Blocking a Gazan's Path to San Diego
As a young Palestinian from Gaza, I had been eagerly anticipating the opportunity to study at the University of California San Diego on a Fulbright scholarship. The chance to escape Gaza's confines and immerse myself in an American education was deeply thrilling. With Israel controlling Gaza's border exits, air space and sea access -- notwithstanding its "pullout" of 2005 -- I imagined the long, open roads of the United States and its people's unchallenged freedom of movement.
I love my people and my homeland, but a young person needs opportunities. These are far more abundant in the United States than in the besieged Gaza Strip.
Last week, I landed in Washington, D.C., brimming with optimism. Upon arrival, I was whisked into a separate room. An American official informed me that he had just received information about me that he could not reveal. However, it required him to put me on the next plane home. I was shocked. And I was taken aback at the cruelty of snatching away my educational dreams at the last possible moment.
My mistreatment was particularly unexpected because in late May, when Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice learned that I and six other Fulbright students were being stripped of our Fulbright scholarships, she leapt to our assistance. One by one, Israel let other Palestinians Fulbright scholars out of Gaza, and they made their way to American universities. Then I was mysteriously singled out for last-minute denial based on "secret evidence." Two others had their visas canceled on account of secret evidence before they could even leave Gaza.
William J. Fulbright was the only U.S. senator to vote against funding for Sen. Joseph McCarthy's Un-American Activities Committee. It is ironic, then, that my remarkable educational opportunity is being stripped from me on the basis of the sort of secret -- and fabricated -- evidence that Fulbright opposed in the hands of McCarthy. Unopposed, McCarthy destroyed lives. I do hope the United States will side with the openness of Fulbright and not the fear-mongering of McCarthy.
Israel routinely locks up Palestinians based on secret charges. All sorts of outrageous claims can be leveled based on information that Israeli officials garner coercively. Could the secret evidence against me have been extracted through the torture of some young Palestinian? Was I even the one denounced, or someone with a similar name? Was my "crime" sharing a classroom or a lunchtime conversation with someone Israel believes poses a danger? I have no way of knowing, and thus no way of defending myself.
My education is my gateway to the future. The master's degree I would have earned at UC San Diego in computer science certainly cannot be attained in Gaza. And I am not alone. Hundreds of Palestinian students with dreams of improving their lives are stagnating intellectually in Gaza. The doors to our open-air prison have largely been slammed shut.
Israel tightened economic restrictions in 2006 following the election victory of Hamas. Hoping to weaken Hamas, Israel has gradually tightened restrictions on freedom of goods and people from the Gaza Strip to the outside world, maintaining a near total blockade on some 1.5 million Palestinian civilians for more than a year.
Thankfully, I have received support from people around the world. Journalists have wanted to hear my story. The American officials who saw me in Amman and Jerusalem upon my return were friendly and seemed embarrassed by my predicament.
Despite my treatment, I know that most Americans are kind people who mean well. What happened to me runs contrary to the good will exhibited by the American people. Israeli policies that relegate Palestinians in Gaza to prison-like conditions and Palestinians in the West Bank to an apartheid-like existence do not advance the cause of peace. The United States should use its tremendous sway with Israel to advance the cause of freedom and equal rights for Palestinians and Israelis alike.
We Palestinians have been stripped of our land for 60 years. But with educational opportunity we have persevered and made what we could of our lives. Limiting our educational prospects only perpetuates our status as a subordinate people. Nothing is served by confining our best and our brightest to Gaza. A better future for everyone lies in unlocking the gates to Gaza and allowing us to learn and gain exposure to the broader world - with all of the challenges, controversies and diverse perspectives it offers.
Abed, recipient of a Fulbright scholarship, lives in the Gaza Strip.
© Copyright 2008 Union-Tribune Publishing Co
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11 Comments so far
Show AllWhat happened to CD?
overkill August 19th, 2008 6:01 pm
I'll agree with both those overall. UCLA? Harvard? Stanford? Yale?, etc? (johnston296 has the real answer though)
Consistant harping is the epitome of bad manners, especially when most of the time it is just rhetoric.
Sorry to burst your bubble, America-haters (overkill and canuckchuck), but UCSD has one of the best science programs in the country. For computer science (what this Palestinian student intended to study), they are 8th in the nation. (Check out http://cresmet.asu.edu/nagps/getWeights.
php?deptSet=1&deptType=141)
So she cannot simply go to SFU or UBC and get an equivalent education. Fine schools they are, but this student most certainly selected UCSD because of its specialty in computer science.
Pathetic, evilly so.
I think Fidaa is operating under a misapprehension. He claims that Americans mean well. I am not so sure. Some may mean well -- BUT Americans as a whole have enabled the current leadership that is responsible for denying entryto the US.
A degree from UCSD can't hold a candle to a degree from UBC. And there's no excuse for bad manners, eh?
canuckchuck August 19th, 2008 2:15 pm
Your American Evilism drumbeat is getting tiresome. I doubt the young man agrees with you about the quality of education here.
elmysterio August 19th, 2008 2:52 pm
Done.
I just sent an email to SFU public relations department that says:
A young Palestinian man was awarded a Fulbright scholarship to the University of California, but upon arrival in the US, he was deported back to Gaza due to "Secret Evidence". This is just another case of Israel refusing education for Palestinians. I highly encourage SFU to take up his cause and allow him to come study at SFU. For more information on Fidaa Abed, please see: http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/08/19/11080/
Please send your own email encouraging SFU to allow Fidaa to study at SFU.
sfumpr@sfu.ca
Go to University in Canada, not the USA
Getting an education in American getting a learning to play music from the deaf, learning to paint from the blind, learning religious studies from an atheist or learning peace, love and understanding from Hilter
We should listen to this young man and remember he is talking about the American government, not the American people. But he is trying to warn us about what we are becoming. Maybe not most of us, but certainly there are enough 'good Americans' in society now to manifest such openly fascist behavior.
Hoa binh
"The American officials who saw me in Amman and Jerusalem upon my return were friendly and seemed embarrassed by my predicament."
So he should be. I hope that a university in a democratic country picks up the baton here and invites Fidaa to study.