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YU Students Rally in Central Park to Protest Genocide in Darfur, Sudan

Sep 20, 2006
-- More than 200 Yeshiva University students were among the more than 20,000 people who attended a rally in New York City’s Central Park on Sept. 17 to protest the genocide taking place in Darfur, Sudan. For photos of the rally click here. The student YU Society for Social Justice cooperated with the Yeshiva Student Union, the Stern Student Council, the Department of Student Affairs and the Office of University Life to promote the event and provide transportation for students. During the week prior to the rally, students set up tables on the Beren and Wilf Campuses, emailed the student body, and held a teach-in on Sept. 13 where students in every undergraduate course in YU educated their peers about the genocide in Darfur and the importance of attending the rally. “The Darfur Rally Against Genocide marks the second year in a row in which the YU student body has taken stand as Jews and as global citizens,” said Sammy Shapiro, co-president of the YU Society for Social Justice. “I hope that our momentum will not dissipate as the semester continues, but instead snowball into a vibrant, compassionate, cogitative student body.” In addition to organizing participation in the Darfur rally, the YU Society for Social Justice is planning a literacy program in local public schools and volunteers at The Manhattan Center for Domestic Violence. A diverse mix of activists, students, concerned citizens, and communities of faith assembled at the rally to support action for Sudan. Activists came from across the Northeast to make their voices heard. “The world has to act, and it has to do so now,” said former U.S. Secretary of State Madeline Albright, who kicked off the rally. “This is not about politics. This is about people. We need to get the U.N. in there. President Bush at the U.N. General Assembly has to make clear that the U.N. has to go inside.” Others at the rally included Ethan Rafal, a journalist who recently returned from a trip to Darfur and Eastern Chad where he was detained and jailed; actress Mira Sorvino; Simon Deng, a Sudanese man who was enslaved in Sudan while still a child; and musical performances by Suzanne Vega, Big & Rich, and O.A.R.