Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University -
Jerusalem Post Columnist calls for Sanctions against BGU as answer
to its Academic Fifth Column
Nor do professors' statements become
immune to criticism because they are uttered in a classroom.
Professors, like everyone else, should expect to have their work
evaluated. Just as parents and students have an interest in knowing
which professors have a tendency to get too friendly with female
students, so do they have a right to form judgments about which
professors are using their classrooms for political indoctrination,
not education. Groups like Campus Watch and
IsraCampus.Org.il foster such informed judgments by publicizing
both the published utterances and classroom statements of university
lecturers. In general, it would be foolish to refrain from
contributing to a university based on the views of one faculty
member. Doing so would eliminate every potential recipient. But Neve
Gordon is not a solitary rogue professor on the BGU campus. The BGU
Department of Politics and Government, which he chairs, fits the
description of former Minister of Education Amnon Rubinstein of
academic departments in Israel in which no traditional Zionist could
be appointed.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1251804481169&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull
Think
Again: Aiding the destroyers among us
Jonathan Rosenblum,
THE JERUSALEM POST
Sep. 3, 2009
The Swedish
government refused to condemn a totally unsupported article in the
country's largest-circulation newspaper alleging that Israel
routinely kidnaps and murders Palestinians to harvest their organs.
To comment, said Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, would be a
violation of the country's principles of free speech.
Those who
called for donors to withhold giving to Ben-Gurion University after
BGU Professor Neve Gordon penned an op-ed in the
Los Angeles Times, in which he advocated an
international boycott of Israel, were accused of violating academic
freedom.
Those
responses share a fundamental misunderstanding of the meaning of
freedom of speech and academic freedom. Just because the content of
speech is legal does not make it proper or immunize it from
criticism. I have the right to express my thoughts. But I do not
have a right to have
The Jerusalem Post
publish them, or to demand that it not publish letters ridiculing
its "haredi apologist."
Freedom of
the press and speech protect
Aftonbladet
from sanctions by the Swedish government. But the Swedish government
has its own interests - or so one would have hoped - in
disassociating Sweden from ancient anti-Semitic
stereotypes, as the Swedish ambassador to Israel rightly recognized.
Had a major Swedish paper printed anything offensive to Muslims of a
violent bent, the government would have fallen over itself to
express its regrets. And while an academic has the right to his
opinions, private donors who find his views or research repugnant
are equally entitled not to support that research. Given the
fungibility of money, that might mean withholding support from the
university that employs them.
Nor do
professors' statements become immune to criticism because they are
uttered in a classroom. Professors, like everyone else, should
expect to have their work evaluated. Just as parents and students
have an interest in knowing which professors have a tendency to get
too friendly with female students, so do they have a right to form
judgments about which professors are using their classrooms for
political indoctrination, not education.
GROUPS LIKE
Campus Watch and
IsraCampus.Org.il foster such informed judgments by publicizing
both the published utterances and classroom statements of university
lecturers.
In general,
it would be foolish to refrain from contributing to a university
based on the views of one faculty member. Doing so would eliminate
every potential recipient.
But Neve
Gordon is not a solitary rogue professor on the BGU campus. The BGU
Department of Politics and Government, which he chairs, fits the
description of former Minister of Education Amnon Rubinstein of
academic departments in Israel in which no traditional Zionist could
be appointed. Before he published his
Los Angeles Times
piece, Gordon shared his message with his department
colleagues. According to Professor Fred Lazin, there was a
"unanimous decision not to let him step down [as chairman]."
BGU
President Rikva Carmi professed to be "shocked" by Gordon's boycott
call. But she has in the past defended him as a "serious and
distinguished researcher into human rights," and lashed out at
academic monitors of his output, which appears regularly on
anti-Semitic and Holocaust denial sites and Aljazeera.com, as "Kahanists."
