Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Cabbagehead Rivka Carmi, the
mad cow president, is the star of a sycophantic cover story in the
Haaretz weekend magazine.
The entire first 1/3 is
about the role of the radical Left at BGU, about BGU's loss of
respect and reputation because of the role of the radicals, and
about the criticism of standards in the politics department. Carmi
gives her typical spins. She even manages to bash the donors to BGU.
"It was a routine report," Carmi says drily about the
CHE document [which called for radical changes in the Political
Science Dept or to close the department completely-Isracampus].
"They are always examining a different field across all the
universities. We thought we would adopt the report's conclusions
about strengthening the core subjects, even though there was an
argument about this, because the department was established with a
mandate to be different... But our thinking was that if the
committee says so, then maybe we overdid things a little, and okay,
we accept the conclusions."
…
So, what do you do when a donor says,
"Get rid of a wayward teacher or I will cancel my donation"?
"That has happened on more
than one occasion. I try to put things into context and say that it
is an extreme political approach espoused by fewer than a handful.
We have 800 faculty members, and of them five, maybe ten, espouse
that approach... One of them, a donor to a beit midrash [place of
Torah study] on the campus, became so angry that he stopped
donating. So what? There was also an American who wanted to donate
$7 million to the library."
http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/magazine/juggling-act-1.415769
Juggling act
Prof. Rivka Carmi, president of
Ben-Gurion University, is a renowned geneticist who has made
promotion of women in academia a priority. But she has often been
sidetracked by right-wing charges that BGU is excessively leftist.
Meanwhile, left-wingers accuse her of silencing opposition.
By Doron Halutz
Published 01.03.12
The German ambassador was
already on the way as Prof. Rivka Carmi concluded her speech to the
management forum of Ben-Gurion University in Be'er Sheva. Just as
Carmi, the university's president, was about to head back to her
spacious office, someone with an iPad approached her, asking whether
she had seen the local television item about the university's
examinations procedure. She hadn't. He played it for her: a group of
students grumbling about the university's attitude, with one of them
declaring, "If it's up to me − don't study at BGU."
"We have to send someone to
give an interview in response," Carmi said. Back in her office, she
was more specific. "I want to be interviewed today," she snapped
into the phone.
"A few students in the
department of electrical engineering have complaints about the
teachers and about the examinations procedure," she explained. "It's
part of a long process that is bogged down in the senate. The
students are impatient. They want the problems to be solved
instantly and have launched a vicious campaign. The truth is that
there are problems, but we are working on it overtime."
It sounds routine, but Carmi
is not one to ignore the media, not even a local TV channel. She
canceled all her appointments for the rest of the day, but it was
too late to cancel the meeting with the German ambassador. They
talked about Deutsche Telekom laboratories in the Negev and about
academic cooperation. He addressed her as "Miss President"; she told
him her father was born in Germany. After exactly half an hour,
Carmi took her leave of the envoy and returned to the distinctly
undiplomatic action on campus.
With a journalist in the room,
Carmi avoids naming names. "That idiot − you know who I mean, yes,
the one with the ponytail," she says to her interlocutor on the
phone in a conversation about the root of the problem. When the
rector comes to see her she explains again, "It's a militant group,
a handful, who are dictating the agenda." She describes someone as
"impotent."
"This story has gone on for a
few years," she says. "There is apparently a basic lack of trust
within the system. We have to come up with an answer, so I am going
to give an interview. And I want to meet with the class committee."
An hour later, she is in the
studio of the campus television station, located in the building of
the Faculty of Health Sciences. "You don't have to say 'I am your
president,'" the university's marketing adviser says after the first
take. Carmi tries to restrain herself, but looks like she is on the
verge of exploding.
Back in the office, the class
committee enters. "Thank you for coming. I wanted to say that
behavior in a dispute also has its rules," she lectures the
combative students. "What would you do in our place?" they ask,
after informing her that in some courses the failure rate is 90
percent and the teachers are incommunicative. "That's a good
question," Carmi replies, but ends the meeting without answering it.
Turn left right here
Carmi, an acclaimed geneticist
and the first woman to head a research university in Israel, has had
to douse quite a few fires in the past two years. The angry students
are actually a relatively easy case. Since her appointment as
president she has had to rebuff criticism, most of it politically
colored, from outside the university as well. She is attacked from
the right for not doing anything about the fact that her university
has become a hotbed of radical-left activity. And she is assailed
from the left for not supporting faculty members who are under
attack and for imposing an atmosphere of silencing opposition.
