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Why Academic Boycott
:: A reply to an
Israeli comrade ::
by Tanya Reinhart
Dear Baruch Kimmerling,
Last week, you published in Ha'aretz a moving letter
defending the freedom of expression of a group of Israeli professors,
including myself, who signed a European petition calling for a moratorium
on European support to the Israeli academia. Here is what you wrote:
""The Coordinating Council of the Faculty Associations [of the Israeli universities] issued a public statement, which appeared in Ha'aretz on May 6, denouncing the call of scientists in Europe and North America to declare a boycott on the Israeli academia, following... supposed war crimes that the State of Israel committed in the occupied territories.
As someone who acted immediately and actively against this boycott, because I saw this as a blatant violation of academic freedom, which is the essence of academic research and teaching, I was shocked by this statement. The shock stems from the content of the document, which not only denounces the boycott, but also denounces that minority of the Israeli academic personnel that support the proposed boycott.
For precisely the same reason that one should oppose the boycott, one should oppose the denouncement of academic members who think differently. Instead of insisting on the freedom of speech and thought of all its members, the council launched an attack on this freedom.... I demand the immediate resignation of those responsible for this outrageous public statement.""
In the present climate in Israel, it is comforting, and
far from trivial, to hear voices still defending old fashioned ideas like
freedom of speech. For this reason, I appreciate your letter.
Nevertheless, I would like to explain here why your defense still leaves
me utterly unmoved.
Nevertheless, I would like to explain here why your
defense still leaves me utterly unmoved.
Background on the Academic Boycott
First some background on the academic
boycott. An accurate description of the events that set the Israeli
academia roaring was given in an Ha'aretz article by Tamara Traubman: "The
first time that the international scientific community imposed a boycott
on a state was during the Apartheid regime in South Africa. The second
time is being considered at present, and now the boycott is directed
against Israel and its policy in the territories. Several manifestos
calling for the imposition of a boycott, on various levels, have been
published in recent days by professors from abroad...The first...was
initiated by a pair of British researchers, Professors Hilary and Steven
Rose of Britain's Open University. The manifesto 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.
(Israel enjoys the status of a European country in many European research
programs). Over 270 European scientists, including about 10 Israelis,
signed the manifesto. Although it is the most moderate of the boycotts
being formulated these days against Israel, the manifesto aroused a great
deal of anger in the Israeli scientific community..."(Ha'aretz, April 25,
2002, "he Intifada Reaches the Ivory Tower")
We can distinguish three forms of the academic boycott.
The first is part of a larger cultural boycott -- cultural events in
Israel have been boycotted for quite a while. In the academic sphere, the
boycott is on any cooperation with institutional events of the Israeli
academia in Israel. This means that scholars cancel participation in
conferences and official academic events (e.g. some refuse an honorary
degree offer). [1]
This form of boycott is already a fact. The reason is that
it is the easiest step for individual scholars to take on their own. It is
not always easy to distinguish between those canceling participation in
events of the Israeli academia for safety reasons and those who are
boycotting, but the phenomenon is quite large, as Traubman reports: "The
most obvious expression of the isolation of the Israeli scientific
community is the refusal of researchers to come here…'Whereas in the past
Israel held many international congresses, says Gideon Rivlin, the chair
of Kenes International, the principal organizer of such congresses, today
there are no longer any international congresses in Israel.' ... 'Until
2004,' adds Rivlin, 'all the congresses in Israel have been canceled'...
Brain researcher Prof. Idan Segev...from HU [Hebrew University,
Jerusalem], says that scientists tend to refuse to come not only to
scientific congresses, but also for joint research projects as well. 'At a
conference abroad a short time ago, I met a friend with whom I've been
working for many years; every year he comes to Israel for a few weeks to
work with me,' says Segev. 'This year he told me openly, `I can't come,
the moment I arrive, I am taking a political step.' For them it's like
going to South Africa'." (Ha'aretz, ibid.).
The second, and more recent
form, is economic sanctions on the Israeli academia. This extends the
other forms of economic pressure which have been observed for a while:
Consumer boycott; canceling European contracts with Israeli computer
companies (http://www.israelinsider.com/channels/politics/articles/pol_0138.htm);
and the divestment movements in the US academy, where scholars and
students in Berkeley, Princeton, Harvard, and MIT call on their
universities to divest from US companies doing business in Israel, as
means of pressure on these companies not to help Israel's economy. (See
Harvard/MIT
Petition,
Princeton Divestiture Petition). While these actions target various
aspects of the Israeli economy (industry and agriculture, electronics
companies, etc.) the academic boycott targets the research funds of the
Israeli academia, thus applying direct economic pressure on the academia,
as a central (and collaborating) part of the state of Israel.
