The independent news website of The Kent Stater & TV2

KentWired

The independent news website of The Kent Stater & TV2

KentWired

The independent news website of The Kent Stater & TV2

KentWired

Follow KentWired on Instagram
Today’s Events

Local activists hold weekly interfaith protest calling for permanent ceasefire in Gaza

Activists+hold+up+signs+calling+for+a+ceasefire+in+Gaza+on+May+4%2C+2024.
Benjamin-Rose Kronenberg
Activists hold up signs calling for a ceasefire in Gaza on May 4, 2024.

During their first semester as a student at the university, music education major Benjamin Kronenberg walked past the Taylor Hall parking lot, the site where four students lost their lives, every single morning on the way out of their dorm room to class. Every time they opened their dorm room window they saw the peace-sign rocks on Blanket Hill. All reminders of the price student activists paid in the face of state violence in 1970. 

Today, Kronenberg is at the center of grassroots weekly protests in support of the liberation of Palestine, which they say are inspired by the spirits of those who came before them. 

Every Friday at 5 p.m., Kronenberg, a co-organizer of the protests, along with other activists, bring signs to the gazebo in downtown Kent, where they protest for a permanent ceasefire in Israel’s war against Palestinians in Gaza.

In the few weeks since the protests began with only a few people, Kronenberg said their numbers have already reached over twenty. 

The protest’s inception came at the United Church of Christ (Kent UCC), where Kronenberg is a section-leader in the church’s choir. Though they are Jewish, they said the church is home to many people of different faiths. 

They, along with a colleague, Jennifer Case, decided to plan the protest after they noticed the inaction of Kent UCC, which has historically taken a stand on humanitarian issues. In a protest during church, Kronenberg stood during a choir song wearing a shirt with the words, “Not in Our Name, Jews Say Ceasefire Now,” on it. 

Case, who is in the process of obtaining a theology degree, said their demonstration “began” her own action. 

“A few weeks later, I had the opportunity to preach at my church, and I asked why we aren’t in the streets holding Palestinians just as precious as Israelis,” she said. “There are thousands of innocent Palestinians being murdered by the Israeli army every single week.”

After, Case and Kronenberg worked together to organize the weekly protest, which is interfaith and attended by people from all walks of life demanding a ceasefire. 

“We are committed to resisting in peace for peace,” Case said. “This demonstration is led by a Jew and a Christian, and last week we had a Palestinian-American woman and her baby join us. We seek to be on the right side of history.”

Kronenberg said their faith, and their “Jewishness” is what has always motivated them and informed their activism. 

“I was raised with Jewish values, and I was raised to stick up for others and support others,” they said. “It’s always never again about the Shoah. If not us, who, if not now, when? And I’ve always considered my family and the people who share our culture to be some of the most progressively-minded people because it’s simply in our values.” 

Kronenberg said they consider the Israeli government’s actions to be genocidal.

In November 2023, a month after the Oct. 7 attack on Israel and the beginning of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, the United Nations called for a ceasefire to “prevent the possibility of genocide.” Their calls were not met. 

In January, South Africa launched a case at the United Nations’ highest court arguing that Israel’s campaign in Gaza amounts to genocide. Israel has refuted these allegations.  

“I think we all realize this is so much bigger than us, and when we say ‘never again,’ about the holocaust, about the Shoah, we mean that about any genocide, truly, and this is a genocide,” Kronenberg said. “And we stand up for our cousins who are going through something we went through too.”

They said the similarities between Judaism and Islam are something many ignore, and that these similarities are part of why so many Jews across the country stand in solidarity with Palestinians. 

“I consider the Palestinians, all Muslims, to be my cousins,” they said. “These are people who share so much with me culturally. I feel our cultures align, and our beliefs align so much. I think it is because of this similarity, along with our values, that cause us to speak up. And I think that’s why we see so many anti-Zionist Jews being unafraid to speak up about this.”

Kronenberg said they wish more people realized how this issue affects everyday Americans. 

“We’re all involved because our taxes go to this,” they said. “The United States is 100 percent complicit in this. Israel would not be able to do it alone fully, to the extent that they are doing it, without the United States.”

Kronenberg referenced the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the pro-Israel lobbying group, as another thread in this issue. Since 1990, AIPAC has given tens of millions of dollars to U.S. politicians. 

Among these, Kronenberg said, is Ohio senator Sherrod Brown, who has received $878,299 since 1990. 

“Our politicians, regardless of their party, democrats and republicans alike, sometimes democrats more often, are bought by this lobby,” they said.

Kronenberg said organizations like Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), Jewish Voices for Peace (JVP) and student protesters around the country inspire them in their own activist efforts. 

