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"They
Dignified Our University"
Anti-Sanctions
Protesters Rock Berkeley's Commencement
Nadine Naber
and Fadia Rafeedie
May 24, 2000
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In February
1998, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Secretary of Defense
William Cohen, and National Security Adviser Sandy Berger held a
"town meeting" at Ohio State University to rally public
support for a new round of bombing of Iraq. Despite the administration's
careful orchestration of the event, the officials were repeatedly
embarrassed by sharp questions from the audience about the devastating
impact of economic sanctions on the Iraqi people, and the double
standards inherent in US foreign policy in the Middle East. The
Ohio State "town meeting" was a symbol that the anti-sanctions
movement, long tiny and isolated, had come of age.
This May, protesters
at the commencement ceremonies of George Washington University and
UC-Berkeley took the movement to a new level of militancy. In Washington
Sunday, dozens of activists handed out "Unofficial Commencement
Ceremony Supplements," prepared by George Washington university
professor Thomas Nagy, listing "the top ten reasons to cheer"
commencement speaker Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. Among
them: "Albright's sanctions have killed half a million Iraqi
kids under the age of five" and "Albright's sanctions
have destroyed the educational system of Iraq." Secret Service
personnel prohibited protesters with posters and banners from entering
the seating area for the commencement, held at the Ellipse, a large
outdoor venue on the Mall. Albright entered the Ellipse in her car,
hiding her head in the lap of a Secret Service agent and covering
it with her hands, according to an eyewitness.
Albright was
likely haunted by her raucous reception at Berkeley on May 10, where
protesters targeted her as a symbol of murderous US policies toward
Iraq, Colombia and the former Yugoslavia. The protest brought together
members organizations like the International Action Center, the
American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, the Muslim Student
Association, Muslims for Global Peace and Justice and the Arab Women's
Solidarity Association, in addition to graduates who felt insulted
that they were expected to celebrate their achievements with a woman
so gravely compromised by her role in perpetuating sanctions.
Heavy Security
Dampens Free Speech
The protest
began at noon with a rally at UC-Berkeley's Sproul Plaza, where
activists from various ideological backgrounds gave speeches aimed
at educating the public about sanctions which have severely damaged
Iraq's social and economic infrastructure, caused food, water and
medicine shortages and killed more than 500,000 Iraqi children according
to UNICEF studies. Some highlighted the use of depleted uranium
munitions by US and British forces which has been linked to increases
in leukemia and other cancers. Others drew attention to the ongoing
US bombings of Iraq that are largely ignored by the US media.
After the rally,
protesters marched to the Greek Theater where the commencement was
to take place at 4:00 PM. By the time the theater doors opened at
2:00, picketing protesters were chanting slogans such as, "Albright,
Albright, You Can't Hide, We Charge You with Genocide," and
"1-2-3-4, We Don't Want Your Dirty War, 5-6-7-8, End the Sanctions,
End the Hate." Gradually, area filled with reporters. When
Albright's car entered the vicinity, she could not exit the car
without a group of security guards to help her scurry behind stage.
While many
protesters made it into the ceremony, others remained outside awaiting
Albright's exit. Security guards posted at entry points searched
bags and bodies, confiscating fliers and leaflets, and also newspapers
and literature unrelated to the protest. Even the orange armbands
that protesters and their allies wore were confiscated. Some wearing
orange armbands were not allowed to enter the theater at all. As
guests took their seats, security guards began tearing down signs
and banners that made their way into the theater. They even tore
down a banner that said, "We Love You Fadia," which a
group of students made as a gesture of friendship and congratulations
to the Palestinian-American university medalist who was to sit on
stage. An airplane flew overhead, pulling a sign that read, "End
Sanctions on Iraq," but disappeared within minutes.
Raising a
Ruckus
When the ceremony
began, every person on stage stood up to greet Madeleine Albright,
but Fadia Rafeedie remained in her seat. She held her hands to herself
as Albright passed by shaking hands.
At the beginning
of the ceremony, the university pulled a fast one on Fadia and the
protesters. At least a month beforehand, the university had told
Fadia that she would speak before Albright. Fadia had spent nights
on end preparing a speech that would only make sense if she presented
it before Albright spoke. The commencement program listed Albright's
name after Rafeedie's. But abruptly, university officials announced
that Albright would speak first. Chancellor Robert Berdahl introduced
Albright as "the greatest woman of our time."
One by one,
protesters began yelling slogans: "End the sanctions now!"
"You're a murderer!" "You have blood on your hands!"
Security began removing protesters from the theater seconds after
they opened their mouths. Some were taken by force (one Egyptian-American
woman is still suffering from a twisted arm).
Albright tried
to maintain her composure, although she could not say two words
without interruption. She delivered a conventional speech, speaking
of the US government's concern for peace, human rights and democracy.
