Israeli Academic Extremism
Moshe Kaveh, President of
Bar-Ilan University, Calls for Dismissal of Tenured Traitors who
Support the International Academic Boycott
The president of Bar-Ilan University has called for Israeli
professors who support an academic boycott of their country to quit
or be fired.
The statement comes as Israel's parliament
debates legislation that would allow lawsuits against academics
and others who support various boycotts of the Jewish state. The
bill is not expected to become law, but it is generating questions
about the role of scholars at public universities in Israel.
Bar-Ilan's Moshe Kaveh, a former chairman of Israel's Committee
of University Presidents, is the first leader of an Israeli
university to back the dismissal of the handful of Israeli
professors who publicly expressed support for a boycott. Last year
the president of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
had no kind words for Neve Gordon, a professor of politics and
government, for advocating an international academic boycott, but
did not fire him.
http://chronicle.com/article/Head-of-Israeli-University/123679/
Head of Israeli University Demands Ouster of
Professors Who Support Boycott
By Matthew Kalman
July 23, 2010
The president of Bar-Ilan University has called for Israeli
professors who support an academic boycott of their country to quit
or be fired.
The statement comes as Israel's parliament
debates legislation that would allow lawsuits against academics
and others who support various boycotts of the Jewish state. The
bill is not expected to become law, but it is generating questions
about the role of scholars at public universities in Israel.
Bar-Ilan's Moshe Kaveh, a former chairman of Israel's Committee
of University Presidents, is the first leader of an Israeli
university to back the dismissal of the handful of Israeli
professors who publicly expressed support for a boycott. Last year
the president of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
had no kind words for Neve Gordon, a professor of politics and
government, for advocating an international academic boycott, but
did not fire him.
"It's easy to be brave when criticizing, but someone who has the
courage to criticize the institution where he works should also have
the courage to quit—and, if not, I as president will make it
happen," Mr. Kaveh told a Jewish education-and-culture festival on
Thursday during a panel discussion with the education minister,
Gideon Sa'ar, on the nature of Jewish identity.
"How can it be that a faculty member can stand in class and say
to his students, 'Boycott the State of Israel?' Someone who
criticizes the place where he works is ethically obliged to resign,"
said Mr. Kaveh.
His remarks were greeted with warm applause from the audience and
from the education minister, Israel Army Radio reported.
"When you call for an academic boycott of Israel, you don't just
do harm to the institution that pays your salary. You also harm
academic freedom," Mr. Sa'ar responded.
Menachem Klein, a professor of political studies at Bar-Ilan who
is firmly opposed to a boycott, said nonetheless that Mr. Kaveh
"disregards the fundamental element of academic research."
"I wish to remind Professor Kaveh." he said, "that university
researchers' primary responsibility and loyalty are to
universal-humanistic values that direct their scientific research,
not to their employer."
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