Ben Gurion University
Comeuppance
for Ben Gurion University?
Don’t you love poetic justice? Ben Gurion
University has long been one of the centers of the anti-Israel
academic Left inside Israel and the capital for calls from tenured
traitors for a world boycott of Israel.
Well, Cowabunga! Now it turns out that a South
Africa “University” wants to boycott Ben Gurion University, in
response no doubt to the bleatings of Comrade Neve Gordon and his
BGU friends in mufti:
'The University of Johannesburg (UJ) is
considering cutting academic ties with Israel's Ben-Gurion
University (BGU) in protest against Ben Gurion's alleged
association with Palestinian human rights abuses.'
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2010-05-21-varsity-row-over-israel-links
Varsity row over Israel links
LIONEL FAULL
May 21 2010
The University of Johannesburg (UJ) is
considering cutting academic ties with Israel's Ben-Gurion
University (BGU) in protest against Ben Gurion's alleged association
with Palestinian human rights abuses.
An "extraordinary" meeting of the university's
senate debated the matter on Monday.
The university's current partnership with Ben
Gurion dates from August when the two signed an academic cooperation
and staff exchange agreement, relating to water purification and
micro-algal biotechnology research.
This re-established a relationship forged
between the former Rand Afrikaans University (RAU) and Ben Gurion in
the apartheid 1980s. RAU merged with Technikon Witwatersrand in 2005
to form the University of Johannesburg.
In October, 52 academic staff members signed a
petition opposing the current partnership. It states in part: "The
Palestinian people are currently victims of an Israeli occupation,
which violates their human rights as well as international law.
Their plight has been repeatedly compared with that of black South
Africans under apartheid."
Professor Steven Friedman presented the
pro-boycott argument in the senate on behalf of the petitioners. "We
are not asking UJ to join a boycott campaign against Israel," said
Friedman, who is the director of the joint UJ-Rhodes University
Centre for the Study of Democracy.
"But we are asking them not to sign agreements
with institutions which collaborate with governments that commit
human rights violations," he told the Mail & Guardian.
Friedman argued that:
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Israel has 53 apartheid-style laws that
discriminate between Jews and non-Jews;
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The Israeli occupation of Gaza is a colonial
exercise; and
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The Ben Gurion offers stipends and partial
exemptions from its degree requirements to members of the Israeli
military, and tenders for Israeli Defence Force research
contracts. The partnership was defended in the senate meeting by
Professor Ilan Troen, the Ben Gurion's founding dean of humanities
and social sciences, and South African advocate David Unterhalter.
Troen flew to South Africa from Israel for
the meeting; Unterhalter appeared pro bono. Their participation was
organised by the South African Associates of Ben Gurion University,
the president of which, Bertram Lubner, is vice-chairperson of Ben
Gurion's board of governors. Lubner is an honorary life member of
the South African Jewish Board of Deputies.
Surprised'
Troen told the M&G he was "surprised"
that a "water purification project that is of manifest benefit to
South Africans and an academic cooperation of 20 years' standing
between two institutions" should be questioned. He said the proposed
boycott was reprehensible. "It is understandable that South Africans
should interpret other societies in terms of their own experiences,
but the apartheid metaphor is a fallacy."
Petition signatory Salim Vally, a senior
researcher in UJ's Centre for Education Rights and Transformation,
said: "RAU played a particular role in cooperating with apartheid.
It was on the wrong side of history then and we don't want UJ to be
on the wrong side now."
The university's SRC president, Emmanuel
Mapheto, echoed this: "We cannot allow our institution to partner
BGU. What Israel is doing in Palestine amounts to apartheid," he
said.
The senate unanimously resolved that a
nine-member committee, led by UJ deputy vice-chancellor Adam Habib,
should make recommendations on the matter to the senate within three
months.
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