"If you have to talk about
freedom of expression, it means there is a problem to begin with," a
lecturer at the university says. "You don't talk about breathing
air, because it's taken for granted."
The watershed was probably an
article published in the Los Angeles Times in August 2009 by Prof.
Neve Gordon of the university's Department of Politics and
Government. Gordon described Israel as an apartheid state and called
on foreign governments and organizations to exert "massive
international pressure" on the country. The article, titled "Boycott
Israel," made waves and focused attention on the Department of
Politics and Government. Since then, the university has been
subjected to microscopic examination by right-wing politicians and
organizations, including particularly close surveillance by Im
Tirtzu − an organization that "works to strengthen and advance the
values of Zionism in Israel," according to its website. These groups
pounce on every controversial statement by a faculty member
suspected of "leftist tendencies."
Carmi's predecessor as
president, Prof. Avishay Braverman (now a Labor Party MK),
had to cope with a similar situation. At that time the trigger was
an article published in a Belgian paper in April 2004 by Dr. Lev
Grinberg of BGU's sociology department. "The assassination of Sheikh
Yassin [in Gaza] by the government of Israel is part of
a larger policy which can be described as symbolic genocide," he
wrote. The education minister at the time, Limor Livnat
(Likud),
wrote a scathing letter to Braverman and launched a
(symbolic)
war against the university. But Braverman managed to achieve a
cease-fire and the hostilities abated.
However, in the past year BGU
has been repeatedly on the front line. The mass-circulation daily
Yedioth Ahronoth devoted an entire page to a report on the
Department of Politics and Government drawn up by the Council for
Higher Education (CHE). The report concluded that core studies in
the department are weak, and that the faculty-student ratio is too
low. If this and other faults were not remedied, the report stated,
as a last resort the council would recommend closing down the
department.
Even though allegations of "leftism"
and "political bias" received marginal treatment in the report, the
headline in Yedioth Ahronoth was, "Recommendation: Shut down
'leftist department.'" And that was more or less the message that
stuck in the public consciousness. (About
a month ago, MK Alex Miller from Yisrael Beiteinu declared that
grading in the department is also based on a political agenda. "If
they teach something unbalanced there, won't they be tested on it?"
he asked rhetorically in a phone conversation. "When you see the big
picture, my concern is that it also has implications for the
students' grades.")
"It was a routine report,"
Carmi says drily about the CHE document. "They are always examining
a different field across all the universities. We thought we would
adopt the report's conclusions about strengthening the core
subjects, even though there was an argument about this, because the
department was established with a mandate to be different. The
faculty members view the issue from a range of angles: geographical,
historical, architectural. But our thinking was that if the
committee says so, then maybe we overdid things a little, and okay,
we accept the conclusions. I don't know who had an interest in this,
but when the report was leaked to the press it turned into a nasty
story."
Could it be that deep down
you agree with the allegation that the Department of Politics and
Government is too far left?
"There is one faculty member
who crossed a line by calling for a boycott of Israel. Some of our
funding is from donors, and if donations do not come in because of
one boycott or another, we will be hurt. One can identify with a
particular line," Carmi adds. "The question is also how far the
political orientation of a faculty member penetrates the classroom.
The material could be highly charged. Students should be exposed to
that, but in a way that is balanced. Even a researcher who propounds
a subversive, revolutionary thesis has to cope with competing
opinions and present a general context. If that's impossible, don't
speak. I am not sweeping the Palestinian issue under the rug, but it
cannot be detached from history. It is complex and weighty, and if
you want to get into it, then do so courageously. And for me,
courageously means coping with all the narratives, including the
issues you find difficult."
A relatively fresh case
involves Prof. Idan Landau of the Foreign Literatures and
Linguistics Department. A conscientious objector, Landau was jailed
for not reporting for reserve duty, and then discovered that the
university had docked his salary for the time he had been
incarcerated. He complained about the university's action on his
blog − called "Don't Die Stupid" − and the episode generated more
headlines about the extreme left at BGU and the university
administration's struggle against the leftists.
"When a worker does reserve
duty, the employer receives compensation from the National Insurance
Institute," Carmi explains, sticking to a technical argument. "Prof.