Albright declared, "Our initiatives on women are part of a
larger strategy for bringing the world closer together around basic
principles of democracy and the rule of law. It's why we support
debt relief for the world's poorest countries, and speak out against
violations of human rights whether they occur in China or Chechnya,
Serbia or Afghanistan," protesters screamed "Liar!"
The University of California reported that 59 individuals were forcibly
evicted from the theater that afternoon. That number could easily
have doubled had her speech lasted longer.
Throughout
her speech, Albright tried to deflect the protests with humor, claiming,
"I'm so glad to be at Berkeley!" Albright referred to
Berkeley's history of political activism and free speech, trying
to reduce the protesters to a decoration on the landscape. At George
Washington Sunday, she made a similarly dismissive reference to
the protest, saying "I know there are some who are unhappy
I was chosen, and I can understand why. If I were a graduate, I
would have asked for Denzel Washington or Tom Cruise."
Though Albright
received a standing ovation, at the end of her Berkeley speech,
security hustled her offstage immediately and escorted her lying
face down on the back seat of her car off campus.
Special security
attention was directed at the Arab and Muslim protesters. The security
personnel standing near the practicing Muslim protesters clearly
outnumbered the guards in any other area of the theatre. Some guests
shouted, "Shut up!" and "Go back to Iraq!" at
a group of Arab protesters sitting in front of them.
A Protester
on Stage
University
medalist Fadia Rafeedie, chosen for her 4.0 GPA and 14 grades of
A+, waited almost an hour after Albright spoke for her turn to speak.
Most of the media had already left. Fadia's speech received little
media attention: one reporter who was contacted later that evening
stated that he didn't know anything about it. Rafeedie later donated
the $1000 prize that accompanies the university medal to the protest
organizers' advertising campaign for lifting the sanctions.
At the podium,
Rafeedie calmly discarded her painstakingly prepared speech, saying
that she would "talk from my heart." A partial transcript
of her remarks follows:
"I was
hoping to speak before Secretary Albright, but that was a reflection
of the power structure, I think, to sort of change things around
and make it difficult for people who are ready to articulate their
voice in ways they don't usually get a chance to.
So I'm going
to improvise, and I'm going to mention some things that she didn't
mention at all in her speech but which most of the protesters were
actually talking about. You know, I think it's really easy for us
to feel sorry for her, and I was looking at my grandmothers who
are actually in the audience - my grandmother and her sister - who
weren't really happy with all the protesters, and I think they thought
that wasn't really respectful of them, and a lot of you didn't,
I don't think, because you came to hear her speak.
But I think
what the protesters did was not embarrass our university. I think
they dignified it.
Because Secretary
Albright didn't even mention Iraq, and that's what they were here
to listen to. And I think sometimes NOT saying things- not mentioning
things-is actually lying about them. [Applause]
I was going
to remind her...that four years ago from this Friday when we were
freshmen, I heard her on "60 Minutes" talking to a reporter
who had just returned from Iraq.
The reporter
was describing that half a million children were dying due to the
sanctions that this country was imposing on the people of Iraq.
And she told her, listen, "That's more... children than have
died in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Do you think the price is worth
it?" [Albright] looked into the camera and she said, "the
price is worth it."
And I was going
to tell her, "Do you really think the price is worth it??!"
Since that time, 3 times that number of...people have died in Iraq.
I mean, we're
about 5,000 here today. Next month by the time we graduate, that's
as many people who are going to die in Iraq because of the sanctions.
This is what House Minority Whip David Bonior calls "infanticide
masquerading as policy."
Now, I don't
want to make the mood somber here because this is our commencement,
but commencement means beginning, and I think it's important for
us to begin where civilization itself began, and where it's now
being destroyed. [Applause]
...And when
the protesters are protesting, it's not because they, you know,
want to pick a fight with the...with the woman who you guys all
happen-well, many of you-happen to love.
In fact, she
was introduced as the 'greatest woman of our times.' Now see, to
me that's an insult. [Applause] This woman is doing HORRIBLE things.
She's allowing innocent people to suffer and to die.
...But in general,
I mean, I'm speaking to a crowd that gave a standing ovation to
the woman who typifies everything against which I stand, and I'm
still telling you this because I think it's important to understand.
And I think,
that if I achieve nothing else, if this makes you think a little
bit about Iraq, think a little bit about U.S. foreign policy, I've
succeeded.
I don't want
to take too much of your time, but I want to end my speech with
a slogan that hangs over my bed in Arabic. It says, "La tastawhishu
tariq al-haqq min qillat al-sa'ireen fihi" and that translates
into, "Fear not the path of truth for the lack of people walking
on it." I think our future is going to be the future of truth,
and we're going to walk on that path, and we're going to fill it
with travelers."

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