American University in Washington, D.C., the campus got a dose of both in one when the National Union for LGBT Jewish Students came to campus to hold their 15th annual conference, “Advocating Our Identities.” Like a match made in heaven.

Students gathered in spiritual centers, academic buildings and residence halls to talk about the challenges of living the life on the margin of two communities: one based on sexual identity, the other on religion. Speakers, mostly gay rights activists and Jewish leaders, from the across the District gave lectures and held workshops for students from across the country. Among some of those notable speakers were Hillel International President Wayne Firestone, American University President Neil Kerwin, Standing on the Side of Love’s Campaign Manager Dan Furmansky and many more representatives from organizations such as The Human Rights Campaign, The Aguda, A Wider Bridge and more.

Check back with New Voices soon to get the full scoop on this weekend-long conference.

Lower tuition… yay! Israel and Iran… meh… [State of the Students]

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

Everybody and their mother is trying to predict what’s going to happen in the 2012 race to the White House. At New Voices, we’re wondering what college students will vote for. Well, tonight may have given us a hint.

Most college students use their Tuesday night to catch up on homework or party before class-free Wednesday.

At American University in Washington, D.C., its student newspaper (which, by the way, I also work for) The Eagle proclaims, “It’s time for the most anticipated televised event of the year at AU. Nope, not the Super Bowl. It’s the State of the Union!”

AU College Democrats gathered the campus political junkies in The Tavern, AU’s bar-turned-hamburger-and-burrito-joint. As early as half and hour before showtime, students milled about, bought themselves a turkey cheese steak and settled in for President Barack Obama’s sixth statement to a joint session of Congress.

AU’s known to be a pretty liberal campus, so it was not surprising that Obama got a raucous round of applause when he began to give his State of the Union.

But what’s even more interesting is what students didn’t seem to care about. Obama’s celebration of global teamwork to stop Iranian nuclear weaponry, and the subsequent growth of Iranian sanctions, received barely any response from the gathered students. Obama’s mention of support for Israel received only a polite golf clap.

But students were apathetic about more than just the United States’s relationship with Israel. Approval for a clean energy economy and reaction to Obama’s gratitude to American soldiers was tepid at best.

But there were certainly highlights for students watching the president’s address happening only six miles away. Students naturally chuckled (by chuckled, I mean literally laughed out loud) at House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s (Republican of Virginia and surprise Jew) visible conniption at Obama’s call for a payroll taxes and First Lady Michelle Obama’s embarrassed reaction to Barack’s joke gone sour.

But when it came to education costs, students came just short of jumping out of their seats in exultation. When Obama said the cost of college was too high, one student, with sarcasm dripping, loudly asked, “Really?”

Everybody else in the room laughed in agreement.

Obama continued to please AU Eagles when he called for more work-study financial aid, demanded lower student loan interest rates and, most importantly, scolded universities for raising tuition too much.

“Let me put colleges and universities on notice: If you can’t stop tuition from going up, the funding you get from taxpayers will go down,” Obama said.

Students responded in kind with surprised enthusiasm for the Commander in Chief’s hardline against rising tuition, an issue students at AU are all too familiar with.

But students’ passion shone through where they cared. Applause and cheers abounded for:

  • The end of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell,
  • Decreasing our debt and “nation building at home,”
  • Continuing American exceptionalism,
  • The creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,
  • Prevention of another BP oil spill,
  • More bipartisanship in Congress,
  • Equal pay for women,
  • The DREAM ACT and immigration reform
  • And most of all, the death of Osama Bin Laden.

Sammy’s Palestinian brother | Today in New Voices

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Ibraheem Samirah | By Ana Santos for The Eagle

While researching my article about Jewish Greek life here at American University, one of the most Jewish private universities in the country (depending on who you ask), I ran into someone interesting.

Ibraheem Samirah is a normal college student. He’s a junior studying political science and pre-dentistry, he likes hanging out with friends, he ran for Student Government president last semester and he’s a brother in Sammy (Sigma Alpha Mu), a historically Jewish fraternity.

Now here’s the twist: Ibraheem Samirah is a Muslim Palestinian.

He was attracted to being involved in a Jewish fraternity precisely because it offered a new perspective, especially for a chapter of a Jewish fraternity that isn’t very Jewish (as my article found). He found that Sammy in particular was open not only to his political views, but also to his choice as a Muslim to not consume alcohol.

“There’s a lot of respect for diversity,” Samirah said.

Samirah isn’t alienated in Sammy either, he said. Sammy’s Jews at AU are “progressive” and they share a lot of his viewpoints when discussing contemporary issues.

To Samirah, that contrasted with Alpah Epsilon Pi, the other Jewish frat at AU. When Samirah was looking at AEPi as a potential brotherhood he’d like to join, he wasn’t as comfortable with the pro-Israel sentiments that were monolithic in the group, he said.

“I felt kind of left out in certain situations when I was talking to people just because they learned the fact that I was Palestinian, whereas in Sammy when they learned I was Palestinian, they were like, ‘Oh, wow, this is intriguing,’” Samirah said.

Intriguing, indeed.

You can read the full article here.

Is American University 25% Jewish? Or 12%?

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

My father has always loved math because it’s simple, it’s direct and it’s truth.

That’s not always the case, though. Statistics are finagled all the time, and the student newspaper at American University, the Eagle, of which I am the student life editor, found that AU’s Jewishness was not as black and white as we might have thought.

Our captain here at New Voices, David A.M. Wilensky, told me about this Hillel survey that showed AU is 25 percent Jewish. But when one of our writers, Linda Benesch, began looking into the story, she found that the AU administration actually reported that 12 percent of the undergraduate population is Jewish.

You can read all about how that happened at the original article here. It reads, in part:

Hillel ranked AU the 12th most Jewish private college in the nation with 1,780 Jewish students representing 25 percent of the undergraduate population.

However, this ranking differs from statistics gathered from freshmen at AU.

As part of the Higher Education Research Institute Freshmen Census, AU freshman fill out a survey during one of the floor meetings held the week before classes. The Freshman Census survey includes a question about religious affiliation. On these questionnaires, only 12 percent of the respondents identified as Jewish, according to the AU Office of Institutional Research and Assessment.

This situation brings up a lot of questions. Is being Jewish a religion or a culture? Is there overlap? Why are students reluctant to disclose their religion in administration-sponsored  surveys? How important is the question in these surveys and how does the wording of these questions affect the answers?

It certainly says a lot about the ongoing challenges Jews, or students of any religion, face when they go to college.  Do they continue to practice their parents’ religion or do they pick a new spiritual path that more suits their needs?

Statistics can say a lot, especially when they disagree.