Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University -Neve Gordon, BGU's Arch-Hater
of Israel, and the Anti-Israel Boycott Movement
Neve Gordon has changed his mind on the campaign to boycott
Israel. In 2003 he wrote a compelling piece under the headline:
"Against the Israeli Academic Boycott" in the The Nation in which he
puts forward some of the central reasons why a boycott of Israeli
academia would be both unjust and also counterproductive.
...
The reason seems to be that things are now so bad in Israel that
'something must be done'. But what Neve Gordon is unable to do is to
show what is wrong with his previous arguments about doing this
particular 'something'. He offers nothing.
No reason why the boycott campaign no longer contains echoes of
antisemitism.
No reason why he singles out Israel, and only Israel, for
boycott.
No reason why he is willing to overlook the 'biases' of the
boycott movement.
No reason why BDS would no longer bolster the right and harm the
left in Israel.
http://engageonline.wordpress.com/2010/10/10/neve-gordon-changed-his-mind-on-the-boycott/
Neve Gordon changed his mind on the boycott
David Hirsh
October 10, 2010
Only an idiot never changes his mind
Neve Gordon has changed his mind on the campaign to boycott
Israel. In 2003 he wrote a compelling piece under the headline: "Against
the israeli [sic] Academic Boycott" in the The Nation
in which he puts forward some of the central reasons why a boycott
of Israeli academia would be both unjust and also counterproductive.
In 2003 Neve Gordon argued that in Israel 'academic freedom still
exists, much more so than in many other countries' but he said that
unwittingly, 'American and European supporters of the academic
boycott against Israeli universities are aiding' the right wing
attack on academic freedom. Gordon goes on:
"Among the many reasons why one should
reject the academic boycott, critics have highlighted the
boycotter's double standard. It is not only that some of the
boycotters come from countries that are also responsible for much
oppression and suffering, but, perhaps more important, Israel could
not carry out its policies without the ongoing support of the United
States, which has, for example, recently promised Sharon $12 billion
in direct aid and loan guarantees."
"While this line of argument exposes
some of the biases informing the academic boycott movement, there
are two other important reasons why a boycott of Israeli
universities is misdirected."
"The first argument is the one already
alluded to: Israeli universities continue to be an island of freedom
surrounded by a stifling and threatening environment. In the past
two years the Israeli media, which was once known for its critical
edge, has been suppressing critical voices, and in a number of
electronic media outlets specific regulations have been issued, such
as restrictions on live interviews with Palestinians. This dangerous
trend is likely to become even more pronounced now that the right
wing has garnered a considerable majority in the Israeli Knesset."
"The second argument, the one most
often ignored by outsiders, has to do with the fact that in the past
year and a half Israeli universities have been under an
unprecedented assault by the Sharon government. The Minister of
Education, Limor Livnat, is trying to radically change the structure
of higher education, including the way universities are governed and
managed. She would like to strip power from the faculty senates and
transfer it to boards of trustees in which professors are barred
from membership. An academic boycott will only strengthen Livnat,
and in this way assist the destruction of academic freedom in
Israel."
Neve Gordon goes on to explain precisely why the boycotters'
claim to be targetting only institutions and not individuals makes
no sense:
When I explained these points to
pro-boycott colleagues in Britain, they replied, "It isn't you, but
rather your institute that will be punished for not taking an
institutional stand on the illegality of the occupation." Yet it is
precisely the institute that enables Israeli professors – regardless
of their political affiliation – to voice their views, suggesting
that an assault on the university is in fact an assault on its
faculty.
Neve Gordon finishes with an important point:
To fight the anti-intellectual
atmosphere within Israel, local academics need as much support as
they can get from their colleagues abroad. A boycott will only
weaken the elements within Israeli society that are struggling
against the assault on the universities, and in this way will
inadvertently help those who want to gain control over one of the
last havens of free speech in the country.
Some of us, who later founded Engage, were so impressed by Neve
Gordon's position that we quoted him in
a letter that was published in the Times Higher in April 2005
and which was signed by, amongst others, David Hirsh and Robert
Fine.
In August 2009 Neve Gordon
raised perhaps the most fundamental reason why a boycott of
Israel would be counterproductive: "A global boycott can't help but
contain echoes of anti-Semitism." This, as UCU activists
have discovered for themselves over the last five years, is
certainly true. In the same piece Neve Gordon also argues that:
"It also brings up questions of a
double standard (why not boycott China for its egregious violations
of human rights?) and the seemingly contradictory position of
approving a boycott of one's own nation."
