Israeli Academic Extremism
Anti-Israel Israeli
Radicals again whining about "McCarthyism"
At the front
line of the conflict are a handful of academics, such as Rachel
Giora, professor of linguistics at Tel Aviv University, who support
international calls for a campaign of boycott, divestment and
sanctions against Israel.
Pointing to
“the growing number of Israeli assaults on Palestinians’ cities,
towns, villages and refugee camps both within and outside the
occupied territories”, as well as events such as the attack on Gaza
during the winter of 2008-09 and the deaths on the “Freedom
flotilla” in May this year, Professor Giora argued that “the state’s
legitimacy has been gradually undermined”, leading to “waves of
vocal criticism” across the world.
International
condemnation has also created a far less comfortable environment for
internal critics, she said, having led to “massive defence tactics
aimed particularly at bashing academics supportive of boycott
initiatives”.
Professor Giora
said: “Repression of protest was no longer implicit. All hell broke
loose.”
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=26&storycode=412910&c=1
Is the Israeli
academy facing a McCarthyite era?
Political interference could put freedom of speech in universities
at stake, says Matthew Reisz
By Matthew
Reisz
7 August 2010
When it comes
to the Israeli academy, said David S. Katz, director of the Lessing
Institute for European History at Tel Aviv University, “we are
entering a McCarthyite phase – and I do not exaggerate”.
“There is
legislation being discussed that would limit freedom of expression
in universities,” he said. “The education minister [Gideon Sa’ar]
has expressed satisfaction with a report that looks at the course
content of professors, sniffing out ‘anti-Zionist’ ideology. The
Knesset Education Committee is behind this initiative as well. It is
very bad indeed, and the universities have done little to reject
this, apart from the rector of Haifa University [Yossi Ben-Artzi],
who was very forthcoming.”
At the front
line of the conflict are a handful of academics, such as Rachel
Giora, professor of linguistics at Tel Aviv University, who support
international calls for a campaign of boycott, divestment and
sanctions against Israel.
Pointing to
“the growing number of Israeli assaults on Palestinians’ cities,
towns, villages and refugee camps both within and outside the
occupied territories”, as well as events such as the attack on Gaza
during the winter of 2008-09 and the deaths on the “Freedom
flotilla” in May this year, Professor Giora argued that “the state’s
legitimacy has been gradually undermined”, leading to “waves of
vocal criticism” across the world.
International
condemnation has also created a far less comfortable environment for
internal critics, she said, having led to “massive defence tactics
aimed particularly at bashing academics supportive of boycott
initiatives”.
Professor
Giora said: “Repression of protest was no longer implicit. All hell
broke loose.”
Amid public
calls for their dismissal, abuse and even death threats, Mr Sa’ar
explicitly announced his determination to take action, claiming that
“when an Israeli academic preaches for academic boycott, he crosses
a red line”.
This led to a
petition of protest signed by 542 Israeli academics, including the
former education minister Yuli Tamir, stating that “if the higher
education system in Israel wants to maintain a high quality, it must
include opinions that are not acceptable to everyone, social and
political criticism, and critical and even controversial research
and instruction”.
Protesters
also looked askance at the minister’s support for a recent report by
the Im Tirtzu youth movement, which has suggested that political
science departments in Israeli universities suffer from a
“post-Zionist bias”.
Thin end of the wedge
Mr Sa’ar,
however, robustly defended his stance.
It was the
petitioners, he told Radio Israel in July, who were “harming the
institutions for which they teach and are funded by the citizens of
Israel…The question here is whether there are absolutely no limits.
Let’s get rid of the double standards. Can everything be placed
under the cover of academic freedom, including murder incitement?”
Many see the
attack on the tiny minority of Israeli academics who support the
boycott as just the thin end of the wedge, likely to lead to further
attempts by politicians to monitor and control what is said within
universities.
“The main
problem”, Professor Katz said, “is that the Right is unable to
understand that what we are demanding is freedom of expression.
Almost none of us are in favour of an academic boycott of Israel,
but we are defending the right of Professor Giora and others to
advocate this outside the classroom without fear of losing their
jobs.
“If the
education minister can say that advocating an academic boycott is
beyond the pale, then where will we be when he says that it is
unacceptable to support conscientious objection…or call the West
Bank ‘occupied territory’…or remind students that there is another
way of looking at the 1948 War [whose interpretation remains a
matter of deep dispute among historians and between Israelis and
Palestinians]?
“We can’t let
politicians draw any lines at all. We have a perfectly good system
of peer review for judging academic contributions within the
scholarly setting, and whatever professors say outside the classroom
is their own business. The charge that professors are exploiting
captive student audiences for political indoctrination is totally
baseless.”
Aron Shai,
rector-elect of Tel Aviv University, has added his voice to these
concerns.
Although he
admitted that he has “no idea what our education minister is up to
regarding freedom of speech and academic freedom at our
universities” and noted that “there are conflicting reports
concerning his intentions in this regard”, he emphasised that
“freedom of speech has been observed in Israeli universities since
the establishment of the state in 1948. I sincerely hope that as an
esteemed and enlightened statesman, our education minister will not
interfere in the traditional autonomy of the universities and will
carry on tolerating it exactly as his predecessors have done.”
He went on:
“Indeed, at a recent debate by the Education Committee of the
Knesset [Israeli parliament], I made my position clear. I underlined
that each and every university is a self-contained community. One
can find in each a colourful, pluralistic fabric of academicians,
scholars, teachers and researchers. If one seeks supporters of the
government, critics of the Cabinet and its policies, dissidents or
so-called extremists of the Right and Left, one can certainly find
them, in different doses and quantities.”
Shared concerns
Although he is
more optimistic, Professor Shai shares Professor Katz’s concerns
about the possibility of a “McCarthyite” atmosphere within the
Israeli academy.
In the
Knesset, he recalled: “I stated quite ironically that we could
create an ‘un-Israeli’ activities committee, similar to the House
Un-American Activities Committee or the US Senate Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations, but that we should at the same time
be aware of the dangerous repercussions of such a move. Would we
wish upon ourselves the atmosphere that existed in the United States
in the early 1950s?”
Also at stake,
suggested Professor Shai, was the need to respect students and treat
them as responsible adults.
“When we
consider students at Israeli universities,” he noted, “we are not
dealing with school pupils or teenagers. We are talking about
grown-ups, mature young men and women who have served their country
in the army, navy or the air force, citizens who are on average 23
to 25 years old. In my opinion, they are capable of rationally
analysing any views they are exposed to, whether these be from the
Right or Left, moderate or extreme.
“I further
believe that when academic texts are presented in class or assigned
as reading material in, say, basic courses in political thought,
history, sociology and other such disciplines, a wide spectrum of
views should be introduced and taught. This is the correct, honest,
scientific approach.
“I made it
clear that I objected to a regulative policy introduced or
encouraged by some Knesset members relating to any aspect of the
higher education system. Regulation by committees or otherwise might
lead us towards a slippery slope and would harm not only free speech
and freedom of expression, but also the very essence and spirit of
research and scientific advancement.”
Despite his
eloquently expressed anxieties, Professor Shai said he believes “the
present Israeli leadership is not going to resort to such disproven
and obsolete policy”.
Others are
notably more pessimistic about what lies ahead.
matthew.reisz@tsleducation.com
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