Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University –
Neve Gordon (Dept of Political Science) - Jerusalem Post takes on Neve
Gordon and Ben Gurion University; Isracampus.Org.il and Campus
Watch featured
Unless one is a news junkie, an academic,
or closely involved with BGU, the name Neve Gordon may not ring many
bells among mainstream Israelis, either. Even so, within 48 hours,
4,000 emails protesting Gordon's remarks had landed in the inbox of
BGU President Rivka Carmi. Several days later, Carmi responded to
her department head's call for a boycott through her own LA Times
op-ed, admitting that she was "shocked" at what Gordon had written,
suggesting that even she hadn't been fully aware of what she called
Gordon's "destructive views."
NOT EVERYONE was shocked. For years,
watchdog organizations like Campus Watch and IsraCampus had
monitored Neve Gordon's words and activities, even before Gordon
made international news during the "Siege of Ramallah," when, in
2003, he joined Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat, holed
up in his Ramallah compound. Defying IDF orders which forbade his
entry to Ramallah, he moved in to protect Arafat, taking up a
position as a "human shield." During the height of the intifada,
when suicide bombers belonging to the military wing of Arafat's
movement were blowing up Israeli cafes and buses, a photo of Gordon
and Arafat, hands joined and held high in solidarity, splashed
across the front pages of Israeli newspapers.
According to documents compiled by
watchdog IsraCampus (www.IsraCampus.org,il),
Gordon's dissident career was politically consistent. Calling Israel
an "apartheid" state had long been part of his anti-Israel rant.
Last December, at the height of Operation Cast Lead, as Hamas
rockets and missiles slammed into Israel - including striking the
BGU campus - Gordon again spoke out, denouncing not Hamas but
Israel.
…
In any communal organization, no one enjoys unrestricted rights,
they note. Just as the right to swing your arms stops where the
other fellow's nose begins, why can't there be some limit on the
things anyone - professor or not - is entitled to say, if his words
will prove detrimental to the community as a whole?
to see the full
original article,
go here
The
battle of the boycotts
Yocheved Miriam Russo , THE JERUSALEM
POST
Sep. 26, 2009
On August 20, an opinion column published
on page A-31 of the Los Angeles Times unleashed a firestorm
that continues to blaze in California, and in the normally placid
city of Beersheba, home of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU).
The op-ed, entitled "Boycott Israel," was
written by Neve Gordon, head of BGU's Department of Politics and
Government. Gordon's published plea was for "all foreign
governments, regional authorities, international social movements,
faith-based organizations, unions and citizens to suspend
cooperation with Israel."
"Nothing else has worked," Gordon
lamented. "The most accurate way to describe Israel today is as an
apartheid state."
Such allegations, when made by Israel's
foreign enemies, are hardly unique. But when the denouncement comes
from a Jewish Israeli who, just last January, was promoted to head
BGU's Politics and Government Department, battle lines form quickly.
It's hardly the first time "post-Zionist"
academics have clashed with the traditional Zionist crowd, but
Gordon's op-ed pushed the debate into new territory. Gordon's words
even closer to home in that his proposed boycott would do
irrevocable harm to a popular university, specifically one which
pays his salary.
When the horrified "traditional Zionists"
turned out to be wealthy Jewish Americans who donate tens of
millions of dollars to keep BGU alive and growing, the dispute was
raised to a new level. Many of the donors find themselves saying,
"If BGU professors feel free to invite the world to boycott Israel,
then perhaps the time has come to boycott BGU. Next time around,
maybe we should sit on our checkbooks."
Ari Bussel, for years a pro-Israel, pro-BGU
activist and a leader in the local chapter of American Friends of
BGU, was among the first to spot Gordon's LA Times op-ed.
"It was Thursday morning," the Beverly
Hills-born Bussel recalls. "The LA Times was delivered to our
doorstep as usual. I saw Gordon's piece, read it, and at first I
wasn't all that surprised. It's not unusual for the LA Times
to print this sort of anti-Israeli rhetoric. I've come to expect it.
