Israeli Academic Extremism
Martin Sherman castigates
the Leftist Tenured Traitors for abusing their academic credentials
to delegitimize Israel
For an increasingly visible, vocal and
vitriolic sector among Israeli academics is playing an influential
role in the public discourse on the Arab-Israeli conflict that can
only be defined as detrimental, dysfunctional and, regrettably, at
times disloyal.
Motivated mainly by fear of donor desertion,
university authorities have attempted to downplay the scope of the
phenomenon trying to dismiss it as marginal in influence and
negligible in size.
This is a manifest misrepresentation of the
facts.
...
But it is not only what Israeli academics have failed to do that is
of concern. What they have done is even more disturbing.
Many some unwitting, others wittingly have
thrown their weight behind the burgeoning drive to delegitimize
Israel internationally, particularly in intellectual circles across
the globe.
Regrettably, frequent use or rather abuse
is made of academic titles or positions to create an aura of
authority on issues where none exists.
Take for example the good Prof. Shulman, who is
listed at Renee Lang Professor of Humanistic Studies at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem. On his website he details his areas of
academic expertise as the history of religion in South India,
poetry/poetics in Tamil, Telugu and Sanskrit; Dravidian linguistics;
and Carnatic music, none of which appears to have any relevance for
the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Yet making use of his academic credentials, he
blogs regularly in The New York Review of Books, vilifying Israel
and validating much of the vitriol of its detractors.
Thus almost immediately following the IDF
interception of the Mavi Marama in its attempt to break the naval
quarantine of Gaza, he applied his expertise in South Asian culture
to the realm of maritime law and national security.
...Such examples are far too numerous to
catalog in this essay, but some will be dealt with in future
columns, for this is an issue that has far too long been neglected.
A giant pall of shame
Israeli academe will have much to answer for to future generations.
For despite its long list of illustrious accomplishments, a giant
pall of shame and disgrace is beginning to rise above it shame for
what it has done; guilt for what it has not.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=241650
Into the Fray: A giant pall of shame
Israeli academe will have much to answer for to future
generations, both for what it has done and what it hasn't.
By MARTIN SHERMAN
14/10/2011
"Kindly remove me from your mailing list; I
have no patience for your tiresome, hackneyed, outdated rantings"
An e-mail from Prof. David Shulman, the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, after receiving my last opinion column, "Reassessing root
causes and red herrings."
Barely a week after the Technion's Dan
Shechtman was awarded the Nobel prize in Chemistry, the sixth
Israeli laureate in 10 years, would appear inauspicious timing for a
caustic rebuke of Israeli academe.
But although the nation's institutes of higher
learning can indeed point to an impressive accumulation of
accomplishments, it has a much darker side as well, which can no
longer be ignored.
True, much of the intellectual output of
Israel's universities has contributed immensely to the bolstering
the country both in terms of physical security and international
stature. Lamentably, this is not the whole picture.
Detrimental, dysfunctional... disloyal?
One of the gravest challenges facing Israel today is the
international assault on its legitimacy. Much of this assault is
being precipitated certainly facilitated and exacerbated by
prominent figures within the Israeli academe.
Some of this is a result of purposeful intent
on the part of self-professed post- /anti-Zionist faculty members,
some the result of misguided mindlessness on the part of purported
Zionist ones. But whatever the motivation, the time has come to
illuminate these dark corners and drive out the lengthening shadow
of disgrace.
For an increasingly visible, vocal and
vitriolic sector among Israeli academics is playing an influential
role in the public discourse on the Arab-Israeli conflict that can
only be defined as detrimental, dysfunctional and, regrettably, at
times disloyal.
Motivated mainly by fear of donor desertion,
university authorities have attempted to downplay the scope of the
phenomenon trying to dismiss it as marginal in influence and
negligible in size.
This is a manifest misrepresentation of the
facts.
Although it is true that this malaise does not
affect or is that infect? large swathes of Israel's academic
community, and that it is mainly prevalent in the faculties of
social sciences and humanities (including law), this does not
accurately reflect the extent of its pernicious impact.
