Press: Student Activism Moves From Rallies to Journals
from The Jewish Week
Last year, Bari Weiss was one of a small group of student activists on
the Columbia University campus protesting the alleged anti-Israel bias
of some Mideast studies professors, which became an international
issue.
This year, as a junior, she has channeled her energies into helping to
found The Current, a campus journal at Columbia dealing with current
politics, culture and Jewish affairs.
"I'm an activist at heart," Weiss said this week, "but I think that a
journal of ideas may have a longer lasting impact than protests and
rallies."
Weiss, a religion and history major, says she is proud to have
produced the first issue of the planned twice-a-year-journal with a
staff of five editors this past semester. Its topics range from female
chauvinism to concern about admitting Turkey to the European Union to
qualified support for Israel's security barrier.
The issue features "some of the best writers on campus," according to
Weiss, though she hopes to have more Jewish content in the next issue.
The new journal is part of an ambitious project undertaken by the
Shalem Center, a Jerusalem-based think tank, to foster the creation
and support of serious journals dealing with Israel and Jewish life at
campuses across North America.
In addition to The Current at Columbia, new journals were published
this fall, with the help of Shalem, at the University of Toronto and
Brandeis. Next semester the list will grow to include New York
University, the University of Michigan, the University of Pennsylvania
and Princeton.
Shalem also provided a grant to the existing periodical at Yale, the
Yale Israel Journal.
The goal of the program is to "facilitate a place for Jewish students
to have open discussions on contentious issues on their minds," said
Aharon Horwitz, 25, coordinator of the Azure Student Journal project.
Azure is the Shalem Center's quarterly "on issues concerning the
Jewish public," with both Hebrew and English editions.
Horwitz is a graduate of Columbia University and fellow activist with
Weiss in last year's campaign that highlighted how some pro-Israel
students feel intimidated by their professor's Mideast statements.
He made aliyah in July, and started working on the Azure project the
next day, running workshops for about 20 American college interns.
About half the interns were budding journalists focused on the art of
starting and sustaining a campus journal, from writing and editing
skills to fundraising.
Shalem fellows like Michael Oren, a historian; Yossi Klein Halevi, a
journalist; and David Hazony, the editor in chief of Azure, met with
and advised the college students.
Having observed the political activism at Columbia last year, Hazony
said the Shalem officials felt "the fight needed to be taken to a
deeper level," noting that some of the student activists told him they
"felt outgunned on an intellectual level, and it hurt them."
Hazony said college life lends itself to like-minded students bonding
intellectually and socially over a common vision, and that producing a
Jewish thought journal can be the center of the vision. He noted that
many Jewish students on American campuses "feel in a profound way that
they are in alien territory, and their fundamental assumptions about
their identities as Zionists and Jews are not sustained by the
intellectual atmosphere" around them.
The Azure project is intended to create "a safe haven" for Jewish
students to "think more deeply about Judaism, Zionism and the Jewish
people in a non-hostile environment," Hazony said. Providing an
intellectual and social home for them through the journals can make
them "feel they are not alone," he added.
The funding, in the form of grants of up to $2,500 per journal, came
from a $100,000 gift from Roger Hertog, a New York businessman and
president of Shalem, and his wife, Susan.
Hertog, board chairman of The New Republic and The New York Sun, said
he became involved in the project because "universities can be lonely
places for Jewish men and women, especially if they identify with
Jewish or Israel interests." He said that "while rallies and speakers
are important, ideas really do matter" and that "journals can have a
large impact" on the thinking of college students.
Weiss agrees. She said her intense activism at Columbia last year
taught her that "protests are really important sometimes" — Weiss
still recalls attending the huge rally for Soviet Jewry in Washington
in 1987 at the age of 3 — but that "ideas are very powerful," and that
Jewish students at Columbia are looking for something more compelling
than "falafel and cool parties" to make them identify with Israel.
An activist for the American Jewish World Service and on behalf of
Darfur, Weiss had planned to go to Uganda last summer to work with the
Jewish community there, but decided to go to Israel as an intern with
the new Azure program, hoping to start a Jewish journal at Columbia.
She said she wanted to challenge herself in terms of writing skills —
she has a column every other Thursday in the Columbia campus daily,
The Spectator — and help "build a community" around Jewish ideas and
concerns.
Another Azure summer intern was Sarah Breger, a student at Penn who
helped produce the first issue of Kedmah three weeks ago on her
campus.
In keeping with its name, Kedmah will focus on the future, she said,
noting that the original title of Kadima was changed after Ariel
Sharon used it for his new political party.
"We switched it because we wanted to be clear that we have no
particular politics or ideology," she said.
Like the other new Jewish campus journals, Kedmah is a mix of long and
short articles, interviews, reviews and fiction. It is open to a wide
range of views and opinions on Jewish and Israel topics, Breger said,
with the only red line so far that it will not take articles calling
for the dissolution of the Jewish state.
Breger, a co-editor, said Penn is about 30 percent Jewish, and the new
journal "should draw from a large group of students who care about
their Jewish identity."
At the University of Toronto, which has about 3,000 Jewish students,
the editors of the new journal, Notebook, which came out few weeks
ago, say they are hoping to attract readers from outside the Jewish
community as well.
Non-Jews wrote one-third of the articles in the first issue, according
to editor Brauna Doidge, a sophomore. She said Jewish life is thriving
on campus, but there were no Jewish publications and she thought a
journal would be "a great forum for ideas."
Horwitz, the coordinator of the journals project, emphasized that each
journal was conceived according to its own vision and that Shalem was
not imposing any ideological or political imprint.
"We are looking for quality and commitment, and we have faith in the
students' interests and talents," he said.
Shalem has set up a listserv for the student editors to stay in touch,
and hopes to sponsor a conference with well-known writers to attract
more attention to the project.
Horwitz noted that a century ago modern Zionism was founded by young
men and women who shared and debated their dreams and politics through
their writings.
"If we can create a forum for dealing with the major issues facing the
Jewish people," he said, "these ideas could be with us for the next 50
years."
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