But a few minutes later, I began to see that there was something
qualitatively different about this article.
"The local reaction was unbelievable," he
continued. "An absolute avalanche of opposition erupted, and our
phones were ringing off the hook. People who, on August 19, wouldn't
have given each other the time of day, were calling each other and
everybody else they knew. They all asked the same question: 'Who's
giving money to BGU?' There are some big donors in this area. Very
big. I've never seen anything like it.
"Before this hit, I'd never heard of Neve
Gordon," says Bussel, who lived in Israel for years and served in
the IDF during the First Gulf War. "For an American, even for
someone involved in Israeli affairs, Gordon hadn't seeped into the
American national consciousness. But this anti-Israel commentary hit
home.
"For some of us, it may be the first
blossoming of the idea that President Obama has become our
downfall," he speculates. "Clearly, things are changing. Something
is happening to alter people's perception and approach to this kind
of Israel bashing. And it's not over - people are still calling,
talking and writing. Three weeks afterwards, the LA Times was
still printing readers' reactions. Something important happened when
this piece was published."
Unless one is a news junkie, an academic,
or closely involved with BGU, the name Neve Gordon may not ring many
bells among mainstream Israelis, either. Even so, within 48 hours,
4,000 emails protesting Gordon's remarks had landed in the inbox of
BGU President Rivka Carmi. Several days later, Carmi responded to
her department head's call for a boycott through her own LA Times
op-ed, admitting that she was "shocked" at what Gordon had written,
suggesting that even she hadn't been fully aware of what she called
Gordon's "destructive views."
"We are shocked by Dr. Neve Gordon's
irresponsible statements, which are morally deserving of full
condemnation," she wrote. "We vehemently shake ourselves free of the
destructive views [advocated by Gordon], who makes cynical use of
freedom of expression in Israel and Ben-Gurion University."
NOT EVERYONE was shocked. For years,
watchdog organizations like Campus Watch and IsraCampus had
monitored Neve Gordon's words and activities, even before Gordon
made international news during the "Siege of Ramallah," when, in
2003, he joined Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat, holed
up in his Ramallah compound. Defying IDF orders which forbade his
entry to Ramallah, he moved in to protect Arafat, taking up a
position as a "human shield." During the height of the intifada,
when suicide bombers belonging to the military wing of Arafat's
movement were blowing up Israeli cafes and buses, a photo of Gordon
and Arafat, hands joined and held high in solidarity, splashed
across the front pages of Israeli newspapers.
According to documents compiled by
watchdog IsraCampus (www.IsraCampus.org,il), Gordon's dissident
career was politically consistent. Calling Israel an "apartheid"
state had long been part of his anti-Israel rant. Last December, at
the height of Operation Cast Lead, as Hamas rockets and missiles
slammed into Israel - including striking the BGU campus - Gordon
again spoke out, denouncing not Hamas but Israel.
Over the years, Gordon's commentary
attracted an unusually diverse crowd of supporters. Despite being
Israeli and Jewish, he regularly published his highly controversial
views on websites and magazines accused of Holocaust-denial, and
ultimately became a regular columnist for Al Jazeera, a
Qatar-based Arabic media outlet. From there, he preached that Israel
was opposed to peace and was plotting to steal Arab lands.
Some of Gordon's antics went beyond
theory. In one incident, Gordon defended Azmi Bishara, the disgraced
former Israeli-Arab MK, a man still wanted by the Israeli
authorities for alleged spying and assistance to the terrorist
group, Hizbullah. In his impassioned defense of Bishara, Gordon
falsely accused his former Army commander, Aviv Kochavi, a decorated
officer, of being a war criminal. As a result, Kochavi's career was
sidelined when he was barred from entering Great Britain where he'd
previously been accepted for study.
