CHICAGO (AP) — Bearded and bespectacled, YM Masood has a quiet nature that suggests he’s older than age 20. A political science major, he plans to graduate from college in December, well ahead of schedule. He’s studying for the LSAT, the entrance exam for law school.
He has another frequent role as well: protester.
Masood, a student at the University of Illinois Chicago, has taken to the city’s streets in recent months for pro-Palestinian rallies, often weekly and — once — twice in the same day.
“Palestine is definitely No. 1 right now,” Masood says. Last spring, he also traveled by train to support pro-Palestinian encampments at the University of Chicago and Northwestern and DePaul universities.
That set the stage for this week’s Democratic National Convention, where thousands gathered to raise their voices on issues from the Middle East conflict to abortion and immigrant rights. Though the cameras often focused on scraps with police, the overwhelming majority marched peacefully.
Masood was often there, volunteering as a marshal to help organizers of these larger protests keep things in line. The overarching messages to the Democratic Party and its nominee, Kamala Harris, were clear: end the war in Gaza and stop sending aid to Israel.
For Masood and other students, the war has become a lightning-rod issue for their generation, just as the Vietnam War was in the 1960s and 鶹Ƶ Africa’s apartheid system was in the 1980s.
Says Masood: “We’re not going to stand by while all these people are suffering.”
The death toll in Gaza . In Israel, about 1,200 people have been killed, and officials there say more than 100 , including two small children, remain in Gaza.
The national found that 60% of college students and 64% of those who already had a college degree supported a permanent cease-fire in the Middle East.
These protests, however, have continued to focus on the Palestinian people, as the war has destroyed huge numbers of homes and wiped out .
“Before I got into activism, I was a lot more shy. ... But for me, this is personal,” says Masood, who is a Muslim of Indian descent.
On campus, he’s known as the guy who drapes a red or black keffiyeh scarf around his shoulders. The Middle Eastern scarves have become an increasingly displayed symbol of solidarity with the Palestinian people. His own keffiyehs belonged to his father and to his late uncle, who also protested in support of Palestinians when they were young.
“I have this duty to carry on … what (my uncle) stood for and bring new meaning to it,” Masood says. He jokes that he wears the scarves so often that people wonder if he washes them.
Occasionally, he says, his parents see him on TV at protests with groups such as Students for Justice in Palestine and Students for a Democratic Society. “My parents … they’re kind of worried about me,” Masood says of his activism. They're generally supportive, he adds — as long as he doesn't get arrested.
On a breezy summer day just before the DNC, Masood sat on the grass with a small group, painting protest signs at a park on Chicago’s 鶹Ƶ Side.
One recent college graduate complained about her parents’ “weird liberal logic” when they asked her to take down a pro-Palestinian sign outside their home so it wouldn't overpower conversations with their guests, even if Democrats.
Next to her, a man in his early 30s said he planned to agitate police officers guarding the DNC, his sentiments seeming to echo anti-Vietnam riots at Chicago’s 1968 DNC. He painted his hands red and pressed them onto poster board, scrawling the words, “America Has Its Hands Covered In Blood.”
There were a few renegade groups at the DNC. One briefly breached an outer security wall, leading to 13 arrests. the second night outside the Israeli consulate.
As a volunteer marshal at the larger March on DNC protests, Masood’s role was quite the opposite of agitation.
“We don’t usually organize disruptions,” he says. But even as the Biden administration has continued to push a cease-fire in the Middle East, he and others will continue to pressure a political party that he sees as culpable and “controlled by corporate interests” as Republicans.
So in the first presidential election for which he’ll be old enough to vote, he plans to vote for Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein — another sort of protest.
On peace in the Middle East, Rania Batrice, a Democratic political strategist who is Palestinian-American, said she is “cautiously optimistic” with Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee. Still, she wholeheartedly supported the March on DNC events in which Masood participated. Peaceful protest, she says, is "how we’ve seen — over and over and over again — policy shifts happen.”
At the mass protest on the DNC’s first day, pro-Palestinian protesters from across the country and journalists from around the world poured into Union Park.
A group with Israeli flags showed up at one point, circling the park as protest marshals in fluorescent vests scrambled to create a human barrier to fend off potential conflict.
Across the street, a man with a fire-and-brimstone message used a loudspeaker to taunt the much larger group in the park. “You’re all terrorists!” he shouted, also saying he supported Donald Trump.
Masood paid him little mind. His own faith, he says, is about love and compassion. “Eventually, you just learn to ignore them."
As the sea of humanity, numbering thousands, walked a two-mile route to another park and back, people banged on drums and waved signs. Masood and fellow marshals used hand signals to keep themselves interspersed on either side of the protest route. Police marched alongside, using bicycles to create rolling barriers to help keep things contained.
Masood felt the message was heard and vowed to continue.
Whoever becomes president, Masood says, “We’ll be out here in the streets, like how we were today, no matter if it’s Democrat or Republican. We will always be protesting for the people.”
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Martha Irvine, an AP national writer and visual journalist, can be reached at [email protected] or at .
Martha Irvine, The Associated Press