fbpx

DePaul University students voting on hummus brand

Students at DePaul University in Chicago are voting on what brand of hummus they want served on campus. The outcome of this week\'s student referendum, which was requested by Students for Justice in Palestine, is nonbinding.
[additional-authors]
May 18, 2011

Students at DePaul University in Chicago are voting on what brand of hummus they want served on campus.

The outcome of this week’s student referendum, which was requested by Students for Justice in Palestine, is nonbinding.

The Sabra brand of the chickpea dip had been served until last November, when the pro-Palestinian student group objected because Sabra is half-owned by The Strauss Group. Strauss has publicly supported the Israel Defense Forces troops, and provides care packages and sports equipment to Israel’s Golani and Givati brigades.

The DePaul food service suspended selling Sabra hummus, even though the request did not go through the university’s internal Fair Business Practices Committee, as is customary. The brand was reinstated pending a decision by the committee, which will take the student referendum into consideration.

The Fair Business Practices Committee is made up of three faculty members, three students and eight staff representatives. Its purpose is to protect the integrity of the university’s mission and values by examining issues raised concerning DePaul’s contracts and contractors.

The committee is set to make a recommendation soon to the university’s president, according to the university, who will make a final decision.

The initiative is “one more salvo in the global assault on Israel’s right to exist,” Michael Kotzin, executive vice president of the Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago, said in a statement.

“As trivial as the determination of which kind of hummus to serve to students at a local university may seem, this campaign has serious ramifications. SJP is using misleading language to cloak their real intention in the guise of concern for human rights. In fact, their ultimate goal is the elimination of the State of Israel.”

In December, a Princeton student referendum on whether to ask the university’s dining services to provide an alternative brand of hummus to Sabra was defeated.

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

‘Playmakers’: A Jewish Toyland

The entire toy industry in America was largely Jewish, from the company founders and executives to the designers and factory workers, from the wholesale distributors and the army of salesmen, to the retail outlets and the large department stores that sold them.

Batya’s Moment

NewsNation host Batya Ungar-Sargon talks about her new book, “The Jews and The Left,” her rift with Megyn Kelly and why antisemitism has spread like wildfire in America.

Jewish Power and Other Myths

Historically, Jews have been accused of controlling politics, the banks and the media. I haven’t read yet that they control the weather, but that wouldn’t be any more bizarre than the other charges.

To Love Israel Is to Demand More of It

When we fall short — as individuals, as a people, whether everyday Jews or the Prime Minister himself — we must have the courage to face it honestly, call it what it is, and do better.

Prayer in Times of Illness

How should we approach prayer for an end-stage dying patient, for whom medical professionals predict no chance of recovery?

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.