In left-wing circles and academia, all of
this was well known, but none of it seemed to matter to BGU. Shortly
after the public hand-holding with Arafat, Gordon was promoted at
BGU and granted tenure. Just last January Gordon was again promoted,
this time to department head, immediately after completing a highly
controversial sabbatical year at the University of Michigan. In
Michigan, according to local students, Gordon exacerbated
anti-Israel tensions by always referring to Israel as an "apartheid
regime," suggesting Israel may be even worse than South Africa.
During "Palestinian Awareness Week"
Gordon gave a talk "From Colonization to Occupation," in which he
expressed support for a "one state solution."
THROUGH ALL this, Gordon remained popular
at BGU, both with the administration and among his fellow
professors. When he occasionally attracted unfavorable publicity,
Carmi defended him as a "serious and distinguished researcher into
human rights," lashing out at his detractors by calling them "Kahanists."
Nor was Gordon alone in his views at BGU.
Shortly after the BGU president pleaded in her op-ed response for
the continued support of the university despite the "egregious
remarks of one person," evidence emerged to the effect that Gordon
wasn't just "one person." Prof. Fred Lazin, who teaches political
science within that department, acknowledged that before Gordon
submitted his op-ed to the LA Times, Gordon submitted his
remarks to the department as a whole, offering to step down as chair
if they thought his words would prove too embarrassing. "There was a
unanimous decision not to let him do that," Lazin said.
David Newman, Gordon's BGU colleague,
championed Gordon's remarks. "This is something which Israel's
universities can be proud of," Newman wrote in a Jerusalem Post
op-ed. "It is this level of democracy, pluralism and freedom of
speech which few in the world, not least many of those proposing
boycotts from abroad, can share."
Indeed, other BGU departments -
geography, history and sociology - also harbor professors who share
Gordon's anti-Zionist, anti-Israel views. Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin, who
teaches in BGU's Department of Jewish History, had also denounced
Israel as an "apartheid regime" in Tikkun magazine.
Students were supportive, too. A
contingent sent their own letter to Carmi, expressing support for
Gordon's "welcome efforts to bring important issues to the public
regarding the future of Israeli society - issues that are absent
from the legitimate public dialogue."
"We are taught history but it seems we
are not allowed to learn from it," the student letter read. "We're
allowed to learn, but not to think, not to reach practical
conclusions…"
Nor is Gordon's support limited to just
BGU. Petitions supporting Gordon began circulating not only at
Beersheba University, but at other academic institutions as well. At
one point, over 185 Israeli professors, from several institutions,
signed petitions defending Gordon.
ON THE other side of the ideological
divide, among both Israelis and Americans, the reaction to Gordon's
comments ranged from pure fury to thoughtful consideration of what
could be done.
Haifa-born Nurit Greenger, now living in
Beverly Hills, for many years a BGU supporter, was among those who
were furious. In a letter to fellow Israel supporters, Greenger
wrote, "For years this Israeli citizen, Gordon, walked a marginally
seditious line, but with his call to boycott Israel he crossed that
line monumentally."
"His call," the letter went on, "to
boycott Israel raises the question: How many more 'Gordons' live in
Israel and are teaching the next generation to undermine their own
homeland's existence?"
In a phone interview, Greenger spoke
bluntly. "I'm very angry about Gordon's call to the whole world to
boycott Israel. It's a very serious problem."
Greenger is among those calling for a
boycott of BGU. "It's an oxymoron," she says. "BGU comes to us all
the time, asking for money - 'Support the University! Support BGU!
We make the Negev bloom! We have all these wonderful projects to
help our beautiful Israel' - but then they allow professors to
publish articles in the LA Times, begging the world to
boycott Israel? That's crazy! Then they get upset when we question
them? They want our money, but at the same time they're telling us
we shouldn't look at what their professors are doing and saying? The
time for that is long over."
