Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Hysterical attack on
Isracampus by David Newman (Dean of Social Sciences) in JPOST
Bemoans increased involvement of
Board of Governors' dealing with Traitorous Academics who abuse
their positions; Boasts the increased attention of the Council of
Higher Education but fails to mention that the Council almost closed
the department Newman founded.
In recent years, spurred on by extremist
right-wing groups, members of the Boards of Governors have also
become increasingly involved in the political debate surrounding
Israeli universities and their academic staff. Many of them have
blindly supported the false assertions of well-oiled and funded
groups, such as Im Tirtzu, NGO Monitor, IsraCampus and Academic
Monitor, that the universities have become hotbeds of "anti-Zionism"
without ever bothering to check the facts on the ground.
…
The crisis of the humanities, which was all too apparent during the
past decade, has finally been recognized by the Council of Higher
Education (the MALAG) which is beginning to redirect resources to
this field. In financial terms, the liberal arts and the humanities
will not always stand up to the stringent measures of economic
feasibility. [nor to
the stringent
measures of Academic standards – Isracampus]
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=269792
Borderline Views:
Time to promote the humanities
By DAVID NEWMAN
13/05/2012
The month-long Board of Governors season
got underway this week as the philanthropic supporters of Israel's
universities arrived to participate in a program of lectures,
cultural events, openings of new buildings and the awarding of
honorary doctorates.
The competition between universities, and
a host of other Israeli institutions – such as hospitals, yeshivot,
welfare organizations and even political movements – has become
increasingly intense in recent years. Economic recession, Madoff,
and uncertainty about the future of the global money markets have
reduced the total amount of philanthropy. The older generation of
donors, for whom giving to Jewish and Israeli causes was a
no-brainer, has been dying off, and it is much more difficult to
find a new, younger, generation of potential donors who demonstrate
the same commitment to the causes which were supported by their
parents.
In recent years, spurred on by extremist
right-wing groups, members of the Boards of Governors have also
become increasingly involved in the political debate surrounding
Israeli universities and their academic staff. Many of them have
blindly supported the false assertions of well-oiled and funded
groups, such as Im Tirtzu, NGO Monitor, IsraCampus and Academic
Monitor, that the universities have become hotbeds of "anti-Zionism"
without ever bothering to check the facts on the ground.
The right-wing protagonists would have us
believe that basic universal values such as freedom of conscience,
freedom of speech and academic freedom are not compatible with being
an upright and law-abiding citizen of the state, and they have
partially succeeded in selling these dangerous ideas to many of the
well meaning, but largely ill informed, supporters of Israel from
abroad. Some of them have even fallen into the trap of reassessing
their donations and, as such, have inadvertently caused damage to
one of the great Israeli miracles of the past 60 years – the
development of seven institutes of higher education (Hebrew
University, Tel Aviv University, Ben-Gurion University, Haifa
University, Bar Ilan University, the Technion and the Weizmann
Institute), all of which have achieved international status for
their research and their teaching and which have, during the past
decade, produced Nobel prize winners who are second to none in the
world.
There are many challenges facing Israel's
universities as they attempt to identify the research frontiers
facing the world during the next two to three decades. All too often
this is translated into the important fields of health sciences and
medicine, or the recent "in" topics such as nanotechnology and
cognitive sciences. Each university has its own unique and specific
areas of relative advantage, and my own university, Ben-Gurion, is
without doubt one of the world leaders in the study of
desertification and the use of water in arid environments – research
which has global, and not just local, implications as it helps to
eradicate poverty and starvation in many critical regions of the
world, not least in Africa and Asia.
Unfortunately, the world of the social
sciences and the humanities has been largely forgotten and discarded
by most university donors. The Board of Governors program may
include annual lectures on contemporary political issues (such as
the so-called "Arab spring") or a new insight into European history
and the Holocaust, because these are "sexy" topics of great interest
for our visitors, and the auditoriums are usually full. But these
same topics are nowhere to be found in the priority list of the
universities when it comes to soliciting donations and future
endowments.
Come listen to a fascinating lecture by
Deborah Lipstadt or Baroness Ruth Deech or Sir Martin Gilbert about
European and Jewish history, and then come speak to us about giving
money to the life sciences or nanotechnology laboratory. The
decision makers in the universities have partially forgotten that
the original role of the university was to contribute to the
morality, philosophy and culture of the society, through a deeper
understanding of history, ethics, theology, literature and basic
humanistic values, and that these too require resources (albeit of a
smaller scale) if they are to continue to flourish.
The crisis of the humanities, which was
all too apparent during the past decade, has finally been recognized
by the Council of Higher Education (the MALAG) which is beginning to
redirect resources to this field. In financial terms, the liberal
arts and the humanities will not always stand up to the stringent
measures of economic feasibility. They require an input of resources
which will not necessarily show a profit margin at the end of the
day. Our friends and supporters from the Diaspora should understand
how important it is to ensure that Israel retains its place as one
of the countries in the world where books and literature and ideas
are reinvigorated and given a new breath of life, in the very best
of Jewish traditions.
So if you are looking for an alternative
investment opportunity in Israel's future, here is a short list:
• We require investment in libraries so
that our best philosophers and historians do not leave Israel for
universities in Western Europe and North America, arguing that the
country no longer has the necessary humanities research
"laboratories" which will enable them to undertake their research
here in Israel.
• We need investment in the teaching of
languages, which has fallen to an all-time low in Israel, so that
our future research students can acquire the necessary skills to
engage with texts which are written in languages other than Hebrew
or English.
• We need investment in the consolidation
and expansion of Jewish Studies, through which the Jewish experience
can be analyzed from a diversity of perspectives and understandings.
In recent years, student numbers have fallen due to the lack of
programs, while the center for research and originality in Jewish
Studies has shifted its locus from Israel to North America.
• Hebrew culture and literature, which is
so unique and special to this country, require strengthening so that
the amazing achievements of the past 150 years focusing on the
renaissance of Hebrew as a modern, live, spoken language do not
disappear in a flood of globalization.
• We need investment in the development of
centers for human rights in a country where these rights are being
challenged; in the study of minorities and ethnic groups in a
country of new migrant groups; in centers of Middle East studies in
order to better understand our neighbors to the east and their
turbulent politics; in European studies to better understand our
neighbors to the west; in programs of social intervention and
training in a country where the basic levels of welfare and poverty,
social inequalities, lack of access to opportunities, is far greater
than it was in the past.
• Projects which strengthen our democracy
and enable critical studies of Israeli society, its government and
its public institutions, within the context of a bitter conflict
between Israel and her neighbors, need to be encouraged and
supported. Strong academic programs in conflict resolution, peace
studies, the rule of law and the ability to "dialogue" with the
other, should be at the forefront of Israeli academic endeavors.
The list of potential projects which do
not simply focus on technology and laboratories is endless.
Without such centers of activity, the
country's universities are on their way to becoming little more than
top quality institutes of technology and medicine, but where the
heart of the society, its values, ethics, philosophies and debates,
have been relegated to the margins. We, the community of scholars in
the field of humanities and social sciences, in all of Israel's
universities, invite your interest so that you, too, can contribute
to the future of the Israeli soul.
The writer is dean of the faculty of
humanities and social sciences at Ben-Gurion University. The views
expressed are his alone
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Op-Ed articles appearing on IsraCampus.Org.il are those of the writer and
do not necessarily represent the opinion of IsraCampus.Org.il
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