The Tribune TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17 2023 | VOL. 43 | ISSUE 6
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Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
EDITORIAL
FEATURE
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
We need collective action against Quebec’s push for financially inaccessible education
The Dread of McGill’s Deferred Maintenance
Annual Environment Public Lecture explores an economic approach to clean energy
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PG. 11
PG. 8-9
Kanien’kehá:ka Kahnistensera express concern over handling of potential evidence on New Vic site Manfredi shares that a shoe and bone fragments were found on the site Jasjot Grewal News Editor Content Warning: Mentions of death On Oct. 10, McGill’s Provost and Vice-Principal (Academic) Christopher Manfredi sent an email to all McGill students and
Nell Tov / The Tribune
staff providing updates on the work taking place on the former Royal Victoria Hospital (RVH) grounds, where the university plans to construct its New Vic project—a state-of-theart research facility for sustainability systems and public policy. PG. 3
Rising Israel-Palestine conflict: Reactions at McGill and across Montreal Palestinian and Israeli communities gather, grieve, and protest
Staff of The Tribune
the community to act safely.
Content Warning: Descriptions of Israel-Palestine conflict, mentions of death, violence and mourning
CHANGE.ORG, OCT. 9 — A petition was started under the name “McGill Peace” pressing for the removal and discipline of Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights McGill (SPHR), a Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) club, over its “hateful speech.” The petition came in response to a since-deleted post from SPHR McGill, which read: “Last night, the resistance in Gaza led a heroic attack against the occupation and has taken over 30 hostages.” As of Monday, Oct. 16, the petition had received over 2,700 signatures.
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ontreal’s Israeli and Palestinian communities organized events and rallies during the week of Oct. 8 in reaction to the escalating conflict in Israel and Gaza. The Tribune covered events across the McGill campus and city. As of Monday, Oct. 16, the Hamas attack on Oct. 7 has killed at least 1,400 Israelis and wounded 3,900, according to a spokesperson for the Israeli prime minister’s office. Israel’s airstrikes in response have killed at least 2,700 Palestinians and injured 9,700, according to Palestinian health officials. MCGILL CAMPUS, OCT. 8 — Fabrice Labeau, Deputy Provost (Student Life and Learning), and Angela Campbell, Associate Provost (Equity and Academic Policies), sent a message to McGill University students and staff acknowledging the rising conflict, expressing condolences, and urging
MCGILL CAMPUS, OCT. 10 — Christopher Manfredi, Provost and Vice-Principal (Academic), condemned SPHR McGill’s social media posts. “I have directed the Deputy Provost to inform the SSMU that SPHR’s use of the University’s name is non-compliant with the terms of the [Memorandum of Agreement] and, furthermore, to revoke permission for this club to use the McGill name,” the Provost wrote.
The next day, SPHR McGill responded with a statement alongside other local pro-Palestine groups rejecting Manfredi’s statement and affirming their support for the Palestinian people. “We reject the claims by the McGill administration that SPHR McGill’s social media posts ‘celebrate recent acts of terror and violence,’” the Facebook post said. “We are not celebrating violence, we are looking at the prospect of liberation.” In response to a question about Manfredi’s message, SPHR McGill told The Tribune that “this is not the first time our members and allies have been doxxed and threatened for speaking out.” “SPHR is appalled by Manfredi’s direct targeting of a McGill student group whose values and demands have remained consistent and are supported by our broader university community,” the group wrote. “SPHR McGill is committed to providing a space for students of all backgrounds to meet and organize in support of Palestine. As long as Israel continues to indiscriminately bomb, killing thousands, we won’t be silenced and we will con-
tinue to educate our peers, organize, and reiterate our strong support for Palestinian liberation.” DORCHESTER SQUARE, OCT. 10 — Some attendees cried and others stood stern as around 200 grieving adults and children gathered at Hillel Montreal’s 8 p.m. candle service. The smell of burning wicks disseminated through the crowd as folks waited to place pocket-sized candles behind the Sir Wilfrid Laurier monument to mourn their Israeli loved ones from afar. Police remained on the corners while a few men waving an Israeli flag watched the perimeters. On the edge of the crowd was a middle-aged mother who does not normally come to downtown Montreal. “I have a brother in Jerusalem,” she said, leaning backward. “I’m worried for him, […] and for everyone.” She watched on as the swaying crowd sang hymns and prayers, clapped, waved their phone flashlights in sync, and listened to a handful of speakers voicing community unity.
One of the speakers included a rabbi, who passionately spoke about 19th- and 20th-century Jewish oppression, citing a number of examples including the Holocaust. As the service came to a head, many banded together, hugging their friends, community members, and family. MCGILL Y-INTERSECTION, OCT. 12 — A crowd slowly amassed around Hillel Montreal organizers at the corner of Lower Field on Thursday evening, many bearing the Israeli flag. By 7 p.m., the crowd had grown to over 100 people. The Tribune spoke to Avishai Infeld, BA’ 23 and Advocacy Coordinator at Hillel Montreal, before the event. “The way the Jewish community works [...], because it’s so tightknit, and it’s pretty small, [...] everyone has family, they have friends in Israel,” Infeld said. “Many people know people who have unfortunately been lost, who are missing, who are taken captive. The most important thing right now, what people are really feeling, is just the need for community and to be together.” PG. 2