Encouraging "key donors" to support other
Israeli institutions instead of BGU is one of Greenger's missions.
"It's time for us to exercise some 'academic freedom' of our own,"
she says. "We need to decide which of Israel's academic institutions
we wish to support. The way to cure anti-Israelism is to redirect
benefactors' funds from the kind of places that hire people like
Neve Gordon, and channeling it instead to educational institutions
that hold strong Zionist sentiments, Ariel University, the Jerusalem
College of Technology, the Sami Shamoon College of Engineering."
There were students among the traditional
Zionists, too. "Im Tirtzu" ("If You Will It"), a pro-Israel student
organization at BGU, began circulating a petition against Gordon.
Within two days, 54 instructors at BGU had signed.
The petition criticized Gordon for
exploiting academic freedom and freedom of speech, noting the BGU's
funding comes from the very country he's is asking the world to
boycott. They characterized Gordon's view as that of a "fringe group
of daydreamers among Israeli academia in general, and BGU in
particular," adding that Gordon's leftist activities made them
ashamed to have him on the staff.
THE IMMEDIATE impact of the Gordon piece
resulted in community meetings where BGU supporters - and former BGU
supporters - gathered to discuss strategy. They also contacted
Israel's Consul-General in Los Angeles, Yaakov (Yaki) Dayan, who
ultimately sent a letter Carmi, advising her that Gordon's
statements were proving "detrimental" to the university.
"Since the article was published I've
been contacted by people who care for Israel," Dayan wrote. "Some of
them are benefactors of BGU. They were unanimous in threatening to
withhold their donations to your institution. My attempt to explain
that one bad apple would affect hundreds of researchers turned out
to be futile."
PART OF what irks traditional Zionists
about Gordon's tactics is his demand for complete freedom of speech
for himself, but not for anyone who disagrees with him. Gordon went
so far as to file a SLAPP suit (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public
Participation), designed to discourage critics, against University
of Haifa professor Steven Plaut.
For anyone lucky enough to be watching
from the sidelines, the Gordon vs. Plaut litigation ranks as one of
the more entertaining chapters in the annals of Israeli legal
history. Not so for Plaut, presumably, since he was paying his own
legal bills.
It began when Plaut, himself a tenured
professor and a long-time critic of Gordon's politics, took Gordon
to task by publishing an op-ed on the website of a now-defunct
California organization. Plaut criticized Gordon's long history of
publishing in Holocaust-denial websites and magazines.
"It was right after the Ramallah
incident," Plaut says. "I called him a 'Judenrat wannabie.' I didn't
attack him personally - I attacked his politics. Look, Gordon writes
his own columns, he's a public figure. Criticizing his politics is
what freedom of speech is for. I also called him 'a groupie of the
world's leading Jewish Holocaust denier, Norman Finkelstein.'"
Gordon could hardly dispute that, Plaut
notes. "Gordon had compared Finkelstein to the prophets of the
Bible. But somehow Gordon came across my internet column, hired an
Arab lawyer to represent him, and filed suit for libel. He didn't
like being in the same sentence with the words 'Holocaust denier,'
even though I'd said that about Finkelstein, not about him."
Plaut, like Gordon, believed himself to
be exercising his basic right to freedom of speech. "In Israel,
there's supposed to be absolute freedom of speech in terms of
criticizing another person's politics. No one has ever been punished
for that. I was just making fun of his politics."
Although lawsuits are normally filed in
the hometown of either the plaintiff or defendant, Gordon filed his
suit in Nazareth. "Gordon lived in Jerusalem, teaches in Beersheba,
and I live in Haifa," Plaut says. "I can only suppose that by filing
in Nazareth, Gordon hoped to get a favorable Arab judge - which he
did. When the decision came down, I think everyone was astonished to
see how Judge Reem Naddaf used her decision to attack Israel.
