International
and National News |
Anger continues to build over Israel
boycott
by British University and College Union
HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania (Press
Release)—The Board of Directors and over 10,000 Network Members of Scholars
for Peace in the Middle East (SPME) are deeply disappointed to learn that
the British University and College Union (UCU) have approved motions which
could lead to a boycott of Israeli academics.
SPME condemns this action,
instigated by a small group of anti-Israel union delegates who appear not to
represent the views of the union membership and who have singled out Israel
for opprobrium. The motion is an attempt to delegitimize and to silence the
only Jewish state in the world, one of a tiny minority of states in the
Middle East that truly honor academic freedom. In Israel's prestigious
universities, faculty members represent all religious and political
persuasions. Many Israeli professors are Arabs; many are Muslims. How many
professors at universities in Arab countries are Jews? How many are
non-Muslims? How many belong to nondominant Muslim denominations?
In Iran, professors have been purged from universities for ideological and
religious reasons, and an American academic, Haleh Esfandiari, was recently
imprisoned while visiting her 93-year-old mother. Despite the gargantuan
scale of human rights abuses in Sudan, Syria, China, Saudi Arabia, and, yes,
Gaza, the UCU is not considering a boycott against any of them. Why not?
The proposed boycott is immoral and antithetical to academic principles. It
shuts off dialogue, when one of the key purposes of universities is to
promote dialogue and thereby the pursuit of truth. It ignores existing
projects where Israeli and Palestinian academics cooperate. It requires
academics to hew to one ideological line. And it constitutes discrimination
on the basis of nationality.
(jump to continuation)
Buena Vista Hadassah
cordially invites you to hear
Rabbi Chaplain Joel D. Newman
based on his experiences in the war zone
"Passover in Iraq"
12:30 p.m., Tuesday, June 19
Vista Library, 700 Eucalyptus Avenue, Vista
Free refreshments
For further information: call Vivian (760) 967-0149
|
To JINSA's surprise, some journalists think
Lebanese-Palestinian hostility something new
By
Shoshana Bryen
WASHINGTON Dc (JINSA)—We
are surprised that journalists were surprised to find Palestinians fighting
the Lebanese Army (LAF) instead of Israel, and "foreign fighters" and Syrian
influence in Palestinian camps. This is not news. The Palestinians were
active participants in the 1976-1990 Lebanese Civil War -
with
the Syrians
against
the Lebanese government.
This accounts for some of the Lebanese animus for the Palestinians on their
soil, and their determination to make the Palestinians as miserable as
possible - even to their own detriment. (Which is why the 1990 Taif Accords
prevented the LAF from entering camps - an anomaly no real country would
have accepted.) In November 2005, less than two years ago - JINSA pointed
out:
Hezbollah and Palestinian military units prevented the Lebanese Army from
moving south... (and) along the Syrian border across which weapons have been
flowing to Palestinian guerilla factions in Lebanon. With the Syrian
uniformed forces and the bulk of its intelligence forces having withdrawn
their protective cover from the Palestinians, Beirut is beginning to insist
that the Palestinians can have arms inside the refugee camps, but not
control Lebanese territory... On the other hand... the 56-year Palestinian
presence in Lebanon is a human nightmare owing to the combination of
unremitting Lebanese hostility and an UNRWA mandate that does not permit the
resettlement of refugees... (this is) a political nightmare for Lebanon as
well as for Israel. Unless the international community helps the
Palestinians get a handle on the reality that they will not dissolve Israel
through uncontrolled immigration, Lebanon will suffer too.
Less
than one year ago, JINSA held a forum on Capitol Hill and heard Rep. Mark
Kirk call for an international audit of UNRWA. Congressman Kirk admitted he
was unsuccessful in generating demand among his colleagues despite such
accounting anomalies as a $13 million entry for "un-earmarked expenses" in
an audit conducted by UNRWA's own board. An amendment to the 2006 Foreign
Assistance Act called for $2 million in additional funds for UNRWA
specifically for an investigation of finances, but the amendment was
withdrawn at the request of the State Department.
So now it is 2007 and here we are: Palestinians are killing and helping
others kill, dug in among their own people - who wail with predictable
regularity that they are the victims of someone else. They are, in fact,
victims of UNRWA and intrepid journalists might usefully begin their
investigations there.
