Opinion: Let students speak for themselves on Israel and Hamas. We don't need outside groups to doxx or threaten anyone

Los Angeles, CA - Students rally on the UCLA campus in support of Palestinians caught up in the conflict that continued to rage unabated between Palestinians and Israelis in the Middle East on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. The two peoples have been in a constant state of war for 75 years. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
Students rally on Oct. 12 on the UCLA campus in support of Palestinians caught up in the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

In the wake of a terror attack in southern Israel and the war taking place inside Israel and the Gaza Strip, American talk shows, pundits and partisans seem to have one question on their minds: What are college students feeling?

All this disproportionate attention paid to college campuses actually makes things worse for students who are trying to comprehend this catastrophe in Israel-Palestine. In a time of such horrific violence overseas, focusing on collegiate activity is a reflection on the egocentrism of the American attention span. If people want to know what it is like to be an American college student, then I believe students should tell our own stories.

Read more: Grief, anger, fear on college campuses as Israel-Hamas war divide comes home

At my university, at every American university, classes have gone on, parties have continued throughout the weekend, and clubs still pass out fliers on our main walkway. My world, and the world of every other Jewish, Palestinian and Israeli student has not continued as usual. We check WhatsApp to see if our loved ones are alive, dead, missing or kidnapped while in lecture. We try to get out and be social, wondering if it’s obvious our minds are 7,500 miles away. And of course, there are no shortages of protests, statements and social media analyses for us to take part in.

As someone who has spent most of my college career attempting to engage my peers on the history and present reality in Israel-Palestine, I have long been frustrated by propagandist organizations that believe their “side” is deserving of unconditional support. The purpose of college should be to nurture and develop ideas and solutions, so it’s not surprising that these outside groups seek to recruit students like us.

Read more: Granderson: Those campus rallies aren't just pro-Palestinian. They're anti-colonial

The truth is that as some students have explored and developed ideas, some truly contemptible viewpoints have been shared and platformed, and students on my campus are not immune from this.

Individuals and student groups have issued statements that have elided or even praised the brutal massacres that Hamas perpetrated as being done in the name of “decolonization,” ”liberation” and/or “resistance.” No one who perpetuates this utterly immoral view should be considered a serious commentator on the situation in Israel-Palestine. However, one should condemn ideas, abhorrent as they may be, and not individuals.

Read more: Opinion: We are a Palestinian and an Israeli in Los Angeles. We find comfort and hope in mourning together

No college student, no matter their ideas or beliefs, should be made to feel unsafe on campus. Each viral sound bite, each video of a rally splashed across our screens paints an image of college campuses as deeply hostile to any student who dares show their sympathies toward the Israeli people in their darkest hour. In reality, I believe that most students genuinely care about all civilians affected by the terror attack on Israeli soil as well as the humanitarian crisis currently taking place in Gaza — even students who may be uninformed or misguided in their analyses.

Yet outside organizations, some of which are run anonymously, have seized upon these moments to doxx and harass students on college campuses, creating a toxic culture that generally begins online and bleeds into real-life threats.

This intimidation does not stop dangerous ideas from spreading. When people feel threatened, they give in far more easily to prejudiced inclinations. Bullying college students into silence risks reinforcing their viewpoints rather than opening them to persuasion. And so, they double down, and the cycle continues.

Read more: Opinion: My whole family is in Gaza and they have nowhere to run. Will it be at their graves that we meet again?

At the same time, the majority of students, who want to learn out of curiosity and compassion, are often afraid to seek out information on fraught issues or to engage in any meaningful discussion. This kind of climate makes every student less safe.

Israeli, Palestinian and Jewish students are profoundly hurting right now. I have a Palestinian friend from Gaza who lost 23 family members, an Israeli friend who identified the corpse of her ex-boyfriend while scrolling through social media — and I am lucky to be one degree of separation from these horrors. We are all learning how to navigate a cruel world that allows such atrocities to occur. What all of us, but especially college students, need first and foremost is compassion.

Read more: Opinion: Hamas’ barbarity broke my heart. Some of my friends are breaking it a second time

We need space of our own, as a university community, to mourn and pray for our loved ones. And, through our grief, we must mobilize and educate our university communities. Together, we can create a new generation that will build a world where the promise of Isaiah will come true, where “nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.”

Rachel Burnett is a senior at UCLA double majoring in psychology and Middle Eastern studies. She is the national communications chair for J Street U.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.