Ben Gurion University
The Hysterical Leftist Opponent of Freedom of Speech, David
Newman, Dean of Social Sciences and Humanities at Ben Gurion
University, attacks Isracampus
How dare anyone criticize extremist
anti-Israel academics!!! Newman forgot to mention that Zionists and
non-leftists are prohibited from teaching in his own Department of
Politics at BGU!!
"The thought police of the extreme rightwing
has grown in strength in recent years. It includes sites such as
Campus Watch and Isracampus, well-funded organizations like Im
Tirtzu and NGO Monitor, whose objectives are to prevent freedom of
expression among all those who do not share their fortress view of
the world. For them, anyone who believes in such values as peace,
human rights or the universal values of Judaism are collectively
labeled as traitors, anti-Zionists and enemies of the Jewish State.
In scenes reminiscent of darker days, they send their
representatives into universities to record lectures, which are then
selectively edited, published on their web sites and used as
ammunition to impose an extreme rightwing agenda on public
discourse.
The attempt by my own university to prevent a
conference on human rights from going ahead last week, and its
refusal to allow the conference organizers to use the Senate Hall
for the main session, was a knee-jerk reaction to this form of
pressure."
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=217024
Thoughts on academic freedom at Pessah
In today's environment, Martin Buber, Judah Leon Magnes or
Yeshayahu Leibowitz would have long been fired from their positions.
By DAVID NEWMAN
17/04/2011
Our festivals can be treated in many ways. Some
ignore them altogether.
Others are content with the rituals, the food
and the family gatherings.
And for others, it is a time for contemplation,
trying to insert contemporary significance into events that happened
thousands of years ago.
Pessah is when we contemplate the meaning of freedom. All
too often it is physical freedom we think about. We read the story
of the Jewish people's liberation from Egyptian slavery and the
transformation into an independent and free nation.
We often compare the Exodus story with the more
recent freedoms obtained by the founders of modern Israel, or the
civil rights movement in 1960s America (for whom the Exodus story
remains a major inspiration), the freedom from apartheid in South
Africa and, for many of us, with concerns about the lack of freedom
for the Palestinians who live under our political rule. For each of
us, the famous words of the Haggada – that we should understand the
Exodus story in every generation as though it was happening to us
today – is one of the most powerful messages of Pessah.
MY OWN thoughts about freedom are different
this year. I am increasingly concerned about how our society is
losing its ability to express views in an open fashion.
In a country where, as we always joke, there
are five opinions for every three people, we are being constantly
attacked and targeted for having the "wrong" views. It has become
acceptable to try and silence our views, even to the extent of
threatening us with hate mail of a type which, in some countries,
would provide grounds for criminal investigation.
For the past few years, I have witnessed
concerted and well-planned attacks on my own university by groups of
right-wing activists who are unhappy with the political views of
some faculty members. This has come to a head in recent months, with
attempts to bring pressure on donors and on Knesset members to
intervene, and just last week there was an attempt to ban a
conference on human rights which took place at the university.
The university leadership finds itself caught
in a trap. It does not want to alienate its donors, many of whom, in
the comfort of their Diaspora homes, hold extreme anti-democratic
views when it comes to Israel. Nor does it want to annoy the members
of the Knesset Education Committee in an extreme right-wing
government, who would like to impose constraints on the freedom to
think and teach by intervening in the academic curriculum.
There is also the academic faculty, which
expects its leaders to defend their freedom of expression, and to
understand the role of intellectualism in raising social and
political awareness.
Were it not for the employment laws of the
state relating to tenure, there is a growing feeling among the
faculty that some could have been dismissed for expressing their
views. Many believe that freedom of expression on Israeli campuses
is facing the strongest challenge since the establishment of the
Hebrew University back in the 1920s. No doubt, in today's
environment,
Martin Buber,
Judah Leon Magnes or Yeshayahu Leibowitz would have been
fired if the present donors and politicians had their way.
The thought police of the extreme rightwing has
grown in strength in recent years. It includes sites such as Campus
Watch and Isracampus, well-funded organizations like Im Tirtzu and
NGO Monitor, whose objectives are to prevent freedom of expression
among all those who do not share their fortress view of the world.
For them, anyone who believes in such values as peace, human rights
or the universal values of Judaism are collectively labeled as
traitors, anti-Zionists and enemies of the Jewish State. In scenes
reminiscent of darker days, they send their representatives into
universities to record lectures, which are then selectively edited,
published on their web sites and used as ammunition to impose an
extreme rightwing agenda on public discourse.
The attempt by my own university to prevent a
conference on human rights from going ahead last week, and its
refusal to allow the conference organizers to use the Senate Hall
for the main session, was a knee-jerk reaction to this form of
pressure.
A similar event occurred last year, when the
Center for Beduin Studies was forced to relocate part of its
conference following political pressure on the university.
As it turned out, last week's conference was an
orderly, well-planned, well-attended discussion, including many
critical opinions and positions, as would be expected from any
university proud of its role as a thought-provoking institution.
The right-wing groups openly attended, filmed
and took notes, and even held a demonstration (attended by few
participants) but, alas, when it came to the facts were unable to
come up with any "incriminating" evidence of sedition or treason.
But that did not prevent them from writing blog
posts or sending mass mailings to their supporters throughout the
Jewish world describing the evil things being done in the name of
the university. After all, why should a few truths be allowed to get
in the way of an increasingly wellfunded attempt to impose a narrow
and isolationist political ideology, one born out of perpetual fear
of the outside world and of anyone who thinks differently?
University leaders must ensure that freedom of expression is not
trampled on. Due to political pressure, they have become slaves to
their external environment instead of categorically standing behind
freedom and diversity, as befits a university.
It is they who should be sitting down this
Pessah and contemplating the meaning of freedom, before Israel's
universities become subject to the Orwellian restrictions of the
right-wing thought police.
The writer is Dean of the Faculty of
Humanities and Social Sciences at Ben-Gurion University of the
Negev. The views expressed are his alone.
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