For it is in these faculties that the nation's
politicians, journalists, pollsters, political advisers and analysts
are to a large degree molded. It is here that the cognitive filters
and frames-of-reference that influence political analysis and
decision-making are forged.
It is here that norms regarding the politically
"permissible" and "prohibited" are lain down, and the concepts
demarcating the limits of "legitimacy" drawn up.
The tyranny of intellectual orthodoxy
Clearly then, scholars in these faculties have far more impact
on the public discourse at least as it impinges on the
Arab-Israeli conflict than their colleagues in zoology, botany or
microbiology.
Moreover, by the nature of their activities,
they interface with much greater frequency freedom and familiarity
with the mainstream media outlets, both national and international.
Indeed, on the national level, many mainstream
media personalities are products of Israel's social
science/humanities faculties.
Sadly, since the mid-'80s, a growing phenomenon
of intellectual orthodoxy has enveloped these faculties.
It is not that a rigid uniformity is imposed on
research agendas or teaching programs, but rather that certain
perspectives are entirely excluded from them. This is not the result
of a directive from any official university organ, but a de facto
custom applied almost without exception across the entire academic
landscape.
No heretical departure is brooked from this
never-mentioned but universally implemented stricture. Prohibition
of divergence from orthodoxy is meticulously maintained. This
requires that facts be distorted, truth suppressed, dissent silenced
and dissenters ridiculed.
Thus no approach that challenges the validity
of the Palestinian narrative or questions the wisdom of Palestinian
statehood has been raised in any serious fashion, or in any serious
forum, within mainstream academia. There is no significant
discussion of the consequences of territorial withdrawal, of the
prudence of political concessions or of any alternative paradigm for
the future of Israel as the nation-state of Jewish people, other
than the two-state model unless of course you count the
post-/anti-Zionist un-Jewish state-of all- its-citizens.
Indeed, the two-state principle has become the
holy grail of academic discourse and acquired almost the status of
the Law of Gravity.
Thus any line of inquiry that might undermine
the perception of both its inevitability and/or desirability must be
barred at all cost. Any evidence no matter how compelling or
well-documented that might, for example, suggest a lack of
sincerity on the part of the Palestinians, cast doubt as to the
nature of their true intentions or their real motivation, or raise
suspicions as the authenticity of the demands, must be studiously
ignored or immediately denigrated as inadmissibly flawed.
Which brings us to Prof. Shulman's demand to be
removed from my mailing list.
Archetypical arrogance
Of course Prof. Shulman is entitled to be spared any e-mails
from me. For that a simple "Please remove me from your mailing list"
would suffice. But the good professor felt obliged to supplement his
request with a "scholarly critique" of my most recent column,
couched in "erudite eloquence."
The arrogant invective that Shulman felt
appropriate to resort to is typical of the attitude I described
above.
As readers will remember, my previous column
largely consisted of citations and analyses of Palestinian/Arab
declarations and documents, which seem to indicate that a plausible
case can be made that the origins of Arab enmity towards a Jewish
state are not territorial, but existential.
And while some of the passages quoted might
aptly be characterized as "rants" they are Arab/Palestinian rants,
not mine.
Neither would Shulman's epithets "outdated" or
"hackneyed" appear fitting.
Indeed, the documents cited are still valid and
the declarations of intent are continuously corroborated most
recently by Fatah central committee member Abbas Zaki in his
yet-to-be-repudiated proclamation on Al Jazeera (September 23) that
the Palestinians' real goal is to "to wipe out Israel, and his
yet-to-be-retracted characterization of Netanyahu and Obama as "dirtbags."
(Now there's a full-blooded rant for you.) Nor was this an isolated
outburst. Indeed it reflects precisely the sentiments of Nabil
Sha'ath, head of Fatah's foreign relations, on ANB-TV (July 13), in
which he asserted that "We will never accept... [t]he story of 'two
states for two peoples'... The 'Jewish state'... is also
unacceptable to us."
Then there was Saeb Erekat, the recently
resigned chief Palestinian negotiator who wrote in The Guardian
(December 10, 2010) that "Disregarding aspirations... [of]
Palestinian refugees... more than 7 million people... to return to
their homeland, would certainly make any peace deal signed with
Israel completely untenable."
