[independent media
centre]
הפש
English
Hebrew
Arabic

שופיח

םדקתמ שופיח


תא יפיסוה
תמישרל ךלש לאודה
ונלש הצופתה
ךל חלשנ ונאו
.םינוכדע

רמאמ םסרפ
,טסקט חלש
וא לוק ,תונומת
תורישי ואדיו
.השילגה תנכותמ
תושדח
ינכדע רוקיס
.םיעורא לש
קזבמ
יאנותיעה התא
!ךמצע לש
םיעורא ןמוי
האחמ ,םיעורא
תויוליעפו
סקדניא
םירתאל םירושיק
ןאכ
ןאכ תעה בתכ
וידר
טנרטניא וידר
ואדיו
יחרזא ןמוי
םילבכב קבאמ




www.indymedia.org

Pacific
adelaide
aotearoa
jakarta
melbourne
sydney

Africa
nigeria
south africa

Europe
austria
athens
barcelona
belgium
bristol
euskal herria
finland
france
germany
ireland
italy
madrid
netherlands
norway
portugal
russia
sweden
switzerland
thessaloniki
united kingdom

Canada
alberta
hamilton
maritimes
montreal
ontario
ottawa
quיbec
thunder bay
vancouver
victoria
windsor

Latin America
argentina
bolivia
brasil
chiapas
colombia
mexico
qollasuyu
uruguay
tijuana

India
india

Western Asia
israel
jerusalem

United States
arizona
atlanta
austin
baltimore
boston
buffalo
central florida
chicago
danbury, ct
dc
eugene
hawaii
houston
ithaca
la
madison
maine
michigan
milwaukee
minneapolis/st. paul
new jersey
new mexico
north carolina
nyc
new york capitol
philadelphia
portland
richmond
rocky mountain
rochester
san diego
san francisco bay area
santa cruz, ca
seattle
st louis
urbana-champaign
utah
vermont
western mass

IMC Projects
satellite tv news
print
radio
video
climate IMC

IMC Process
process
discussion
tech
volunteer
mailinglists
fbi/legal updates
indymedia faq

 

 


technlogy by cat@lyst and IMC Geeks

 

 

indymedia news about us

The Meaning of Academic Boycott Latin
by Baruch Kimmerling 6:00pm Sun May 26 '02
address: Dept. of Sociology, Hebrew University, Jerusalem

An academic boycott of Israeli universities and faculties are not moral as well not practically applicable - A Replay on Prof. Renhart's article.
print article

THE MEANING OF ACADEMIC BYCOTT
(A Reply To Tanya Reinhart and others) http://indymedia.org.il/imc/israel/webcast/27741.html

My dear colleagues and friends Tanya Reinhart, Rita Giacaman and Elia Zureik:

On May 17 Professor Tanya Reinhart published a lengthy and well-documented article in "Indymedia Israel" ( http://indymedia.org.il ), seeking to convince Israeli academics opposing Israel's oppressive and brutal policies toward the Palestinian people to join Professors Hilary and Steven Rose in their effort to promote a boycott against the Israeli academic community and its institutions. The appeal suggests that European research institutes stop treating Israel like a European country in their scientific relations with it until Israel acts according to UN resolutions and opens serious peace negotiations with the Palestinians. About 270 European and some American and Palestinian scientists signed this appeal, including about 10 Israelis.

Contrary to some of my Israeli colleagues I do respect the right of every member of the scientific international community to make such a demand, and as all of you know, I even agree with most of the reasons behind this call. However, the same reasons that lead the Professors Rose to call for a boycott against Israeli academic institutions lead me to urge the world academic community not only refrain from boycotting us but to offer us its support and protection.

First of all I have to admit that Israeli academic institutions are a part and parcel of the oppressive Israeli state that has, among its other acts of foolishness and villainy, committed unforgettable crimes against the Palestinian people. A major cause for the Israeli academy's inseparability from the state is that we are so heavily funded and subsidized by the Israeli government. A successful boycott will have a boomerang effect by cementing the dependence of Israeli academic institutions and their members on an increasingly capricious government.


Since Ms. Limor Livnat was appointed Minister of Education under the present government, the Israeli academy became the target of a reconstruction and "reeducation" campaign. This policy was in no way accidental. In Israel today, the mass media are generally chauvinistic and unwilling to challenge the Sharon government. Dissenting journalists like Amira Hass and Gideon Levy, who document the daily afflictions and human rights violations suffered by the Palestinian population, are subjected to petition drives designed to pressure the country's most liberal private newspaper to stop publishing their work. In this repressive climate, the Israeli academy remains the last bastion of free thought and free speech.
Most humanistic, dissident voices in Israel originate in the academy or are supported by faculty members.