The JINSA meeting last year opened with the comment, "As long as
Palestinians do not have to face the hard choice of resettling somewhere,
anywhere that will have them - the fate of all other refugees - they can
cling to the belief that the establishment of Israel was a 'mistake' by the
international community, and the international community can be made to
correct it. Israel is not a mistake to be corrected."
All other things, including fourth-generation Palestinian "refugees,"
"foreign fighters" and Syrian influence, flow from this.
Bryen is the director for special projects of the Jewish Institute for
National Security Affairs.
|
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Capture of Shawish near presidential
compound
puts lie to Mahmoud Abbas being a moderate
NEW YORK (Press Release)— Khaled
Shawish, a senior terrorist commander in Palestinian Authority (PA)
president Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah, who had been sheltered since 2002 in Abbas'
presidential compound (the Muqata) in Ramallah, was captured this week by
Israeli forces in Ramallah.
Shawish is a senior commander in Fatah's Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades who is
responsible for the murder of 19 Israelis and the wounding of dozens in
numerous attacks, including several in and around Jerusalem. The victims
include Binyamin-Ze'ev Kahane, the son of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, and
his wife Talia, who were shot to death while their five daughters were all
seriously wounded in a December 2000 terror attack in which Shawish played a
key role.
Shawish also orchestrated two suicide bombings in Jerusalem in 2002, as well
as a shooting attack in the French Hill neighborhood of Jerusalem. Shawish
was cornered by Israeli forces when he left the Muqata in Ramallah. Israeli
forces managed to wound Shawish in 2001 but failed to eliminate him (Israel
National News, May 31). Israeli officials said that
Shawish has been wanted by the IDF since 2000 and has spent most of his time
near the Muqata. He was in possession of a gun when arrested (Jerusalem
Post, May 31).
Morton A. Klein, president of the Zionist Organization of America, said,
"The arrest of the terrorist Shawish by Israeli forces after he left Mahmoud
Abbas' presidential compound in Ramallah demonstrates as clearly as anything
could that Mahmoud Abbas is no moderate anti-terrorist peace seeker. In
addition to numerous other anti-peace, pro-terror actions and words, we now
find out that he also shelters and protects terrorist murderers, just as
Yasser Arafat did before him. Contrary to the absurd and false rhetoric one
hears about Abbas'
moderation, opposition to terrorism and interest in peace, he is simply
Yasser Arafat in a suit. Only this week, former Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
Chief of Staff, Lt-Gen. Moshe Yaalon, said categorically that Mahmoud Abbas
is not a peace partner.
"Abbas after all, is the man who
co-founded the terrorist group Fatah with Yasser Arafat and was his deputy
for 40 years. He funded the Munich massacre. He wrote a Ph.D. thesis and a
book denying the Holocaust. As president of the PA, Abbas said 'it is our
duty to implement the principles of Yasser Arafat.' He has refused to
implement the signed Oslo agreements and the 2003 Roadmap peace plan which
requires him to fight, arrest, extradite and jail terrorists and confiscate
their weaponry and end the incitement to hatred and murder in the
PA-controlled media, mosques, schools and youth camps that feeds it. He has
formed a unity government with the genocidal terrorist movement, Hamas. Why
anyone would expect him to differ in his aims and conduct from Yasser Arafat
is a mystery.
"That has not stopped governments
around the world and the Bush Administration backing Abbas as though he were
a force for moderation and peace. The ZOA has described this approach as
divorced from reality and urged President Bush, who describes himself as
'the best friend that Israel ever had,' to cease supporting and funding
Mahmoud Abbas and the PA terror regime. This policy not only harms Israel
but also American interests and in particular the President's war on terror,
which is predicated on the idea that one cannot promote and sponsor
terrorism and be a U.S. ally. The capture of the multiple murderer Shawish
is a trenchant reminder of the terrorist sponsorship of Mahmoud Abbas and
the PA."
The foregoing
release was provided by the Zionist Organization of America.
Jews
in the News
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like you, we're pleased when members of our community are
praiseworthy, and are disappointed when they are blameworthy.
Whether
it's good news or bad news, we'll try to keep track of what's being said in
general media about our fellow Jews.
Our news spotters are Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H. Harrison in San Diego,
and you. Wherever you are, if you see a story of interest, please send a
summary and link to us at sdheritage@cox.net.
