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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - The PACBI
anti-Israel group run by TAU grad student Omer Barghouti is
denouncing the anti-Israel propaganda book edited by TAU's Adi Ophir
(which
we reviewed). It is just not anti-Israel enough!
"The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and
Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) has recently encountered a number
of projects that while intending to empower the colonized
Palestinians, in essence end up undermining their will and choice of
method of struggle for freedom, justice and self determination. The
publication of a new book entitled The Power of Inclusive Exclusion:
Anatomy of Israeli Rule in the Occupied Palestinian Territories [1]
belongs to this category. The book project represents a classic
example of how the collective voice of the colonized is ignored in
the production of a scholarly work supposed to empower them."
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1178
Intellectual Responsibility and the Voice of the Colonized
PACBI
17/02/2010
The Palestinian Campaign for the
Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) has
recently encountered a number of projects that while intending to
empower the colonized Palestinians, in essence end up undermining
their will and choice of method of struggle for freedom, justice and
self determination. The publication of a new book entitled The
Power of Inclusive Exclusion: Anatomy of Israeli Rule in the
Occupied Palestinian Territories [1] belongs to this category.
The book project represents a classic example of how the collective
voice of the colonized is ignored in the production of a scholarly
work supposed to empower them.
While it is crucial for scholars in relevant
fields to expose and analyze the colonial situation in Palestine,
this academic imperative should not imply that one overlooks how
scholarship engages this colonialism. That is, this book, as a
collaboration of various scholars – Israeli and non-Israeli
contributors – was completed with support from the Van Leer
Institute [2]. In other words, through working under the aegis of
the Van Leer Institute, this project has cooperated with one of the
very institutions that PACBI and an overwhelming majority of
Palestinian academics and intellectuals have called for boycotting.
As such, the research project which led to the production of the
volume violates the criteria of the academic and cultural boycott as
set by PACBI and widely endorsed in Palestinian civil society,
including by the Palestinian Federation of Unions of University
Professors and Employees (PFUUPE) and University Teachers'
Association in Palestine (UTA). [3]
Contrary to the claims of some left-wing
Israeli academics that the Van Leer institute is an incubator for
cutting-edge critical thinking and oppositional politics, the
Institute is firmly planted in the prevailing Zionist consensus and
is part and parcel of the structures of oppression and domination.
It subscribes to the “vision of Israel as both a homeland for the
Jewish people and a democratic society, predicated on justice,
fairness and equality for all its residents,” ignoring the oxymoron
presented by this inherently exclusionary vision -- a “Jewish
State” of necessity discriminates against its “non-Jewish” citizens.
The Van Leer Institute receives financial support from other Israeli
universities and state institutions that are subject to boycott.
Among its financial contributors and institutional “friends” are
the Cohn Institute at
Tel
Aviv
University; the
Edelstein
Center at the
Hebrew
University; the Israel Ministry of
Science; the National Insurance Institute,
Israel; and the Jewish Agency for
Israel.
Furthermore, Van Leer, like all other Israeli
academic institutions, has never taken a stance against
Israel's policies of occupation and
racial discrimination, nor against the recent war of aggression on
Gaza or the ongoing illegal siege of 1.5
million Palestinians there. The Van Leer is, therefore, an
institution with strong links to establishment institutions in
Israel. As such, it is complicit in
maintaining and entrenching
Israel’s regime of occupation and
apartheid against the Palestinian people.
Though intellectual projects may aim to
rigorously articulate the complex matrix of control that exists in
Palestine, the intellectual process has a fundamental ethical and
political component. As such, it is incumbent upon all scholars to
realize that any collaboration which brings together Israeli and
international academics (Arabs or otherwise) under the auspices of
Israeli institutions is counterproductive to fighting Israeli
colonial oppression, and is therefore subject to boycott.
A project involving only Israeli
academics, on the other hand, receiving support from an Israeli
academic institution, may be seen as a justifiable exercise of a
right or an entitlement by Israeli scholars as tax payers and, as a
result, may not per se be boycottable. [4]
As the Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement
gains momentum globally, an increasing number of voices are emerging
in support of this strategy as the most effective, non-violent route
to bring about change towards justice and durable peace based on
international law and universal principles of human rights. The
endorsement by various artists and academics of specific boycott
actions in the past few years is welcome and well known. It is the
responsibility of the boycott supporters to understand the broadly
accepted boycott criteria and guidelines upon which this boycott is
based and adhere to it, rather than attempting to invent or suggest
idiosyncratic criteria of their own, as the latter would undermine
the Palestinian guiding reference for the global boycott campaign
against Israel. [5]
It is crucial to
emphasize that the
BDS movement derives its principles from
both the demands of the Palestinian
BDS Call, signed by over 170 Palestinian
civil society organizations in July 2005, [6] and, in the academic
and cultural fields, from the Palestinian Call for Academic and
Cultural Boycott of Israel, issued a year earlier in July 2004. [7]
Together, the
BDS and PACBI Calls represent the most
authoritative and widely supported strategic statements to have
emerged from Palestine in decades; all major political parties,
labor, student and women groups, and organizations representing
Palestinian refugees all over the world have endorsed and supported
these calls. Both calls underline the prevailing Palestinian belief
that the most effective form of solidarity with the Palestinian
people is direct action aimed at bringing an end to Israel’s
colonial and apartheid regime, just as the apartheid regime in South
Africa was abolished, by isolating Israel internationally through
boycotts and sanctions, forcing it to comply with international law
and respect Palestinian rights.
Since the formulation of these calls, a great
deal of emphasis has been placed on defining the principles of the
boycott movement. Rooted in universal values and principles, the
BDS Call categorically rejects all forms
of racism, racial discrimination and colonial oppression. PACBI has
also translated the principles enshrined in its Call into practical
guidelines for implementing the international academic and cultural
boycott of Israel. [8] However intellectually challenging and
avant-garde some projects may be, by being oblivious to the
Palestinian-articulated boycott criteria they in effect work against
the internationally-embraced Palestinian struggle for justice.
PACBI
www.PACBI.org
[1] Adi Ophir, Michal Givoni, and Sari Hanafi,
eds (Boston: Zone Books, 2009).
[2] The acknowledgements page states that "[w]ork on this volume was
made possible thanks to the generous support of the Van Leer
Institute, which hosted the research group _Israel-Palestine, a
Catastrophe in the Making,_ and funded its activities…”
[3] http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1108
[4] This follows the principle set in the PACBI Guidelines for the
International Cultural Boycott of Israel, which states that, “Individual
cultural products that receive state funding as part of the
individual cultural worker’s entitlement as a tax-paying citizen,
without her/him being bound to serve the state’s political and PR
interests, are not boycottable, according to the PACBI criteria.”
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1047
[5] For instance, the introduction to the book in question, on page
27, states: "While some Palestinian scholars have not considered
their participation in the joint Israeli-Palestinian research group
to undermine their call for boycott of Israeli academic institutions
(because the boycott campaign has explicitly encouraged cooperation
and meeting with Israelis who oppose the occupation), others have
considered the group as a legitimate target of the boycott and
refused to cooperate with it." This statement is not accurate and
fails to reference any specific principle in the Palestinian calls
for boycott or the guidelines for applying the boycott.
[6]http://bdsmovement.net/?q=node/52
[7] http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=869
[8] http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1047 and http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1107
Posted on 17-02-2010
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