THE
news yesterday was that the
Israeli government has invaded
and shut down by force of arms
the entire Palestinian
University in Jerusalem, one
of the most moderate and
respected instutitons of
learning in the Middle
East.
—
David Irving comments
Washington, July 10, 2002
UK
Scholars
Debate Boycott of Israel
By Jill Lawless Associated Press
Writer
David Irving comments:
THE news yesterday (July 10) was that the Israeli government has invaded and shut down by force of arms the entire
Palestinian University in
Jerusalem, one of the most moderate and respected instutitons of learning in the
Middle East. Not a squeak of protest about this invasion of academic freedom from The
Washington Post and The
Daily Telegraph. Am I missing something?.
LONDON — Hundreds of
European academics have called a boycott of Israeli universities to protest treatment of the Palestinians – a move that has led to the firing of two Israelis from British publications and prompted allegations of discrimination and intellectual censorship.
Boycott supporters insist they’re exerting political pressure on the Israeli government. But Miriam Shlesinger
says she is a victim of academic discrimination. A lecturer in translation studies at Bar-Ilan University in Tel
Aviv, Shlesinger was fired from a journal,
The Translator, by an editor who supports the boycott.
“I was appointed as a scholar,”
Shlesinger said Wednesday. “But I was dismissed as an Israeli.”
The online petition calls on academics not to “cooperate with official Israeli institutions, including universities” to protest Israel’s “military reoccupation of the Palestinian territories in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip” – a reference to
Israel’s military campaign begun in March in response to attacks by Palestinian suicide bombers.
The petition commits signatories not to travel to Israel for conferences or to
“participate as referee in hiring or promotion decisions by Israeli universities,” but says they should
“continue to collaborate with, and host,
Israeli scientific colleagues on an individual basis.”
Steven Rose, a professor at
Britain’s Open University who helped start the campaign, likens it to the cultural and sporting sanctions imposed on apartheid South Africa.
“We are concerned with boycotting or refusing to collaborate with Israeli institutions,” Rose told British
Broadcasting Corp. radio. “Unfortunately institutions are expressed through individuals … That means that some of our friends are actually going to suffer for it.”
More than 750 academics – most from
Europe but including 10 from Israel – have signed the petition or a related one calling for a moratorium on European Union cultural and scientific ties to Israel until Israel “abide(s) by U.N. resolutions and open(s) serious peace negotiations with the Palestinians.”
A few useful links to look at and pass on: pictures illustrating
Israeli military activities in the Middle East
- Israeli
Defence Force (Wehrmacht)
shoots a child - Israeli
settlers
(10
pictures) - Droll
female soldier - School
children and soldier -
href=”http://stcloudinvestor.netfirms.com/Skunk/israelisoldierholdsaboy.jpg”>Soldier
dragging little kid - Israeli
heroes with their trophy
kills
(5
pictures)
Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza
Strip in the 1967 Mideast war.
Peace
negotiations that began with an interim
accord in 1993 broke down in January 2001
when the Palestinians did not accept an
Israeli proposal of a state in all of
Gaza, more than 90 percent of the West
Bank and a foothold in Jerusalem.
Ongoing violence has scuttled all peace efforts since then. Israel has imposed tough restrictions on the West Bank to stop suicide attacks on Israeli civilians, but the Palestinians charge that the
Israeli measures are collective punishment.
Amnon Rubinstein, a former
Israeli Minister of Education and former dean of Tel Aviv University law school, said the boycott was outrageous.
“There are many disputes and many accusations against many other states, and
I haven’t heard of a petition like this against any other country,” he said.
Last month, Shlesinger was asked to step down from the editorial board of
The Translator, a semiannual journal, by owner and editor Mona
Baker. Baker, a professor at the
University of Manchester Institute of
Science and Technology, signed the
Internet petition.
Baker also asked Tel Aviv University professor Gideon Toury to resign from the advisory board of another journal she owns, Translation Studies
Abstracts. When Shlesinger and Toury refused, Baker fired them.
“It has nothing to do with our views,”
Shlesinger told The Associated Press. “We were dismissed because we have the wrong passports.”
Baker’s husband said she was unwilling to speak to the media Wednesday. Ken
Baker – who is managing director of
St. Jerome, the journals’ publisher – said
Toury and Shlesinger were fired not because they are Israeli, but because they work for Israeli universities.
“This is a boycott of Israeli academic institutions, ” Baker said. “If an Israeli happened to be working for an American institution, or a British institution, or a Swedish institution, we’d have no problem with that whatsoever.”
Baker was quoted by The Guardian
newspaper as saying she fired the two academics based on “my interpretation of the boycott statement that I’ve signed.”
Efraim Inbar, a professor of political science at Bar-Ilan University, criticized the boycott, saying: “I think between academics to boycott someone because of their government policies which they have no control over is disgraceful.”
Britain’s National Union of Students also condemned the boycott.
“To exclude people because of their nationality is abhorrent and nothing short of racism, and should be universally condemned,” the union’s anti-racism campaigner, Daniel Rose, was quoted as saying by The Guardian.
The boycott also has been condemned by
Jewish groups such as the Anti-Defamation
League and the Simon
Wiesenthal Center, and petitions denouncing it have sprouted on the
Internet.
One, based at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, claims to have received
13,000 signatures, while another, set up in the United States and signed by more than 1,000 academics, calls the boycott an
“alarming and non-constructive development.”
“The chilling of contacts targets those in Israel who are reaching out to interact with the world community,” it says.
That irony is not lost on Shlesinger, a left-winger and former head of Israel’s chapter of Amnesty International who opposes current Israeli policies toward the Palestinians.
Israeli Prime Minister “Ariel
Sharon is not going to end the occupation because Miriam Shlesinger has been thrown off the board of The
Translator,” she said. “Even a massive academic boycott is not going to cause the government to change its ways. It doesn’t do anything except undermine science.”
© 2002
The Associated Press
On the
Net:
- Pro-boycott site, http://www.pjpo.org
- Anti-boycott site, http://www.aaisc.net
Related
items on this website:
Main news
report: Fury as academics are sacked
for being Israeli | Editorial
Opinion | Professor
Greenblatt criticizes Baker
Chronicle
of Higher Education: British Journals
Oust 2 Israeli Scholars From Their
Boards
US
warns Texas businessman
against
boycott of Israel
Jewish
academics threaten to boycott
Oxford over Irving speech
Boycott
threat threat to Oxford Union over
Irving
Daily
Express headline, March 24, 1933:
“Judea Declares War on Germany” (begin
of the Jewish boycott which
triggered
German retaliation)
Miami
Jews call for boycott of
Poland
All our yesterdays. . .

Daily
Express headline, 24 Mar 1933