Ben Gurion University
Israeli Appeals Court: You Can Denounce the Radical Left
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By
P. David Hornik
FrontPageMagazine.com |
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
It was a big loss for Israel’s radical Left,
and a big win for the freedom to criticize it and describe it
accurately.
An appeals court in the Israeli town of
Nazareth overturned an earlier lower-court ruling that had awarded a
legal victory to Neve Gordon, a far-Left Israeli lecturer in
political scientist at Ben-Gurion University in Beersheba. Gordon
had filed a SLAPP suit in that court against Prof. Steven Plaut, a
prominent columnist and academic economist, based on articles Plaut
had published denouncing Gordon’s political opinions and public
political activities. Plaut is a critic of Israel’s radical academic
Left and is associated with websites that monitor it, including
www.isracampus.org.il.
SLAPP stands for “Strategic Lawsuit against
Public Participation.” In many parts of the United States there are
serious penalties for filing SLAPP suits, but to date none in
Israel.
In particular, Plaut had censured Gordon for
repeatedly endorsing the views and writings of Prof. Norman
Finkelstein, recently fired by DePaul University in Chicago, and
even comparing him to the biblical Prophets. Finkelstein, a
fawning admirer of the Hezbollah terror organization,
is a favorite of neo-Nazis like Ernst Zundel. Commentary senior
editor Gabriel Schoenfeld has condemned his “crackpot ideas, some of
them mirrored almost verbatim in the propaganda put out by neo-Nazis
around the world” (Commentary, January 2001, p. 20).
Plaut had also slammed Gordon for illegally
entering Ramallah to interfere with Israeli military operations,
describing Gordon’s “human shield” group as “Judenrat wannabes.” On
February 3, 2002, Israel’s ynet
reported (in Hebrew, with photo) that “250 left-wing activists
violated the Israeli army’s orders and entered Ramallah for a
meeting with [Yasser] Arafat. . . . Neve Gordon . . . was
photographed with Arafat with hands clasped . . . .”
In his suit Gordon claimed that Plaut had
called him a “Jew for Hitler” and Holocaust denier. The appeals
court ruled that Plaut had only characterized Finkelstein as a
neo-Nazi and had rebuked Gordon for endorsing and praising him.
Gordon also claimed that other pieces Plaut wrote about him were
libelous, and demanded that Plaut be forced to compensate him for
writing that Gordon’s “academic record” largely consisted of
anti-Israeli political propaganda misrepresented as research and
scholarship.
Gordon had won the first round in June 2006
when an Arab woman judge in the lower court, Reem Naddaf, found in
his favor. The appeals panel, however, states that Naddaf’s judgment
was replete with errors. Moreover, Naddaf made no attempt in her
verdict to hide her own radical anti-Israeli political opinions,
which happen to coincide largely with those of Gordon. She inserted
outright political declarations in her ruling, including upholding
the legitimacy of Holocaust revisionism and declaring that all of
Israel is land “stolen from another people.”
On November 8, 2006, Prof. Alan Dershowitz of
Harvard University blasted Naddaf’s ruling in the
Jerusalem Post. He attacked the verdict as a gross violation of
Plaut’s freedom of speech and stated: “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.” Dershowitz also invited
Gordon to file a libel suit against him similar to what Gordon had
filed against Plaut. Gordon never did.
Naddaf’s ruling was
strongly criticized as biased and antidemocratic in articles all
over the world. Plaut’s lawyer suggested that Gordon had filed his
SLAPP suit in Nazareth court solely because he knew many Arab judges
sat on the bench there and was hoping to get a radical anti-Israeli
Arab to hear the case. Naddaf awarded Gordon nearly 100,000 shekels
(currently almost $30,000) in compensation and costs for what she
considered “libelous” in Plaut’s criticisms of him.
Plaut filed an appeal against the ruling, which
under Israeli law must be filed in the same district court as the
first legal round (Nazareth). Gordon also filed his own appeal in
which he demanded far greater compensation for his supposed
“injury,” even though he had never demonstrated any material damages
from Plaut’s criticisms of him. Gordon also demanded that the court
coerce Plaut into publishing a public apology.
The appeals court completely rejected every
single demand made by Gordon and his lawyer, Fareed Ghanam, in their
appeal. It accepted every single point except one made by Plaut in
his appeal, overturning the Naddaf ruling. It ruled, however, by a
two-to-one majority that Plaut’s description of Gordon and his
comrades as “Judenrat wannabes” was not permissible speech, even
though Plaut was criticizing criminal behavior by Gordon.
