the davidsonian
February 22, 2017 Vol. 112 Issue 14
The Independent Student Newspaper of Davidson College since 1914
Inside NEWS Ethan Ehrenhaft interviews recently-elected SGA President and VP 2 Krouded app wins Avinger Scholarship grant 3 LIVING DAVIDSON Davidson's first Dance Marathon raises over $6,000 4 PERSPECTIVES Zach Miller '20 challenges himself to pop his personal Davidson bubble 3 Arielle Korman '17 performed at the latest Teach-In, which focused on resisting the travel ban and xenophobia. Photo by Abby Miller
Davidson Teach-Ins: Students and Faculty Resisting the Trump Administration
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COLLEEN KARLOVICH Staff Writer
To teach people how to find their voice, use their voice, and if they disagree with something what can they do about it.” This was one of the mantras that Rachel Ruback ’17 shared for the Davidson Teach-Ins series. As campus is abuzz with conversations about Executive Order, and Trump’s administration more broadly, Ruback and Arden Simone ‘17, with the support of Dr. Ruhlen of the Anthropology Department, hope to create a space where conversations are not only welcome but required. The Davidson Teach-Ins began as the brainchild of a wise teacher and an energetic student. Following the election in November, Ruhlen noticed a sentiment of fear and anxiety facing the students of the campus. But she also noticed a lack of plans for action. Her response? Look to history. In the 1960s, the idea of a teach-ins became an effective tool for sharing information and resisting the Vietnam War.
Ruhlen decided this strategy could be useful in our own political unrest: “Well, teachers know how to teach, students know how to learn. This is a way to build momentum and get ourselves moving and engaged in really practical, really practical, on-going actions and activities both on and off campus.” When Simone asked to create an independent study with Ruhlen based on political activism, Ruhlen’s idea was brought to life. With the important help of the Spike! Grant, Simone and Ruback combined student and faculty voices, an art component, and an anonymous number that students can text if they would like to ask a question. The speakers that are featured at these events represent the “snowball method” of the project’s creators. Ruhlen, Simone, and Ruback tap their own networks of people they know or organizations they have heard of that have a connection to the topic that they wish to discuss, and then ask for more contacts. Additionally, faculty members have reached out to the team: they see the platform created by Davidson Teach-Ins as an op-
portunity to share their stories and scholarship. The organization strives and struggles to balance academics with activism. As Ruback puts it, “It’s very much education for its purpose. We are giving you the information that you need, we are answering the questions that you have about this topic.” However, the Teach-Ins are not simply lectures or talkbacks; there is an element of direct action. According to Simone, “We want it to be very action focused… we wanted to educate people and say, ‘Okay, if this is something that speaks to you, here are direct action plans for what you can do to contribute to this cause.’” The team has passed around sign-ups to different email lists during the event, held lunch-in conversations, and shared information on the best charities to fund. The Teach-Ins grew in direct opposition to
Natalie Skowlund '18 reflects on the importance of mindfulness 5 YOWL Police Chief Sigler plans one last heist with the old gang 6 Early blooming of trees freaks out ENV Professors teaching outdoor classes 6 Commons receives some humorous suggestions for the new spice rack 6 SPORTS Men's Basketball prepares for Atlantic-10 Conference 7
See COLLABORATION Page 2
A "Forbidden Conversation" on Israel and Palestine
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EMMA PETTIT Staff Writer
tudents and faculty gathered over baklava on Saturday February 18th in the multicultural house before guest artist Gili Getz’s autobiographical performance. Getz focused on the resistance and discomfort surrounding the divisive discussion within the Jewish community over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Getz is an Israeli-American artist based in New York City, published in all major Jewish journals there. His performance, entitled “The Forbidden Conversation,” referenced his work as photographic journalist in Israel, his own efforts to discuss Israeli issues with his family, and the way he has observed tension over the topic in his work. His work seeks to destigmatize the controversial conversation, which Getz describes as “usually so contentious, destructive, confrontational, violent, antagonistic, toxic, and full of angry diatribes.” For this reason, many choose to opt out of discussion entirely. As a young photographer, the camera helped him “make sense of the contradictions” he observed in the war in Gaza. Getz was able to be “protected by the glass of the lens” and then return to the lab to process the film and digest the violence. Through his poetic rhetoric and ani-
mated performance, he narrated his experience as a photographer of his time: “bodies all around me click badly burnt body of a child click…later in the lab looking at the photo I felt numb.” Getz spoke to his father about the conflict during his time in Israel. In a heated discussion between them, Getz admitted to crossing a line, feeling hurt, and entering the forbidden aspect of the conversation where the rules of civility in arguments were broken down. The emotional response triggered pain and trauma of years of Jewish struggle for his father. Nevertheless, Getz encourages opting into the conversation without rules or restrictions while empathizing with the other person. He wants different generations to discuss Zionism, and realized when he challenged his father’s ideas he was questioning his Zionist dream. After his performance, Getz asked the audience to raise their hands if they too have felt a tension surrounding the “forbidden conversation” in their communities and to share their narratives. The Jewish students in attendance voiced a spectrum of opinions, but Kerry Honan ’17 spoke from personal experience and explained
See ISRAEL-PALESTINE Page 2
Self-proclaimed political junkie Gili Gertz engaged students through theatrical performance and an open discussion about Israel. Photo by AJ Naddaff