"She wrote into her opinion that all of
Israel - all, not part - was built on land stolen from other
people," he continues. "Then she went on to justify Holocaust
revisionism. In her decision, the judge wrote things not even Neve
Gordon had said."
She also imposed a whopping fine. "Gordon
hadn't alleged any financial losses," Plaut says. "But in a libel
suit, Israeli law permits the award of NIS 50,000. She fined me NIS
100,000."
That's when Harvard professor Alan
Dershowitz, a major player in the US legal community, jumped in with
his incisive commentary. In a column published in the Jerusalem
Post on November 8, 2006, Dershowitz addressed the issues and
then wrote, "It is my opinion that Neve Gordon has gotten into bed
with neo-Nazis, Holocaust justice deniers, and anti-Semites…. he is
a despicable example of a self-hating Jew and a self-hating Israeli,
whose writing consists of anti-Israeli propaganda designed to
'prove' that the Jewish State is fascist."
Then Dershowitz issued his own
make-my-day challenge to Gordon: "Sue me, too."
Gordon didn't sue Dershowitz, brushing
off his challenge as "a cheap dare," while Plaut appealed the
Nazareth decision. In a stunning reversal, a three-judge panel
rejected every demand made by Gordon and agreed to almost all of
Plaut's. Legal decisions are rarely characterized by speculation,
but one of the appellate judges, Judge Abraham Abraham, offered
unique commentary in his written opinion. "Even if Plaut had
described Gordon as a "Jew for Hitler," (which Plaut had not) he
would have been within his rights," the judge wrote.
While the most recent court decision was
a victory for Plaut, the litigation continues, with the case set to
be heard by the Supreme Court on October 13.
SOME COMMENTATORS claim that the real
danger of this internal Israeli call for a boycott against Israel is
that it encourages and provides cover for anti-Israel sentiments in
the international community.
Gerald Steinberg, a political science
professor at Bar-Ilan University who heads the Jerusalem-based NGO
Monitor, sees Gordon's call for a boycott as part of a series of
events designed to "demonize" Israel.
"Neve Gordon and his pro-boycott article
… is another example of the Durban [an anti-Racism conference which
was largely seen as anti-Israel] demonization strategy based on
total international isolation of Israel through boycotts and
sanctions in order to follow the South African anti-apartheid
model," Steinberg said, referring to Israel's recent clashes with
Sweden over their "stolen organ" blood libel and Great Britain,
whose funding of "Breaking the Silence" encouraged Israeli soldiers
to admit to IDF war crimes.
There were those who, while angered by
Gordon's call for boycott, took a more philosophical approach,
seeking a way to balance "academic freedom" with the best interests
of the community.
In any communal organization, no one
enjoys unrestricted rights, they note. Just as the right to swing
your arms stops where the other fellow's nose begins, why can't
there be some limit on the things anyone - professor or not - is
entitled to say, if his words will prove detrimental to the
community as a whole?
The Zionist Organization of America has
not yet issued a policy statement regarding the Neve Gordon/BGU
affair, but Jeff Daube, Director of the Israel ZOA office and a
life-long Zionist activist, articulated a common sentiment. "My
desire is not to constrain anyone's freedom of speech," Daube said.
"But I think there's nothing at all wrong with a university saying,
'This is a Zionist institution. Statements (like Neve Gordon's) do
actual harm to the collective, to the Jewish people living in
Israel. Just as most societies limit free speech when the speech
will prove harmful - libel or slander - then if some speech brings
harm to the society as a whole, why can't that be limited as well?'"
Other suggestions were put forward, such
as encouraging BGU to hold a public meeting on the topic, to allow
everyone to have a right to exercise their freedom of speech, or
establishing campus "Zionist Centers" to teach Zionist principles.
Daniel Gordis of the Shalem Institute advocated a wholesale revision
of the education system.
"A century ago, who could have imagined
that the Jewish state would one day have a world-class army but a
failing, collapsing education system?" he wrote. "(Israel) needs a
liberal arts college, and the young people prepared to speak
constructively about Jewish sovereignty, its challenges, its
failures and its future that only that kind of college can produce."
