Feb. 8, 2017

Page 1

The Student Newspaper of Saint Joseph’s University

Volume XCV | Est. 1929 | www.sjuhawknews.com

Feb. 8, 2017

The next step

Hawk Hill reflects on SJU March for All CHARLEY REKSTIS '20 Assistant News Editor About 300 students, faculty, and staff marched in response to President Trump’s executive order on immigration. The SJU March for All was in solidarity with immigrants and refugees. Organizers encouraged those who attended to reflect on the community at Saint Joseph's University and what each person could do to support those affected by the executive order. “I was overcome by emotions it was really nice seeing people coming out in solidarity with others," said Umeyye Isra Yazicioglu, Ph.D. associate professor for theology and religious studies. "I think that is one of the reasons why God lets these things happen because when injustice happens it’s sad but it brings out the best in people. There was so much support and people standing up for somebody else and I think that is really profound.” Yazicioglu is one of the faculty members that spoke at the march and said that after coming from a place where she went through even more difficult executive orders during her college years, she feels that seeing others stand up for things that may not affect them is something worth recognizing. “I remember when I got kicked out of school because of my headscarf,” Yazicioglu said. “We didn’t have one student walking out with us. Our choice was give up the

education or come back without the scarf. There was no sense of people walking out with you saying ‘I don’t wear it but I want to stand up for you.’ I get emotional when I see people standing up for something they don’t necessarily agree with.” Students who attended saw the march as a good opportunity to speak out as a campus community. “I attended the march because I feel it is our right as a campus to protest what is going on,” said Paul Ammons ’20. “It is the seed of an effort to begin more political action on campus.” Ammons thinks student’s roles are to stay educated on what is occurring in the country and be able to see what the other side is thinking. “Pay attention to current events that are going on,” Ammons said. “Make sure to keep an open mind to both sides not just the liberal side but to look at the arguments to why people may want this. Keep an open mind; that’ll make things better.” Yazicioglu also thinks that staying educated and understanding other’s views is important to come together as a community to support those who need it. “Reaching out to each other and trying to understand each other and telling somebody I am here for you,” Yazicioglu said. “There can be a whole kind of negative en-

Students walk through the Post Learning Commons during SJU’s “March For All” (Photo by Luke Malanga, ’20).

ergy and I think people need to learn and teach because yes, some fears are irrational, but people can be convinced that they are rational. There could be more education about it and more solidarity.” Another student who attended said she went because she couldn’t pass up on an opportunity to walk in solidarity for international students at St. Joe’s and for anyone affected in the country. “While personally I am not affected, I just wanted to go by an empathetic standpoint and it is just something that really caught me,” Rachel Cox ’19 said. Cox thinks the university is doing everything they should be in response to the executive order. “They need to continue to show support for its students and show that it is their first priority,” Cox said. “I think they have done a good job so far both with the emails and with Dr. Reed showing up to the march and walk-

ing with the students. I think if they continue on that trend they will do a good job.” The thing that stuck out to Yazicioglu the most from the march was the song “What Have We Done?” that was sung while everyone was marching from the “Synagoga and Ecclesia in Our Time” statue to the St. Ignatius statue in fornt of Merion Hall. “That [the song] was very profound and I think that whatever happens in the world come[s] back to yourself and say ‘What have we done?’ both as the person that is doing the wrong and also someone deserving the wrong,” Yazicioglu said. “I ask myself what have we done wrong as Muslims, in the sense that, maybe we didn’t do a good job of living in the beauty of the faith in its full and letting people see it. We can start with ourselves. What did we do wrong? What have we done? That is refreshingly beautiful.”

For the city to see

T-shirt memorial sheds light on gun violence in Philadelphia MARK DE LEON ’17 News Editor Exactly 240 T-shirts, representing victims of gun violence in Philadelphia, are on display outside Overbrook Presbyterian Church on the corner of City and Lancaster Ave. Each victim’s age and date of death are inscribed on the T-shirt, one T-shirt for each victim of gun violence in 2016. In a partnership with Heeding God’s Call, an interdenominational initiative to stop the use of illegal guns, the church established “Memorial to the Lost” for homicides in the city. Volunteers, made up of the congregation and other community members, labelled the T-shirts and set them out, for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. This year marks the third year that the congregation has hosted the memorial. “Many of the folks who see the Memorial are commuting into the city for work and may only do so a few days a week,” said Jeff Bowker, who was the congregation coordinator for the project. “For them gun violence may be an abstraction. Seeing that number of shirts at that intersection makes it more real and more local.” The memorial means a lot more to the congregation this year as they labeled a T-shirt in memory of James Walke, the son of the church’s building manager. Walke’s murder in Germantown from last February remains unsolved. “Everybody was in shock,” Bowker said. “I don’t think anybody ever deserves to be shot.” According to the Philadelphia Police, total violent crime, which includes rape, robbery, and assault, is also down overall;

however, homicide is the only violent crime category that has increased over last year. “It is wonderful when faith based communities try to raise awareness,” said Maria Kefalas, Ph.D., professor of sociology. “It’s a humbling uphill battle. It always astounds me that we don’t do more and pay more attention. We’re more frightened of the Zika outbreak or Ebola or terrorism when those concerns, while real, aren’t as epidemic as gun deaths in the U.S.”

dangerous people other than domestic abusers from having access to guns. No city, county or municipality in Pennsylvania can “in any manner regulate the lawful ownership, possession, transfer or transportation of firearms, ammunition or ammunition components," according to the Pennsylvania Uniform Firearms Act. However, Mayor Jim Kenney and the police are working on initiatives outside of legislature to reduction gun violence

A memorial to Philadelphians murdered by illegal guns (Photo by Luke Malanga, ’20)

Pennsylvania scores a “C” rating on their Gun Law State Scorecard for not enacting any significant firearms-related laws in 2016, according to the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. Currently, the state does not require background checks on private sale long gun purchases, and does not allow courts to issue protective orders to prevent

in Philadelphia. Focused Deterrence is a violence intervention strategy that helped contribute to a dramatic decrease in shootings and homicides in South Philadelphia, after it was put into action in 2013. Focused Deterrence uses networks in communities to identify folks that they

were worried about, that would engage in gun violence, according to Kefalas. After that, the police would have these individuals on their radar before they were under suspicion or arrested. “The difficulty is you have to spend a lot of money to do it well, and even then it doesn’t always work,” Kefalas said. “But I hope that if the mayor brings it citywide, that they put the resources to help provide meaningful and sustained turning points for young people who are at high risk for committing violence in our city. Keep them on a better path and make that turning point last.” The Memorial to the Lost will be on display outside Overbrook Presbyterian until Feb. 11. Then it will continue to be on display outside other churches, as part of Heeding God’s Call’s initiative to display the memorial all over the city. “Just because the shirts are moving on doesn’t mean that we’re done with it,” Bowker said. Kefalas believes that the next step after a symbolic memorial should be political action. “I tell my students, ‘You have wonderful passion and wonderful energy but you need to pay attention,’” Kefalas said. “Especially in those congressional races. I think people forget or don’t realize how important that and their local races are. If you care about issues like gun violence, you need to get engaged politically in a skillful way. [You] need to be as skilled and passionate and determined as the other side has been.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.