The court ruled that Gordon had lied when he
claimed Plaut had called him a “Jew for Hitler” and a “Holocaust
denier,” and the appeals judges repeatedly reproved Naddaf for
erroneously ignoring the fact that Gordon lied in those statements.
It ruled that Plaut’s descriptions of Gordon’s academic record as
consisting largely of anti-Israeli hate propaganda misrepresented as
scholarship were entirely legitimate.
The court also ruled that sarcastic and harsh
criticism of leftist anti-Israeli radicals is protected speech, thus
defeating the entire rationale for Gordon’s SLAPP suit. It ordered
Gordon to return 90% of the “damages” the lower court had awarded
him, but allowed him to retain 10,000 shekels as compensation
because two of the three appeals judges thought this would deter the
use of Holocaust-era imagery in public political debate in Israel.
Throughout the appeals verdict, the panel of
three judges vividly described Gordon’s anti-Israeli writings,
including his articles describing Israel as a fascist, Nazi-like,
apartheid state. (Gordon
recently publicly called for a “one-state solution” in which
Israel would cease to exist, though did so too late to be included
in the judges’ ruling.) Although Plaut had repeatedly characterized
Gordon, in the media and in his court defense, as an open
anti-Semite, the judges saw nothing objectionable in this. One
judge, Avraham Avraham, ruled that even if Plaut had indeed called
Gordon a “Jew for Hitler,” there would have been nothing unsound in
Plaut’s having done so.
The decision to reverse only 90% of the
damages, rather than 100%, was based entirely on an Israeli Supreme
Court decision last year in which the editor of the daily Maariv,
Amnon Dankner, was ordered to pay a single shekel in damages to a
right-wing extremist, Itamar Ben Gvir, because Dankner had called
Ben Gvir a “little Nazi” on television. That ruling, written by the
controversial Judge Ayala Procaccia, a radical proponent of
“judicial activism,” claimed that the courts should attempt to
suppress “impolite” public rhetoric that makes use of Holocaust-era
imagery. The Nazareth appeals court claimed it left the 10% in
damages for the same reason.
“The Israeli judicial system has been very weak
in defending freedom of speech for those who do not belong to the
Far Left,” said Plaut in response. “Moreover, the filing of SLAPP
suits to harass and silence political opponents and critics has not
been reined in at all, endangering Israeli democracy. In my court
case, we saw a politically biased, lower-court Arab judge attempt to
inject her political support for a radical leftist into Israeli case
law and muzzle Israeli freedom of speech. The next item on the
country’s judicial agenda must be the removal of Judge Reem Naddaf
from the bench before she can do any more harm.”
Plaut went on: “This is a near-complete victory
for those who think that all in Israel, and not only the seditious
far Left, should be entitled to freedom of speech. It is unfortunate
that the appeals court balked from going the extra few centimeters
and ruling that the pro-terror political activities of a radical may
be legitimately denounced even using Holocaust-era terminology. The
greatest hypocrisy in Israel is that far-Left Jews and extremist
Arabs denounce Israel and Zionism as Nazism and genocidal and this
is always protected speech, but denunciations of those same
extremists are not.”
Regarding the small residual payment the court
declined to refund to him, Plaut quipped, “Henceforth Neve Gordon
will be intimately linked in Israel’s legal system with far-rightist
Ben Gvir as the two comrades who legally snipped the margins of free
speech in Israel. In the Procaccia-Ben Gvir ruling the Supreme
Court ordered Dankner to pay a single shekel in compensation when
calling someone a ‘little Nazi.’ We may be appealing to Israel’s
Supreme Court to overturn the undemocratic 10,000-shekel
residual.”
“Another loser in all this is Ben-Gurion
University,” adds Plaut. “It is now clear to all that parts of
Ben-Gurion University have followed a policy of hiring and promoting
anti-Israeli radicals on the basis of turning out hate propaganda
and misrepresenting it as scholarship. Academic standards have been
trashed in some departments of that university. My near-complete
court victory will only produce escalated exposure and criticism of
Israel’s academic fifth column and of the failure of Israeli
universities to enforce academic standards when it comes to
anti-Israeli extremists.”
P. David Hornik is a freelance writer and
translator living in Tel Aviv. He blogs at
http://pdavidhornik.typepad.com/. He can be reached at
pdavidh2001@yahoo.com.
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