To see a source story click on the link within the respective paragraph.
_______________________________________________________________________
*Rabbi Yonah Bookstein, a rabbi who
works with University of California Irvine students, says anyone overtly Jewish
on that campus is liable to be harassed, but UC Irvine Chancellor Michael Drake
said during a forum at Shir Ha Ma'alot Synagogue that he cannot intervene
against "free speech." The
story by H.G. Reza is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Elizabeth Dervan, 16, and Amanda Fink, 17, are organizing a
dance-a-thon and silent auction at Polytechnic School in Pasadena for Darfur
refugees. As Jews aware of the Holocaust, they said they feel a responsibility
to do what they can to prevent genocide. The
story by Martha Groves is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*Will the compromise immigration legislation prompt an increase in immigrants
seeking to come to the United States illegally, with the idea of forging
documents to "prove" they had been residents prior to January 1, 2007?
U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California) didn't directly answer this
question, but defended the compromise that moved the legislation forward.
The
story by Jerry Kammer of the Copley News Service is in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune.
*In Norfolk, Virgina, U.S. District Court Judge Jerome B. Friedman
has ordered that
Majed Talat Hajbeh be freed from
prison because he had been held for nearly four years for violating immigration
laws and in all that time no country could be found to deport him to. The
Associated Press
story is included in a column of briefs in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune.
*U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg received mixed
reviews in a San Diego Union-Tribune
editorial. The newspaper agreed that a law restricting the time
people may file a discrimination claim may need fixing. But, it said,
that's up to Congress, not up to the Supreme Court.
*Jonathan Greenberg, superintendent of the Perris Union High School
District, says a high-speed, alcohol-influenced crash on Interstate 15 that took
the lives of three students and critically injured another during a senior class
trip, is "breaking our hearts...kids are just heartbroken." The
story by Kristina Davis and J. Harry Jones is in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune.
*The works of photographer Arthur Lavine are on display at two
venues: The Museum of Photographic Arts and the Four Walls Gallery in North
Park. A
review by Neil Kendricks is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*Adam Levine of Maroon 5 needs to get out of bed more, writes
reviewer Erin Glass, who is clearly uninspired by Levine's sex life. Her
review is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Connecticut) is on tour of U.S.
military facilities in Iraq. One of the first questions a soldier asked
him in a forum was when the troops could leave. The
story by Leila Fadel of MCT News Service is in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune.
*In the latest battle between Qualcomm and Broadcom, the former is accused
by the latter of having hidden documents that were at variance with Qualcomm's
testimony in another case and which might have affected the outcome of a trial
which Broadcom won anyway. Lou Lupin, an attorney for Qualcomm,
said in an apology to the judge in the case that the failure to produce the
documents was inadvertent. The
story by Kathryn Balint is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*New York Times television critic Joanne Ostrow describes The Starter
Wife, a new USA television offering starring Debra Messing of
Will-and-Grace fame, as "six
hours of divorcée porn, cable-style."
Her
review is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*Former Congressman Lionel Van Deerlin of San Diego writes in his
column in the San Diego Union-Tribune about a new Creation Museum
that opened in Petersburg, Kentucky, devoted to a literal interpretation of
Genesis. Among high-tech exhibits is one suggesting that the Grand Canyon was
created by the sudden flood of water at the time of Noah.
*Martin Nissenbaum and Richard Shapiro, partners in Ernst &
Young, were among four defendants accused in an indictment unsealed in Manhattan
federal court of attempting to defraud the Internal Revenue Service by creating
phony tax shelters for clients, then having the clients pretend to withdraw from
the bogus shelters by claiming that the September 11, 2001 terror attacks forced
them to reconsider their investments. The Associated Press
story by Larry Neumeister is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*Coroner Dr. Louis Pena, testifying in the Phil Spector murder trial,
acknowledged under cross-examination that it could not be said from the angle of
bullet penetration whether victim Lana Clarkson was shot by someone else, or by
herself. But he continued to insist that the case was a homicide. The
story by Matt Krasnowski of the Copley News Service is in today's San
Diego Union-Tribune.
*Dr. James W. Weinstein of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in
Hanover, N.H., concludes in a new study that some back problems are better
treated with surgery than with drugs and physical medicine. The
story by Thomas H. Maugh II is in today's Los Angeles Times.
