the California Aggie SERVING THE UC DAVIS CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY SINCE 1915
VOLUME 135, ISSUE 15 | THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2017
Muslim students respond to recent Events Muslim Student Association curates five-part Davis Muslim lecture series
GENESIA TING / AGGIE
BY AARON LISS campus@ucdavis.edu The UC Davis Muslim Student Association (MSA) will host a fivepart Islam awareness lecture series on campus for students in response to the current political climate and prevalence of negative attitudes toward Islam. The hour-long lectures, which include topics such as “The Chameleon Muslim” and the “Rituals and Practices of Muslims,” illuminate the shared and diverse experiences of Davis Muslims. Kumran Islam, a Muslim alumnus of UC Davis, spoke at the opening event on Jan. 25, “What is Islam,” to dispel myths and spread accurate knowledge regarding the Muslim religion. Islam’s lecture provided an interactive introduction to the series, as he encouraged participation, questions and debate from the audience. The recent Islamic Center of Davis hate crime emboldened Islam to speak and question the acceptance of his religion within America. Islam spoke about the Jan. 22 attack on the Islamic Center of Davis, where an unidentified female vandal laid bacon on door handles and shattered windows. “I thought it was important to come today considering the recent hate attack on the local masjid,” Islam said. “I think it’s not only important for us to be aware of our Muslim brothers and sisters, but to understand how incidents like this cause us to reflect upon ourselves and who we are as American people — whether we truly fulfill the ideals that we proclaim to [have] as an American society.” Two days after the first Davis Muslim lecture, on Jan. 27, President Donald Trump issued an executive order to temporarily ban travel from seven predominantly Muslim countries. Hansa El-Nounou, a first-year communication major, an MSA member and an upcoming speaker at the Feb. 15 talk, felt disenfranchised by the new president’s executive order. “My personal, and others’, reaction was kind of that of mortification.” El-Nounou said. “We were holding onto the hope that he wasn’t
actually going to pull through with it. It was really scary, but also, in a weird way, it was empowering to the community because we realized we have to stick together. We’re doing our best to be good Americans.” Aafreen Latheef, a third-year civil engineering major and MSA member, worked in conjunction with ASUCD to present the lecture series. Latheef felt compelled to respond to political and social contention surrounding Islam. “The problem, especially with the current president, is that there’s a lot of bigotry towards minorities and a lot of Muslim people are feeling threatened and attacked,” Latheef said. “We just wanted to spread knowledge about Islam.” Adilla Jamaludin, a former ASUCD senator and a third-year international agricultural development major, started planning the series
BRIAN LANDRY / AGGIE
UC DAVIS TELLS ITS LOVE STORIES Students, alumni share how they met their partners in Davis BY GILLIAN ALLEN features@ucdavis.edu From picnics at the Davis Farmers Market to weddings in the Arboretum, UC Davis Aggies have carved out time in their busy quarters for a little romance. In the spirit of Valentine’s Day, The California Aggie reached out to students and alumni through social media, asking them to volunteer their campus love storwies. The story of Genie Obina, a fourth-year community and regional development major, and recent managerial economics graduate Cameron Do began in Segundo’s Ryerson Hall. After meeting through mutual friends, they eventually became so close that Obina was able to turn to Do when she had to go home to the Bay Area for a family emergency. “I had to go home but didn’t have any way of getting there,” Obina said. “I messaged our friend group chat asking if anyone could give me a ride to the Bay Area, and [Do] responded
saying he would bring me. Him being there as a good support system and someone I could trust really helped me handle the situation and brought us closer, but was also the starting point of another relationship beyond friendship.” Obina said her family always kept Do in mind because of how kind he was to take her to the hospital, and she noted that their relationship may have not ever had the chance to develop if she did not have to go home for an unfortunate circumstance. “My family had never met [Do] but he came with me to the hospital where almost my entire family was,” Obina said. “At first they were confused about who he was, but later everyone, even my aunts and uncles, went up to him and told him how nice it was that he brought me to the hospital and how much they appreciated it.” Obina said that this situation solidified her relationship with Do into something more than friendship. If it hadn’t happened, Obina and Do’s love story might have never lasted the year
last quarter. “I came up with this idea when I was still a senator with ASUCD last year, and the whole idea was that with the current political climate, it just seemed like the right time to have an informational series of lectures about the Muslim faith,” Jamaludin said. ”For me, it’s really nice to see this series happen because there’s different experiences for different Muslims on campus. There isn’t just one mold of what a Muslim is and it’s important to have that type of diversity of experiences shared. It’s also a great way for other students who are learning about Islam or the Middle East to be exposed to it on their own campus.” Latheef invites and encourages non-Muslims interested in Islam to attend the remaining events. “We wanted to target it towards non-Muslims who were curious,” Latheef said. “Maybe they’ll see that it’s a very peaceful religion.”
