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Tel Aviv University
A Public Challenge to Tel Aviv
University
http://thejewishpress.blogspot.com/2009/10/public-challenge-to-tel-aviv-university.html
Posted by Steven Plaut
October 29, 2009
The Sociology department at Tel Aviv University
has been engaged in subsidized sedition. It has offered a course in
one-sided propaganda and leftist indoctrination. And Tel Aviv
University students got PAID to sign up and be indoctrinated in the
course! Really!
The course, which is evidently not offered this
year but was offered as late as 2007-8, was entitled “Bureaucracy,
Governmentality, and Human Rights.” It was group-taught, mainly by
Tel Aviv University Marxist sociologist and far-leftist anti-Zionist
Professor
Yehouda Shenhav, together with far-leftist non-academic
political activists. The latter were two lawyers, Yael Berda from
the extremist “Machsom
Watch” political group, specialized in interfering with Israeli
military checkpoints in the “territories,” and Michael Sfard, the
attorney for the far-Left “Association
for Civil Rights in Israel.” The
ACRI believes that Jews
have no civil rights worth defending but Arabs have the right to
use violence to evict Israel from “occupied territories.”
The course was also offered by
Shenhav and friends to visiting students from Tufts
University (see
this). The
syllabus of the course shows that it consists only of leftist
anti-Israel propaganda. No pro-Israel speakers or writers were
included in the course materials. Students in the course were taken
around to visit various Israeli far-leftist groups like the
extremist “Yesh Din,” and also Palestinian propagandists. The
lectures included diatribes against Israeli imperialism and
colonialism. Israel is denounced throughout the course as racist and
as an apartheid regime. Occupation of Palestinians is denounced as a
horrible atrocity, with never a word as to how and why the
“occupation” came about and what the costs have been to Israel from
attempts at ending the “occupation." Go
here to see the entire course outline.
So here we have the spectacle of Tel Aviv
University not only offering a one-sided propaganda and
indoctrination program in anti-Israel extremism all dressed up as a
course in “sociology,” but also making payments to students who
agree to be subjected to the indoctrination. Each student was paid
about 1450 NIS plus additional expenses.
Well, my friend and comrade Seth Frantzman, a
Phd student at the Hebrew University and a writer for
Isracampus.org.il, the watchdog group that monitors and
exposes Israeli extremist academics, has come up with a brilliant
idea. He (and I second his call) would like to challenge the heads
of Tel Aviv University. We would like to ask the heads of Tel Aviv
University whether in the name of pluralism and balance they would
be willing to approve in principle the following course as a new one
to be offered to students in the sociology department. We would like
to know if the following course content, which largely parallels the
course offered by Shenhav and his buddies, is acceptable. And we
would like to ask how much money Tel Aviv University is willing to
pay the students who sign up for the course.
Here is the course outline as prepared by Seth
Frantzman:
Tel Aviv University
Faculty of Social Sciences
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Yearly Course
Two weekly hours
Bureaucracy, Governmentality and Individual
Rights – Alternative Course Syllabus
Prof. Benny Alon
TA: Adv. Itamar Ben-Gvir
Guest lecturer: Baruch Marzel
The course will discuss managerial theory and
practice, with an emphasis on mind control mechanisms that
Palestinians developed to train terrorists in the context of the
West Bank. We will examine the historical sources of these
mechanisms and attempt to situate them within the Islamist context,
particularly as envisioned in Wahhabism and the writings of Said
Qutb. We will then demonstrate how the Hebrew freedom fighter is
reflected, within the spaces of sovereignty he creates, in the
NGO-funding practices of European countries, their agents and
executive authorities. In addition, we will demonstrate how the
Palestinian Islamist culture creates lawless spaces, where people's
lives become exposed to violence or the threat thereof.
Simultaneously, we will analyze the political and cultural
implications of historical anachronism, relating them to questions
of morality and religion, politics and sovereignty, and political
theology. We will place special emphasis on the relationship between
radical Hamas interpretations of religion and Fatah bureaucracy and
their ties with violence, in all forms. Through the course, we will
familiarize ourselves with the complexity of maintaining the human
rights of the Hebrew, particularly in the unusual yet daily events
in which they are most crucial. We will learn to listen to
testimonies and stories from the points of view of different actors
in the event, and primarily "look over the shoulder" of those
working in service of the Yishuv, in order to try and understand the
mechanisms and the networks of events operating in reality.
Course structure
The course is a seminar combining theory and
practice. In addition to Prof. Alon's lectures, Activist Itamar Ben
Gvir and his friends will accompany the course as a guest lecturer.
Every two weeks, the students will take part in Yesh Yehudut's
project of observing Palestinian militancy, and in Yad L’Achim's
project of assistance to Jewish women trapped in the houses of their
abusive Arab husbands in the Palestinian territories. Under the
direction of these organizations, the students will be involved in
documentation, building a Jewish outpost, advocacy and coordination
while maintaining a journal documenting their activity. The students
will be guided by Itamar Ben-Gvir, both individually and in groups.
Students will receive transportation expenses and a yearly
scholarship of NIS 1450. At the end of the year, each student will
submit an article based upon her activities and experiences, with
reference to the course's theoretical content. Some of the articles
will be collected in a book edited by Prof. Alon, Baruch Marzel and
Adv. Itamar Ben-Gvir, in cooperation with the organizations.
Schedule and outline
October 24 – Lecture 1: Introduction of the course, group guidance
Prof. Alon, Adv. Ben-Gvir, Adv. Marzel
October 31 – Field work
November 7 – Lecture 2: Development of bureaucratic thought,
managerial revolution and rationalism
as an ideology
November 14 – Field work
November 24 – Islamism and terrorism – Guest lecturer: Baruch Marzel
November 28 – Field work
December 3 – Lecture 3: Bureaucracy and political catastrophes
December 12 – Field work
December 19 – Lecture 4: Sovereignty, governance and power
December 20 – Field work
January 2: Testimony of Islamic murderers and confession. Guest
lecturer: Seth Frantzman
January 9 – Field work
January 16 – Field work
February 27 – Lecture 5: Political theology and the state of
emergency
March 6 – Lecture 6: Islamism – occupier and occupied: from
co-dependency to
"exposed life"
March 13 – Field work
March 20 – Field work
March 27 – Racialization and Wahhabism
April 10 – Field work
April 17 – Lecture 7: The security paradigm
April 24 – Field work
May 8 – Lecture 9: Bureaucracy of Hamas’ Shariah judicial system
May 15 – Field work
May 29 – Lecture 10: Globalization of terrorism, disaster management
and humanitarian organizations
June 5 – Concluding meeting
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