University of Haifa
University of Haifa - Head of Board of Govs of Haifa U
makes excuses for the Judenrein Rally of the Jihad Sheikh
Charney, who was a
layer before becoming involved in politics and real estate, also
said that if the issue had been taken to court, it would have forced
the legal system to better define the limitations of freedom of
speech on campus - a positive development, he said, as the
universities were not capable of making the decision on their own.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1246443707095&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Haifa U Chairman:
'Freedom of speech on campus has limitations'
Jul. 2, 2009
Abe Selig , THE JERUSALEM POST
The tide of outrage over Sheikh Raed
Salah's controversial speech at Haifa University last month has more
or less subsided. But the university's chairman, American-Zionist
activist and entrepreneur Leon Charney, told The Jerusalem Post
this week that he had personally come under fire for the
incident, and wanted to make it clear that while his institution was
committed to maintaining academic freedom and freedom of speech on
campus, those ideals came with limitations.
"It must be emphatically understood that
we are an Israeli university committed to Jewish values," Charney
said. "And we should never allow anyone who is a racist, or someone
who espouses violence to speak on our campus. Freedom of speech
doesn't allow you to scream fire in the theater."
The controversy surrounding the university
began on June 17, when Salah, who leads the northern branch of the
Islamic Movement in Israel, addressed a Muslim student group that
had invited him to the campus, and claimed Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu was hatching nefarious plans to tunnel under the Temple
Mount and eventually rebuild a third Jewish temple there.
"We love life, our families, our homes and
our children," Salah said during his speech. "But if they suggest
that we give up our principles and holy sites, we would rather die
and we welcome death!"
Students in the auditorium at the time
replied to Salah's statement with boisterous cheers of "Allahu Akbar!",
which caused Jewish protesters gathered outside - who had been
prohibited from entering the auditorium due to fears of violence -
to clash with security officers at the scene.
But the fallout after Salah's appearance
included additional protests by student groups and an eventual
hearing on the matter during a Knesset Education Meeting last month,
in which committee head MK Zevulun Orlev (The Jewish Home)
admonished university officials for allowing Salah to speak.
On Wednesday, Charney reiterated what
university officials had said in June, namely, that the university
did not want Salah to speak, but that the university's legal adviser
had made it clear that if they had barred the sheikh from speaking,
the university would have been taken to court, and would have lost
the case.
"But I think we should have gone to court
and lost," Charney added. "Because at least that way, we would have
aired the issue."
Charney, who was a layer before becoming
involved in politics and real estate, also said that if the issue
had been taken to court, it would have forced the legal system to
better define the limitations of freedom of speech on campus - a
positive development, he said, as the universities were not capable
of making the decision on their own.
"This is a very important issue, not just
for the academic world, but for the State of Israel," he said. "And
the judicial system has to be the one to handle it, because it's
nearly impossible for university officials to find that balance."
In that vein, Charney also said he
believed the limitations on freedom of speech should be different in
Israel than on an American university, as the reality here calls for
more sensitivity against the backdrop of the deep hostilities that
exist in the region.
"Maybe an Islamic radical could speak at a
campus in the US, which has two oceans between it and the rest of
the world," Charney said. "But I think that there would be more
limitations in Israel because the country is too small, and is
involved in day to day wars. Here, you have to be more careful - the
environment of the country needs to be taken into account when
determining how far freedom of speech can go."
Charney also stressed he valued the
university's Arab students - some 20 percent of the student body -
and appreciated the example his university was able to set for the
country.
"Haifa University is a model of
coexistence," he said. "The dean of research is an Israeli-Arab, and
I think we are an important vehicle for the State of Israel to show
that we can coexist. But again, there are limits to everything."
On that note Charney added that after the
Salah controversy, he had been assailed by angry e-mails from
university donors and others who accused the university of becoming
a bastion of Islamist radicalism.
"Some people only read the headlines," he
said. "And I think there was a misunderstanding, especially over the
issue with the Jewish protesters not being allowed in the auditorium
because they were Jewish - this was not the case."
"But I've been the chairman of the
university for two years, and I've never received more e-mails over
a single issue than this one," Charney continued. "It's a good test
case for Israeli democracy, but as chairman I have a duty to protect
my university, and I think there is a wrong impression out there
which I want to correct. We are an Israeli university, and by
osmosis, that makes us a Jewish university. If someone wants to
respectfully say something about Israeli policies, they can do that,
but they cannot be allowed to cross the line and preach values of
hate and racism."
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