Time to stand back, take a deep breath
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Randy Lewis
Last Saturday, UC Irvine celebrated its 39th commencement.
Approximately 6,000 students were awarded degrees -- the largest
graduating class in the history of the university.
Hundreds of participating students chose to adorn their
commencement robes with festive regalia. Included in this colorful
display were braided cords, medallions, tiaras, balloons, feathered
boas, serapes, U.S. Marine Corps sashes, fraternity and sorority
letters, an image of the Lady of Guadalupe, and flowers -- thousands
of flowers -- most of them fragrant leis.
As reported widely in the media, about 30 students (0.5% of the
graduates), who are members of the Muslim Student Union, wore green
stoles. Each stole bore Arabic script on one side that read, “There
is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger,” and on the other
side read “God, increase my knowledge.” The students stated that the
stoles were an expression of faith and a call for unity and that
similar stoles had been worn last year without incident.
Due to a barrage of media attention and misinformation, these
green stoles with white Arabic script brought national attention to
the UCI campus. The reaction of some was that these stoles with their
Arabic calligraphy represented something so vile that the university
was obligated to either ban them from the ceremony or, at minimum, to
issue a statement denouncing them as hateful.
They suggested that the script contained subtext or could be
interpreted to suggest a linkage to the terrorist group Hamas. Others
went so far as to label UCI’s commencement as “graduation jihad” and
the stoles as “suicide sashes.”
After careful review and considerable consultation, Chancellor
Ralph Cicerone in a letter to faculty, students, and staff made it
clear that UCI “is a public university with people from diverse
backgrounds who enjoy the rights and protection of the 1st Amendment.
Our history includes the free expression of political and
nonpolitical ideas, no matter how controversial.”
These rights are regarded as vital to the university. They are a
hallmark and strength of all great educational institutions.
And while at times some may perceive these rights as tested --
even abused -- they are rights our Constitutional fathers meant to be
broad and lenient. Indeed, it has often been said that the 1st
Amendment is intended to protect the least popular of thoughts, not
the most popular.
Many dismissed the controversy that played out at UCI as a
“tempest in a teapot.” They said it was a war of words or, perhaps, a
contentious clash of semiotics. I would suggest that this issue is
symptomatic of a larger enigma.
The Israeli-Palestinian controversy, and how it has been portrayed
in the media, has polarized people to such an extent that the
embroidered script on a graduation stole can serve as a lightning rod
for controversy.
When misunderstandings reach this level, it is time to step back
and take a deep breath. Yes, it is often extremely difficult to
respect different opinions, or to realize they may contain a measure
of truth. But the ability to listen to often-unpalatable opinions is
the cornerstone of a democratic society.
If we are to go beyond the current standoff (whether in the Middle
East or at UCI), people on both sides of this controversy need to
abolish two things from their seemingly entrenched positions: that
they alone understand the problem and that the other side is dead
wrong.
* RANDY LEWIS serves as executive associate dean of students at
UCI. He has worked closely with student leaders and student
organizations for over 30 years and has assisted in coordinating
numerous UCI commencement programs.
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