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Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – David
Newman (Dept of Political Science) – Extreme Left-wing critic who
can not tolerate criticism from others
To
see the full original article,
go here
Bashing the
academic Left
By DAVID NEWMAN
Apr 14, 2009
For the past two
years I represented Israel's universities in the UK in the debate
surrounding the proposed academic boycott. There were many who could
not accept the fact that a professor with left-of-center views
should fill this role. The Department of Politics at Ben-Gurion
University where I work has been described by its detractors as
being the most left-wing academic department in Israel. After all,
they would argue, people like myself are part of the problem, not
the cause, and as proof of their argument they would roll out the
same two or three names of Israeli academics (most notably Ilan
Pappe) who had taken the unprecedented step of actually supporting
the boycott. The proposed boycott proved to be a great opportunity
for some left-wing bashing rather than focusing on the real problem
- the growth of anti-Israel sentiment among specific groups within
the UK university faculty union.
The last few years
have been "in season" for attacking the academic left, a form of
academic McCarthyism that is hard to recollect going back 10 or 20
years. Most pernicious and consistent is the self-styled Campus
Watch, created by the neo-con critic of the Israeli left, Daniel
Pipes. It uses students and faculty to spy on those teaching courses
on Israel and the Middle East. Anyone who so faintly utters a word
of criticism is immediately labeled as such, including some of the
best critical scholars of Israel today.
Campus Watch is a
disgrace for anyone who believes in the concept of freedom of
speech, and so it would appear is the copy organization Israel
Academia Monitor, an interview with which appeared in the April 7
Jerusalem Post. It is little wonder that Dana Barnett was
unprepared, or more likely unable to give a single name of an
academic who has not been hired or promoted at an Israeli university
for professing right-wing political views. I sat for three years on
the promotions and tenure committee of my own university faculty.
Despite the fact that the members of that committee shared a diverse
range of political views, not once was the political critique
allowed to intervene in what was, and remains, a very tough and
demanding, but very fair, system of professional mobility.
Israeli
universities have very tough and demanding standards, almost more
than any other comparable university system in the world. Many
people fall by the way when, perhaps, in other countries their CV
and their research publications would be considered enough to move
up the academic ladder. It is all too easy for those who fail, or
whose promotion gets delayed, to blame it on political reasons, and
thus to portray themselves as academic martyrs. But the truth is
very different, and the universities are their own worst enemies in
this respect since they insist on an anonymous and non-transparent
promotion and hiring process that never allows the candidates to see
the letters of recommendation or evaluations of their work. It is
therefore all too easy for people with weak academic records to
blame it on their political views - an argument that is used equally
by both right- and left-wing academics.
One of the worst
examples of this blatant political critique hiding behind the veneer
of academic research is the NGO Monitor, directed by Jerusalem Post
columnist and Bar-Ilan political science professor Gerald Steinberg.
The Monitor, funded by anonymous right-wing supporters, has set as
its task to delegitimize almost any NGO that so much as dares to
support the peace process and/or receives funding from the European
Union.
The Monitor Web
page describes itself as an organization "founded to promote
accountability, and advance a vigorous discussion on the reports and
activities of humanitarian NGOs in the framework of the Arab-Israeli
conflict." But it consistently refuses to analyze the activities and
the dubious funding of the numerous right-wing NGOs, both in Israel
and abroad, that promote West Bank settlement projects and
anti-government activities when government policies are contrary to
their own extremist beliefs. Projects funded through the EU are
constantly portrayed as being anti-Israel, despite the fact that the
EU quite legitimately and openly promotes peace related projects,
unlike some of the right-wing funders that promote activities in
conflict with Israeli law.
Even more
disturbing is the fact that organizations such as Campus Watch,
Israel Academia Monitor and NGO Monitor, to name but a few, will not
disclose the names of their donors and supporters, unlike the EU,
which is a very transparent organization. While the right-wing
organizations pretend to seek transparency among others, they
constantly refuse to divulge the same information about their own
institutions. Perhaps they would be embarrassed by the fact that
many of their donors hold extremist right-wing views deemed totally
unacceptable to the vast majority of the Israeli public, and in some
cases advocate (from afar) the breaking of Israeli law.
Self-appointed
organizations of academics have set themselves up as the defenders
of Israeli academia. For awhile there was the IAB (International
Advisory Board) for Academic Freedom operating out of Bar-Ilan
University, with its clear right-wing preferences, which never quite
managed to gain acceptance by the governing authority of Israel's
seven universities as its formal representative. Or there is the
SPME, the oddly named Scholars for Peace in the Middle East,
boasting thousands of members and partly funded through donations
from the Jewish National Fund. The SPME's promotion of peace has
never been able to stretch far enough to have academics with
left-wing views, or Arab academics, on its board of directors, and
it constantly refuses to take up the denial of academic freedom when
it affects Arab or Palestinian academics. It conveniently forgets
that for the argument of academic freedom to be legitimate, it has
to be across the board and relevant to all, for if it is not, it is
simply not academic freedom.
Recent years have
also witnessed unceasing pressure from donors abroad, especially in
the United States, to intervene in the management of the
universities. They threaten to withhold their donations if certain
individuals are not fired or prevented from moving ahead. They
attack any left-wing academic for daring to air his/her views, and
they normally take positions far to the right of any Israeli
government, including the present one. They are people for whom the
power of the pocketbook far outweighs any sense of freedom of
speech.
Clearly they have
a right to give their hard-earned money to whomever they want, but
they do not have a right to spread false accusations of "self-hating
Israelis" or "Jewish anti-Semites" about Israeli academics whose
views they oppose. In pursuing their super-patriotic positions from
the comfort and safety of their Diaspora residences, they cause
great damage to Israel as a whole.
Too many academics
here suffer from the self-need to engage in political polemics. It
is especially the case among those within the social sciences whose
focus of research deals with these sensitive social and political
topics, and who sometimes are unable to differentiate between their
personal views and professional analysis, each of which feeds into
the other. But in this respect there is no difference between right-
and left-wing critique, except for the fact that he who practices
the former is labeled as being patriotic, and the latter as
treasonous. The former is okay, the latter is to be vilified and, if
possible, prevented from moving up the academic ladder.
The academic
McCarthyism of the Right endangers Israeli democracy and society. It
threatens the very basis of freedom of speech. The self-styled
patriots are causing enormous damage to the country and should be
prevented from assuming the cloak of self-appointed defenders of the
common good, which they are clearly not.
The writer is a
professor in the Department of Politics and Government at Ben-Gurion
University and editor of the International Journal of Geopolitics.
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