Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
UCLA - Gabriel Piterberg (Dept of
History) participates in Israel bashing symposium at UCLA
http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=A4C55979-6CF5-468B-9D95-E5B81AF19F28
Jew-Hate at UCLA
By
Eric Golub
FrontPageMagazine.com
February 02, 2009
A "Gaza
and Human Rights" symposium hosted by the University of
California, Los Angeles (UCLA)’s Center for Near Eastern Studies
instructed attendees on
how best to spread anti-Zionism, anti-Semitism, and
anti-Americanism.
Attendees advocated for many
unrelated leftists, from Lenin to Che Guevara, while students were
busy texting, Twittering, and checking Facebook.
Moderator Susan Slyomovics, the
director of the Center for Near Eastern Studies, offered typical
leftist academic condescension.
"I have done extensive research on
Israel and Palestine. After all, this is not Fox TV. This is UCLA."
She must have meant the Fox News
Channel, unless she was comparing her research abilities to Homer
Simpson.
UCLA history professor Gabriel
Piterberg followed. He described an "Israeli onslaught on Gaza
Palestinians" and labeled IDF soldiers "war criminals."
He alleged the "forced removal of
the indigenous people in favor of the settler nation-state," with
Palestinians supposedly being the former and Israelis the latter.
He cited Karl Marx, referencing
popular revolts in China and India and the Algerian struggle against
France as examples of the proletariat overthrowing oppressors.
Palestinians would rise up next, he predicted.
He repeated the
debunked charge that Israel has killed Gazans using white
phosphorous.
Lisa Hajjar, University of
California, Santa Barbara Law and Society Program Chair, was up
next. Considering her biases, Hajjar’s eloquence made her the most
dangerous speaker.
She falsely claimed that "Israel
violates the Fourth Geneva Convention." Moreover, like al-Qaeda, the
Geneva Conventions don't apply to Palestinians. Neither are nations.
Israel was repeatedly labeled an
"occupier" of "occupied territories," the Gaza Strip and West Bank,
when the proper terminology is "disputed territories." The fact that
Israel left Gaza in 2005 didn’t seem to register either.
She conceded, to the audience’s
consternation, that, "War is permissible. Not all war is illegal,"
and later, "Collateral damage alone is not necessarily a war
violation." Yet, she went on to state, "Civilians have a right to
immunity. Intentionality is key."
She repeated the lie that Israel
deliberately targets civilians, as well as the white phosphorous
falsehood. As she put it, "Israel should only target what’s
necessary."
"Denying food and water is inhumane.
It’s a war crime" and Israelis, Hajjar added, "are war criminals."
She concluded her nonsense about
"proportionality" with the bizarre, irrelevant statement: "Dick
Cheney is the enemy of all mankind."
Next came Richard Falk, University
of California, Santa Barbara Professor of Global and International
Studies and
9/11 conspiracy theorist. Falk is the newly created UN "Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian
territories" and was recently denied entry into Israel for his
biased and morally repugnant statements.
He declared Gaza an "unequal war,"
as if Hamas’s ineptitude should be treated as the war equivalent of
affirmative action.
He claimed Hamas initiated the
Egyptian-mediated
June 2008 cease-fire to avoid cross-border violence. He called
the ineffectual cease-fire "a diplomatic initiative that would have
ended the conflict."
He seemed to think that because
Hamas’s attempts to violate the cease-fire failed to murder
Israelis, Israel had no retaliation rights.
Falk described Hamas’s daily firing
of into Israel as "wrong, imprudent, and immoral," but added that
"the rockets did little damage, and were not a significant threat."
He alleged "Israeli aggression
against a defenseless society," moments after justifying rockets.
Falk’s litany culminated with the
outlandish statement: "America and Israel are most addicted to
reliance on moral superiority. They practice genocidal geopolitics."
UCLA English professor Saree Makdisi,
who spoke last, peddled numerous fallacies.
He stated that "dropping ordinances
is not okay," neglecting to mention that Israel also drops
evacuation warnings in order to save civilian lives.
He declared Gaza a "child prison"
and said that, "the goal of Israel is to deliberately starve
children."
Makdisi later thundered, "If you
want to stop rockets into Israel, Israel must end the occupation!"
Audience questions demonstrated a
complete and utter disinterest in Gaza. "Democracy Now," the
"Leninist Workers Revolutionary United Party," Dennis Kucinich, and
even Kitty Dukakis were mentioned.
Ludicrous ramblings included the
statements, "Iran needs nukes to protect itself against America and
Israel," and "Israel has violated norms of civilized behavior.
Palestinian resistance is the non-violent alternative."
I then calmly asked my question.
"When are any of you going to ask
Palestinians to take personal responsibility for their own
corruption and failures, and admit they’re entirely responsible for
their own miserable lot in life by choosing suicide bombings and
terror over protecting their own children?"
Lisa Hajjar replied that it's
pointless to argue about "who started it." "Occupation was the
issue. Oppressed people must fight oppressors."
I interrupted her by asking, "What
about suicide bombings?"
Forgetting the event was being
filmed, Hajjar lost her cool and retorted, "If you think I favor
suicide bombings, then that Zionist hat on your head is screwed on
way too tight!"
I replied that my hat was a Fedora,
not a Chasidic hat. An "educated" woman would know the difference,
although her lack of knowledge about hats was secondary to her
bigoted statement. I told her "Your comment was out of line, bigoted
and racist."
She acknowledged such comments hurt
"her cause" from a public relations standpoint, employing the same
tacit language used to describe suicide bombings as "not helpful."
She backed down, apologizing twice, yet reiterating that everything
else she had said was justified.
The final incredulous moment came
when Makdisi, asked to condemn Iran for supplying Hamas with
weapons, claimed, "Hamas is a political group. I have no idea where
they get their weapons."
This symposium sent a pair of clear
message: Hamas and the Palestinians are identical. The academics
involved absolved them both while blaming Israel alone. They neither
distinguished self-defense from murder, nor disavowed murder. No
mention was made of Israel’s right to exist.
Luckily, the students on hand
appeared to be more indoctrinated by Blackberry video games than the
apologists for terrorism on the podium. Then again, those games also
involve blowing stuff up.
Eric Golub is the publisher of the
Tygrrrr Express blog. He wrote this article for
Campus Watch, a project of the
Middle East Forum.
|