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How Do Jewish Students, Faculty Feel About the Encampment?
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Six Jewish Cornell community members expressed their views on the pro-Palestine encampment. They showed a mix of support and disapproval for the demonstration.
The Cornell Daily Sun (https://cornellsun.com/tag/hamas/)
Six Jewish Cornell community members expressed their views on the pro-Palestine encampment. They showed a mix of support and disapproval for the demonstration.
In her first email statement on the pro-Palestine encampment, President Martha Pollack warned of further disciplinary action against demonstrators.
Hundreds of Cornell community members rallied on the Arts Quad to combat rising antisemitism and support Israel while Pro-Palestinian students protested in favor of divestment.
CFI student leader urges the CML to wake up.
Prof. Rosensaft spoke about how the Israel-Hamas war caused political polarization and hate to proliferate.
Content Warning: Genocide
Adapted from a Martin Amis novel, Jonathon Glazer’s The Zone of Interest follows the inner lives of Auschwitz Commandant Rudolph Höss and his wife Hedwig, focusing its attention on family strife and workplace politics rather than the unspeakable horrors happening on the opposite side of the camp’s walls. Constantly breaking the 180-degree rule, diverting into avant-garde infrared sequences and displaying long, would-be boring depictions of domestic life, the film sets out to put off its own audience, confronting both the ability of cinema to narrativize evil and the startling comfort of an audience in engaging with it. Nearly every scene is set against a vomit-inducing soundscape that combines the machinery of death with the human reactions that it inspires (and the subsequent gunfire and dog barks part and parcel to the repression). It’s one of last years’ most difficult films but also one of its most essential, a treatise on the ease with which horror is tuned out just as its modern analogue is more visible than ever.
The obvious comparator text for The Zone of Interest is Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah, possibly the definitive visual document of the Holocaust and a film most notable for its refusal to show a second of archival footage. Glazer, who isn’t painting with a documentary canvas, must represent Auschwitz as an operating camp, but he too restrains his camera from ever actually depicting images either of genocide or those doomed to it.
Amid tensions in the Middle East, Prof. Menachem Rosensaft, law, began teaching a new course that offers a safe environment for students to ask difficult questions.
Chairman Jason Smith (R-M.O.) of the Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives sent a letter to Cornell President Martha Pollack that called into question the University’s tax-exempt status, citing what he deemed as Cornell’s “failure to adequately protect Jewish students from discrimination and harassment.”
Around 200 students staged a die-in in Klarman Hall to mourn the lives of those killed in Gaza and demand the University acknowledge Palestinian suffering.
As a professor at Cornell and living in Israel with my wife and kids, I keep asking: If a couple of hundred armed men decide at dawn to go on a rampage of bloodshed, they would likely succeed, so why dont they?