Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University – Education minister Gideon Sa'ar bashes TAU
over "Outrageous" Nakba Day ceremony on campus
Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar asked Tel
Aviv University President Professor Joseph Klaftner over the weekend
to reconsider his decision to allow students to organize an
"outrageous" on-campus ceremony to commemorate Nakba Day.
…
TAU approved the students' ceremony despite the Nakba Law, passed in
the Knesset last year and upheld by the High Court of Justice in
January, which allows the finance minister to cut the budget of any
state-funded institution or body that holds events that mark the
Jewish state's independence as a day of mourning.
http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=269606
Education minister: TAU Nakba event
'outrageous'
Sa'ar calls on Tel Aviv
University president to reconsider his decision to allow on-campus
ceremony marking Nakba Day.
By JPOST.COM STAFF
LAST UPDATED: 13/05/2012
Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar asked Tel
Aviv University President Professor Joseph Klaftner over the weekend
to reconsider his decision to allow students to organize an
"outrageous" on-campus ceremony to commemorate Nakba Day.
The Nakba, meaning "catastrophe" in
Arabic, is an annual commemoration when Arabs mourn the creation of
the State of Israel in 1948. The Palestinian narrative recounts how
hundreds of thousands of Arabs were either forced or felt compelled
to leave behind their homes, with many fleeing to Israel's
neighboring countries where they remain until this day.
TAU announced this week that it would
allow students to organize a Nakba Day commemoration under certain
provisions, including hiring six school security guards to monitor
the day's events. The school administration also prohibited
organizers from using a PA system and hanging flags and banners.
Speaking with the university president,
Sa'ar said he thought the university's decision to allow the
ceremony was "false and outrageous," Army Radio reported.
Students organizing the event said the
commemoration would include a moment of silence to emphasize the
importance of the Palestinian day of mourning, which falls on the
day after the Gregorian date of Israel's independence.
The event at TAU's Antine Square is
scheduled for May 14.
In addition, organizers will read an
alternative version of "Yizkor," the prayer for Israel's fallen
soldiers traditionally read at memorial ceremonies.
TAU approved the students' ceremony
despite the Nakba Law, passed in the Knesset last year and upheld by
the High Court of Justice in January, which allows the finance
minister to cut the budget of any state-funded institution or body
that holds events that mark the Jewish state's independence as a day
of mourning.
Tel Aviv University responded that the
decision to allow the Nakba Day activities is in accordance with the
law and university regulations.
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