These rejectionist positions are articulated by
senior representatives of the allegedly pragmatic Fatah movement
not by any extreme Islamist radical.
It is difficult to resist the urge to urge the
good professor to wake and smell the coffee.
Impaired intellectual output
The intolerance of the (intellectual) "other" by those who
habitually preach tolerance of the "other," has dramatically
impaired the quality of the intellectual output of Israeli academe
regarding the Israeli-Arab conflict, particularly toward the
Palestinian component of it.
This has rendered the academe incapable of or
unwilling to evaluate or predict with any precision, events and
processes of crucial importance to the nation. It has certainly
rendered any of its input into the national decision-making process
highly suspect, if not hopelessly misleading.
What could illustrate this more vividly than
the academe's assessment of the Oslo process? When this "process"
began, it received warm, almost wall-to-wall endorsement from the
experts in the nation's universities.
Policy papers were written, research conducted,
articles published, public declarations of support signed, all
expressing professional optimism as to the rosy prospects this bold
new vision heralded for the region.
There was hardly a dissenting voice.
Beyond the confines of the ivory tower,
however, many expressed their concern, warning that the "noble
vision" was in fact a dangerous fantasy. Then came bitter reality,
and alas, the assessments of the greengrocers, the cabdrivers, the
market vendors proved far more reliable than forecasts of the
academic experts and the learned scholars.
In the words of Prof. Efraim Karsh, head of
Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at King's College London: "Had
such professional misconduct occurred in the natural or physical
sciences there would have doubtless been serious consequences: e.g.
the collapse of a bridge following phoney engineering calculations,
dangerous side effects hidden during the development of a new
medicine, etc....Yet it would seem that when it comes to the social
sciences or the humanities...
the researcher can escape punishment for the
worst kind of malpractice."
Who could disagree? For in these disciplines it
appears that advocacy of Palestinian statehood has become an
overriding consideration to which all must be subordinated,
including the conduct of intellectual inquiry and the norms of
academic discourse.
Abuse of position and prestige
But it is not only what Israeli academics have failed to do that is
of concern. What they have done is even more disturbing.
Many some unwitting, others wittingly have
thrown their weight behind the burgeoning drive to delegitimize
Israel internationally, particularly in intellectual circles across
the globe.
Regrettably, frequent use or rather abuse
is made of academic titles or positions to create an aura of
authority on issues where none exists.
Take for example the good Prof. Shulman, who is
listed at Renee Lang Professor of Humanistic Studies at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem. On his website he details his areas of
academic expertise as the history of religion in South India,
poetry/poetics in Tamil, Telugu and Sanskrit; Dravidian linguistics;
and Carnatic music, none of which appears to have any relevance for
the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Yet making use of his academic credentials, he
blogs regularly in The New York Review of Books, vilifying Israel
and validating much of the vitriol of its detractors.
Thus almost immediately following the IDF
interception of the Mavi Marama in its attempt to break the naval
quarantine of Gaza, he applied his expertise in South Asian culture
to the realm of maritime law and national security.
With dismissive disdain for the official Israel
version, and seemingly suggesting that the serious wounds inflicted
on the IDF commandos were no more than they deserved, he sneers:
"Spokesmen for both the army and the government repeatedly said that
the soldiers were in danger of being lynched as if they were
innocent victims of an ambush rather than, in effect,
state-sponsored pirates attacking a convoy carrying humanitarian aid
in international waters."
This is merely a single example of a myriad of
insidious misrepresentations of Israel and Israelis action by a
myriad of Israeli academics, abusing the exercise of academic
freedom.
After all, this freedom was intended
principally to allow them unhindered pursuit of truth in their
chosen fields of study, not for malicious misportrayal of their
country and its policies.
Such examples are far too numerous to catalog
in this essay, but some will be dealt with in future columns, for
this is an issue that has far too long been neglected.
A giant pall of shame
Israeli academe will have much to answer for to future
generations. For despite its long list of illustrious
accomplishments, a giant pall of shame and disgrace is beginning to
rise above it shame for what it has done; guilt for what it has
not. Watch this space of more on this topic.
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