Landau did not do reserve duty, but was also not available to the
employer during this period. You could say that he needn't have been
present on the campus at all [to do research], but availability
refers also to students, to a departmental seminar, to membership on
committees. He tried to say I was coming from a preset agenda, but
he broke the law and it was not I who jailed him."
Docking his salary was
perceived as an act of political punishment against the left, or as
a political payoff to the right, to show you are good Zionists.
"That infuriates me. And if I
put my hand in the university's pocket and pay him for the time he
spent in jail, is there no subtext there, which says that I support
his action? It wasn't some personal caprice, it was a decision by an
administrative forum. Now I have a problem with a left-wing donor,
who says that if I don't retract, he will withdraw his donation. But
I do not have double standards, what I say is disinterested, and if
I have to forgo the donation, I will."
Right versus left
It's not just freedom of
speech, but also freedom of funding that dictates the university's
behavior. The cuts in budgets for higher education over the past few
years have increased the institutions' dependence on donors, and
some of the latter are trying to exploit the situation to promote
their own agendas. Several of them have accused Carmi of
surrendering to the radical left on the campus. The lecturers under
attack feel that Carmi is being unsupportive and infringing freedom
of expression. The result is that she is on the blacklist of
right-wing groups, and at the same time is accused of conformism by
the left.
"Someone told me the fact that
I am being slandered equally by both sides means I am in the right
place," Carmi says. "And there are also those who say I am betraying
the university by supporting the faculty members involved and not
slashing budgets in some departments. The allegations from both
directions are baseless. With great modesty, I think I am behaving
in a practical manner."
Which is more important:
academic freedom or obtaining donations?
"Both are extremely important.
The donations are critical to the university's vitality; academic
freedom is critical to the university's life. If the wellspring of
donations were to dry up, the university would not be able to exist
in the desired format. With state funds alone, one can maintain
something small and unimportant, and then the private opinions of
those people would not be taken into account, either."
So, what do you do when a
donor says, "Get rid of a wayward teacher or I will cancel my
donation"?
"That has happened on more
than one occasion. I try to put things into context and say that it
is an extreme political approach espoused by fewer than a handful.
We have 800 faculty members, and of them five, maybe ten, espouse
that approach. All the others are loyal citizens to the state. I
wanted to understand what was upsetting the donors. Some of them
spoke out against me using terms like 'Nazism,' 'Kapo' and 'Judenrat.'
One of them, a donor to a beit midrash [place of Torah study] on the
campus, became so angry that he stopped donating. So what? There was
also an American who wanted to donate $7 million to the library."
What did he want in
exchange?
"Not in exchange, but there
were general discussions, and the bottom line was to get rid of the
extreme leftists. He is someone for whom I have high regard and who
donated in the past. The dialogue with him was important for me: I
wanted him to understand the situation."
Did he understand?
"No."
Did he donate?
"It's not final yet."
What is the message that
this form of dialogue sends to faculty?
"Part of the fund-raising
ritual involves talking. That is clear both to me and to the faculty
members. For them to say I am not being protective is populist and
baseless. I would not want to be the president of a university that
did not have academic freedom, but there is a contradiction between
calling for a boycott and receiving a salary from an institution
that would be harmed if that call were acceded to."
Other universities have no
fewer leftists than you, so why do you draw the fire?
"I have no idea. Someone said
the only explanation is that I am a woman, that it's an attempt to
undermine my authority. That is hallucinatory, but there are all
kinds of conspiracy theories. There were previous calls for a
boycott in the local press, not in outlets with the circulation of
the LA Times. That article got us placed under a magnifying glass −
every move we make − in a way that is completely disproportionate."
Some faculty members claim
that by addressing the threats of Im Tirtzu and company, instead of
throwing their reports into the garbage, you are indicating that the
university has a soft underbelly and is an easy target.
"In most cases, I ignore the
material, and then it gets leaked to the press and I get criticized
for ignoring it instead of being supportive."
"I know the discourse of 'You
don't know what it's like to deal with donors,' I've heard it 20,000
times," says a senior lecturer at BGU. "The problem," he adds, "is
that Carmi will not tell the donors that if they withdraw their
money from BGU, it is they who are boycotting the State of Israel.
