
Protestors march down Market Street to the Phillip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco on Jan. 5 in protest of the conflict currently occurring in the Gaza Strip. ALEX LUTHI / THE GUARDSMAN
By Natalie Coreas
Arts & Entertainment Editor
City College students, along with other concerned individuals, participated in protests around San Francisco concerning the attacks by Israel on Palestinian Gaza to educate other students about the situation.
During the past 10 days Ahmed Alkhatib, 18, a sophomore at City College, has peacefully participated in all but one of the marches against the war. Most of them have embarked from Market Street, stopping traffic in the busy downtown area and went to City Hall, the Israeli Consulate or the Federal Building. He holds a picket sign with the slogan “Stop the Genocide in Gaza”, which displays dozens of images of wounded Palestinian civilians.
Alkhatib came to San Francisco from Gaza City in 2005 as a foreign exchange high-school student and was supposed to return to his family in Gaza after a year. He was detained in Egypt for three months and then sent back to the U.S. because war had erupted in Lebanon. Upon returning to the U.S., he applied for political asylum, which was granted in October 2008.
His mom, dad, brother and sister still live in Gaza City. “It is really bad. Things have been really difficult over there,” Alkhatib said. “My family has been imprisoned in their own home, they have been without electricity for 7 days.” His family, he says, is preparing him for the worst. “They take no violent actions, yet they still continue to suffer,” he said. To him the situation is a “nightmare” and all of it could be easily stopped by Israel.
Alkhatib volunteers for the Western Regional Advocacy Project (W.R.A.P), which assists with legal advocacy for the homeless and fights civil rights injustices. He is also involved with the Arab Resource and Organizing Center (A.R.O.C), which organizes the Arab community in the Bay Area.
Alkhatib hopes to work with City College’s Muslim Student Association (MSA) to help spread the word and inform students at City College of the incidents in Gaza and the use of U.S. tax dollars to supply Israeli troops. “I do not necessarily want to do protests, but public relations, [about] who we are as Muslims and as Arabs,” Alkhatib said.
“I want to bring in educational material. I want to connect the dots,” Alkhatib said and added he wants “to teach that we [Palestinians] are not terrorists.”

Simon Perez, left, a reporter for CBS 5 interviews 18-year-old City College student Ahmed Alkhatib during the Jan. 5 protest in San Francisco of the conflict currently occurring in the Gaza Strip. ALEX LUTHI / THE GUARDSMAN
MSA member Sana Benharchache, 19, originally from Algeria, also participated in one of the marches. “After my eyes had seen enough and cried themselves dry, I felt a compelling urge to do something,” Benharchache said. “I attended the protest in front of the Israeli consulate and realized I was not alone. Angry crowds rushed to the streets, trying to find a way to express the anger inside them and I joined. But then I realized that I had to do more.”
As a MSA member, Benharchache hopes the association will participate in raising awareness on campus about the war in Gaza. She hopes to shed light on what, she believes, is not just a religious or ethnic problem, but rather a world problem.
She believes that change can only come from educating the public with a voice different from the American media. It will give the public a different perspective of the conflict in Gaza.
“They will then understand why we are willing to fight and die for a free Palestine,” Benharchache said. With the protests and the help of the MSA on campus, Benharache hopes that “They [the student body] will finally understand the famous Arabic chant “With our soul, with our blood, we will redeem you, oh Palestine”.