Israeli Academic
Extremism
Leftist anti-Israel Academics whine about
"McCarthyism" and about Isracampus
Hardly a week goes by here without the claim,
usually by groups on the Left, that people are being silenced and
censored by McCarthyism. In an October 2009 article, Benjamin
Pogrund claimed that university groups such as Isracampus and Israel
Academic Monitor were attacking leftist professors in “classic
McCarthyite style.” David Newman of Ben-Gurion University has
written that “the academic McCarthyism of the right endangers
Israeli democracy and society. It threatens the very basis of
freedom of speech.”
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=172102
Terra Incognita: McCarthyism!
By SETH J. FRANTZMAN
30/03/2010
For all the hysteria, no
government is behind the "campaigns against groups and people on the
Left."
Hardly a week goes
by here without the claim, usually by groups on the Left, that
people are being silenced and censored by McCarthyism. In an October
2009 article, Benjamin Pogrund claimed that university groups such
as Isracampus and Israel Academic Monitor were attacking leftist
professors in “classic McCarthyite style.” David Newman of
Ben-Gurion University has written that “the academic McCarthyism of
the right endangers Israeli democracy and society. It threatens the
very basis of freedom of speech.”
The hullabaloo
over Naomi Chazan, former Knesset member, professor and chief of the
New Israel Fund, in early 2010 resulted in a wave of claims of
McCarthyism. An interview with her by Donald Macintyre in The
Independent was titled “The new McCarthyism sweeping Israel.”
Hagai El-ad of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel claimed
“these are classic McCarthy techniques, portraying our organizations
as enemies of the state.”
Then earlier this month, the Education Ministry
ordered its logo removed from a Web site called Common Ground that
is supported by the Abraham Fund, an organization that claims it
supports “coexistence.” In response, a senior official at a
non-governmental organization claimed that “this is a McCarthyist
period we’re going through.” Prof. Daniel Bar-Tal and many others
have, in recent years, joined the chorus claiming McCarthyism is
growing in Israel.
When Joel Kovel, author of the anti-Israel book
Overcoming Zionism, was sacked at Bard College, one
commentator claimed it was a sign of “McCarthyism.” In a 2007
article in The Nation, Larry Cohler-Esses argued that Nadia
Abu el-Haj, a Barnard professor, was a victim of McCarthyism because
pro-Israel groups were angered that someone they perceived as a
radical ideologue was up for tenure; “This is the modus operandi of
the New McCarthyism. It targets a new enemy for our era: Muslims,
Arabs and others in the Middle East field who are identified as
stepping over an unstated line in criticizing Israel.”
IT IS obvious that a lot of people think that
McCarthyism is in the air. But do their fears and claims truly
illustrate knowledge of what McCarthyism was? The use of words like
“McCarthyism,” “apartheid” and “Nazism” in contemporary parlance
should require that those using them and those reading them at least
have a modicum of understanding of what they originally described.
Joseph McCarthy was born in 1908 and raised on
a farm in rural Wisconsin. At 33 he served as a Marine Corps officer
in World War II and was decorated. McCarthy was elected to the US
Senate in the postwar Republican landslide. He came to the nation’s
attention in 1950 with his speech at Wheeling, West Virginia in
which he claimed that “the State Department is infested with
communists.”
In 1953, after winning reelection, McCarthy was
made head of the Senate Committee on Government Operations, an
obscure body that he transformed into a center of investigations
into communist influence in the US administration. He used this
committee and his legal lieutenants, such as Bobby Kennedy, to go
after government bodies such as Voice of America and the
International Information Agency (an overseas library program).
In 1954 McCarthy laid into the US Army and ran
afoul of Dwight D. Eisenhower, who had so recently left the service
to become president. By this time, the American public had tired of
McCarthy’s claims and outbursts and famed journalist Edward Murrow
noted, “We cannot defend freedom abroad by deserting it at home.”
By December 1954 it was all over. McCarthy was
censured by the Senate and he died two and a half years later.
The irony of McCarthy’s life is that his
activities became associated with “McCarthyism.” In fact it was the
House Committee on Un-American Activities in the House of
Representatives that became infamous for blacklists and subpoenaing
civilians, such as Hollywood writers. It was this committee that
demanded to know: “Are you now or have you ever been a member of the
Communist Party of the United States?”
The blacklist was a series of directives by
Hollywood studio executives in which they refused to hire
communists. Many of the Hollywood directors affected were Jewish.
Never did the US government order people to be fired.
The truth about McCarthyism is that while
originally some people had their careers harmed or ruined by having
been, or accused of having been, communists, the claim of being a
“victim” of McCarthyism has been far more helpful to people’s
careers than actually being a victim was ever harmful. Those who
today claim they are victims of McCarthyism dream of being victims;
they want to be the lone voice standing up to the government.
But theirs is a fantasy, no government is
behind the campaigns against Haj, Chazan or the Abraham Fund.
Instead, private individuals, expressing their right to freedom of
speech, have condemned the activities of those they disagree with.
When, several years ago, a student at the Hebrew University’s
Rothberg International School penned an editorial on Ynet about how
his professors were using the classroom to spread anti-Israel
propaganda, he was called in by administrators to explain himself;
“they basically made me promise not to write anything else.”
He didn’t cry “McCarthyism!”
Those who cry McCarthyism want attention. They
are fear-mongers and extremists with little understanding of the
concept of free speech and less understanding of history.
The writer is a PhD researcher at Hebrew
University.
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