It's clear that it's not very heroic to say that from the outside,
and you would not want to be president when it happens. But if you
are incapable of displaying leadership and only surround yourself
with people who tell you what you want to hear, then you are not a
leader. The donors' money is not given so they can dictate things.
If they don't want to give, fine. People in academia are also
citizens who have the right to think what they want."
The bottom line
In 2010, the CHE's Planning
and Budgeting Committee expanded the higher education budget for the
next five years. However, in doing so, it set a criterion of
academic excellence based on measurable parameters, such as the
number of publications in leading journals, the number of research
students, and so on. The result was to turn the universities into
businesses seeking to maximize bottom lines. Some faculty members
believe there is a gulf between this approach and academic
excellence.
At present, Carmi says, 75
percent of the university budget (for
salaries and maintenance) is
covered by the state, 15 percent by tuition fees and 10 percent by
donations. In contrast, 90 percent of the development budget
(for new laboratories and
buildings) comes from
donations.
"In the past, Planning and
Budgeting gave a little. In the past few years − nothing," she adds.
"The major change in the new format is that the model is
transparent. Everyone knows how he is being budgeted and can plan
accordingly, while also knowing where his strengths and weaknesses
lie."
"Since 2004, the structure of
the university has become corporatist," says Dr. Iris Agmon of the
Department of Middle East Studies at BGU. "The name of the game is
money, which means that the donors are extremely important. The new
Planning and Budgeting format supposedly creates technical equality
between faculties − but it is impossible to research different types
of knowledge by the same methods. The result is that there are
abnormally large quantities of publications, and everything
influences the evaluation − except the quality of the research. You
imagine to yourself that it's an objective evaluation, but it is
not.
"Obviously," she continues,
"the researchers who won the Nobel Prize are brilliant. But Ada
Yonath and Dan Shechtman spent decades on their research, and no one
gave a hoot about them. Shechtman was ridiculed and his theory was
said to be groundless. Ada Yonath's work was thought to be
delusional. It took time before people grasped that it was
significant. Academic research needs obsessional people, though they
need to take into account the possibility that [their research] will
lead nowhere. But that is the necessary climate."
As for the new Planning and
Budgeting format, Carmi says, "Every model can be subjected to abuse
if you stick to its technical aspect; but the new model might take
the universities to the right place in terms of planning. Some sort
of tool is needed, a ruler, and it has to be used intelligently.
What's important for me is that the tools be transparent, so people
know they are being scrutinized in an equal, nondiscriminatory
manner. You can count the number of books put out by prestigious
publishers in literature and philosophy, too, and they are in any
case fields that require less investment than the tremendous inputs
of science and technology. All you need in literature and philosophy
is a computer and a library, so things balance out.
"The budget also does not go
to an individual researcher. The system gives opportunities to
people in unusual fields. So, to say that we will lose brilliant
minds because of a budgeting model is a populist statement. There is
quite a bit of conformism in the system, and no little envy, and the
fact is that Shechtman and Yonath received tenure − and proved they
deserved it."
Nothing special
Carmi was born in August 1948,
"with the state." She and her sister grew up in Zichron Yaakov. She
remembers being a "normal girl and a good citizen," as well as
excelling in school, including a spot in the first group of
science-oriented youth at the Weizmann Institute of Science
("and I wasn't such a geek or
anything").
The two people who influenced
her most were "my father by his absence and my mother by her
presence." Her father, Menahem, an accountant by profession "but a
Renaissance man, a painter and an amateur archaeologist," died when
Carmi was 14, after an ulcer operation in which he "apparently lost
a great deal of blood and no one noticed." She adds that his death
"matured me overnight. I had to manage my life responsibly,
intelligently."
Her mother, Zipora, a social
worker, took a full-time job to support the family. "It's not that
we had a hard life, but a modest one. From my father I received a
warm upbringing, from my mother, one that was very practical. A
grade of 98 was taken for granted, nothing special."
Her mother lived to be 82, but
"lost interest in marital relationships − she remained faithful to
my father to her last day. I find that peculiar. I did not live
enough years with my father to evaluate the scale of the loss to
her. We never talked about it; I don't think she was a happy woman."
Carmi lived in Zichron Yaakov
until she was drafted. In the army she became the commander of an
officers' course and reached the rank of captain. During summer
vacations, "when my pals were enjoying themselves," she served in
the reserves. On her honeymoon, in Greece, she was ordered back to
Israel "after a day and a half," when the Yom Kippur War broke out −
"one of the most traumatic events in my life."