(return to top)
__________________________________________
The Jewish Grapevine
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADVOCACY—Howard Feldman, president of Pioneer Emergency Response, has
been doing some responding of his own. Alerted by the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) that action is needed to promote the Iran
Counter-Proliferation Act of 2007, he sent out an e-blast to friends and
acquaintances urging them to write or telephone U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-California) and to ask her to cosponsor bipartisan legislation by
Senators Gordon Smith (R-Oregon) and Richard Durbin (D-Illinois) to increase
political and economic pressure on Iran to give up its drive to develop nuclear
weapons. The mass e-mail also recommended letters of calls to Senator
Barbara Boxer (D-California) to thank her for already becoming a co-sponsor.
AROUND THE TOWN—Young violinist
Eugene Ugorski has been booked as the featured performer at the
Neurosciences Institute's "Minding the Art," its gala event to benefit
performing arts. A "Save the Date" card was mailed by the Institute so
everyone would keep Sunday, September 23, open for the 4 pm to 8 p.m. concert.
Informtion may be obtained from Jessica Colby via
her email.
COMMUNITY WATCH—Hoping to learn about Jewish subjects? The Agency for
Jewish Education says in its Makor catalogue it lists 15 new learning
opportunities beginning in June. Here is
a link to that online catalogue... The
Astor Judaica Library at the Lawrence Family JCC, Jacobs Family campus, is
getting ready for its annual used book sale. For more information about
the June 10 event, click
here.
CONGREGATIONAL CURRENTS—A letter from Rabbi Phillip Graubart of
Congregation Beth El is rocketing around the Internet. He calls on San Diego's
Jewish community to "define what the term 'sister city' means" by helping Sha'ar
Hanegev and S'derot cope with the stress and rebuild the damages inflicted upon
them by Qassam rocket attacks from Gaza. "Sha'ar Hanegev and S'derot need
to rebuild vital infrastructure; they require secure summer programming for
children; they need transportation for the elderly; they need to rebuild
schools." He appealed for people to send money to Beth El's "Negev Fund"
at 8660 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92037, explaining that the money will be
grouped into one big check to the United Jewish Federation, which in turn will
distribute fund to various emergency projects in S'derot and Sha'ar Hanegev.
Michael Rassler, UJF chief executive officer, told San Diego Jewish
World that a community-wide campaign is under consideration.
CYBER-REFERRALS—Bruce Kesler refers us to a tongue-in-cheek
missive by University of Haifa Steven Plaut likening the British
University and College Union call for a boycott of Israeli institutions as
analogous to calling for a boycott of Czechoslovakian institutions of higher
learning in 1938 for their alleged mistreatment of Sudeten Germans. Kesler
also found on the politically-minded Little Green Footballs site a guest posting
from San Diego Congressman Duncan Hunter, a Republican presidential candidate,
about his strong support for Israel. Here is
the link. ...Larry
Gorfine passed on to us a musical and visual
ode to the
1960s. It is on a website called MoreOldFortyFives.com. ...
IN MEMORY—Miriam Goldberg, 96, of La Jolla, died May 6. A short
obituary is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
POLITICAL SCENE—Marty Block continues to pick up Jewish community
endorsements in his drive to be elected to the 78th District of the State
Assembly. An invitation to his 6pm June 18 fundraiser at the University
Club lists includes within its list of co-hosts some people who are active in
the San Diego Jewish community, among them Laurie Black, Michael Brau, Jerry
Goldberg, Dr. Richard Katz, and Sandy Roseman. These are in
addition to some community members previously announced as supporters such as
Murray Galinson, Fred Schenk, former Congresswoman Lynn
Schenk and former Assemblymember Howard Wayne.
Team of Polin, Oster,
Bignell, Miller and Kornfeld
tapped for top UJF positions by Nominating Committee
SAN DIEGO—Kenneth D. Polin
was tapped today by the nominating committee of the United Jewish Federation of
San Diego County to serve another year as the organization's president, with
Andrea Oster selected as president-elect, meaning that she will be in line to
succeed Polin at the conclusion of his term.
