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Israeli Academic
Extremism
Tel Aviv University – Alan Dershowitz denounces Israel’s
Academic Fifth Column - full text of keynote speech at TAU Board of
Governors 2010 meeting
http://www.haaretz.com/full-text-of-alan-dershowitz-s-tel-aviv-speech-1.289841
Full text of Alan Dershowitz's Tel
Aviv speech
'The burden should not only be on students to stand up to
propagandizing professors who distort the truth in the name of
extremist ideologies.'
I have the double honor and pleasure of accepting an honorary
doctorate from one of the world’s great universities, and also of
delivering an acceptance speech on behalf of the other distinguished
recipients of the honorary degrees. I know I speak for all of the
degree recipients when I praise the incredible accomplishments both
of Israel in general over the past 62 years and of Tel Aviv
University in particular over the past 57 years.
No country in the history of the world has ever contributed more
to humankind and accomplished more for its people in so brief a
period of time as Israel has done since its relatively recent
rebirth in 1948. As one of the youngest nations in the world, and
one of the smallest, Israel exports more life saving medical
technology per capita than any nation in the world, and ranks among
the top 2 or 3 in absolute terms. The same can be said for
environmental technology, internet technology and so many other
areas of scientific innovation.
(Fortunately for the rest of the world, but unfortunately for
Israel, it also exports some of its best scientists and other
academics to American and European universities, because the Israeli
government does not fund its universities sufficiently.)
At the center of these contributions to the world are Israel’s
great research universities. And at the center of these universities
is Tel Aviv. Barely half a century old, Tel Aviv University has
surpassed most of Europe’s ancient institutions of learning and is
now the equal of virtually all. The publications, awards and
recognition of its faculty rival the best faculties in the world. I
am tempted to say that Tel Aviv has become the Harvard of the Middle
East, but then I would not be speaking for the rest of my fellow
degree recipients who might not regard Harvard as the singular
measure of excellence. Instead I will say that Harvard aspires to
become the Tel Aviv University of America. Hyperbole aside, I can
think of no university in the world that has achieved so much in so
short a period of time as has the great university that has honored
us tonight. Yasher Koach.
Looking at Israel’s accomplishments over 62 years and Tel Aviv
University’s over 57 years, it would seem to suggest that Israel and
its premier research universities have developed in tandem and with
symbiosis. And to some degree they have. Israel’s research
universities have contributed immeasurably to the defense of Israel
by the development of technological advances that support the
mission of the IDF. And as Dan Senor and Saul Singer have
brilliantly demonstrated in their remarkable book Start Up Nation,
the IDF has paid back its debt to Israel’s universities multifold.
The IDF has helped train and prepare many of Israel’s most
innovative young women and men for the university and then for their
roles in research and technology. The Israeli military plays more
than a critical role in defending the citizens of the Jewish state.
It also plays an important social, scientific and psychological role
in preparing its young citizens for the challenging task of being
Israelis in a difficult world.
All this is well and good. There is no reason why the state and
its universities must have as high a wall of separation, as should
the synagogue, the church, the mosque and the state. But the
university must play an important role in the informal system of
checks and balances that is so essential to the health of the
democracy. We all learn in school that the judicial, legislative and
executive branches of government must check and balance each other.
But other non state institutions must participate in this important
system of checks and balances as well. These checking institutions
include the academy, the media, religious institutions and NGOs. The
academy should not become too cozy with, or too reliant on the
government. Great research universities must insist on independence
from government and on the exercise of academic freedom.
Academic freedom requires that professors be free to challenge
governmental policies, government officials and the status quo.
Israel boasts that the highest level of academic freedom in the
world today—if not in theory, then certainly in practice. I
emphasize practice, because few nations in the world—even those who
in theory proclaim strict adherence to academic freedom—confront on
a daily basis kind of academic dissent experienced in Israel.
Israeli academics regularly and falsely compare their nation to the
tyrannical regime that murdered 6 million Jews. Academic dissenters
regularly and freely call on other academic institutions around the
world to boycott the very Israeli universities which grant them
academic freedom. Professors from this university are currently in
Boston demanding the shutting down of an exhibit in the Boston
Museum of Science featuring Israeli scientific and technological
advances in medicine, clean energy and other contributors to
humanity. [Matar, Giora]
Israeli academics are free to challenge not only the legitimacy
of the Jewish state but even, as one professor at this university
has done, the authenticity of the Jewish people. Israeli academics
are free to distort the truth, construct false analogies and teach
their students theories akin to the earth being flat—and they do so
with relish and with the shield of academic freedom. So long as
these professors do not violate the rules of the academy, they have
the precious right to be wrong, because we have learned the lesson
of history that no one institution has a monopoly on truth and that
the never ending search for truth requires, to quote the title of
one of Israel’s founders autobiography, “trial and error.” The
answer to falsehood is not censorship; it is truth. The answer to
bad ideas is not firing the teacher; but articulating better ideas
which prevail in the marketplace. The academic freedom of the
faculty is central to the mission of the university.