THE CALL to "boycott BGU" threw
university officials into a panic, resulting in a flurry of
commentary, as well as a quickly-scheduled trip to the US by Carmi
and other faculty members hoping to stem the tide of opposition.
Their position: Boycotting BGU - or any
other Israeli educational institution - isn't the answer.
Ronni Strongin, another member of the
American Associates of BGU, stressed that since Gordon "has tenure
and cannot be fired," the university finds itself in an impossible
position. The University, she noted, includes some 25,000 students,
faculty and staff with many different missions. To inflict
collective punishment by withholding funds from the university as a
whole "allows the fulfillment of Gordon's wishes." Within a week,
BGU issued statements to the effect that Gordon will not be fired,
although BGU officials are still considering their options regarding
removing him as department head.
Carmi insists there's little the
university can do to a tenured professor. "Like it or not, Gordon
cannot be readily dismissed. The law in Israel is very clear, and
the university is a law-abiding institution," she wrote in her LA
Times response, and in a later statement to YNet, she said that
"the demand for (Gordon's) resignation (as department head) is
legitimate and I hope that after this tough week he will reach the
right decision."
University Rector Jimmy Weinblatt,
following a meeting with the professors who had signed petitions
supporting Gordon stressed that Gordon's status as faculty member
will not be compromised, and that the university administration will
not violate his civic and academic freedom of expression. Weinblatt,
who said he believes "it is not appropriate that Gordon continue in
his position" and hopes "he (will) reach the proper conclusions,"
said of university policy, "we are a democratic country with freedom
of expression for everyone, even if his opinions are unacceptable to
the rest.
"We support freedom of expression and
academic freedom which are at the heart of any university," he
added.
Jonathan Rosenblum was among those who
upheld the legitimacy of a donor boycott. In a Jerusalem Post
op-ed, he wrote that "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 him."
Professors, Rosenblum suggests, cannot be
held immune from criticism. "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."
"In general," Rosenbaum continues, "it
would be foolish to refrain from contributing to a university based
on the views of one faculty member one finds repugnant. Doing so
would eliminate virtually 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."
NEITHER SIDE is happy. BGU officials rue
the fact that they're under pressure from two sides. "We have heard
the calls by those who demand that the university ignore Israeli law
and fire Gordon, a tenured faculty member," Carmi said, "And we are
also under attack by others who champion Gordon on the basis of
freedom of speech."
Given the fact that BGU officials insist
Gordon will remain as a member of the faculty, those who oppose
Gordon's continued presence on the teaching staff at BGU were also
unhappy.
Jeff Daube suggests the tension is far
from over. "It's obvious that President Carmi would very much like
to sweep this whole affair under the carpet, move on to something
else, make believe it never happened - up until the next insult.
From here on, it's only going to get worse. If those who hate Israel
see they can get away with this kind of speech, I hate to think what
else they'll do next.
"Once you've called for an international
boycott, what's left?" Daube asks. "Maybe a call for the unilateral
dismantling of the State? Followed by that line, 'Would the last one
to leave please turn off the lights'?"
Nor does Ari Bussel believe any
significant donor boycott of BGU will take place. "The major donors
will be persuaded to go on giving money," he says. "It will be life
as usual. The difference this case made is that it set off a
fundamental change in the attitude of American Jewry. Now the red
line has been crossed. So the next time this happens - which it will
- it's going to be much more difficult to persuade donors to keep
supporting BGU.
"There's only so much one person can do,"
Bussel laments. "I know that at the end of the day, people pay the
price for what they do - we all will. But one thing I know for sure.
The next time I go to someone and ask for money for Israel, I know
it's going to be that much harder. How are we - how are any of us -
going to fight the next call for divestment, or for a boycott, if
Israel itself is calling for it?"
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