As Traubman reports, "Members of prestigious scientific
bodies, such as the Norwegian Academy of Sciences, have condemned Israel's
actions in the territories, and criticized their Israeli colleagues for
their indifference to the situation of Palestinian researchers, and the
damage to academic institutions in the Palestinian Authority. According to
Israeli diplomatic sources, steps to have Israel join several large
European projects have been postponed until further notice -- for example,
accepting Israel as a member of a particle acceleration project at the
CERN laboratory in Geneva. The contacts that began behind the scenes have
been halted at this stage..." (Ha'aretz, ibid.).
The specific academic petition which
ignited the fury of the Israeli academia, falls within this second type of
boycott [2]. This is a call for economic sanctions on the Israeli academia
in general, and not for full boycott of ties with individual Israeli
academics.
The third form of the academic boycott,
however, extends it also to this most severe stage -- practiced in the
South-Africa boycott -- of complete international isolation of individual
Israeli scholars. It prohibits any contact with them -- invitations to
conferences abroad, research collaborations, publications, editorial
boards, etc. [3]
Among the supporters of academic boycott,
opinions are divided about the third form of boycott. At the individual
level, many Israeli academics oppose the occupation and Israel's brutality
in the territories. A large minority of them is actively involved, like
you, Baruch, in a daily struggle against all these. Furthermore, among the
goals of academic boycott is to encourage the Israeli academics to take a
more active part in struggle and resistance. For this, it would help if we
feel part of a large international community, sharing this cause, rather
than completely isolated from it. Personally, I support the first two
forms of academic boycott, but not the third form of individual boycott.
Nevertheless, there is no doubt that if the
economic-institutional boycott is successful and research funds to the
Israeli academia are cut off, this will effect individual researchers,
including not only you and me, but also students and young scholars who
are supported by research grants. This is the logic of sanctions -- they
are meant to hurt the political and economic system, and in that process,
they inevitably hurt all segments of the targeted society. In South
Africa, the Blacks were among the first to suffer from the boycott. Still
they pleaded with the West to continue.
Why boycott
The model of boycott followed here is,
indeed, that which was formed in the case of South Africa. Just a few
years ago, in 1993, the whole world celebrated when the Apartheid regime
in South Africa collapsed after 50 years of brutal discrimination and
oppression. This change did not come about on its own. It was the outcome
of a long and painful struggle of the blacks in South Africa. But the
anti-Apartheid movement, throughout the world, also had an enormous
impact.
The struggle was directed at governments on
the one hand, and directly at corporations doing business with SA, on the
other. There were protests and demonstrations demanding that an arms
embargo be imposed. The pressure on corporations to divest, targeted
specific corporations with product boycotts accompanied by demonstrations,
stockholders speaking at meetings (churches who owned stocks, could get a
few people in), and much more.
Following this pressure, in 1977 the UN
Security Council imposed limited sanctions on South Africa. Their impact
was, in fact, limited as long as the great powers --primarily UK and US --
found ways around them (like getting Israel to provide arms, military
training and oil to SA.). But during the eighties, the big corporations
were beginning to move out of their SA ties anyway, due to the protest and
turmoil it generated. Suddenly, there was a heavy economic price for the
continuation of Apartheid.
This was combined with another
aspect of pressure -- cultural boycott and social isolation: South Africa
was kicked out of international sports; professional and academic
organizations did not cooperate with South-African organizations; there
was a ban on conferences and cultural events. All these helped. South
Africa was forced to change. [4]
I have no doubt that you
supported the South Africa boycott. Where we may differ is in the question
whether the Israeli case is sufficiently similar. I believe that even much
before its present atrocities, Israel has followed faithfully the
South-African Apartheid model. Since Oslo, Israel has been pushing the
Palestinians in the occupied territories into smaller and smaller isolated
enclaves, promising, in return, to consider calling these enclaves, in
some future, a Palestinian 'state' -- a direct copy of the Bantustans
model. (For a detailed description of the early Apartheid stages, see my
article in Ha'aretz Magazine, May 27, 94,
The Era of Yellow Territories).