Carmi was part of the team
that set up an IDF unit to search for MIAs. She was mobilized for
five more months, "of which I remember maybe three-four days," and
lost a semester at medical school as a result. "I had a cousin who
was missing at the time, and it later turned out he had been killed.
We were very close. His father, my mother's brother, was a kind of
father to me after my father died. I also had friends who were
killed or wounded in the war. It was a highly charged time, which
gave me a pessimistic view of life. I have a kind of inner numbness.
I lack the ranges of emotion: the ability to be very happy or very
depressed. There is nothing that can floor me. As I see it, that
helps me cope in life; it puts everything in proportion."
Perhaps that is why she hasn't cried "for years already." Similarly,
her divorce, after a long marriage that produced an only child, her
daughter Shira, now 33, was "not a heartwarming story, but also did
not leave a deep imprint."
She met her ex-husband after
her army service. She has retained his surname, despite the 20 years
since the divorce, "because I was already in mid-career and all my
articles bore that name." She has been in a lengthy relationship
with a lecturer in medicine, a pensioner of the university, whom she
met at a social gathering in the Be'er Sheva suburb of Omer, where
she lives today. He is 76, has the unusual name of Lechaim Naggan,
and plays the violin (naggan
means player of a musical instrument).
Like her first husband, Naggan is about a decade older than Carmi.
"I don't know if it's related to the absence of my father; I never
had therapy. It wasn't really done in my generation, and I didn't
have the need or the money. What I understand is fine for me, and
what I don't is of no concern to me. Let's say it's because my
father died at an early age. So? My daughter wants to go to a
shrink, but I told her I would not pay for it."
She speaks of her daughter
with open admiration. After military service in Army Radio, Shira
joined a group of outstanding students at New York University and
was accepted as an MBA student at Columbia even though she lacked
sufficient business experience. At the age of 26 she established a
fashion company − which now has 18 employees − married a Canadian
and stayed in New York. She is expecting her first child.
Why won't you pay for her
to see a shrink? Are you afraid she will say nasty things about you?
"I don't think she needs it. I
paid for half her undergraduate degree and I helped her with living
expenses."
Did Shira have an easier
childhood than you did?
"All in all, yes, but her
family fell apart when she was 12."
So did yours.
"In different circumstances."
Shira didn't have a mother
at home; you were always working.
"She had a full-time
grandmother, who raised her and was the stable figure in her life.
My mother raised her after she retired. It was help from heaven,
such as I will never be able to give my daughter."
Do you think she is
resentful of you for that?
"Absolutely not."
She fled all the way to
New York.
"We talked about that once,
whether she went all that way in order not to be near me. She said,
on the contrary, that I showed her it was possible, that the drive
and the ambition come from me."
Carmi knew at 14 that she
would engage in research. "I always thought genetics is the center
of life and represents the future," she says. "I was in maths and
sciences in high school and majored in biology. When we studied the
cell, the teacher asked us to prepare something creative. I was wild
about cellular division, so I created a model from Plasticine, in
which the father's chromosomes were blue and the mother's red. That
was the event in my life that made me decide to go into genetics. I
read passages from 'The Origin of Species' when I was 16, and when I
got out of the army I studied biology at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem."
Because she did not like
zoology and botany, which were part of the degree requirements, she
switched to medicine. After graduating she did a pediatric residency
at Soroka Medical Center in Be'er Sheva, "because genetic diseases
appear and take on form in the first years of life." Three years
later, she did a "super residency" in genetics at Harvard, and
afterward a third residency, in neonatology
(intensive care for premature
newborn infants).
"Back then, genetics was a
somewhat boring field, and neonatology is action par excellence. A
dead preemie comes out − and you revive him. It's an instant reward.
I need that type of tension."
Carmi rose rapidly up the
academic ladder. At the age of 45 she was a full professor at BGU.
Her resume lists dozens of articles and three syndromes which she
was the first in the world to identify. The first is called Carmi
Syndrome; she gave the two others names unrelated to her
(TAS and X-Linked Midline
Anomaly), "because there was
already a syndrome named for me, so I decided to be modest."