Kenneth Polin
Steve Solomon
Andrea Oster
Gary Kornfeld
Oster serves currently as vice president for planning and allocation as well as
serving as secretary. In the proposed new line-up, Terri Bignell would
step up to UJF vice president and women's division president, succeeding Bev
Pamensky; board member Brian Miller would be elevated to vice president for
planning and allocations, while the current treasurer, Marty Klitzner, would
perfom both his current job and additionally serve as secretary.
In other changes, Michael Flaster has been nominated to succeed Jerry Goldberg
as chairman of the Jewish Community Relations Committee (JCRC), and Teresa
DuPuis takes a new board position as women's dividison campaign chair.
Accordingly the slate to be submitted by the nominating committee for
ratification at UJF's annual meeting June 19 includes:
●President: Kenneth Polin
●President-Elect Andrea Oster
●Vice President and Women's Division President: Terri Bignell
●Vice President-Funding and Allocations: Brian Miller
●Vice President-Financial Resource Development: Gary Kornfeld
●Vice President-Annual Campaign: Rob Fink
●Treasurer/ Secretary: Marty Klitzner.
●Women's Division Campaign Chair: Theresa Dupuis.
●Jewish Community Relations Committee Chair: Michael Flaster.
●Young Adult Division Co-Chair: Jessica Effress
●Jewish Community Foundation Chair: Sheila Potiker
If ratified, these officers will be joined on the board by Dr. Steven D.
Solomon, immediate past president; and by Michael S. Rassler, UJF's Chief
Executive Officer.
The nominating committee also tapped the following UFJ members to serve as
directors-at-large of the Federation, which serves as the umbrella agency for
San Diego County's Jewish community: Betty Byrnes, Richard Effress, Claire
Ellman, David Geffen, Ron Marcus, Tammy Moch, Brian Tauber, Jan Tuttleman
and Caryn Viterbi.
A Special Message... .
|
|
|
Nominating
Committee members included: Dr. Steven D. Solomon, chair; Jessica
Effress, Claire Ellman, Jean Gaylis, David Geffen, Tammy Moch, Laura
Tauber and ex officio members Kenneth D. Polin, Michael S. Rassler,
Nadine Finkel and Barbara Sherman.
In another United Jewish
Federation development, Executive Officer Michael Rassler released a
videotaped appeal for people who have not yet fulfilled their campaign
pledges to do so. |
|
Max Siegel
Congratulations on your
graduation!
Now
it's off to UC Berkeley!
Grandma Paula
|
Arts,
Entertainment & Dining |
JFS Project
SARAH sponsors hopeful drama on dealing with domestic abuse
SAN DIEGO (Press Release)—Project SARAH of Jewish Family Service in San
Diego is teaming up with the 14th Annual Lipinsky Family San
Diego Jewish Arts Festival to bring the performance of Flowers Aren’t
Enough, written and performed by Israeli actress and writer Naomi
Ackerman.
Flowers Aren’t Enough
is a monologue that tells the story of Michal, a young woman from an
upper-middle-class family who finds herself in an abusive relationship.
Michal describes how her partner gradually narrows her world, isolating her
from her surroundings. Her denial, guilt and the negative effects of social
conditioning become apparent. Michal sinks into darkness before taking
charge of her life and rediscovering herself. The monologue is woven from
true stories and scenarios of women willing to talk about their
all-too-common experiences. Since its debut almost nine years ago,
Flowers Aren’t Enough has been performed over 600 times for audiences
and organizations all over the world.
The performance will take place on Monday, June 25 from 7 to
9pm at the San Diego REPertory Theater at the Lyceum at 79 Horton Plaza in
downtown San Diego. Tickets for the performance are $18 and tickets
including a dessert reception with Naomi Ackerman are $36. Tickets can be
purchased at the San Diego REPertory Theatre’s box office by calling (619)
544-1000, or online at www.sandiegorep.com.
Ackerman is an American-born Israeli with a BA from Hebrew
University and teaching credentials from David Yellin Teachers Seminar in
Israel. Her acting credits include theatre, musicals, film and television.
She writes, directs and performs many of her own plays, including films
promoting tolerance and dialogue between diverse cultures and plays based on
lives of at-risk children. She is also a well-known mediator and conflict
resolution specialist and works with various organizations adapting and
creating drama techniques to deal with social, gender and educational
issues.
