University of Haifa
University of
Haifa – YNet quotes University and Student Union Heads defending
IsraCampus.Org.il’s right to publish ad that denounces Anti-Israel
Lecturers in Student Union daily planner
Students at Haifa
University are outraged over the contents of an ad included in a
daily planner distributed by the Student Union at the beginning of
the academic year. The ad urges students to become aware of
"anti-Israel lecturers" from universities across the country,
including the Haifa institute. A complaint was sent to University
President Professor Aaron Ben Ze'ev pointing to incitement. …
Chairman Felix Koritney commented, "It's an advertisement bought and
published in the planner as by other advertisers. We went over the
content and it is fine by us. It informs the students, in the way
other websites inform of corruption and ethics violations…Students
should know who they take classes with. We love the State of Israel
and support it and see no wrong with the ad." Haifa University
issued a statement reading, "In accordance with its policy and the
student rights law, the University of Haifa allows freedom of speech
on campus, even when it opposes the contents of opinions, so long as
no State laws were violated."
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3796509,00.html
Student ad:
Know your anti-Israel professors
Daily planner distributed by Haifa University Student Union
includes ad promoting website which warns against 'extreme
anti-Israel lecturers on campus.' Complaint already filed by
student, while Student Union claims ad is legitimate
Yaheli
Moran Zelikovich
27.10.2009
Students at Haifa
University are outraged over the contents of an ad included in a
daily planner distributed by the Student Union at the beginning of
the academic year. The ad urges students to become aware of
"anti-Israel lecturers" from universities across the country,
including the Haifa institute. A complaint was sent to University
President Professor Aaron Ben Ze'ev pointing to incitement.
The ad directs
students to a website which lists names of lecturers from various
universities and their quotes on such topics as the separation
fence, legitimacy of Israel's existence, and even an article
slamming pop singer Madonna's concert in Israel. The website does
not offer the lecturers responses to the quotes.
The ad reads,
"Warning! A fifth academic corps! Know your anti-Israel lecturers.
Professors and lecturers in Israeli universities and colleges
engaged in subversive activity such as: openly endorsing terror
attacks against Jews, initiating international boycotts of Israel,
using their status to anti-Israel preaching and anti-Zionist
brainwash, cooperating with known anti-Semites, slandering Israel as
a fascist, colonial State with an apartheid regime."
The ad further
accuses the lecturers of promoting violence and law violations,
encouraging draft-dodging among IDF soldiers and calling for the
annihilation of Israel. "Learn of the abuses of the academic
platform and beware of extreme anti-Israel lecturers on campus," the
ad concluded.
'Ad amounts to
incitement'
Maor Dahan, a law
and psychology major, filed a complaint with the university
administration. "As a Haifa University student, reading this ad made
me feel nauseous. Preparing black lists of academics reminds me of
dark times in dark regimes when people were persecuted for their
different opinions. The ad's title – a fifth corps - clearly amounts
to incitement."
Members of the
Haifa Student Union claimed that the ad doesn't constitute
incitement but a legitimate expression of opinion.
Chairman Felix
Koritney commented, "It's an advertisement bought and published in
the planner as by other advertisers. We went over the content and it
is fine by us. It informs the students, in the way other websites
inform of corruption and ethics violations…Students should know who
they take classes with. We love the State of Israel and support it
and see no wrong with the ad."
Haifa University
issued a statement reading, "In accordance with its policy and the
student rights law, the University of Haifa allows freedom of speech
on campus, even when it opposes the contents of opinions, so long as
no State laws were violated."
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