This is not to say that all the members of the Israeli academy are great humanists or support the idea of self-determination of the Palestinian people. We are a highly heterogeneous community, as is true in any other fine academic environment. Some of us are highly active in ethnocentric groups, other (perhaps the majority) alienated from any public or intellectual activities, while a small but salient minority (of which Prof. Reinhart is a prominent member) are very active and highly committed to the humanization and democratization of various aspects of the Israeli society. However, the most important feature of this community is that so far, in spite of the deep cleavages among us, we have found a way to co-exist each with the other and to conduct spirited dialogs among ourselves and with the world outside the ivory tower – under the umbrella of academic freedom I also think we, the Israeli academy, have stood fast in a time of crisis and have conducted ourselves more credibly than the British academy (while the British government was engaging in acts of brutality against the Irish-Catholics, during the Falkland/Malvinas war, or throughout the long Thatcher regime) , or the patriotic American academy (during the current war against Afghanistan, the McCarthy-era witch hunts, or even during most phases of the Korean and Vietnam wars). Yet I have never heard of any calls to boycott either the British or American academies. As for the cause celebre of the "successful" boycott of the South African academy, it is well known that it mainly damaged the progressive forces within South Africa and probably hindered its democratization process. As sociologists, the Roses have to know the inner dynamics of communities under siege.

My friend Elia Zureik suggested that the boycott should be only institutional but not personal. Very kindly and generously, he has offered to cooperate with me, (presuming I'm on his personal list of "good guys") but to boycott my institution, the Hebrew University. Self-evidently it is his right to boycott every institution or person he want to, but he must realize that if his call to freeze funds to my institution is effective, the resulting constraints on research and conferences will also hurt "good guys" like me. Moreover, the very idea of making selections among members of the academy is a horrifying idea and I hereby pledge not to cooperate with any institution or person who will make such selections, even if I myself am ruled acceptable by them. Selections made on the basis of non-academic criteria endanger academic freedom.

I'm fully aware that academic freedom is not above other moral considerations and does not exist within a political and social vacuum. I can understand European and American academics who feel strong moral resentments when confronted by oppressive policies and war crimes directed against Palestinians and who desire "to do something" within their own profession. Even more, I can sympathize with Palestinian academics like Professor Rita Giacaman, who daily witnesses the destruction of Palestinian academic institutions and the harassment of faculty and students while only miles away, my institution operates more or less normally.
Her feelings are especially comprehensible because my institution, as an institution, never did anything to relieve the severe conditions suffered by Palestinian universities and colleges. True, we had some of common research and development projects, some funded by European authorities and NGOs, but under the present circumstances they provided almost no remedy to the Palestinians.

However, I have less understanding for my Israeli colleagues who are asking to be boycotted. I don't condemn them as our "trade union" did, because they are fully entitled to express their opinions and to try to convince us of their correctness. Moreover, they and I have the common goal of democratizing and de-colonizing Israeli society. The only divergence between us, beside the very meaning of the academy, is that, should their call be taken seriously it would weaken our common academic autonomy and freedom – the precise goal of our adversaries – and ultimately have catastrophic consequences for our common struggle.

Therefore, I'm calling on the international academic community to strengthen its connections with the Israeli and Palestinian academic communities, in order to empower their autonomy and freedom. Both people needs a strong academic space as a part of their civil and civilized societies in order to promote the elements that are able to initiate major social and political changes in the region.

Baruch Kimmerling

add your comments


 

It is not an argument Hebrew
by Socialist Workers League 7:40pm Sun May 26 '02

print comment

An Accademic boycott is moral and practical.
Yossi Schwartz.

add your comments


 

Yossi Latin
by KPSS 7:43pm Sun May 26 '02

print comment

Yosi - you are from the labor class. So how you are going to boycote the academy :)
This is realy fun to see some brain washed comi asshole trying to be like his beloved idol Lev Trotchki.

:) you are so pathetic.

add your comments


 

Re: It is not an argument Hebrew
by Guy Berliner 10:24pm Mon May 27 '02

print comment

I'm glad to see the Socialist Workers League
weighing in with its incisive detailed rebuttal
to Baruch Kimmerling's thoughtful piece. With
this kind of intellectual acumen at work in our
midst, I'm sure the socialist worker's paradise
is just around the corner for us all.

add your comments


 

Absolutely Agree with Professor Kimmerling Hebrew
by D. Bellino 7:06pm Fri Jul 19 '02
phone: 630-690-8421 dbellino@ameritech.net

print comment

After spending the last 2 years attempting to
"study and understand" the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict, I cannot but agree with Professor
Kimmerling's argument; i.e. it will be
extraordinarily counterproductive to boycott
Israeli academic institutions.

