Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion
University - On anti-Semitic Counterpunch web site, Neve Gordon
(Dept of Political Science) gives HIS version of Israeli patriotic
student protests (and misrepresents himself as a professor)
Pro-government students interviewed
in the press said they were ’shocked to see faculty members,
together with students from the left and Arab students shouting
slogans against Israel’. Their classmates posted pictures of the
protests on Facebook, asking likeminded students to ‘identify their
classroom “friends”’.
A Facebook group was created to call
for my resignation: by the end of the day more than 1000 people had
joined. As well as hoping that I die and demanding that my family be
stripped of our citizenship and exiled from Israel, members of this
Facebook group offer more pragmatic suggestions, such as the need to
concentrate efforts on getting rid of teaching assistants who are
critical of the government, since it is more difficult to have me –
as a tenured professor – fired.
What is troubling about these
pro-government students is not that they are pro-government, but the
way they attack anyone who thinks differently from them, along with
their total lack of self-criticism or restraint.
http://counterpunch.com/gordon06042010.html
"No Citizenship Without Loyalty!"
Israel's Two Spaces
By NEVE GORDON
June 4 - 6, 2010
In Israel, almost all of the protests against
the navy’s assault on the relief flotilla took place in Palestinian
space. Palestinian citizens in almost every major town and city,
from Nazareth to Sachnin and from Arabe to Shfaram, demonstrated
against the assault that left nine people dead and many more
wounded. The one-day general strike called for by the Palestinian
leadership within Israel was, for the most part, adhered to only by
Arab citizens.
In Jewish space, by contrast, business
continued as usual. Except for a demonstration in front of the
Ministry of Defence in Tel Aviv, which brought together a few
hundred activists, the only site where there was some sign of a
grassroots protest against the raid was on Israeli university
campuses. While numerically these protests were also insignificant –
there were fewer than 2000 demonstrators from all the different
campuses, out of a student body of more than 200,000 – they were
extremely important both because they took place within Jewish space
and because the protestors were Jews and Palestinians standing side
by side.
Perhaps because of the widespread international
condemnation of the attack on the flotilla, the Israeli police were
relatively careful when handling these protests. Their caution is
particularly striking when compared with the police reaction during
the war on Gaza. Twelve students from the Technion and Haifa
University were nonetheless arrested, and one at Ben-Gurion
University was detained by undercover agents.
There was a visceral response to these campus
protests, however, from pro-government students.
Counter-demonstrations were immediately organised, bringing together
much larger crowds that rallied around the flag. While
demonstrations and counter-demonstrations are usually a sign of a
healthy politics, in this case the pro-government demos revealed an
extremely disturbing trend in Israeli society.
A group of opposition students from Ben-Gurion
University prepared a big banner on the street near their off-campus
apartment: ‘15 Dead. The Israeli government, as usual, has its
reasons, and the Zionist majority, as usual, extends its support.’
Their neighbours spat on them and called them ‘cunts’, ‘whores’ and
‘traitors who love Arabs’ until the students fled.
The following morning these students and their
friends rolled the same banner down from the administration
building, initiating a third wave of protests on campus. Both those
opposing and those supporting the Israeli government use Facebook to
tell their friends about these spontaneous demonstrations, and so
within minutes a couple of hundred students from both sides of the
fray had gathered and were shouting chants in the middle of campus.
A Palestinian student with a Palestinian flag was
shoved and had his flag torn from him by some of the pro-government
protesters, who were chanting: ‘No citizenship without loyalty!’ In
response, the Jewish and Palestinian oppositionists shouted: ‘No,
no, it will not come, fascism will not come!’ and ‘Peace is not
achieved on the bodies of those killed!’
At one point a Jewish provocateur, who is not a
member of any group (and could even be a police agent), raised his
hand in the air: ‘Heil Lieberman!’ The response of the
pro-government students was immediate: ‘Death to the Arabs!’ Luckily
the university security managed to create a wedge between the
protesters, and in this way prevented the incident from becoming
even more violent.
Pro-government students interviewed in the press
said they were ’shocked to see faculty members, together with
students from the left and Arab students shouting slogans against
Israel’. Their classmates posted pictures of the protests on
Facebook, asking likeminded students to ‘identify their classroom
“friends”’.
A Facebook group was created to call for my
resignation: by the end of the day more than 1000 people had joined.
As well as hoping that I die and demanding that my family be
stripped of our citizenship and exiled from Israel, members of this
Facebook group offer more pragmatic suggestions, such as the need to
concentrate efforts on getting rid of teaching assistants who are
critical of the government, since it is more difficult to have me –
as a tenured professor – fired.
What is troubling about these pro-government
students is not that they are pro-government, but the way they
attack anyone who thinks differently from them, along with their
total lack of self-criticism or restraint. If this is how students
at Israel’s best universities respond, what can we expect from the
rest of the population?
Neve Gordon is an
Israeli activist and the author of and author of Israel’s Occupation
(University of California Press, 2008).
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