Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - David Newman (Dept of
Political Science) again attacking the donors to his own university.
THEY are NOT entitled to freedom of speech!
Leads the campaign to protect the right of the EU to fund and
promote treason in Israel
Neither are the
bastions of freedom of expression immune to these pressures.
Universities, where freedom of expression and diversity of opinion
should be the most cherished of values, are proving themselves weak
in the face of these same pressures. Right-wing donors who feel that
their checkbooks give them the right to determine what goes on in a
country they are not even prepared to be citizens of threaten to
cease their funding and influence others to do the same.
In the tight economic
situation of recent years, the leaders of these institutions are not
always prepared to publicly stand up for academic freedom, as the
lure of the donation takes precedence over the values around which
these important centers of science and education were created in the
first place. It has become easier for university heads to lay the
blame for their failure to bring in new donors at the door of
left-wing academics than than to attribute the drop off in funding
to the realities of economic recession or to their inability to
succeed in a highly competitive world of Israeli institutions
(universities, hospitals, yeshivot, welfare associations) all vying
for the evershrinking dollar.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=246467
Speaking out against the threat
The Knesset's ongoing attack on democracy is real and
terrifying. The time is now to stand up and protest.
By DAVID NEWMAN
21/11/2011
It is not a
superficial slogan. Neither is it cheap demagoguery.
Israel's democracy is
under threat to an extent which it has never previously experienced
in the sixty years of its existence. And while the post-Soviet
countries have moved along the difficult road from totalitarianism
to free speech, and the Arab spring has heralded the shaky
beginnings of freedom of expression in much of the Middle East,
Israel seems to be headed in the exact opposite direction. We are in
real danger of passing each other along the way if the present
antidemocratic tendencies in Israel are not halted in their tracks.
Most troubling is the
fact that one of the institutions which should be up front defending
the right to freedom of speech, the Knesset, is the instigator of
the proposed legislation which will destroy Israel's democratic
status. Spurred on by right-wing NGO's, funded by private donations
from residents of foreign countries, their supporters in the Knesset
are attempting to impose their own values on society as a whole.
The list is a long
one: Preventing the funding of propeace and pro-human rights
organizations, intervening within the judicial system and
politicizing the appointment of Supreme Court justices, challenging
the status of Arabic – the mother tongue of over 20 percent of the
country's population – as an official language, threatening to
intervene in the curriculum of the country's universities, turning a
blind eye to attacks on left-wing peace activists, forcing an oath
of loyalty on those citizens whose ethnic and national
background is neither Jewish nor
Zionist, and the rounding up, imprisonment and physical expulsion of
helpless refugees without the right to a fair hearing or trial.
The accumulation of
this anti-democratic war of attrition and sentiment is pushing
Israel to the brink of being excluded from the family of democratic
nations.
When that happens we
will not be able accuse the world of being anti-Semitic because we
will have brought it on through our own actions. We will have no one
to blame but ourselves for our gradual exclusion from international
forums.
IT IS not surprising
that one of the few members of the present Likud government who
recognizes the dangers facing our fragile democracy is Minister Dan
Meridor, a former cabinet secretary and minister of justice and a
trusted member of Israel's inner security establishment.
He was a protégé of
Herut Party and Likud icon Menachem Begin who, despite his
right-wing politics, firmly believed in the rule of democracy and
the supreme status of the judicial system. Begin must surely be
turning in his grave to see the actions of his successors, in the
name of the party that he created on the values bequeathed to him by
Vladimir Jabotinsky, who also would have been opposed to the current
trends.
Neither are the
bastions of freedom of expression immune to these pressures.
Universities, where freedom of expression and diversity of opinion
should be the most cherished of values, are proving themselves weak
in the face of these same pressures. Right-wing donors who feel that
their checkbooks give them the right to determine what goes on in a
country they are not even prepared to be citizens of
threaten to cease their funding and influence others to do the same.
In the tight economic
situation of recent years, the leaders of these institutions are not
always prepared to publicly stand up for academic freedom, as the
lure of the donation takes precedence over the values around which
these important centers of science and education
were created in the first place. It has become easier for
university heads to lay the blame for
their failure to bring in new donors at the door of left-wing
academics than than to attribute the drop off in funding to the
realities of economic recession or to their inability to succeed in
a highly competitive world of Israeli institutions (universities,
hospitals, yeshivot, welfare associations) all vying for the
evershrinking dollar.
I AM a proud citizen
of this country. I chose to live here, along with many dozens of my
family and friends, because I believe strongly in the values of
Zionism and because I am a proud member of the Jewish people. I
could never in my wildest dreams imagine myself living anywhere
else, despite the ease with which I could make that choice. This is
where I belong.
Like so many other
immigrants from the free West, there was no push factor of
anti-Semitism involved in what was, for so many of us, a natural
decision to come and live in the Jewish State and to contribute to
its development, security and strength. I identify strongly with the
Jewish symbols of this country, including its flag, its anthem, its
Jewish festivals and many of its public mores.
Of course, there are
policies which I strongly oppose, not least the continued occupation
of the West Bank, but I have always believed in, and exercised, my
right to state that opposition without fear of retribution. I have
always believed that one of the inner strengths of this amazing
country is its ability to preserve its democracy, despite the
ongoing conflict, even at time of crisis and existential threat.
It has become almost
second nature for Israelis to view the Arab and Palestinian
residents of the country as citizens with lesser rights than those
of the Jewish majority. But the ease with which those rights have
been denied, is now spreading to the Jewish majority.
These may sound like
strong words and I will no doubt
be strongly criticized for making such a comparison, but we would do
well to paraphrase the famous words of Pastor Niemoller, writing in
1946 about Germany of the 1930s and 1940s: "When the government
denied the sovereign rights of the Palestinians, I remained silent;
I was not a Palestinian.
When they
discriminated against the Arab citizens of the country, I remained
silent; I was not an Arab. When they expelled the hapless refugees,
I remained at home; I was no longer a refugee. When they came for
the human rights activists, I did not speak out; I was not an
activist. When they came for me, there was no one left to speak
out."
For all of us who
likewise believe in the need to preserve the country's democracy, it
is our responsibility to speak out now before it is too late.
The writer is dean
of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at Ben-GurionUniversity.
The views expressed are his alone.
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