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Israeli Extremism
Bemoaning the Plague of Self-Hatred at Israeli Universities
The Israeli university
reflected Zionist ideals. It maintained the continuity between the
traditions of the past and the country taking form in the present
without foregoing the secular-pioneer mission of building a
sovereign independent state without waiting for divine intervention.
However, as enlightened freedom of thought is replaced by a
politically correct agenda, over-emphasis of secular anti-religion
remains and paves the way for self-hating revisionism. For instance,
one of the "new historians" "proved' that Jewish self-awareness as a
nation and their continued connection to the Land of Israel are
inventions meant to justify Zionist ideology retroactively. A
well-known archeologist, who was awarded a prestigious award,
regurgitated this claim and applied it to biblical times. According
to him, the kingdom of David and Solomon never existed and was only
invented to justify control of the Palestinian territories with a
claim of historic right. A third "new historian" went far enough to
say that the Jewish people are an invention, saying that Jews are
all converts from other nations. With this kind of curriculum to
rely on, it is no wonder that students are staying away from Jewish
university studies.
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3762490,00.html
Who still wants to learn
about Judaism?
In failure of our value system, self-destructive dance plaguing
group of educated, self-hating academics who threw away
truth-seeking in favor of political correctness in universities
compromises Jewish studies, keeps students away, says Mor Altshuler
Mor Altshuler
16.08.2009
The festive atmosphere at the
15th World Congress on Jewish Studies held last week at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem was accompanied by an air of sadness. This
was due to the sense that Israel perhaps is not the focal point of
Diaspora Jewry, despite being home to the largest database in the
world on Judaism and Jews.
Discussions were dedicated to
the crisis plaguing Jewish studies departments – namely, that every
year the number of students choosing to study Bible, Jewish history,
or Hebrew language gets smaller and smaller. It is possible that
this phenomenon is linked to the shrinking endowments of humanities
departments in general, to the materialism of the younger generation
that prefers to study fields that will bear speedy economic returns
on investment.
In addition, throughout the
world, universities are losing their status as knowledge and
information providers as the Internet becomes an increasingly
dominant player, even in researching the past.
Take, for instance, the
thousands of rare and first editions of books that have been scanned
and made available on the Internet. In years to come, the Internet
will also contain scanned versions of periodicals. The virtual
library will beat out the bricks-and-mortar library, the very symbol
of the old university. In a similar manner, the importance of group
learning, in classrooms, in front of flesh-and-blood lecturers is
decreasing.
Yet, these are only external
changes and provide only a partial explanation on the brain drain
from theoretical learning. The devaluation of humanities in the West
stems from a failure of our value system, which has its source in
the thinning of content and turning our backs on the search for
truth that was once at the very aim of learning to begin with.
Alan Blum, a Jewish American
philosopher, claimed in his book The Closing of the American Mind
that truth was replaced on campuses by political correctness, whose
tyranny threatens democratic society.
Spirit of Zionism
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