This performance is sponsored by Project SARAH (Stop Abusive
Relationships At Home), a program of Jewish Family Service, which provides a
safe and confidential setting for individuals who are experiencing abuse to
explore resources and options and assists them in making critical life
decisions. Project SARAH offers many services including counseling, crisis
intervention, case management, educational outreach, support groups and
referrals. Learn more at www.jfssd.org
If your partner has pushed or shoved you, kept you from using
the phone or visiting friends or relatives, insulted or humiliated you in
private or public, destroyed your property, withheld your access to joint
finances, or caused you to feel fearful in any way, you may be experiencing
domestic violence. For more information or to receive confidential
assistance, please contact Project SARAH at (858) 637-3238. There is never
an excuse for abuse.
The foregoing story was provided by Jewish Family
Service.
Book Review
Jewish expat takes humorous look at Hong Kong
By
Danny Bloom
CHIAYI CITY, Taiwan—Longtime
Jewish-American expat in Hong Kong, Larry Feign, has produced a new
humor book about his adopted city, titled Hongkongitis. For those who
have ever lived there or visited on overseas business trips, the book's a
hoot.
According
to Feign, a popular cartoonist and humorist, Hong Kong is actually
located in France, Chinese food will save the ozone layer, Hong Kong taxi
fares are based on the Quantum Theory, and like Taipei-itis, there is
apparently no cure for Hongkongitis. He says all this tongue firmly in
cheek, of course.
In the new book, Feign shares his latest thoughts, discoveries and
un-scientific theories about Hong Kong, including The
Larry Feign
Unified Wah Theory, the Chinese Garbage Principle, proposals to make
Chinglish the official language of the United Nations, among other things.
Filled with 27 humorous essays and a few of Feign's signature cartoons, the
paperback book is available via online ordering sites on the Internet.
Boycott...
(continued from above_
SPME therefore urges its network professor colleagues and their colleagues
write to UCU head Sally Hunt at
shunt@ucu.org,uk , Prof. Hunt has publicly opposed the boycott-enabling
motions. Express your support for her argument that the boycott motion may
not be implemented until it has been presented to, discussed by, and passed
by a vote of the full membership, analogous to motions for strikes. Please
be sure to send blind copies of your letters to SPME at
spme@spme.net and the Fair Play Campaign
Group at ucu@fairplaycg.org.uk
In addition, SPME urges academic colleagues to write to any professional or
scholarly organizations with which they are affiliated. Urge or petition the
leadership of your organization to issue a statement opposing academic
boycotts in general and the UCU's boycott motion in particular.
As a result of this boycott action,
Scholars for Peace in the Middle East is forming an International Task Force
on Countering Academic and Professional Boycotts. Its charge will be to
promote academic freedom and to wage anti-boycott campaigns in professional
and academic organizations, societies and associations and in colleges and
universities by working within these institutions as members of the academic
community. The full Task Force has not yet been appointed but will include:
Edward S. Beck, Ed.D., Walden
University, President Scholars for Peace in the Middle East
John R. Cohn, M.D.Thomas Jefferson University Hospital
Stanley Dubinsky, Ph.D., Associate Dean, University of South Carolina, SPME
Board of Directors
Lizbeth Fried, Ph.D., University of Michigan
Richard Lubman, M.D.University of Southern California School of Medicine,
SPME-USC Chapter Co-Chair
Ed Morgan, JD Ph.D. University of Toronto School of Law
Edgar Pick, M.D. Ph.D., Sacker School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University
Elihu Richter, M.D. Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center
Harvey Risch, M.D, Yale University School of Medicine
SPME is recruiting interested
contributing members to this important international task force. To join,
you must be a contributing network member. To join,
click here . To apply to join
this task force, click here .
Edward Beck, Walden
University and President of SPME, commented: "In
calling for a boycott of Israel academics, the British have separated
themselves, not the Israelis, from the global academic community which
firmly condemns academic boycotts for moral, ethical and intellectual
reasons, frequently acknowledging that academics are active in trying to
solve problems and not create additional ones."
"I am sorry that one of the first
acts of the newly formed University and College Union has been to jettison
the principle of the Universality of Science and Learning, which has been at
the heart of academic activity for so long This decision brings discredit on
the Union." laments Oxford University scientist, Michael Yudkin.
