Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - Prof. Amnon
Rubinstein, one-time Minister of Education, Israel's leading
constitional law expert, Dean of the IDC, states: anti-Israel
faculty at TAU uses “academic podium to deliver Israel-bashing
propaganda”
This news item did not surprise me. A
small group of anti-Zionist, anti-Israel faculty members has turned
Tel Aviv University into a podium from which to broadcast their
political propaganda. Two notable instances: a group of 30
professors signed a pro-Iranian petition last year warning against
Israeli and American designs and "adventurism" against the Islamic
Republic, without even mentioning its president's threat to wipe
Israel off the map and his Holocaust-denying outbursts. The second
example was a conference held by the Tel Aviv Law School in which
the subject was the alleged mistreatment of "political prisoners"
(i.e. convicted Palestinian terrorists) that invited, as guest
speaker, a released prisoner sentenced to 27 years in jail for
throwing a bomb into a Jewish civilian bus. This is not academic
freedom. This is using academic podiums to deliver Israel-bashing
propaganda.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1258705173959&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Freedom
of expression belongs to professors and students alike
Amnon Rubinstein , THE JERUSALEM POST
Nov. 23, 2009
According to a recent report in
Ha'aretz, students at Tel Aviv University are complaining
bitterly about leftist professors. The students are said to be hurt
by the professors' positions, "but are afraid to express contrary
views, lest this harm their grades."
So wrote Prof. Nira Hativa, head of the
university's center for advancement of teaching. She added that in
many end-of-year feedback forms, students complained about
professors who "attack the state of Israel, the IDF, the Zionist
movement and even worse than that."
She also added that the complaints allege
that "Leftist professors, as distinct from rightist ones, feel
absolutely free to express their political views, even when there is
no relevance whatsoever to the subject they teach."
The head of the university's student
union tells of similar student complaints, and the talkbacks to this
news item - whatever their credibility - also told about students
who are afraid to argue with such professors.
THIS NEWS item did not surprise me. A
small group of anti-Zionist, anti-Israel faculty members has turned
Tel Aviv University into a podium from which to broadcast their
political propaganda.
Two notable instances: a group of 30
professors signed a pro-Iranian petition last year warning against
Israeli and American designs and "adventurism" against the Islamic
Republic, without even mentioning its president's threat to wipe
Israel off the map and his Holocaust-denying outbursts.
The second example was a conference held
by the Tel Aviv Law School in which the subject was the alleged
mistreatment of "political prisoners" (i.e. convicted Palestinian
terrorists) that invited, as guest speaker, a released prisoner
sentenced to 27 years in jail for throwing a bomb into a Jewish
civilian bus.
This is not academic freedom. This is
using academic podiums to deliver Israel-bashing propaganda.
When I taught at Columbia University, I
could see how TAU guest professors would stoke the flames of
anti-Israel rhetoric; one of them insisted that the university show
the film Jenin, Jenin, which charges Israel with perpetrating
a famously imaginary massacre.
The usual defense of these TAU excesses
is that all professors are entitled to academic freedom. This is
inherently true in principle. Academic freedom, a special niche of
the freedom of speech principle enshrined in Israeli law, should
incorporate marginal and iconoclastic views. This is especially true
in a society like Israel which suffers from a constant state of
emergency and stress.
But academic freedom, like all human
rights, is not unlimited. Austrian and German courts rightly decided
that Holocaust denial is not protected speech; Jean Paul Sartre went
further, believing that all anti-Semitic expressions are unprotected
by the right to freedom of speech.
A call to boycott Israel, such as was
made by a lecturer at Ben-Gurion University's political science
department, is certainly unprotected, in a similar way to the
Supreme Court's ruling that a party which seeks the destruction of
Israel cannot run in the Knesset elections.
But there is one further point: academics
cannot seek shelter behind their much-touted freedom, while denying
the students' right to express their own opinions. If what is
alleged in Ha'aretz is true, then these TAU professors are
violating the law.
Article 5 of the Student's Rights Law
states this explicitly: "Every student has the freedom to express
his views and opinions as to the contents of the syllabus and the
values incorporated therein."
In other words, the students, too, have a
measure of academic freedom. If the allegations made by the students
- probably mainly in TAU's social sciences departments - are true,
the university is violating the students' lawful rights.
The writer is a professor of law at the
Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, a former education minister and
Knesset member, as well as the recipient of the 2006 Israel Prize in
Law.
www.amnonrubinstein.org.
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