Editorial Article
Professors of hate
By Isi Leibler
(Jerusalem Post 5/5)
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The flow of new
initiatives from academics throughout the world seeking to
delegitimize Israel continues unabated. Now the emphasis is directed
towards anti-Israeli boycotts as exemplified by the recent outrage
from the British Association of University Teachers.
Sadly, in many
universities, academics of Jewish origin have assumed key roles
denigrating Israel often claiming to do so out of "a sense of Jewish
justice."
But the most harmful
academic purveyors of hatred against the Jewish state are located at
our own universities. They demonize their own country and try to
persuade their students that Israel was born in sin. Their negative
impact abroad is devastating.
University of Haifa
political science professor Ilan Pappe would undoubtedly qualify for
the title of doyen of the haters of Zion in Israeli academia. He
constantly brackets Israelis with Nazis and urges academics
throughout the world to delegitimize Israel.
Pappe gained added
notoriety as the supervisor of a master's thesis which alleged that
the Alexandroni Brigade had massacred hundreds of Arabs during the
War of Independence. Veterans of the brigade instituted libel
proceedings against the author, Teddy Katz, who conceded in court to
having falsified interviews from alleged Arab witnesses. But despite
the exposure of his rogue scholarship, Katz – with the endorsement
of Pappe – continues to travel around the world repeating the same
lies.
In a call to the
British Association of University Teachers just prior to their
boycott resolution, Pappe appealed to them "as an Israeli Jew who
for years worked for other ways to bring an end to the evil
perpetuated against the Palestinians in the occupied territories,
inside Israel, and in the refugee camps to be part of a historical
movement to bring an end to more than a century of colonization,
occupation, and dispossession of the Palestinians."
Obscenely
anti-Israeli outbursts by Hebrew University historian, and head of
the German Studies department, Moshe Zimmerman qualify him as a
worthy competitor to Pappe. A Tel Aviv judge who rejected
Zimmerman's libel suit against a critic, condemned his repeated
comparisons "between Hebron youth and Hitler Youth; between the
motivation and conditions of service in IDF units and that of the
Waffen SS between the Bible and Mein Kampf."
There are many other
Israeli academics promoting similar views:
Ran Hacohen, who
teaches comparative literature at Tel Aviv University described
"Israel as fulfilling Hitler's dream" and referred to the
assassination of Hamas leader Ahmed Yassin as "a milestone in the
process of the barbarization of mankind."
Lev Grinberg,
director of the Humphries Institute for Social Research at
Ben-Gurion University, accused the Israeli government, in a Belgian
newspaper, of "state terrorism." He also described the "murder of
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin as an Israeli policy that may be described as an
act of symbolic genocide," prompting a Foreign Ministry official to
accuse him of treason.
Binyamin Beit
Hallahmi, professor of psychology at the University of Haifa,
claimed that "Israelis are haunted by the curse of original sin
against the native Arabs Its memory poisons their blood and marks
every moment of their history."
Ze'ev Sternhell from
the Hebrew University history and political science department wrote
"There is no doubt regarding the legitimacy of the armed resistance
in the territories themselves. If the Palestinians had a bit of
sense, they would concentrate their struggle against the
settlements."
Baruch Kimmerling,
the Hebrew University sociologist, and others leapt to the defense
of the anti-Israeli academics at Columbia University, currently
under fire for intimidating Jewish students.
Not surprisingly,
these defamers of Israel are hailed as courageous fighters for human
rights and have become darlings of the global anti-Israeli academic
circuit. Their loathsome statements are exploited by the boycotters
to cover-up the odium of applying double standards against Israel
and displaying anti-Semitic prejudice.
In response to
complaints about these activities, all university administrations
adamantly refuse to take disciplinary action. They insist that
academic freedom is sacrosanct and that under no circumstances will
they intervene. Apparently such sensitivities do not apply to the
British University Teachers Association whose boycott explicitly
exempts Israeli academics willing to denounce their country's
"colonialist and racist policies."
It is surrealistic
to witness universities funded by Israeli taxpayers being used as
launching pads for international activities designed to undermine
Jewish statehood under the mantle of academic freedom.
It is equally
bizarre for Jewish donors motivated by Zionist and pro-Israel
sentiments to contribute funds which indirectly provide platforms
for self-loathing Jews to demonize and delegitimize Israel.
Paradoxically, ADL
head Abe Foxman, himself a passionate champion of freedom of
expression, was one of the first Diaspora leaders to challenge the
passivity of Israeli university administrations. After becoming
involved in the Columbia University imbroglio and having urged
Columbia president Lee Bollinger to take action to prevent
anti-Israeli faculty from exploiting their positions, Foxman felt he
could not remain silent as similar abominations took place at
Israeli universities.
Israel is a nation
under siege, facing existential threats. Is it unreasonable to deny
anti-Israeli faculty the use of our universities as staging grounds
for campaigns to delegitimize the Jewish state? There is certainly
no doubt that the vast majority of Israelis would endorse the need
to rein in academics who exploit universities as platforms to
provide succor to those who seek to destroy us.
It would therefore
be timely for the government to set up a commission to enable a
public discourse on the role of publicly funded institutions which
are being exploited to undermine the security of the nation in the
name of academic freedom.
Is that fascism?
Only if one associates democracy with a license to incite and
subvert the state in the name of freedom of expression.
Besides, in most
countries, the growing threat of global terror will in the near
future undoubtedly necessitate encroachments, on what has hitherto
been considered as unfettered freedom of expression. If the survival
or physical welfare of citizens is at risk, most governments (in
contrast to Israel) would implement whatever measures are deemed
necessary to protect their welfare.
The writer chairs the Diaspora-Israel
relations committee of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs and
is a former chairman of the governing board of the World Jewish
Congress.
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