Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - While bragging about muzzling
his own Board of Governors, denying THEM freedom of speech, TAU
President Joseph Klafter pretends to favor freedom of speech;
attacks Mark Tanenbaum
During the last meeting of the board of trustees a few
months ago, some of the members raised a suggestion to hold back the
promotion of lecturers who support the academic boycott of Israel,
or even to dismiss them. I didn't allow a discussion on the issue.
Even though I am opposed to any kind of boycott, I believe it's the
right of lecturers to express their points of view even if it annoys
me ....
One of the donors told me I wouldn't receive donations if I
continued to support the right of these lecturers to freedom of
expression. I told him that yes the university needed money but
accepting his point of view would be tantamount to shattering the
very basis on which all academic institutions are founded. This
donor decided to donate to another institution. Beyond that, it's
hard to know if there has been a decrease in donations because of
this attitude, since the world economic crisis also has an effect.
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/features/head-to-head-with-joseph-klafter-1.308688
Head to Head with Joseph Klafter
TAU President Joseph Klafter, is academic freedom in Israel at
risk?
By Or Kashti
18/8/2010
Right-wing organizations stepped up their
attack on Israeli academic institutions this week with the
publishing of Im Tirtzu's letter to the president of Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev, Prof. Rivka Carmi. If she did not take
steps to correct the "anti-Zionist tilt" in the department of
politics and government, the movement would call on students not to
study political science at Be'er Sheva. Im Tirtzu would also
persuade donors in Israel and abroad to stop funding the university.
Also, following the publication of the
Institute for Zionist Studies' report on the alleged post-Zionist
tilt in sociology studies, lecturers at Tel Aviv University's
sociology department were requested to send their syllabi to the
office of the university's president, Prof. Joseph Klafter.
Prof. Klafter, is academic freedom threatened in Israel?
I'd like to believe that the system of higher education is strong
and stable enough to take care of itself and protect freedom of
expression and academic freedom, two concepts at the basis of
research and teaching at the universities. At the same time, I must
admit that there have been some frightening indications of harm to
academic freedom; for example, the attempts to interfere with the
content of materials being taught. I hope it's still possible to
contain these phenomena.
Have you come up against threats like this?
During the last meeting of the board of trustees a few months
ago, some of the members raised a suggestion to hold back the
promotion of lecturers who support the academic boycott of Israel,
or even to dismiss them. I didn't allow a discussion on the issue.
Even though I am opposed to any kind of boycott, I believe it's the
right of lecturers to express their points of view even if it annoys
me ....
One of the donors told me I wouldn't receive donations if I
continued to support the right of these lecturers to freedom of
expression. I told him that yes the university needed money but
accepting his point of view would be tantamount to shattering the
very basis on which all academic institutions are founded. This
donor decided to donate to another institution. Beyond that, it's
hard to know if there has been a decrease in donations because of
this attitude, since the world economic crisis also has an effect.
Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar has said action should be taken
against Israeli lecturers who support a boycott against Israel.
Statements of this kind are not acceptable to me. I approached
him a few weeks ago and met with him on this issue. I tried to
explain to him that I - as the head of a university system - have to
protect freedom of expression and academic freedom, and that he - as
head of Israel's education system - has to be as careful as possible
to avoid harming these principles.
Today we are referring to lecturers who make statements against
the current government, but tomorrow it will be [against] another
government. The moment protection for freedom of expression is
breached, it will be extremely difficult to return to the status quo
ante. I still hope he will accept my point of view. If something
good comes out of all the hullabaloo of the last few days concerning
these issues, it is that the universities, the media and, I hope,
public opinion have been aroused and now understand the dangers.
Why is it that the reports by Im Tirtzu and the Institute for
Zionist Strategies are dangerous?
We are talking about attempts to interfere with academic content.
The basis of research and teaching at any university is the freedom
to express an opinion even if it is not acceptable to [others]. This
is the freedom that allows a researcher to question what his teacher
did, and the student to question what his lecturer taught him. The
moment we restrict these two values, we are imposing a threat to the
future of research and thought. It's good that the universities, the
media, and I hope also public opinion, have woken up to this now.
This is truly a menace.
According to the reports, the public should not have to pay for
post-Zionist points of view in academia.
The public pays for higher education thanks to the added
economic, cultural and security value that the academic world
produces. This is only on account of the pluralism and the spectrum
of views that exist at the universities. Moreover, the assertion
that particular studies are or are not tilted is always relative to
the person defining them. Who has authorized Im Tirtzu to define
what Zionism is? Is theirs the only Zionism? This is a crazy
approach aimed at introducing a very well-defined political line at
the campuses.
Why did the universities want to examine the syllabi of the
sociology courses that were accused of being post-Zionist?
We received the report of the Institute for Zionist Strategies
from the director general of the Council for Higher Education. In my
opinion, the council or the Committee for Planning and Budgeting
should not send the universities the mail of any fringe group,
either from the right or the left. After receiving the report, the
[president's] office asked to look at the syllabi mentioned in the
research as a first step and to figure out how to treat it. I did
not have the slightest intention of supervising the material studied
in the sociology courses, and certainly not of intervening and
changing the contents. I don't have any intention of carrying out an
examination or anything similar.
Beyond that, what's frightening in the whole story is that the
decision-makers at the highest levels tend to rely on reports of
this kind to intervene in academia.
Have you read the Institute for Zionist Strategies' report?
The starting point of the report's authors, I think, was to mark
a target and adorn it with supposedly reliable statistics. It's
impossible to divide the world into Zionists and anti-Zionists.
That's not scientific and not serious .... We accept faculty members
and promote them only on the basis of their scientific quality. Any
other consideration when accepting or promoting lecturers is not
acceptable and can harm the level of research. This report was meant
to sow fear at the universities and to introduce political elements
into the system of academic considerations. Reports of this kind
will not change the manner of studying or our conduct.
What is your response to the criticism by rightist organizations
of academia and Tel Aviv University?
Anyone who criticizes the university for lack of concern about
the values of Zionism does not understand that precisely the
pluralistic environment we are trying to maintain is the cornerstone
of the Zionist and democratic vision on which the state was founded.
Only through maintaining a fruitful environment for discourse will
it be possible to raise generations of citizens with awareness of
the basic democratic and liberal values.
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