But academic freedom is not the province of the hard left alone.
Academic freedom includes the right to agree with the government, to
defend the government and to work for the government. Some of the
same hard leftists who demand academic freedom for themselves and
their ideological colleagues were among the leaders of those seeking
to deny academic freedom to a distinguished law professor who had
worked for the military advocate general and whose views they
disagreed with. To its credit, Tel Aviv University rejected this
attempt to limit academic freedom to those who criticized the
government. As Professor Shlomo Avineri, no right-winger, put it:
"The attempt to 'protect' those who belong to the left while
employing McCarthy-style methods against those associated with the
right is nothing but hypocrisy, which has no place in academia."
Rules of academic freedom for professors must be neutral,
applicable equally to right and left. Free speech for me but not for
thee is the beginning of the road to tyranny.
Nor does academic freedom belong to the professor alone. As Amnon
Rubenstein has brilliantly argued, academic freedom belongs to the
student as well as the teacher. He has pointed out that Article 5 of
the Student’s Rights Law guarantees every student “the freedom to
express his [or her] views and opinions as the contents of the
syllabus and the values incorporated therein.” The right of the
student’s academic freedom, however, goes well beyond this law. It
includes the right not to be propagandized in the classroom by
teachers who seek to impose their ideology on students. It includes
the right of the student to express opinions contrary to those
presented by the teacher without fear of being graded down and
without fear of being denied recommendations or job opportunities.
Indeed, any professor who punishes a student for not agreeing with
his controversial opinion is guilty of academic harassment, which is
a variant on what we all would agree is an academic violation,
namely sexual harassment. No teacher is permitted to threaten a
student with lower grades or poorer recommendations if the student
refuses to consent to sexual contact. Nor should any professor be
permitted to threaten lower grades or recommendations if a student
refuses to agree with a teacher’s ideology. Students are the
consumers of the university and consumers have rights that, if they
don’t trump those of the producer, are at least equal to them in the
context of controversial ideas.
In their book Start Up Nation, Senor and Singer make a strong
case that Israel’s innovative excellence is in part of function of
its non-hierarchical military structure: A young 19 year old kid
straight out of high school is encouraged to talk back to an officer
if he or she thinks they have a better idea. Competition in the
marketplace of ideas is encouraged in the IDF. It must also be
encouraged in the academy where the right of a student to speak up
and express controversial ideas is crucial. It is true that not all
ideas are created equal and that those of the experienced professor
may be better than those of the novice student, but the ultimate
judge must be the open marketplace of ideas and not the raw power of
the grader or recommender to impose his or her ideology. [tell Joel
Pollack story]
But most universities, not only in Israel, but throughout the
Western world, the loudest and shrillest voices most often come from
the extremes. Today it is the hard left. Yesterday it was the hard
right. The burden should not only be on students to stand up to
propagandizing professors who distort the truth in the name of
extremist ideologies. The burden must be shared by professors as
well, especially those who disagree with the extreme views. The
other side of the coin of academic freedom is academic
responsibility. It is the responsibility of reasonable and moderate
professors to speak out against extremist views, whether of the hard
right of hard left. The silent center must not remain silent just
because extremists are more opinionated and more willing to express
their views. Moderates don't get a pass. They too have an obligation
to speak out, not in the classroom but in appropriate forums outside
of the classroom where different rules govern. Students deserve the
public support of faculty members who quietly agree with them,
especially when they feel vulnerable to the power of extremist
faculty who believe that their unbalanced views represent the sole
truth. Great universities have the right to expect their professors
to contribute to the market place of ideas when irresponsible
extremists try to hijack the university's hard-earned brand and
misuse it to promote their own ideologies.
So let us join together in celebrating a great university which
was born in conflict, came of age in conflict and will continue in
conflict. What else could be expected of an innovative house of
learning in the Jewish state. Conflict, after all, is as old as
Abraham's argument with God, Jacob's wrestling match with the angel,
the Talmud's insistence on preserving dissenting opinions and the
tradition of Jewish jokes about two Jews, three opinions. A
university without conflict may be suitable for China, Iran or the
former Soviet Union. But it could never find a home in Israel.
Conflict, while uncomfortable, is inevitable in a vibrant democracy.
It is particularly inevitable in a vibrant Jewish democracy. To
be Jewish is to be uncomfortable, to be unable to breathe a sigh of
relief and declare that we can relax. Tension and conflict seems to
be our destiny. It is also the road to learning, progress and
innovation.
The alternatives to conflict are stagnation, certainty and
censorship, which have no place in a university. So let conflict
continue, so long as no voices are silenced, all points of view
valued, and the marketplace of ideas remains open. I am confident
that moral clarity will trump hypocrisy, common sense will prevail
over political correctness, and the process of searching for truth
will be encouraged. Israel will survive its dissenters, as will this
great university [Sh'ma story]. While there will always be conflict,
we all here today hope and expect that the state of Israel and the
university of Tel Aviv will go from strength to strength. |