Unlike South Africa, however, Israel has
managed so far to sell its policy as a big compromise for peace. Aided by
a battalion of cooperating 'peace-camp' intellectuals, they managed to
convince the world that it is possible to establish a Palestinians state
without land-reserves, without water, without a glimpse of a chance of
economic independence, in isolated ghettos surrounded by fences,
settlements, bypass roads and Israeli army posts -- a virtual state which
serves one purpose: separation (Apartheid). "We are here and they are
there" -- behind the fences, as Barak put it.
But no matter what you think of the Oslo
years, what Israel is doing now exceeds the crimes of the South Africa's
white regime. It has started to take the form of systematic ethnic
cleansing, which South Africa never attempted. After thirty-five years of
occupation, it is completely clear that the only two choices the Israeli
political system has generated for the Palestinians are Apartheid or
ethnic cleansing ('transfer'). Apartheid is the 'enlightened' Labor
party's program (as in their Alon or Oslo plan), while the other pole is
advocating slow suffocation of the Palestinians, until the eventual
'transfer' (mass expulsion) can be accomplished. ("Jordan is the
Palestinian state", is how Sharon put it in the eighties.). [5] Even those who can swallow 'made in Israel' Apartheid, cannot
just watch silently as Sharon carries this second vision out.
Given that the US backs Sharon, no UN
resolution has any force. This was made perfectly clear by the latest
shocking example in which Israel managed to defy the resolution regarding
a search committee for the events of Jenin. The only way left to exert
pressure on Israel to stop is through the protest of people around the
world, including use of the most painful means of boycott. As an Israeli,
I believe that this external pressure may save not only the Palestinians,
but also the Israeli society, which is, in fact, not being represented by
the political system. In a
recent poll, 59% of the Jewish Israelis support immediate evacuation of most
settlements, followed by a unilateral withdrawal of the army from the
occupied territories. But with no external pressure, no political party
will carry out this will of the majority.
Why the Academia
I am not sure whether your objections to
the moratorium on research funds to the Israeli academia, which we called
for, is because you object to any divestment or boycott moves, or whether
you think the academia should be exempt. Many Israeli academics hold the
latter view, so I suppose it is also yours. You say in your letter that
the reason you "acted immediately and actively against this boycott" is
"because I saw this as a blatant violation of academic freedom, which is
the essence of academic research and teaching." This is a very peculiar
use of the concept of academic freedom. What is under consideration here
is your freedom to access international research funds. You seem to view
this type of freedom as an inalienable right, untouchable by any
considerations of the international community regarding the context in
which its funds are used. But it is not. The traditional spirit of the
academia, no matter how much of it is preserved in daily practice, is that
intellectual responsibility includes the safeguarding of moral principles.
The international academic community has the full right to decide that it
does not support institutions of societies which divert blatantly from
such principles. You had no problem accepting this when South Africa was
concerned.
The only question is whether there is
anything about the Israeli academia (as an institution, unlike individual
resisting academics) that could exempt it from the condemnation and
pressure of the international community. Let us turn to the broader
arsenal of the arguments used to argue that. You find yourself here in
large company. The Israeli academia, which was not so impressed with mere
condemnations and the ongoing ban on official academic events in Israel,
got on its feet when its freedom to access international funds was at
stake. In a matter of days, they organized a
counter petition (to the
British petition above), which has gathered thousands of signatures. Dr.
Ben Avot, one of the organizers of the counter petition "says that 'the
signatories come from a wide array of opinions about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, ranging from members of [the right-wing]
'Professors for National Strength' to people who are usually identified
with the left, such as Prof. Baruch Kimmerling'" (Traubman, Ha'aretz,
ibid.).
A basic principle that the counter-petition
you signed is based on, is that science should always be separated from
politics. It is this line which enabled the Israeli academia to live in
peace with the occupation for thirty five years. Never in its history did
the senate of any Israeli university pass a resolution protesting the
frequent closure of Palestinian universities, let alone voice protest the
devastation sowed there during the last uprising. (Such resolution would
be a violation of the sacred principle of separation -- more examples of
this below.) If in extreme situations of violations of human rights and
moral principles, the academia refuses to criticize and take a side, it
collaborates with the oppressing system. But as we saw, it is precisely
this principle, and the collaboration that it entails, which the
international community is now condemning.
Interestingly, the principle of separation
of science and politics never applies when what is at stake is defending
the interests of Israel. The powerful Israeli scientific lobby managed to
arrange an editorial in the central scientific journal Nature, which
repeats faithfully the arguments of this counter petition (' Don't
Boycott Israel's Scientists', Nature 417, 1, May 2, 2002).