In 1990, when the Human Genome
Project started, "I realized that this was the chance of a lifetime,
the ability to go down to the DNA level. Until then I had seen
diseases in their clinical appearance, and I was able to develop a
hypothesis about their origin. I started to study the Bedouin
population systematically, because of the multitude of diseases
among them. Genetic diseases are the cause of the excessively high
mortality rate among Bedouin infants. It all stems from intra-family
marriages: if there is one healthy chromosome, you are healthy, but
if both parents carry the mutation, you are sick. I made a strategic
decision: not to focus on a specific disease, but to start mapping
the genes that cause these diseases in the Bedouin population.
"It's a situation from which
everyone benefits," she continues. "The diseases are identified in
the community and taken to the lab; a solution is identified in the
lab and brought back to the community. They [the group being
studied] not only enrich the medical world with knowledge; I can
also offer them a test during pregnancy to see whether the fetus is
suffering from a particular syndrome. Without the ability to examine
the gene, I could not have done it."
The first syndrome she
examined was BBS, the Bardet-Biedl Syndrome. "It was relatively
frequent in three separate Bedouin tribes. Children who suffer from
it are born with a sixth finger on each hand and a sixth toe on each
foot, and [in the case of boys] with a very small genital organ. The
girls start to gain weight in childhood and develop high blood
pressure and a certain type of serious vision impairment. The
disease interested me for two reasons: How was it that three
different tribes had the same disease? And what was the connection
between an extra finger and toe, a micro-penis, gaining weight and
an eye problem? Naively, I thought that if it was the same disease,
it must be one gene."
At a conference she attended
20 years ago, she found a colleague with whom to continue the work,
a Mormon researcher from Iowa named Val Sheffield. "I used to go
there with blood samples, when you could still remove them from
Israel. We discovered the three BBS genes one after the other in the
course of two years. We only found the gene of the Carmi Syndrome
two years ago. It's a gene that encodes the proteins that preserve
epidermal integrity, and when it breaks down, the protein it
generates doesn't do the work. We still haven't found the TAS gene."
What is your greatest
contribution to science?
"In the BBS we found molecular
proof of the concept of genetic heterogeneity. It was one of the
first times in which it was seen that the same disease can be caused
by completely different genes. Subsequently, 16 genes were found
that are encoded for BBS, and we found the first three. This is an
opening to a world of complex genetic connections. In classic
hereditary diseases, such as cystic fibrosis, one mutation is the
cause. But diabetes, high blood pressure or cancer are determined by
a multi-genetic system, that gives rise to a tendency, amid the
influence of environmental factors. I think it will take another 10
to 15 years before we understand this sequence, and the contribution
of BBS to this research is enormous. Historically speaking, my naive
beginning, which arose from a desire to map the genetic diseases
among the Bedouin population, opened a new field of research, which
will help us understand the basic processes that cause diseases."
Run on stilettos
In addition to her research
achievements and her academic advancement, Carmi also rose on the
administrative ladder. She headed committees in the BGU medical
school, was appointed assistant dean, and in 2000 became dean of the
Faculty of Health Sciences. None of this, of course, made her rest
on her laurels. "I continued to teach and do research, and one day a
week I worked as a physician. There are 24 hours in a day and seven
days in a week, so I did the research mostly on weekends. I am still
putting money into research, and someone else does it, trying out
new methods whenever they are developed."
It was in the middle of her
second term as dean that talk began about her succeeding Braverman
as university president. She resigned as dean a year before her term
of office ended and went to the United States − both to contemplate
her future and to advance the research with her Iowa colleague. A
month after she left, Braverman announced his resignation
(to enter politics).
Carmi was told about her election in December 2005 and became acting
president in February 2006, a title she held until the university's
Board of Directors confirmed the appointment in May.
"In contrast to the previous
position, which I wanted and planned," she says, "this was not
actually a choice. But I didn't really see anyone other than me who
could do it, and I thought BGU needed someone who is connected to
the vision of developing the university and the Negev. [BGU was
established in 1969 with the aim of furthering the development of
the Negev. It now has 20,000 students.] It might sound horrible in
the newspaper, but those were my feelings; I felt I had been
summoned to a mission. Braverman laid the institutional foundations
and built them physically. Now the time had come to inject
scientific content and research. That was my mission."
Was it hard to step into
Braverman's shoes? Almost everyone I spoke to about you started by
talking about him.
