In
2007, UC Irvine student leaders from Muslim,
Jewish, Christian, Druze and unaffiliated
backgrounds set a goal to take a fact-finding
trip to Israel and Palestine to better
understand the nature of ongoing conflicts in
the region. Due to national travel restrictions,
UCI couldn’t sponsor the trip, so the students
raised more than $60,000 from diverse Orange
County organizations and individuals to fund the
tour. Fundraising and planning activities took
more than 18 months.
The group, which includes members of
Anteaters for Israel, Muslim Student Union,
Hillel, Society of Arab Students, Middle East
Studies Initiative and Model U.N. met weekly for
more than a year, educating themselves on the
history of conflicts and recent developments in
the region. They addressed cultural and
religious differences and established protocols
for interaction among themselves and with the
often-controversial speakers whose talks they
attended.
Finally, on Sept. 1, 2008, 14 students and three
advisors left Orange County for the Middle East.
Fourteen days later, they returned with part of
their mission accomplished – an increased
awareness and deeper understanding of the highly
volatile geopolitical situation and the
importance of peace.
And now it’s on to the second facet of their
mission, says Ali Malik, history major and a
founding member of the group.
“The goal of the initiative from here is to
create a forum in which students can express
their disparate political, social and religious
ideologies in a rational and ethical manner,”
Malik says.
Olive Tree Initiative students will create just
such a forum at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 23, with
their “Beyond Stereotypes: Faces and Voices of
the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict” program in the
UCI Student Center, Crystal Cove Auditorium.
Doors will open at 6:30 p.m., and the program is
free and open to the public.
— Cathy Lawhon, University Communications
University of California Irvine 2008 | Privacy Policy | Developed in partnership by: Creative Solutions and Earthbound Media Group