What are these ('non political') arguments?
One is that "A unilateral boycott of Israeli academics unfairly identifies
Israel as the only party responsible for the violent shift in
Israeli-Palestinian relations and ignores ongoing attacks against innocent
Israeli citizens. Such a one-sided perspective is contrary to academic
standards of truth-seeking" (Israeli counter-petition). "...Should we also
boycott Palestinian researchers because the Palestinian Authority has not
done enough to prevent suicide bombers?" (Nature editorial). Well, this is
precisely what people of conscience no longer buy. Basic human values and
standards do not place equal responsibility on the oppressor and the
oppressed, when the oppressed tries to rebel. Even when we strongly
condemn the means used by the oppressed, this does not exempt the
oppressor. I take it for granted that you, Baruch, place the
responsibility for thirty-five years of occupation and Apartheid on the
Israeli governments, and not on the Palestinian people. I assume that you
just did not bother to read the petition you signed.
But the next set of arguments is probably
the heart of the matter for many. The Israeli academy views itself as
liberal, democratic, and sensitive to issues of human rights. Hence "to
boycott Israeli academics would endanger the democratic values and respect
for human rights this community works hard to foster" (Israeli
counter-petition). Most importantly, the academy views itself as promoting
values of coexistence and peace by means of a "meaningful dialogue" with
its Palestinian colleagues: "European programs have provided important
frameworks for Middle East scholars to meet... to discuss academic topics
of mutual interest, and to build informal interpersonal ties, thus helping
to counter years of accumulated misunderstanding and animosity." (Ibid.).
Hence, boycotting the Israeli academia will harm its devoted work of
reconciliation and peace.
Nature's editorial is even more
enthusiastic about this peace endeavor. "Science is less political than
other issues, and is a bridge for peace. That is what Leah Boehm, then
chief scientist at Israel's science ministry, enthusiastically told Nature
in 1995. Then, Israeli and Palestinian researchers were optimistic that
the peace process would cause funds to flow to joint Arab-Israeli projects
from the international community, reinforcing peace by contributing to
dialogue, and boosting research in the region..." Hence, Nature concludes,
"the world's scientific community" should "jump at" the opportunity to
support the Israeli academia, and thus, "encourage Middle-East peace."
Even Nature must admit that "subsequent events have left these noble
aspirations in tatters." But it calls on the scientific community to help
the Israeli academia (with research funds) to renew the spirit of these
wonderful years of dialogue. (This is emphasized further in Nature's
second editorial of May 16)
It is typical and revealing that in proving
the contribution of the Israeli academia to dialogue and peace, this
editorial of Nature cites only Israeli (and one American) scholars. The
Palestinian perspective is, apparently, irrelevant. If it were, a very
different perspective on that golden era of Oslo and 'peace' would emerge.
Here is a fragment of a report of Sari
Hanafi, Associate Researcher at the Palestinian Center for the Study of
Democracy [6]. It was written before the Palestinian uprising, and describes
an event of 1998/1999:
""In end of 1998, the Jerusalem Spinoza Institute called the Palestinian University of Al-Quds (based in Jerusalem) to cooperate with it in order to organize an international conference, in August 1999, entitled 'Moral Philosophy in Education: The Challenge of human Difference'... The pros [for accepting the invitation] were supported by two arguments: first, the cooperation could help persuade the Ministry of Education to recognize Al-Quds University, taking into account that non-recognition is purely political; the second argument is related to the first: it consists of trying to convince the Ministry of Interior to not expel the administration and the main building of the university outside of Jerusalem (as announced once by an Israeli official). In fact, these two arguments show that the romantic view of cultural cooperation between two civil societies hide all the power imbalance between the two societies -- between an occupied and occupying people: 'We are here to put apart divergence and talk on science, philosophy and education far from politics', as argued by the President of the Spinoza Institute...
However between May and August 1999, a serious incident happened: the Ministry of Interior of the Barak government withdrew the Identity Document of Musa Budeiri, a director of the Center of International Relations in Al-Quds University and a resident of East Jerusalem. Native of Jerusalem, his family has lived there for hundreds of years, under Ottoman, British and Jordanian rule. He was given a tourist visa, valid for four weeks, and was told that he would have to leave Jerusalem by August 22 -- Musa Budeiri is one of thousands of other Palestinians in a similar situation. They all have the same problem: they are subject to the threat of being turned into 'tourists' in their birthplace. 2,200 Jerusalem ID cards of families (roughly 8,800 individuals) were confiscated between 1996 and May 1999 (according to the Israeli ministry of Interior)...