"I don't know how many times
I've heard those words: 'Braverman's shoes.' One time I got really
irritated by it, so I lifted my foot" − she demonstrates − "put the
heel of the shoe on the table, and said, 'Braverman wouldn't be able
to walk in my shoes.' If I had tried to walk in his shoes, I would
have fallen down. And I have different shoes, which do not fit him.
I can run on stilettos. All the beautiful big buildings on the
campus were erected in the Braverman period. I am delighted that I
arrived after that, because I could not have done the building work,
and it doesn't interest me. What interests me is what's inside the
buildings, what the researcher has at his disposal, what it is that
will ensure his success."
Why can't people stop
making comparisons with Braverman?
"It doesn't bother me, and
it's meaningless. I am a woman of research and academia, there I
grew up and there I will die. Braverman comes from a different
place. He took a college of 5,500 students and turned it into a
university of 15,000, mainly undergraduates, on a beautiful campus.
Buildings don't turn me on. What's important for me is the
university's performance."
People who saw Braverman
cajoling donors say he is unrivaled in that field.
"First of all, I didn't see
him doing that. Second, I came with zero know-how about
fund-raising, whereas Braverman was a virtuoso. I didn't trust my
abilities, but still, donations to the university − apart from the
depression years, when everyone, including Harvard and Yale, got
nothing − have increased. In 2007, we raised the most funds ever.
Fund-raising is a complex story, it's not just charm. People want to
see a vision, a plan, something qualitative and meaningful. I have
never felt dwarfed in any way. I have 120 articles to my credit and
a syndrome named for me. But until I was presented in that way, I
didn't know how good I am."
That's not true − you
always knew.
"I understand that I have the
ability to integrate things and to work in conditions of pressure, a
kind of inner fortitude, but I didn't feel I was all that good.
Really. My mother also didn't hear anything about me. Everything I
did was taken for granted. As though this is the way it's supposed
to be."
Have you ever failed at
anything?
"The only failure in my life
was in a genetics exam, in the second year of medical school. With
all modesty, I think I knew too much and maybe it was kind of being
a smart aleck. In the second sitting I passed with an excellent
grade." A few months ago, in the middle of her second term, Carmi
declared that she would not continue as president for the long haul.
"I said that in the context of 'Time is pressing, we need to
accomplish things,' but the remark resonated.
"The declaration did not come
from a clear and absolute place. Maybe it's a signal that I am open
to offers."
Do you want to go into
politics?
"Unequivocally, no."
Why not politics? You have
a viewpoint on social and national issues, you wield influence.
Politics could be a natural continuation.
"Everything that surrounds
politics is utterly remote and alien to me. It's the kind of thing I
will never succeed in, and anything I thought I would not succeed
in, I did not touch."
But as president of the
university you are also engaged in politics. You meet with
ambassadors and mayors, visit the Knesset, send greetings and are a
guest at the celebration for the birth of the daughter of Gila
Gamliel, a Likud MK.
"That is a part of politics
that has implications and significance for the university. When the
American ambassador celebrates the Fourth of July, it's not Rivka
Carmi but Ben-Gurion University. Maybe, if the ambassador sees me
enough times, he will bring guests of his to visit the university.
That is important for me: I have to put this university on the radar
of many organizations, people, foundations. Yes, it's politics, but
of a particular kind. Political politics does not attract me. I
wouldn't be good at it."
What are your political
views?
"I am in the center. When I
was young, my heart spoke, and I was almost a communist in terms of
values. But when I matured, my head started to speak. In terms of
values, primarily social values, I perceive Kadima as the center, or
at least that's how I perceived it until now. On socioeconomic
issues I am further to the right; on social-societal issues, such as
human rights, I am a bit more to the left. I am one of those who is
looking for the way."
Will you vote for Yair
Lapid?
"Are you going to write this?
Then, no."
Thick layer of men
As the first woman to become
the president of a research university in Israel, Carmi − who also
chairs the committee of university heads
(the presidents, rectors and
directors-general of the research universities in Israel)
− works diligently for the advancement of women in academia. She
recently also headed a panel of the Planning and Budgeting Committee
that addressed this subject. Its recommendations will be published
soon.