“The world is watching,” they said. “And that’s not just a bad thing. It’s not just a threat to ‘be on the right side of history,’ it’s a good thing that the world is watching. Because we’ve already seen people in Gaza reach out with pictures of them holding signs thanking organizations like Students for Justice in Palestine, or the students at Columbia … Here they are holding up signs thanking us for speaking up for them, and I think that’s enough to keep us going.”

Leah Shepard is a reporter. Contact her at [email protected].

View Comments (2)
More to Discover
About the Contributor
Leah Shepard, Team Editor
Leah is a fourth-year student with a double major in Journalism and Spanish. She also works as a staff editor at Kent State's literary magazine, Luna Negra. She is a Kent native and enjoys writing about social justice, history and politics.
Contact her at [email protected]

Comments (2)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • J

    Jeffrey RocklandMay 8, 2024 at 9:08 pm

    Of course Jews care about innocent Palestinians, however, for there to be any hope for this people to form a nation with goals other than the destruction of Israel, its leadership and ideology must change.

    Along with Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and members of UNRWA, Palestinians spat on the mutilated bodies of raped women whose corpses were paraded in the streets of Gaza on October 7th.

    Israel is doing an unbelievable job trying to avoid “innocent” collateral death. There is approximately a 1 to 1 ratio between combatants and civilians in this war arena. If Hamas would give up the hostages and leave Gaza, the war would cease.

    Why are Kent students protesting against the indigenous people of Israel and yet they are part of a culture that appears to want to make up for European destruction in the Americas. Haven’t we learned our lesson?

    When SJP and student protestors call for “Global Jihad” and “From the River to the Sea” they are supporting a global war on human rights aimed at destroying democracy, freedom, equality, and the rights of those who do not fit extremist’s doctrine.

    Kent Students and faculty should watch the movie: “Screams before Silence” in order to get an understanding of who you support by siding with Hamas. The full documentary is available for free on YouTube and purposely avoids graphic images while still clearly sharing the savage hate of October 7th.

    Iran and its proxies have vowed to destroy Israel. If you believe in peace, the rights of sovereign nations and the rights of indigenous people, stand with Israel.

    The Jews are just one 5th of one percent of the world’s population. We are a people with close to a 6,000 year old calendar and archeological evidence of our presence in our homeland going back more than 2,000 years before any other monotheistic religion existed. Be on the right side of history and do not fuel the fires of injustice, bigotry, and hate that keeps the Palestinians from progressing toward a better future. Your actions are appreciated by and ultimately orchestrated by Iran and its proxies, whether you want to believe it or not.

    If you want to help Palestinians, protest against Hamas. Demand they stop raping hostages and return them to their families. Demand they leave Gaza and that new leadership that cares about Palestinians, rather than using them as human shields, be formed. Support progress, not destruction!

    Reply
  • B

    Barry DunietzMay 5, 2024 at 10:52 pm

    Unfortunately, another Kent-wired news story that misses important facts of the Israel-Hamas war, and while might be well intended is actually causing damage by propagating misinformation.

    Any calls for ceasefire and in particular those aiming to quell the humanitarian crisis in Gaza must consider the following facts:

    Ceasefire was in place before October 7, 2023 and ended by the Hamas attack. Ceasefire can resume tomorrow if Hamas accepts and admits defeat. However, Hamas continues to negotiate and insists to maintain control on Gaza. Israel can not allow Hamas to control Gaza following this war. Any TRUE sympathizer of the Palestinian people must therefore realize the destructive role of Hamas dragging the Gazan people into this devastating round of violence.

    Any deep thinker must realize that protests lining up with Hamas agenda are inflicting damage on the Palestinian people. Any sympathizer with the Palestinian plight must condemn the atrocities inflicted by Hamas including directly against the Gazan people, and call to remove Hamas from any position of governance.

    Listen to Hamza Howidy, a human rights activist in Gaza commenting on the pro-Palestinian protests in campuses: “The truth is that the
    manner in which many gather to voice their support for Palestinians does more to hurt our cause than help it.”

    And he asks:
    “Why didn’t they (the protesters, bdd) speak out about the fact that Hamas led Gazans into this conflict, which resulted in more than 30,000 dead and 80,000 injured, according to Gazan municipal authorities? Where were they when Hamas’s failed missiles claimed the lives of hundreds of Gazans on October 17, or when Hamas murdered young people in order to steal aid and resell it to Gazans at massively inflated prices?”

    See full article published by Newsweek on 4/25/24: “Message From a Gazan to Campus Protesters: You’re Hurting the Palestinian Cause”.

    But somehow LS reports protests of the Israel-Hamas war without addressing the destructive role of Hamas, let alone condemning its actions. LS instead sympathizes with pro-Hamas messaging on campus. Such reporting, unfortunately, as do the protests causes damage to the Gazan people by propagating Hamas agenda.

    Listen to Hamza Howidy. Learn the facts.

    Reply