Other Schools
Weizmann Institute of
Science - Nir Gov (Dept of Physics) Organizes 155 Members of the
Tenured Left to call for Boycott of Ariel University
The signatories state that Ariel was an illegal
settlement whose existence contravened international law and the
Geneva Convention. "It was established for the sole purpose of
preventing the Palestinians from creating an independent state and
thus preventing us, citizens of Israel, from having the chance to
ever live in peace in this region."
The petition was initiated and organized by Nir
Gov of the Weizmann Institute's Department of Chemical Physics.
Unlike other such initiatives, over a third of the list's
signatories are from the natural and exact sciences.
[Could they be after the budgets granted to
Ariel?
Looking for 155 Ideas of people who should be Boycotted?]
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israel-prize-laureates-join-academic-boycott-of-settlement-university-1.335954
Israel Prize laureates join academic boycott
of settlement university
155 academics sign petition calling Ariel, where the education
center is located, an illegal settlement whose existence contravenes
international law and the Geneva Convention.
By Or Kashti
Published 09.01.11
Some 155 university and college faculty members
have signed a petition calling for an academic boycott of the Ariel
University Center. In the petition, the lecturers state their
"unwillingness to take part in any type of academic activity taking
place in the college operating in the settlement of Ariel."
Furthermore, the petition states that "Ariel is not part of the
sovereign state of Israel, and therefore it is impossible to require
us to appear there."
Among the signatories are three Israel Prize laureates -
professors Yehoshua Kolodny of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Benjamin Isaac of Tel Aviv University and Itamar Procaccia of the
Weizmann Institute of Science.
"We, academics from a variety of fields and from all the
institutions of higher learning in Israel, herein express publicly
our opposition to the continued occupation and the establishment of
settlements," the petition states. "Ariel was built on occupied
land. Only a few kilometers away from flourishing Ariel,
Palestinians live in villages and refugee camps under unbearably
harsh conditions and without basic human rights. Not only do they
not have access to higher education, some do not even have running
water. These are two different realities that create a policy of
apartheid," the petition also says.
The signatories state that Ariel was an illegal settlement whose
existence contravened international law and the Geneva Convention.
"It was established for the sole purpose of preventing the
Palestinians from creating an independent state and thus preventing
us, citizens of Israel, from having the chance to ever live in peace
in this region."
The petition was initiated and organized by Nir Gov of the
Weizmann Institute's Department of Chemical Physics. Unlike other
such initiatives, over a third of the list's signatories are from
the natural and exact sciences.
Gov, who started organizing the petition a few weeks ago, said it
was important to show that not only people known from other
petitions support a boycott of Ariel, and therefore this petition
has among its signatories many scholars who are not from the social
sciences and the humanities.
"Israeli academia must differentiate itself from the 'settlement'
academia," said Gov. "Only significant differentiation can help our
supporters abroad who are working against an academic boycott of
Israel. This assistance is important, but all in all it is secondary
to the principled stand that the goal of the establishment of the
college at Ariel was not teaching and academic research, but
political. It may be too late, but we felt a need to state in the
clearest language that Israeli academia must not be involved in the
settlement project," Gov also said.
Gov said he encountered some colleagues who agreed with the
message of the petition but were afraid to sign. He said such fear,
"in the current atmosphere, is understandable, tangible. Even if
there is no official action against the signatories, we may pay some
sort of price."
About three weeks ago, the Council For Higher Education issued a
public statement against calls by Israeli academics for an academic
boycott of Israel. The council, which is headed by Education
Minister Gideon Sa'ar, said such calls "undermine the foundations of
the higher education system."
However, Gov said there is no contradiction between the council's
statement and the petition. "The council says rightly that there is
a danger of delegitimization of the academic system in Israel. We
say the source of this danger is Ariel and the settlements."
Yigal Cohen-Orgad, chairman of the Ariel college's executive
committee, said: "A tiny and bizarre minority of some 150 lecturers
is behind the petition, out of 7,000 faculty members. The
cooperation between the Ariel University Center and many hundreds of
scholars from universities in Israel and many hundreds more from 40
universities abroad, is the response to this petition. We know the
heads of the universities oppose the call for a boycott and all it
entails. I am sure that academia will continue to cooperate with
us."
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