The Lumberjack



Students Serving The Cal Poly Humboldt Campus and Community Since 1929

Tag: Gaza

  • Students March on the Quad for Palestine

    Students March on the Quad for Palestine

    by Andres Felix

    On the morning of Wednesday, Jan. 24, students and faculty in and around the Gutswurrak Student Activity Center (SAC) stopped their activities and looked towards the quad. They could hear the chants and the drums long before the roughly two dozen demonstrators marched into the quad after beginning their demonstration at the Cal Poly Humboldt’s Children’s Center.

    The action was organized in part by Humboldt for Palestine, a collective of individuals from the community to support Palestine and protest apartheid. The demonstrators waved Palestinian flags, held their fists in the air, and held signs reading, “Resistance is not equal to terrorism,” “Don’t look away” and “Mourn the dead, fight like hell for the living.” Alongside this, the crowd chanted led by a demonstrator wielding a microphone.

    “Ceasefire now!” The demonstrators chanted. “Free, free Palestine! Gaza, Gaza can’t you see? Palestine will be free! No peace on stolen land!”

    After about 15 minutes, the demonstrators continued their march, passing by the library and chanting all the way.

    “Let. Gaza. Live!” They chanted to the drums. “No peace on stolen land!”

    The demonstrators eventually marched off campus, heading towards Wildberries. Maria Fragoso Calzada, a student who marched in the demonstration, feels that there are many parallels between her struggles growing up in Mexico and the struggles of the Palestinians in Gaza.

    “[I want] everyone to be liberated and supported,” Fragoso Calzada said. “[We need to] keep educating, because education is power and it’s liberation.”

  • Students honor Palestinian lives lost

    Students honor Palestinian lives lost

    by Jasmin Shirazian

    Students gathered in the University Center quad on Oct. 27 for a vigil to honor the lives that have been lost due to the war in Palestine. 

    Student and organizer of the vigil, Jamilla, who has declined to share her last name, began by thanking the crowd for joining her to remember and honor the Palestinian people. She continued speaking about the attacks that had been launched onto civilians, mentioning the resilience of the Palestinian people and expressing thankfulness for the safety of her family members that are still in Palestine. 

    Jamilla passed the microphone to her friend and colleague, who told a personal story of growing up in New Jersey as a young Jewish girl, being told to collect donations for causes that funded tree planting in Israel and feeling responsible for the loss of lives after being informed on the history of the State of Israel. The microphone was passed to various students and faculty members who had prepared speeches entailing their experiences and calling for an end to the occupation of Palestine.

    Throughout the speeches, a few were able to form a volunteer group, with students and community members offering to be involved in gathering press, spreading awareness, helping with city council matters and more. Jamilla ended the vigil with chants for peace in Palestine as classes were being let out at 1 p.m. 

    Students and community members alike attended the vigil. Kiara Farias, a Critical Race and Gender Sexualities (CRGS) major, attended the vigil to become more educated on what’s happening in Gaza and the West Bank and to show their support for Palestinians. 

    “This is a humanitarian crisis,” Farias said. “[I am] forever and always going to be against genocide and going to [support] liberation for those like Palestinian people.” 

    Michael Steeleman, also a CRGS major, attended the vigil for the same reasons as Farais. 

    “I come from a population who was forcibly removed from their land and is still continuing to deal with that trauma,” Steeleman said. “I think it’s ridiculous to still view that and have that happen in the present day.” 

    Steeleman and Farias both believe that through unity, petitions, protest and creating opportunities to show community support, vital steps can be taken to make a difference individually and collectively. 

    One of the students who volunteered to help with organizing future vigils and protests is Margarita Fedorova.

    “I’m here because I feel pain – I heard the cries of Palestinians in Gaza, for people to draw awareness and support,” Fedorova said. “I’m Ukrainian, and we have a lot more in common than people may think. As long as we keep talking about it, things can get better.” 

    Jamilla, the organizer of this vigil, has been taking several initiatives to educate the community on what is happening, such as the history of resistance through embroidery. 

    “The level of violence that we are seeing happen right now is just the most horrific, egregious thing I’ve seen broadcast on TV,” Jamilla said. “I’m grieving. I have family and friends in Gaza that have lost their homes at this point. This is the least I can do to be speaking out against that, and organizing a collective response to end this horrible violence.”

    Jamilla believes that the university needs to have a stronger stance in response to what is happening to Palestinians. 

    “A neutral stance on this is unacceptable. The university really should be… acknowledging the level of violence of what this actually is, and not just taking a neutral stance because they’re worried about creating riffs or waves,” Jamilla said. “It’s about being against genocide, and our voices matter in bringing an end to that.”