Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - BGU Faculty Come Out Against
the Politics Department
Claim that taking the Council of Higher Education to court "would
be taken at the expense of other important university initiatives"
Disagreement with the department's
teaching methods does not only come from external groups, however.
BGU Professors Israel David, of the industrial engineering and
management department, and Dan Censor, of the electrical and
computer engineering department, have openly expressed their
critiques of the program.
"I don't want the department to close, but
I am in favor of kicking out malignant elements," said David,
specifically pointing to Prof. Neve Gordon, who is known for his
radical left-wing political opinions and is currently on sabbatical
at Princeton University in the US.
According to David, Gordon has often
mentioned the term "apartheid" when talking about Israel. "I'm not
against the department because I'm Zionist, that's not what makes me
get involved in this at the age of 50-something. The reason is, and
I hope this will be heard, that I am fed up with people pissing on
my head. There are a few people here that piss on everyone, on this
university," he said.
David also said that the department's
website states its goal as helping students bring about "economic
and political change."
"That is not the mission statement of a
university program," he said. "It's the platform of a political
party."
He further discussed the department's
threat to take the issue to court, saying the money that would go
toward such an action would be taken at the expense of other
important university initiatives.
Censor, for his part, said: "I see the
whole department as accomplices in the offense. I think they are in
a status of 'useful idiots,' they are contributing in destroying
their own environment."
Whatever the MALAG's decision, he said, it
will be significant and "will change the face of Israeli academia in
Israel for the better."
Censor added that the idea to sue CHE is
"absurd" and "surrealist."
David and Censor agree that the program's
methods and persistence in contradicting MALAG hurts the
university's reputation – and their jobs. Censor noted that he had
been denied the opportunity to present research at a conference, and
he is convinced it was due to the controversy.
"It's a bleeding wound that will never
close," he said of the program.
http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=289199
BGU faculty
threatens legal action over closure
University politics department
threatens to take Council for Higher Education to court for
"dangerous" decision to shutter program.
By DANIELLE ZIRI
25/10/2012
Ahead of the Council for Higher
Education's decision to close Ben-Gurion University's political
science department, Prof. David Newman, dean of the Faculty for
Human and Social Sciences, said the department is prepared to take
legal action if the council does not cancel its decision.
"There's going to be a meeting in the
MALAG [Israeli CHE], where the university presents its case to
demonstrate that the professional considerations of the
sub-committee were wrong," Newman said.
"Most of the senior political scientists
in Israel and the world back up the university's case, and we hope
that the necessary mutual compromise will be reached."
He added: "There is a strong possibility
that if this is not resolved, the university will take the Council
for Higher Education to court, which will be a first in the history
of Israel's higher education and would not be to the benefit of
Israel's scientific and academic standing."
MALAG decided last month to close the
political science program after investigating claims made by
right-wing organizations such as Zionist NGO Im Tirzu, which said
its faculty was teaching students radical leftist political
opinions. Im Tirzu also called the program "unbalanced" and "very
disturbing."
The decision will be reconsidered next
week.
Department head Haim Yacobi responded that
"the claims are very well-engineered, I would say, by groups who
have a political agenda...It's okay to have a political agenda,
there is nothing wrong with that. But the problem is that their
strategy has been adopted by people who have official
responsibility."
Their truth is taken as a fact, he added,
but has no basis in reality.
"We shouldn't be naive, it's part of a
wider agenda."
Yacobi, who took up his position two
months ago and has been dealing with the controversy ever since,
explained that he does not believe that MALAG will shut down the
department – an opinion which his staff and faculty members share.
"It cannot happen. We can be very critical toward Israel's politics,
but we are not at a stage where a department at a university can be
closed because of political interest – and I hope we never reach
this point," he said.
"Closing a department because of political
reasons is a very, very dangerous thing to do," added Yacobi.
He expressed his frustration with the
current situation and stated he is very proud of the achievements of
the political science department.
Regarding the attacks on his faculty
members, Yacobi said: "To be honest, I really don't care what my
colleagues are doing after they are teaching here or whatever
they're doing on the weekend.
"I think if we reach a stage where I would
judge the work of my colleagues or my students according to their
political, social affiliations, it will be a very dark moment," he
added.
Lynn Schler, who teaches African studies
at the department, said that even though her course is not being
directly criticized, she still feels the scrutiny.
"It feels incredibly like 'Big Brother'
monitoring," she said. "This sort of house cleaning on the basis of
who falls in line with certain visions of what can and should be
said, that's what worries me, the 'thought police.'" Students in the
program, Lior Levin and Liraz Yaffe, said they feel they are
receiving a "mind-opening" education and are exposed to "a broad
spectrum of approaches."
"Even if we are aware that some of our
professors have a certain background, we don't see it in class, they
stick to the syllabus. Personally, I've never heard a lecturer
express a political opinion in a clear way," Levin said.
"Our teachers shouldn't feel like they are
walking on eggshells and be afraid to say things," Yaffe, a
third-year student, said.
Although she supports her professors,
Yaffe said she is still concerned about the consequences of the
controversy.
"I'm worried that when I'm going to look
for a job, my degree will be less valued than the same one from
another university."
Disagreement with the department's
teaching methods does not only come from external groups, however.
BGU Professors Israel David, of the industrial engineering and
management department, and Dan Censor, of the electrical and
computer engineering department, have openly expressed their
critiques of the program.
"I don't want the department to close, but
I am in favor of kicking out malignant elements," said David,
specifically pointing to Prof. Neve Gordon, who is known for his
radical left-wing political opinions and is currently on sabbatical
at Princeton University in the US.
According to David, Gordon has often
mentioned the term "apartheid" when talking about Israel. "I'm not
against the department because I'm Zionist, that's not what makes me
get involved in this at the age of 50-something. The reason is, and
I hope this will be heard, that I am fed up with people pissing on
my head. There are a few people here that piss on everyone, on this
university," he said.
David also said that the department's
website states its goal as helping students bring about "economic
and political change."
"That is not the mission statement of a
university program," he said. "It's the platform of a political
party."
He further discussed the department's
threat to take the issue to court, saying the money that would go
toward such an action would be taken at the expense of other
important university initiatives.
Censor, for his part, said: "I see the
whole department as accomplices in the offense. I think they are in
a status of 'useful idiots,' they are contributing in destroying
their own environment."
Whatever the MALAG's decision, he said, it
will be significant and "will change the face of Israeli academia in
Israel for the better."
Censor added that the idea to sue CHE is
"absurd" and "surrealist."
David and Censor agree that the program's
methods and persistence in contradicting MALAG hurts the
university's reputation – and their jobs. Censor noted that he had
been denied the opportunity to present research at a conference, and
he is convinced it was due to the controversy.
"It's a bleeding wound that will never
close," he said of the program.
The CHE is set to meet on Tuesday.
At the same time, students from the
department are expected to protest in its favor in front of the
building in Jerusalem.
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