Yet it is
this same editorial in the LA Times where Neve Gordon says that
he now supports the campaign for Boycotts,
Divestment and Sanctions against Israel. This followed on from
a piece he had published in the Guardian also offering support
to the BDS campaign.
Only an idiot never changes his mind. There is no disgrace in
changing your mind. But if you do so then you ought to say why. This
is the reasoning that he offers in the LA Times:
But today, as I watch my two boys
playing in the yard, I am convinced that it is the only way that
Israel can be saved from itself.
I say this because Israel has reached
a historic crossroads, and times of crisis call for dramatic
measures. I say this as a Jew who has chosen to raise his children
in Israel, who has been a member of the Israeli peace camp for
almost 30 years and who is deeply anxious about the country's
future.
The most accurate way to describe
Israel today is as an apartheid state. For more than 42 years,
Israel has controlled the land between the Jordan Valley and the
Mediterranean Sea. Within this region about 6 million Jews and close
to 5 million Palestinians reside. Out of this population, 3.5
million Palestinians and almost half a million Jews live in the
areas Israel occupied in 1967, and yet while these two groups live
in the same area, they are subjected to totally different legal
systems. The Palestinians are stateless and lack many of the most
basic human rights. By sharp contrast, all Jews — whether they live
in the occupied territories or in Israel — are citizens of the state
of Israel.
The question that keeps me up at
night, both as a parent and as a citizen, is how to ensure that my
two children as well as the children of my Palestinian neighbors do
not grow up in an apartheid regime.
The reason seems to be that things are now so bad in Israel that
'something must be done'. But what Neve Gordon is unable to do is to
show what is wrong with his previous arguments about doing this
particular 'something'. He offers nothing.
No reason why the boycott campaign no longer contains echoes of
antisemitism.
No reason why he singles out Israel, and only Israel, for
boycott.
No reason why he is willing to overlook the 'biases' of the
boycott movement.
No reason why BDS would no longer bolster the right and harm the
left in Israel.
Neve Gordon evidently understands the reasons why BDS is both
wrong and also counterproductive. He is therefore very well placed
to explain to us why these reasons are no longer important. He
should do so.
Engage offered Neve Gordon a right of reply to
this piece which I wrote in response to another article
of his. Neve wrote back and denied that, as it said in that
article, he is 'a supporter of the campaign to exclude Israeli
scholars from the international academic community'. He wrote that
'the BDS campaign itself does not support such exclusion. Indeed,
the academic boycott is aimed at institutions and not individual
scholars'.
As to what the BDS campaign supports, that was clear long ago. It
supported Mona Baker and Andrew Wilkie in their 'individual
boycotts' of Israelis. At some times it has supported a political
test for individuals from Israel, and offered an amnesty to
individuals like Neve Gordon who show willingness to jump through
their hoops. And at other times the BDS campaign has tried to hide
behind the fiction of the 'institutional boycott'.
This old piece by Jon Pike deals with this sophistry:
http://www.engageonline.org.uk/blog/article.php?id=231
This old piece of mine responded to Sue Blackwell's protestations
and threats on the issue:
http://www.engageonline.org.uk/blog/article.php?id=1197
But for the best critique of the 'institutional boycott' I would
refer you to Neve Gordon himself (above): "it is precisely the
institute that enables Israeli professors – regardless of their
political affiliation – to voice their views, suggesting that an
assault on the university is in fact an assault on its faculty."
Neve Gordon has written op eds in the Guardian and in the LA
Times in which he offers unambiguous support for Boycotts,
Divestment and Sanctions against Israel. Nowhere does he mention any
nuances of position regarding an academic boycott.
There is a
transcript of an interview that he gave on Public Radio
International in which the interviewer suggests that Gordon is not
for an academic boycott. Neve Gordon replies as follows:
" There is no doubt
tension, if not a contradiction, to support a boycott of one's self
in a sense. What I'm trying to say is that we all live in
contradictions and we have to choose the contradictions we live in.
The contradiction I am living with is a contradiction that I hope
will bring change here for my children. And I don't want them, or
the children of our Palestinian neighbors, to live in an apartheid
regime."
Neve Gordon does not take this opportunity to say that he is for
BDS except for academics. He does not say he is against an academic
boycott either of individuals or of institutions. Given that he
publicly and internatioanlly supports "BDS" and given that he has
not argued for an exception for academics, I think it is fair to say
that he supports the boycott campaign.
The boycott campaign is fronted by "PACBI" – the Palestinian
campaign for an Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel. It is a
campaign for an academic boycott of Israel. Neve Gordon supports it.
But he does not say why he has rejected all the good reasons for
opposing it.
David Hirsh
Goldsmiths, University of London
Engage invites Neve Gordon to respond
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