Other Schools
Interdisciplinary Center (Herzliya) - Galia Golan (School of
Government), Far leftist founder of Peace Now, denounces those who criticize the Israeli academic fifth column.
Accuses us of being RICH!! (If only…) Calls for denying freedom of
speech to critics of the anti-Israel Left!
The Knesset committee called upon the Council
for Higher Education to take the report of Im Tirzu and investigate
what Committee Chair Zvulun Orlev called ”subversive and
anti-Zionist.” These (and more) are not isolated items. They add up
to a policy, a campaign designed to cripple civil society, stifle
criticism and eliminate opposition. They endanger the very essence
of liberal democracy and of a free society, namely pluralism – of
thought, deed, and expression.
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3888067,00.html
Crippling our democracy
Current attacks on Israel’s civil society, academia more dangerous
than ever
Galia Golan
14/5/2010
It is not clear just what is behind the present
attack on Israeli civil society and academia. Is it simply a
misguided campaign by a small, inconsequential (but rich) minority
on the extreme right? Is it the lashing out of a weak government
responding to outside pressure and criticism? Or, is it, more
likely, the expression of an ideology now in power – that of the
right-wing, the Likud and its supporters?
If we look back, we could see signs of it when the Likud came to
power the first time. Not only the populist anti-(Ashkenazi) elitism
and anti-intellectualism but also the epithets against the peace
camp of “fifth column,” “knife in the back of the nation,” and the
like.
This was brought to an abrupt halt by the hand-grenade thrown on
the Peace Now demonstration and the killing of Emil Grunsweig. The
government sent a representative to the funeral and began to portray
the peace movement as a “loyal opposition.”
Such caution was forgotten in the Oslo period, and the results
were again tragic. But for almost a year now we have seen the
approach back again in full strength – indeed far bolder, and far
more dangerous than any time in the past.
It could be seen last summer in the police “raid” on New Profile,
and later in the attacks on the funding of Breaking the Silence. It
could be seen in the plethora of proposed legislation such as the
Nakba law, the draconic immigration (called infiltrators) bill, and
the proposed law to curb NGO funding.
It can be seen not only in “private” initiatives such as the ads
and posters of Im Tirtzu blaming human rights organizations (and
those that fund them) for
Israel’s isolation in the world, but also, still more alarmingly
perhaps, in the Knesset education committee’s discussion of that
organization’s report on what was called the anti-Zionism of the
academic staff and teachings of Israeli universities.
Social contract
The Knesset committee called upon the Council for Higher
Education to take the report of Im Tirzu and investigate what
Committee Chair Zvulun Orlev called ”subversive and anti-Zionist.”
These (and more) are not isolated items. They add up to a policy, a
campaign designed to cripple civil society, stifle criticism and
eliminate opposition. They endanger the very essence of liberal
democracy and of a free society, namely pluralism – of thought,
deed, and expression.
By means of the social contract between the people and the state,
citizens voluntarily accept limits to their freedoms for the good of
the community, but democratic societies are also committed to
protecting the minority from tyranny of the majority. Freedom to
criticize, to call the state to account, to protect people’s rights
are all critical to the preservation of democracy.
For decades we have stood by and watched as government after
government denied democratic freedoms to the millions of
Palestinians under Israeli occupation – in the name of preserving
the democratic and Jewish character of Israel. Now we have a
government that appears to be on the road to applying the same
approach to Israeli society itself, in the name, it would seem, of
some distorted version of Zionism. Not only Herzl may be turning
over in his grave at this, but perhaps also Jabotinsky.
Professor Galia Golan, Hebrew University of Jerusalem (emerita);
Interdisciplinary Center, Herzliya
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