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FIREFly Flags at GWU in Support of Student Told to Remove Palestinian Flag

About 20 students, some draped in flags from various nations, gathered at George Washington University鈥檚 (GWU鈥檚) Kogan Plaza on Friday to support Ramie Abounaja, the GWU student forced to remove a Palestinian flag from his dorm room window in October.

鈥淲e are showing our support for Ramie and showing our support for any student who feels like they don鈥檛 have the right to speak freely on campus,鈥 said Vanessa Alarcon, one of the organizers of the event.

Last week, GWU President Peter Knapp called Abounaja to personally apologize for the incident in which a campus police officer forced him to remove the flag, as well as for the reporting system that triggered the sending of a subsequent warning letter threatening disciplinary action. he will end the 鈥渇lawed process鈥 of automatic warnings for reported policy violations and ensure consistent enforcement of university rules.

Another event organizer, Tarek Abdel Kouddous, said that while hanging flags from dorm windows is indeed a GWU fire code violation, Abounaja鈥檚 lawyers from the nonprofit documented other types of flags being flown from other dormitories at the time Abounaja was asked to take his down, suggesting that the policy was being selectively enforced to punish pro-Palestinian views.

鈥淩amie was telling me that it was rather embarrassing,鈥 Kouddous said of the police intervention. 鈥淚n front of all of his neighbors in the dormitory hall. It looked like he had done something very, very wrong.鈥

Kouddous acknowledged that students have the right to their 鈥渋ntolerant views,鈥 but that 鈥渢he university鈥檚 mechanisms should not facilitate those views to be enforced on other students.鈥 He said President Knapp鈥檚 apology 鈥渨as a victory,鈥 but not enough to address general intolerance against Palestinians on campus.

Abounaja, for his part, smiled and posed for photographers with his flag at the event, even though he said media interest has been a bit overwhelming.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 expect it to blow up this big,鈥 Abounaja said of the incident, adding that he didn鈥檛 hang the flag to be political but simply 鈥渢o embrace who I was, embrace my heritage. It wasn鈥檛 about pro-Palestine or anti-Israel. Nothing of that sort.鈥

Abounaja said he has tried to avoid reading online comments accusing him of taking advantage of the situation for political gain, which Abounaja calls 鈥渃ompletely not true.鈥

鈥淚 am not political in any way,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ike, in no sense. But I鈥檓 smart enough to know the difference between right and wrong. And when I saw something that I felt was wrong, I really decided to pursue it. And I didn鈥檛 let people who didn鈥檛 believe in me stop me from pursuing something that I really wanted to.鈥

Abounaja says the support he鈥檚 received from members of the GWU community has sparked his interest in becoming more active in fighting for causes he believes in.

鈥淚 feel really good now,鈥 he said. 鈥淭o see that I made a difference on campus and really initiated a conversation, and to see a policy change, which was huge. I didn鈥檛 expect that.鈥

Long-time FIREsupporters may remember our involvement in other campus flag controversies over the years. As far back as 2003, University of Alabama students in the midst of a similar dorm-room flag controversy wore and waved flags to protest the school鈥檚 policy. (The university abandoned the policy to ban all window displays after FIREintervened.) And more recently, in 2013, FIRE wrote to Ball State University after it misapplied a policy on 鈥渆xpressive activity鈥 and insisted a professor remove an Italian flag from his office. Ball State allowed him to re-post the flag and vowed to reevaluate its policy.

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