"We have three female deans:
in administration, in the school of doctoral students and on the
Eilat campus," she says by way of illustrating the emphasis on
women. "The Eilat post was my administrative choice; the others were
chosen by the university senate. Most of the positions in the
academic world are filled by election (and
not by direct appointment), so
I have no say in the matter. I do encourage women in general to be
candidates and compete, because usually they are not enthusiastic
about doing so. By this stage in life they usually have
grandchildren and have to help their children. Women also have to
inject more energy [than men] in the competition process. A male
competitor is the default situation; a woman has to mount a
campaign. When I ran for dean I had to market myself and prove
myself in the face of the other contestants."
How difficult is it to be
a female president in a patriarchal system that has so many dominant
men?
"It's a challenge.
Occasionally I feel we are not broadcasting on the same wavelength.
It's the way one looks at things − it's hard to give examples."
Is there a glass ceiling?
"Someone told me there is no
glass ceiling, only a thick layer of men. There are a great many
technical obstructions that prevent a work environment from being
friendly to women. The problem is to overcome the psychological
obstructions and the gender scheme that women and men have in their
head, thanks to our education."
Do you have a strategic
plan to advance women in the university for the long term?
"There is an atmosphere − ask
around in the university."
I asked. Not everyone
feels it.
"I get complaints that I am
coercive in terms of bringing in women. This is a very problematic
issue in academia. In hiring and promoting faculty, the sole
criterion is excellence and academic freedom. But in chemistry,
after enough men had been brought in, I said I was putting a freeze
on hiring until women were brought in. Did they like it? No. But
they brought in women."
Can you do that?
"Not easily, but I can, and I
did. There is still a shortfall of women in the universities. They
are examined for tenure just when they are establishing a family.
The biological clock and the tenure clock tick together. Sometimes
it's hard to cope with that, because CVs are compared and it's seen
that the female candidate has published fewer articles than the male
candidate.
"I have no doubt that I am
engaged in the gender issue at the university: on the surface, below
the surface, with all kinds of initiatives," she adds. "These
efforts do not generate solutions and changes overnight. Whether
they have been effective will be seen after I conclude my term of
office."
The managerial forum that
operates directly under you consists exclusively of men; the only
woman [the assistant rector] completes her term this month and will
be succeeded by a man.
"Assistant rectors are chosen
by the rector. The others are there based on a perception of the
good of the matter per se. For example, when we were looking for a
legal adviser for the university, I very much wanted a woman to
replace the outgoing adviser. Fortunately, there was a woman who
stood out head and shoulders above the other candidates, and she was
chosen."
Still, Carmi's call for gender
equality is not sweeping in character. She refused, for example, to
support the struggle waged by the female cleaners on the campus, who
are employed by contractors and want to be employed directly by the
university.
"When declarations are made about a socially oriented university and
about feminism and equality, I would expect the same approach to be
applied to the cleaners," says Orna Amos, a community social worker
who formerly taught at BGU and helped the cleaners organize.
Carmi says her refusal in this
regard "is based on an analysis of our ability to manage a service
that is not at the core of what the university deals with. Over the
years we saw to it, in the wake of student initiatives, that their
employment was proper and not harmful. It is not a question of
toughness or an attempt to demonstrate strength. There are all kinds
of unpopular administrative decisions that look like a form of
discrimination. That's the difference between being at the top of
the pyramid and seeing the full scope of the [institution's]
interests, and being part of the public. I am here to manage a
university."
Some of those women have
been working at BGU for more than a decade. Aren't they part of the
university?
"In the soft sense of the
term. Cleaning is a service within a system whose core engagement is
completely different. As long as there is no law to the contrary,
there will be no direct employment."
It is grating to hear that
from someone who purports to promote feminism.
"I am not a feminist per se.
My interest is to see to it that the women in the university have
equality of opportunity. I am talking about the gender issue within
a particular context."
A context of strong,
educated women with stable white-collar employment.
"Absolutely not. I also feel
solidarity with Bedouin women whose education needs to be advanced,
and therefore a year ago a colleague and I founded an NGO to promote
education for Bedouin women."
There are some who
complain that you are behaving as though the university belongs to
you.
"Just the opposite. Sometimes
I have a problem with lengthy proceedings I think are futile, and
try to abridge them. But I don't think I have ever obstructed any
proceeding. I try to find a legitimate and fair way to shorten it. I
think that when my term of office is summed up, it will be
considered a good period. True, there were controversial headlines,
but the bottom line is that in terms of most of the parameters for
judging a university, it has been a successful period."
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