Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University president
censors his own governors, suppresses freedom of speech! Leading
Governor Resigns in Outrage! Death of academic freedom at Tel Aviv
University!
A Tel Aviv University board member is set to
resign Wednesday following university President Joseph Klaffter’s
refusal to bring a proposal he drafted to a vote. Mark Tanenbaum had
proposed a resolution to the board of governors, requesting that the
university senate investigate the political activity of professors
who use the school’s name.
…
Tanenbaum described Klaffter yelling into the microphone that he
would not tolerate any infringement on academic freedom within the
university immediately after the proposal was read. Klaffter’s
decision not to bring the proposal to a vote came at the end of a
heated debate between the board members concerned about the
university restricting freedom of speech. “While he was blathering
on about the right to free speech, he ironically denied me, a member
of the board of governors, a former student, whose late father was
one of the founding members of Canadian Friends of Tel Aviv
University the right to free speech, and that is absolutely
unacceptable,” Tanenbaum told The Jerusalem Post.
'TAU restricts freedom of speech'
By ZOE FOX
12/05/2010
University board member to quit
after failed effort to spur investigation of professors’ anti-Israel
activity.
A Tel Aviv University board member is set to
resign Wednesday following university President Joseph Klaffter’s
refusal to bring a proposal he drafted to a vote.
Mark Tanenbaum had proposed a resolution to the
board of governors, requesting that the university senate
investigate the political activity of professors who use the
school’s name.
Tanenbaum’s proposal comes as a response to
outspoken TAU professors advocating an academic boycott of Israel
and the university.
The proposal cites faculty bylaws “Breach of
Discipline” restriction on faculty listing their affiliation with
TAU on any document or statement of a political nature when
participating in any domestic or international forums of political
nature.
Tanenbaum described Klaffter yelling into the
microphone that he would not tolerate any infringement on academic
freedom within the university immediately after the proposal was
read.
Klaffter’s decision not to bring the proposal
to a vote came at the end of a heated debate between the board
members concerned about the university restricting freedom of
speech.
“While he was blathering on about the right to
free speech, he ironically denied me, a member of the board of
governors, a former student, whose late father was one of the
founding members of Canadian Friends of Tel Aviv University the
right to free speech, and that is absolutely unacceptable,”
Tanenbaum told The Jerusalem Post.
Tanenbaum on Wednesday will announce his
resignation from all of his posts at TAU and his decision to join
Bar-Ilan University.
Until Tuesday, Tanenbaum had been a member of
the TAU Board of Governors, the board of directors for the American
Friends of Tel Aviv University, and the board of international
Overseers of the Moshe Dayan Center at Tel Aviv University.
He is involved in a number of other
philanthropic Israel-oriented organizations, both in Israel and in
Miami. He describes himself as an “ardent Zionist who’s not
embarrassed to use the word Zionist.”
Other long-time members of the board of
governors told Tanenbaum that they planed to follow his lead and
resign from the board as well.
Earlier Tuesday, TAU academics’ condemnation of
Israel abroad was at the forefront of the John Gandel Symposium on
the Middle East.
Harvard University Prof. Alan Dershowitz,
former president of TAU Itamar Rabinovich and Principle Deputy Legal
Adviser of the Foreign Ministry Daniel Taub addressed the board of
governors during their annual meeting.
The symposium, “The Deligitimization of Israel
as a Strategic Threat,” focused on issues representing Israel
abroad.
Dershowitz accused Israeli professors
campaigning for an academic boycott of Israel of being “hypocritical
Stalinists.” He pointed particularly at two TAU professors, Anat
Matar and Rachel Giora, who are known for their endorsement of
campaigns to academically boycott Israel.
This week, Matar and Giora signed a letter
boycotting an exhibit on Israeli medical achievements at the Boston
Museum of Science.
“The people who call for a boycott are a bunch
of cowards. They should start by boycotting Tel Aviv University
themselves and resign. That’s the courageous thing to do,”
Dershowitz told the board of governors.
Dershowitz noted that he offered his own
resignation from Harvard when the administration almost used
discriminatory hiring policies against a Jewish nominee.
The law professor assured that restricting
political activity in the name of TAU was a legitimate action for
the university to take. Harvard University has a policy forbidding
faculty from speaking outside of their specialty in the name of the
university, Dershowitz said.
While Dershowitz contended that restricting
political speech was not a violation of academic freedom, TAU Prof.
Hannah Wirth-Nesher did not see the same distinction.
“When I immigrated to Israel I came to work at
Tel Aviv University, not Teheran University,” said Wirth-Nesher,
equating such a restriction of speech with one of a tyrannical
regime.
The proposal requests that the TAU Senate
investigate letters, petitions and articles that promote an
international academic boycott of TAU and other Israeli universities
that are written and signed by TAU academics who state their
university affiliation.
“My contention is that there is a huge
difference between academic freedom, which we all cherish, and
what’s purely outside political activity,” Tanenbaum told The
Jerusalem Post.
“If they were to say these things [among] their
peers, I have no issue with it. My issue is when they leave the
university and fly to Europe, fly to Canada, fly to the US and
attend political forums and try to get the world to boycott Tel Aviv
University, from where they receive their paycheck. That’s political
activity and it’s not academic discourse.
Recently TAU linguistics professor Giora and
philosophy professor Matar endorsed a number of organizations
boycotting Israeli academic institutions, including their own. One
of the organizations, BOYCOTT!, supports the Palestinian boycott,
divestment and sanctions campaign about Israel.
On March 30, the organization praised a British
academic in an open letter for her “important decision to boycott
state-run and apartheid-complicit Tel Aviv University.”
Giora and Matar also signed the US Campaign for
the Academic & Cultural Boycott of Israel, which advocates “a
comprehensive boycott of Israeli institutions at the national and
international level.”
“I support every form of open criticism against
the current policies of the Israeli government, in the occupied
territories, whether it is an economic boycott or other forms of
resistance,” Giora told Ynet in 2006, adding that an academic
boycott showed Israelis that the world was “rightly” against them.
Tanenbaum pointed to Giora’s and Matar’s
employee status as one of the most disturbing parts of their claims.
“If you have a business and your employee
starts writing letters and signing petitions to boycott your
business, you are able to fire that employee with just cause in the
US,” explained Tanenbaum.
Although he has not looked at the professors’
contracts at TAU, he assumes there is some implicit or explicit
understanding that they will not attempt to harm the university.
Tanenbaum initially appealed to the university
administration to take action against these professors. However,
despite the administration’s shared frustration, it expressed doubt
about restricting their freedom of speech.
Tanenbaum then decided to research the faculty
bylaws and discovered several rules that could advance his case.
The Breaches of Discipline section (Article 3)
prohibits academic staff from listing their affiliation with TAU on
any document or statement of a political nature and when
participating in any domestic or international forums of political
nature.
“If they were to say Israel is an apartheid
state guilty of war crimes within their classroom, I have no issue
with it, and neither do the faculty bylaws,” said Tanenbaum.
However, he claims that Giora and Matar
deliberately use their TAU affiliation in political activity abroad.
In addition, Article 3.6 in the “Regulations
for Academic Staff” describes “inappropriate behavior on the part of
a member of the academic staff in his relationship with the
university’s institutions” as a breach of discipline.
“I would definitely consider trying to boycott
your own university, which pays your salary, inappropriate
behavior,” explained Tanenbaum.
Having enlisted Israeli legal experts to ensure
that his contentions were reasonable, Tanenbaum said he had received
unanimous assurance that they were solidly founded.
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