they have been together. Tica Bragg, a second-year cognitive science major, was not an experienced soccer player when she joined a co-ed intramural (IM) team for fun during her freshman year. After some time, she decided that the team was not something she wanted to be a part of anymore, but she went to one last practice anyway. That fateful night, she began to fall in love with now-boyfriend of nine months Emile Rappaport, a second-year theater major. “At the end of practice I asked if anyone wanted to go to the dining commons for late night knowing no one would pass that up,” Bragg said. “I just remember thinking he was unique and I liked that. We talked for a while that night, and the rest is history.” Rappaport swore that it was a combination of his charm, funny personality and, most importantly, the two goals he scored during an IM game that helped him win over Bragg. “Approaching summer, we had only been dating for three weeks,” Rappaport said. “At that point you don’t really know what the other person’s life is life back home, so there was an elevated amount of trust we needed to put in each other so that we could make it through the entire summer.” Bragg believes that the distance over summer actually made them fall even more in love and proved that they were on the same page about wanting to make the relationship last. Bragg’s own likes and interests are now becoming a part of Rappaport’s life too, and vice versa. For example, Bragg was inspired enough by Rappaport’s passion for theater to audition for a role in a play, something she said she never would have done if it were not for him. “I love dancing and just doing adventurous things, and [Rappaport] is someone who always wants to do things I love with me,” Bragg said. “For example, we just planned a trip to go skydiving together and I love that we can go do crazy things together.” Regardless of whether or not she continues her newfound interest in theater, Bragg supports Rappaport by going to his shows and even surprising him by bringing his parents along with her. Bragg and Rappaport both appreciate the many
different environments that Davis has to offer — especially IM sports — and agree that the campus is a place where amazing relationships can form. “UC Davis is such a crazy-large campus with so many different types of people,” Bragg said. “It’s amazing when you put yourself out there in a different environment to see the people you’ll meet and the people you’ll eventually fall in love with.” Falling in love is exactly what Alyssa Jenkins and Dan Elefant did, two UC Davis alumni from the Class of 1990. This happily married couple of 25 years met in 1987 in the Tercero snack shop where Jenkins happened to be playing arcade games. “This guy came down and wanted to play the game next to mine,” Jenkins said. “At that moment, my game ended and I wanted to learn how to play his so he started showing me how and that sparked us talking. At the time I didn’t think anything of it.” A week or so after they first met, Jenkins returned to Davis after spring break to find a note on her dorm whiteboard from Elefant inviting her to a party. Jenkins remembered Elefant as somebody she got along with and enjoyed talking to, but she was not on the prowl to meet someone, which was one of the reasons she attributes to their relationship working out. “[Elefant] didn’t meet me when I had makeup on, or was dressed cuter, or was being more flirtatious, so [for] the entirety of our dating period I never felt like I had to be anything other than myself,” Jenkins said. “When you’re trying to meet somebody you kind of put up a front, but the day we met I was just out there to kill time and he was there on a study break in the middle of finals, but instead he ended up down there for three hours talking to me.” Jenkins was very confident in knowing what she wanted from a possible relationship. “My first two quarters I dated people that really did not fit my value system, so that made me realize that they weren’t keepers,” Jenkins said. “[Elefant] and I share the same values and even though we have different traits, we complement each other. You have to have the same value system and that is the core of VALENTINES on 10