Israeli Academic Extremism
Dan Illouz clarifies the
Goals of Im Tirtzu through Examples of Leftist McCarthyism on
Israeli Campuses
In November 2009, Professor Nira Hativa, who
was responsible for the computerized feedback provided by students
to their professors, wrote that “there are a lot of students that
complain and report that they feel significantly hurt by the
presentation of facts from a perspective which is contrary to their
views but that they are worried to express opposing views because
they feel such an expression might reflect badly on their marks or
other things which professors have control over.” Professor Hativa
continued and wrote: “I was exposed to many complaints from students
of professors who express extreme leftist positions in their
lectures and attack the State of Israel, the Israel Defence Forces,
the Zionist movement and other, even worse, things”.
A PhD student at Hebrew University testified
that he was once told that “anything “right of Meretz” was best not
spoken aloud or it would have a serious detrimental impact on my
career in Israeli academia”.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/9627
True Academic Freedom In Israel
by Dan Illouz
23/7/2010
Israeli academic institutions seem to
be problematic for reasons that sound too similar to those that
plague other Western universities. Note this week's firing of Dr.
Ran Baratz.
Im Tirtzu recently published a detailed report revealing the
troubling academic reality in Israel today. According to the
report, students in all of the major universities in Israel have
complained of a heavily political academia where opinions which do
not follow the post-Zionist or anti-Zionist narrative are often
rejected and sometimes even penalized.
After the publication of the report, published at the request of
the Knesset’s Education Committee, those academic bodies who were
investigated responded with ad hominem attacks and claims which fly
in face of the reality on university campuses in Israel. Haifa
University said that “Im Tirtzu is an organization which uses
McCarthyism to threaten freedom of speech.” The spokesperson of
Hebrew University told reporters that: “Hebrew University maintains
full freedom of expression.”
Im Tirtzu has never demanded that only its opinions are allowed
to be expressed. Rather, we, at Im Tirtzu, demand that all opinions
be accepted in the academic discourse. We oppose thought policing of
any kind. Our complaints are not about the exposure of students to
post-Zionist scholarship, but rather on the lack of exposure to the
Zionist opinions. A truly free academic environment should be a
marketplace of opinions.
Here are some examples of events which Im Tirtzu is trying to
combat:
Rachel Avraham, a student at Ben Gurion University, published two
critical academic exposes on the content of a lecture given by Ben
Gurion University's Dr. Oren Yiftachel, entitled "Selected Topics in
the Geography of the Middle East". After publishing these exposes,
Rachel Avraham was summoned by the head of the Geography department,
Prof. Avi Rubin, “to discuss the possible ramifications” of her
“defamatory” exposes. An email communication between the two was
then started. Rachel Avraham felt threatened by the tone and nature
of these emails. Fearing she would be discriminated against for
having disagreed with her professor, she hired a lawyer to deal with
further communications with the university. Defending Rachel
Avraham’s right to disagree with her professor is not an affront to
Dr. Oren Yiftachel's right to free speech. It is not McCarthyism. It
is nothing other than the defence of free speech.
In November 2009, Professor Nira Hativa, who was responsible for
the computerized feedback provided by students to their professors,
wrote that “there are a lot of students that complain and report
that they feel significantly hurt by the presentation of facts from
a perspective which is contrary to their views but that they are
worried to express opposing views because they feel such an
expression might reflect badly on their marks or other things which
professors have control over.”Professor Hativa continued and wrote:
“I was exposed to many complaints from students of professors who
express extreme leftist positions in their lectures and attack the
State of Israel, the Israel Defence Forces, the Zionist movement and
other, even worse, things”.
A PhD student at Hebrew University testified that he was once
told that “anything “right of Meretz” was best not spoken aloud or
it would have a serious detrimental impact on my career in Israeli
academia”.
By now, one can clearly see that Zionist students have many
reasons to fear publicly stating their opinions. Our full report
contains countless other examples. On the other hand, there are also
a lot of incentives for students to continue their research toeing
the line to the post-Zionist narrative. For example:
Ms. Tal Nitzan received a distinction from the Israeli Council
for Sociology for her paper that claimed that IDF soldiers do not
rape Palestinian women because they are racist.
Furthermore, some courses require their students go on field
activities with extreme leftist organizations such as Machsom Watch
and Yesh Din, two organizations which spend much of their time
attacking and criticizing the IDF. Some courses even offered
students to get paid to work for these organizations in addition to
the credits they would received for the course.
A truly free academic environment is one in which all students
feel free to express their ideas and where students are exposed a
multiplicity of ideas. Unfortunately, many in the academic world
feel that freedom of speech simply means that they are allowed to do
whatever they want in their classroom, including intimidating
students who disagree with them.
We at Im Tirtzu want to restore true academic freedom in Israel –
an academic freedom in which all students will be able to express
themselves, including Zionist students. It is painful to see that
even in the State of Israel, Zionist students are victims of
discrimination.
Im Tirtzu will not allow the stifling of academic freedom to
become a reality in Israel. We believe that we can transform the
dream that is the State of Israel into a more just, more modern,
more democratic and more Jewish place. This latest report is just
one step forward on that path.
(For efforts to combat anti Zionism in USA
academe,
click here)
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