(personal background...American, 52 years old,
Catholic, son of Italian immigrants, a "born"
liberal/leftist)

As a Catholic, I have also looked closely at the
response to this conflict of the non-evangelical
(non-right wing) Christian churches, ie Catholic,
Anglican/Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian,
Methodist etc. And there seems to be a uniform
concern for the "plight of the Palestinians". I
agree with this view.

However, there is another aspect to this
Christian concern (and sometimes activism) which
I find mystifying, and again, counterproductive.
In all the calls for money, for example, (and I
receive e-mails almost daily in this regard), it
is always for charitable purposes; ie assistance
to needy Palestinians. Again, I am not suggesting
this is not a worthy moral effort. But to what
purpose? What will it achieve? What has happened
to all the money the EU gave to the Palestinians?
Unless I am mistaken, it now lies in smoking
ruins.

And thus my own conclusion...there is TOO LITTLE
THINKING on the part of those of us, (whatever
our nationality or religious beliefs) who support
"peace and justice" for all peoples in Israel and
Palestine. By that I mean, who is most likely to
resolve this issue, to bring about a just
solution? And to that question I find myself
answering...it is the Jewish people who are most
likely to solve this issue. People like Professor
Kimmerling, Professor Reinhart, Gideon Levy,
Amira Haas, the Refuseniks, the ones who operate
this web site, and more additional names than I
can list here.

These are the people who need to be supported,
financially, morally, and in any other way. But
primarily FINANCIALLY. There is no human endeavor
more expensive than war. How can peace be waged
without resources? The forces of war in Israel
have, via the US government, almost unlimited
resources. So why, I keep asking myself, are not
the rest of us doing some serious fund raising
for those Israelis (and diapora Jews) who are
trying to WAGE PEACE. To not do so strikes me as,
quite literally, idiocy (not to mention moral
failure).

I may be wrong about this, I honestly don't know.
I am in the process of appealing to my local
Diocese for permission to begin such an effort.
But I would be deeply grateful for any thoughts,
criticisms, suggestions, or even "drop dead and
mind your own business" responses. We (catholics)
have the ability (in theory) to raise large sums
of money for this purpose.

And lastly, given John Paul II's strong interest
in Catholic-Jewish reconciliation, it seems to me
an effort of this kind could be seen as an act of
lay Catholic atonement (we do not have such a
wonderful history vis-a-vis the Jewish people).
Any comments would be greatly appreciated.
D. Bellino


add your comments


 

to Tany, with love Hebrew
by Fred Lapides 5:56pm Wed Jul 31 '02

print comment

Dear Prof. Reinhart: as by now you know, 7 people
were blown to death in the Cafeteria at Hebrew
University today (7/31). Ironically, Hebrew U
had many professors who advocated what can in
reductionist terms be call Left of Center
positions, the sort of thing I believe you find
yourself in.
I know your being at an Israeli University is a
pleasant way ato spend some time, away from your
slot in Holland (I think it is), where you have
been a student of--N. Chomsky.
What has just happened then seems to me is so
antithetical to all that professors espouse that
I am sure many that were sympathetic to the Arab
cause will now reconsider their positions because
they have lost some of their very own bright
students to the madness of terrorism.
Alas, the Jews in Israel tend to take the
high moral road and will not give back that which
it receives but were I in charge I would close
down Arab colleges in the West Bank for one
straight year....an eye for an eye? No. Hardly.
The loss of thse young students can not be
replaced by a closed building.
Enjoy your stay in the Holy Land, and by all
means use the freedoms of a democracy to say
wicked things about your host country.

add your comments


 

Thank you, Mr. Kimmerling Latin
by Sasha McLean 2:02am Mon Aug 12 '02
sasha_mclean@hushmail.com

print comment



Thank you for your article, Mr. Kimmerling. I enjoyed reading it and I found your reasons for objecting to the academic boycott compelling. Your article is, I think, balanced; reading it made me acutely conscious of the many, many irredeemably slanted and ill considered articles about the Isreali-Palestinian conflict I have read in the past year. I look forward to reading your future postings.

Sasha McLean

add your comments


 

(C) Indymedia Israel. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Indymedia Israel.