Ashey Grossman, William Harvey
Research Institute, Barts and the London School of Medicine, Queen Mary
University of London points out, "...I have yet to meet any member of an
Israeli University who believes that there should be other than an
establishment of a Palestinian state on equal terms with Israel: would that
were true of all Palestinian opinion. The organisers of the boycott may
state otherwise, but this one is another example of creeping salon anti-semitism
that we are now become accustomed to in the UK."
Hebrew University Vidal Sasson
Center for Research on Anti-Semitism Research Associate and SPME Board
Member from Germany, Matthias Kuentzel remarks. "Hostilities against Israel
appear today in the form of a pincer movement: On one side, we have
anti-Semites such as Ahmadinejad or Hamas who draw their “knowledge” about
Jews from the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. On the other side we
have non-Jewish and Jewish “fellow travelers of anti-Semitism” in
progressive Western movements and governments who take up and proliferate,
albeit in muted form, Iran’s attempts to delegitimize Israel."
Associate Dean Stanley Dubinsky of
the University of South Carolina, also a member of the SPME Board of
Directors urges his colleagues to consider these thoughts. "The passage of
an academic boycott motion by the University and College Union (UCU)
confirms for the rest of the academic world, more than anything else, what
American Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg calls a 'widespread anti-Israel and
anti-semitic current in British opinion.' The British anti-semites of
Brighton (UB) and East London (UEL) have come skittering out from under the
woodwork to make their loathing of Israel a matter of public record. In
their ardor for their cause, they appear to have ignored the fact that their
motion places their faculty union and all of its members squarely at odds
with the most basic principles of academic freedom. By the promotion of
academic boycotts and political censure, UCU will become actively engaged
(in its inaugural year) in the undermining of open and free exchange of
ideas and will place itself firmly in opposition to the advancement of human
knowledge. In response to this and other previous boycott attempts, I have
secured honorary affiliations with Bar Ilan University and Haifa University.
In this manner, I declare myself to be a member of that class to which the
UCU boycott pertains (for the purposes of making it clear that I fit into
the boycotted category, the UCU membership should attribute to me any and
all opinions which would place me in the class of individuals to be
boycotted). I, for my part, will not boycott anyone for their beliefs in my
various editorial and academic roles, but I will be certain to
advise all my British correspondents and colleagues of the dilemma that a
UCU boycott may place them in, whenever appropriate. I would urge all
academics of moral courage and ethical decency to do likewise, and secure
for themselves the yellow star of Israeli affiliation, and so help the
British unionists to more quickly realize what fools they have made of
themselves and their colleagues. "
Donna Robinson Divine, Morningstar Professor of Government, Smith College
observes, " The UCU call for a boycott reveals not only profound ignorance
of the Middle East conflict but also deep illiteracy about the academic
mission. Academicians should be able to think without resort to slogans and
mantras."
Law Professor Ed Morgan of the
University of Toronto suggests, "...The important link between a boycott of
Israel - be it commercial or academic - and the impact on the Jewish
community was succinctly stated by President Jimmy Carter who, in signing
the EAA amendments into force on June 22, 1977, declared that, 'The bill
seeks…to end the divisive effects on American life of foreign boycotts aimed
at Jewish members of our society.' It may seem ironic today, but it was
President Carter who identified those who would boycott Israel as practicing
a special form of apartheid. Carter stated, 'If we allow such a precedent to
become established, we open the door to similar action against any ethnic,
religious, or racial group in America.'
University of Buffalo SPME Chapter Chair Prof. Ernest Sternberg, comments,
"Today, leaders of the British academic labor union have approved a boycott
of Jewish academics, in Israel, the country in which Jews have built as a
democratic, tolerant home in the wake of worldwide discrimination, pogroms,
and genocide. At a time when Israel is subjected to threats and active
attempts at annihilation from Iran, Hizbullah, Hamas, and Islamist
extremists, the UCU has sought once again to target the victim. While
hundreds of thousands are murdered in Darfur, repressive occupation
continues in Tibet, ethnic cleansing takes place West Irian, and
suicide-terrorism causes mass murder in around the world, UCU targets
Israel. Through ignorance or malice, UCU leaders have, though this
scapegoating of Israel, become complicit with bigotry, racism, and the
yearning for genocide.”
The foregoing article was provided by Scholars
for Peace in the Middle East.
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