Israeli Academic Extremism
Haim Kreisel, BGU Professor, Dismisses the Radical Left "Blacklist"
claims as "Ludicrous"
Attests that Far-leftist Positions helps in the Promotion Process in
the Social Sciences Dept
I am referring to the recent comical
attempts to depict all those who challenge this movement's growing
strength in the academic world as the heirs to the late Senator
Joseph McCarthy, in particular the mainstream Im Tirtzu student
movement and its purported "blacklist."
I am not disputing the claim that Im
Tirtzu compiles lists of academics who write and teach against the
Zionist Idea (or Israel as a Jewish State) and even goes so far as
to criticize some of them publicly. Im Tirtzu occasionally even
calls for the ouster of an academic whose salary comes mostly from
the government but still calls for international boycotts of Israel,
and even of its universities of which he/she is a member.
But calling this a "blacklist," with all
the historical associations involved is, well, ludicrous....But
yesterday's tragedy becomes today's farce; I know of no academic
criticized by Im Tirtzu who has lost his/her job as a result, or
whose academic career was jeopardized. In fact, I can testify as an
academic insider that Im Tirtzu's claims that in a number of
academic departments in the social sciences holding far-left (or
"post" Zionistic) positions actually gives one an edge, and
certainly helps in the promotion process, are true.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=256595
The Israeli
academic Left and the Im Tirtzu movement
Calling Im Tirtzu's collection
of objectionable academics a "blacklist," with all the historical
associations involved is ludicrous.
By HAIM KREISEL
05/02/2012
I have often been reminded of Marx's
famous dictum that history repeats itself, first as tragedy then as
farce.
In the academic world to which I belong
the latest examples of "history as farce" are recent attempts by
some of my colleagues on the Israeli (radical/anti-/post-) Zionist
Left to create a new bogeyman that they then claim is persecuting
them and poses a dire threat to the freedom of Israeli society, if
not to Western civilization.
I am referring to the recent comical
attempts to depict all those who challenge this movement's growing
strength in the academic world as the heirs to the late Senator
Joseph McCarthy, in particular the mainstream Im Tirtzu student
movement and its purported "blacklist."
I am not disputing the claim that Im
Tirtzu compiles lists of academics who write and teach against the
Zionist Idea (or Israel as a Jewish State) and even goes so far as
to criticize some of them publicly. Im Tirtzu occasionally even
calls for the ouster of an academic whose salary comes mostly from
the government but still calls for international boycotts of Israel,
and even of its universities of which he/she is a member.
But calling this a "blacklist," with all
the historical associations involved is, well, ludicrous.
Any list without real political and
economic clout behind it is not even a pale imitation of the one
compiled by the House for Un-American Activities Committee in the
United States in the 1950s.
Many
professionals,
particularly in the
entertainment industrybut
including also those in the academic community, whose names made
their way to the Committee's list as Communist Party members or even
sympathizers, were fired and blackballed from attaining any other
job.
Many careers were destroyed, families
suffered greatly and paranoia in certain sectors of American society
prevailed for a while (though McCarthy even in his heyday suffered
no shortage of prominent detractors).
But yesterday's tragedy becomes today's
farce; I know of no academic criticized by Im Tirtzu who has lost
his/her job as a result, or whose academic career was jeopardized.
In fact, I can testify as an academic insider that Im Tirtzu's
claims that in a number of academic departments in the social
sciences holding far-left (or "post" Zionistic)
positions
actually gives one an edge, and certainly
helps in the promotion process, are true.
It is much easier to publish ideological,
anti-Israel articles than more nuanced ones, not only in the popular
press but also in second- rate academic journals. Moreover, there
really is a strong group of anti-Israel academics out there in the
world who are more than happy to write letters of recommendation for
fellow travelers in the Israeli academic community, and over the
years I have had occasion to read such letters.
The case of a faculty colleague of mine
who is most prominently featured on Im Tirzu's "blacklist" is a case
in point. Since writing his (in)famous column in a prominent
American newspaper calling for an academic boycott of Israel his
fortunes have certainly taken an interesting turn, far different
than that which one would have expected listening to the lament of
the radical Left.
He has – rightfully – been promoted to
associate professor on the basis of his academic record, his
extracurricular political activities – properly – ignored by all the
university committees dealing with his promotion. He has been
elected by his peers to one of the most important committees in the
faculty, and has been appointed faculty chair and financial czar by
the dean.
Calls for his dismissal by those outside
the university are dismissed as ludicrous, and certainly
counterproductive, by all those in the academic community (this
writer included) and border on virtual zero, the political
grandstanding of some right-wing politicians notwithstanding.
In short, we are witnessing an exceptional
form of "martyrdom" for the cause, a point not lost on any of us in
the academic world.
Let me add that the odds that the
ideologically far-left oriented department to which he belongs,
Politics and Government, will be closed are also virtually nil,
despite the scathing academic report it has earned from a very
prominent academic committee appointed by the Israeli Council for
Higher Education to examine all political science departments in the
country.
In fact, the department has grown in
student popularity as a result of the report, will almost definitely
grow in number ofpositions
(to meet the academic demands of the
report) and, if history is any guide, the new appointments will
share similar ideological outlooks to those of the older members of
the department.
So much for Im Tirtzu's "blacklist." Small
wonder that some of my colleagues are currently signing up on
Facebook to try to add their names to such a list.
Meanwhile those belonging to the Israeli
(radical/anti-/post-) Zionist Left continue to proclaim their
ideological views to their heart's content in the mainstream Israeli
media (not to say Western media), while lambasting non-existent
attempts to curtail their "free speech" whenever they are
criticized.
So why all this posturing? Why the
need to
depict oneself as the victim of an
imaginary government crackdown? Is it, perhaps, a result of the
mounting pressure to change entrenched old habits, such as avoiding
hiring those not of their camp, of teaching classes and organizing
academic conferences where even mainstream Zionist views receive
very little if any voice, all under the banner of "critical" thought
and academic freedom? This leads us to wonder whether there really
are blacklists, and if so who their real victims are; who is really
trying to silence whom.
So to all my colleagues on the radical
Left who complain about threats to free speech and attempts to
curtail academic freedom I can only remind you of the immortal words
of the American comic strip Pogo: "We have met the
enemy,
and he is us."
The writer is a professor in the
Department of Jewish Thought at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
as well as the chair of the Goldstein Goren International Center for
Jewish Thought at the university.
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