Nor did
Gordon's boycott call come out of the blue. For years he has
described Israel as an "apartheid state." He once joined 250
International Solidarity Movement members serving as a human shield
in Yasser Arafat's Ramallah compound, where he was photographed
holding hands aloft with Arafat and quoted expressing doubts about
the latter's involvement in terrorism.
Gordon is
the last person entitled to hide behind the cover of free speech and
academic freedom. He once labeled his former army commander Aviv
Kochavi a "war criminal," forcing Kochavi to forgo graduate studies
in England for fear of prosecution. Gordon filed a libel suit
against Haifa University Professor Steven Plaut over the latter's
sharp criticism of his ISM escapades and of
Ha'aretz's choice of Gordon to write an effusive
review of Norman Finkelstein's
The Holocaust Industry,
which alleges, inter alia, that the number of those murdered
in the Holocaust is greatly exaggerated. Before filing, Gordon then
went forum-shopping to Nazareth, where neither he nor Plaut live, in
search of a suitably sympathetic Arab judge.
ISRAELI AND
Jewish Israel-bashers constitute a major, perhaps insuperable,
obstacle to any attempt to defend Israel in the court of world
opinion. Anyone attempting to defend Israel abroad will inevitably
be confronted with some statement characterizing Israel as a racist,
apartheid state, perpetrating war crimes against the Palestinians,
from the mouth of an Israeli academic or journalist. The fact that
the source is Jewish or Israeli is assumed to provide credibility.
Sadly, many
Jews who care deeply about Israel's existence help fund its
delegitimization. The New Israel Fund raises millions of dollars
annually from American Jews. Donors are told that New Israel Fund
supports Israel as a Jewish state and opposes the "right of return"
for Palestinian refugees, and that the NIF does not fund
organizations that engage in propaganda or support boycotts of
Israel.
None of
these claims are true, as two recent studies of NIF grantees
prepared by the Center for Near East Policy Research demonstrate.
The Coalition of Women for Peace recently sponsored a speech by
Naomi Klein in support of the movement for boycott, divestment and
sanctions (BSD) against Israel. Six NIF grant recipients - including
CPW, Mossawa, and Machsom Watch - petitioned the Norwegian
government for sanctions against Israel.
Ittijah, an
umbrella group of Israel Arab NGO's, issued a statement prior to its
attendance at Durban II in Geneva in which it charged that "the
Jewish character of the state of Israel contradicts international
law" and referred to the "racist character" of the State. The draft
constitution prepared for Israel by Adalah, the Legal Center for
Minority Arab Rights in Israel, another NIF grantee, calls for
Israel to recognize responsibility for the
Nakba of
its creation and to recognize "the right of return." Adalah
participated actively in the preparations for the UN sponsored
Israel-bashing fest in Durban and in the drafting of the conference
resolutions.
The
director until recently of I'lam - the Media Center for Arab
Palestinians in Israel, Balad MK Hanin Zoabi was one of the
signatories of the Haifa Declaration calling for the negation of
Israel's Jewish character. She supports Iran's quest for nuclear
weapons and has participated in Israel Apartheid week activities in
the United States. The organization's Empowerment Coordinator calls
for the return of the Palestinian refugees to their homes, and its
director of International Relations describes Hamas as "a genuinely
emancipatory liberation and resistance movement."
Perhaps the
best indicator of the NIF's real agenda was unwittingly supplied by
a 2001 letter to The
Jerusalem Post. Evalyn Segal recounted how she was a "devout
Zionist" until she made the "haj" to Israel on a 1989 NIF
study tour and had her eyes opened to the "racist contempt of the
Israel government . . . towards the Palestinians [and] how the
founders of Zionism schemed from the start to take over, by any
means necessary, the whole of Palestine and to cleanse it of
Palestinians."
The prophet
Isaiah (49:17) long ago foresaw that "your ruiners and destroyers
will come from amongst you." But generous American Jews, committed
to Israel's existence, should not be supporting the destroyers'
efforts.
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