Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - Anat Matar
(Dept of Philosophy) supports Neve Gordon’s boycott; claims
Academics should take the fall
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1110417.html
Israeli academics must pay price to end
occupation
By Anat Matar
August 30, 2009
Several days ago Dr. Neve Gordon of Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev published an opinion piece in the Los
Angeles Times. In that article he explained why, after years of
activity in the peace camp here, he has decided to pin his hopes on
applying external pressure on Israel - including sanctions,
divestment and an economic, cultural and academic boycott.
He believes, and so do I, that only when the
Israeli society's well-heeled strata pay a real price for the
continuous occupation will they finally take genuine steps to put an
end to it.
Gordon looks at the Israeli society and sees an
apartheid state. While the Palestinians' living conditions
deteriorate, many Israelis are benefiting from the occupation. In
between the two sides, Israeli society is sinking into complete
denial - drawn into extreme hatred and violence.
The academic community has an important role to
play in this process. Yet, instead of sounding the alarm, it wakes
up only when someone dares approach the international community and
desperately call for help.
The worn-out slogan that everybody raises in
this context is "academic freedom," but it is time to somewhat crack
this myth.
The appeal to academic freedom was born during
the Enlightenment, when ruling powers tried to suppress independent
minded thinkers. Already then, more than 200 years ago, Imannuel
Kant differentiated between academics whose expertise (law,
theology, and medicine) served the establishment and those who had
neither power nor proximity to power. As for the first, he said,
there was no sense in talking about "freedom" or "independent
thought" as any use of such terminology is cynical.
Since then, cynicism has spread to other
faculties as well. At best academic freedom was perceived as the
right not to ask troubling questions. At worst was the right to
harass whomever asked too much.
When the flag of academic freedom is raised,
the oppressor and not the oppressed is usually the one who flies it.
What is that academic freedom that so interests the academic
community in Israel? When, for example, has it shown concern for the
state of academic freedom in the occupied territories?
This school year in Gaza will open in shattered
classrooms as there are no building materials there for
rehabilitating the ruins; without notebooks, books and writing
utensils that cannot be brought into Gaza because of the goods
embargo (yes, Israel may boycott schools there and no cry is heard).
Hundreds of students in West Bank universities
are under arrest or detention in Israeli jails, usually because they
belong to student organizations that the ruling power does not like.
The separation fence and the barriers prevent
students and lecturers from reaching classes, libraries and tests.
Attending conferences abroad is almost unthinkable and the entry of
experts who bear foreign passports is permitted only sparingly.
On the other hand, members of the Israeli
academia staunchly guard their right to research what the regime
expects them to research and appoint former army officers to
university positions. Tel Aviv University alone prides itself over
the fact that the Defense Ministry is funding 55 of its research
projects and that DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency in the U.S. Defense Department, is funding nine more. All the
universities offer special study programs for the defense
establishment.
Are those programs met with any protest? In
contrast with the accepted impression, only few lecturers speak up
decisively against the occupation, its effect and the increasingly
bestial nature of the State of Israel.
The vast majority retains its freedom to be
indifferent, up to the moment that someone begs the international
community for rescue. Then the voices rise from right and left, the
indifference disappears, and violence replaces it: Boycott Israeli
universities? This strikes at the holy of holies, academic freedom!
The writer is a lecturer in Tel Aviv
University's Department of Philosophy.
|