Missouri Students for Justice in Palestine members watched a Palestinian True/False documentary before their weekly march to City Hall
MSJP protesters began their day at the Missouri Theatre to watch โThree Promises,โ a True/False documentary. MSJP President Isleen Atallah said True/False reached out to MSJP and offered them free tickets to the film, which told the story of a Palestinian family in the early 2000s through childhood home videos. Following the film, MSJP met at Speakers Circle and marched through True/False festivities to demand a ceasefire, ending the march in front of City Hall.
Mizzou Students for Justice in Palestine President Isleen Atallah (left) offers a โThree Promisesโ ticket to Jaden Reed on Saturday, March 2, 2024 at the Missouri Theatre in Columbia, Mo. โThe film was, to me โ as a Palestinian โ it was very powerful to see a time that our parents were going through so much turmoil,โ Atallah said. โAnd then you look at the film and you realize that what youโre seeing is 1% of what the people in Gaza are suffering right now. To me, it paints a whole picture of how this has been ongoing.โ
Director of Ministry of Mid-Missouri Peaceworks Mark Haim and Mizzou Students for Justice in Palestine President Isleen Atallah stand in front of the Missouri Theatre before the showing of โThree Promises.โ Haim handed Isleen fliers to give out during that dayโs protests.
A man joins the crowd of โThree Promisesโ in a standing ovation as the film ends. Each year True/False selects a True Life Fund Film with the goal of collecting funds for the subjects. โThree Promisesโ is the 2024 True Life Fund film, with donation funds going towards the director Yousef Srouji and his family.
Columbia residents cross a street when marching to Columbia City Hall during their protest as part of the Global Day of Action on Saturday, March 2. The theme of the protest was โHands off Rafaโ to show support for maintaining Rafa as a safe place for Palestinians in Gaza.
Syed Inam holds up his daughter Alizay, 3, as she chants โFree Palestine.โ
โShe is also understanding the pain,โ Inam said. โShe is too young to see that, but the world is seeing. We cannot shut our eyes.โ
Protesters walk through Ninth and Cherry streets chanting โFree Palestine.โ โWe have come all the way out from St. Louis for this,โ protester Elisa Sugar said.
Onlookers hold up peace signs showing their solidarity with the protesters from across the street. โEverytime we look around, thereโs more people,โ MSJP President Isleen Atallah said. โEven if our efforts donโt impact whatโs happening in Gaza directly, itโs shifting the narrative. Itโs shifting the whole dehumanization of Palestinians.โ
MSJP President Isleen Atallah leads the back-and-forth chants with protestors at Broadway and Ninth streets on the way to Columbia City Hall. MSJP has marched to city hall demanding a ceasefire almost every Saturday since Oct. 17. โIโm genuinely exhausted,โ said Atallah. โI have schoolwork, I also have a job. But itโs very important to keep that sense of community here in Columbia.โ
A protester holds up a โCeasefire Nowโ sign in front of Starbucks on Ninth Street. While passing Starbucks, protesters shouted, โStarbucks, Starbucks, you canโt hide โ you are funding genocide.โ
MSJP President Isleen Atallah speaks to the crowd of protesters at the end of the event. โI feel like [people in Columbia] have more information on Palestine,โ Atallah said in an interview. โThey have proper tools, proper information.โ