In the opening session, Sari Nusseibeh, the president of Al-Quds University, contrary to his habit, gave a very moving speech concerned exclusively with the case of Musa Budeiri and his family. To outline the roots of the Budeiri family in this city, he discussed a manuscript on Jerusalem history written by Musa's father, which has never been edited. Sari Nusseibeh, pioneer of the dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians, finished his speech by saying that he is torn morally by these events, adding that the Israelis should not expect to conduct further dialogue with Palestinians, as the latter are increasingly becoming tourists [in their land]. If almost all of the participants were moved, the organizers were not. The president of Jerusalem Spinoza Institute commented on Nusseibeh's speech saying that 'there is some military problems' between Israelis and Palestinians which have not yet been resolved, while the rector of the Hebrew University asked Nusseibeh where he can find the Budeiri manuscript, as the Hebrew University would like to have it!!
Finally the
organizers of the conference refused to send the Minister of
Interior a petition in favor of Budeiri, signed by the majority of
the participants. The argument used was that there is a separation
between the academic sphere and the political one, and as scholars
they cannot take a position." [6]
This event took place in the days of
peaceful Apartheid. As for the present situation of Al-Quds University,
Nature finally acknowledged in its May 16 issue that, "Al-Quds University
claims that Israeli soldiers badly damaged laboratories and other
buildings at its campuses in El Bireh and Ramallah. The university has
asked the Israeli government and the international community to send
fact-finding missions and to help rebuild its infrastructure" (Declan
Butler, European correspondent, Nature 417, 207, 16 May 2002)
As the most decisive argument for why no
moratorium on research funds should apply, the Israeli counter petition
and its echo in Nature point out that this will harm the Palestinian
academia. "Many European-funded programs have explicitly aimed at
enhancing scientific cooperation between Israelis, Palestinians and Arab
scholars...Freezing Israeli access to, and participation in, such programs
would...damage these important frameworks and undermine the benefits to
research" (Israeli counter petition). This theme is further developed and
emphasized in the more recent Nature editorial of May 16.
Regardless of what the facts are about this
"energetic scientific collaboration," this is the standard colonialist
argument. The colonialists were always certain that they are bringing
progress to the natives. Here is what Prof. Rita Giacaman of Birzeit
University told me about the matter: "Several individually linked projects
began with Israelis since the Oslo accords were signed, mainly because
Europe and the US were luring scientists with the carrot of money in a
money starved environment, in exchange for being used as 'evidence' for
peace and equity having been achieved, when the stick never stopped
hitting Palestinian infrastructure, institutions, political processes and
academic life. It thus placed us in the political arena, using us to show
peace that does not exist and equity that exists even less. Many of us
Palestinian academics chose not to get involved in such academic
cooperative relations with Israelis and continued solidarity activities
[with Israelis], aimed at changing the political reality instead -the root
cause of the problem. .. Anyway, the issue is not about Israeli scientists
helping out. This is like taking away the right of villagers to till their
land and then giving them some food-aid instead. The issue is ending
occupation and allowing Palestinian to develop their institutions,
including scientific ones." (Personal communication, May 2002).
If continuing support to the Israeli
academia is what the Palestinian academia considers best for its future,
we should hear it from them. What I hear from my comrades in the
Palestinian academia is only a full and unequivocal support for the
boycott.
Notes:
[1]
French and
Australian petitions are calling also for avoiding any other institutional
cooperation, such as serving in promotion procedures of the Israeli
universities, though the French call declares that they will continue
individual ties with Israeli scholars.
[2] Here is the full text of the
British petition that we signed, which was published in The Guardian
(London) on April 6, 2002, with the first 120 signatures:
"Despite widespread international condemnation for
its policy of violent repression against the Palestinian people in
the Occupied Territories, the Israeli government appears
impervious to moral appeals from world leaders. The major
potential source of effective criticism, the United States, seems
reluctant to act. However there are ways of exerting pressure from
within Europe. Odd though it may appear, many national and
European cultural and research institutions, including especially
those funded from the EU and the European Science Foundation,
regard Israel as a European state for the purposes of awarding
grants and contracts. (No other Middle Eastern state is so
regarded). Would it not therefore be timely if at both national
and European level a moratorium was called upon any further such
support unless and until Israel abide by UN resolutions and open
serious peace negotiations with the Palestinians, along the lines
proposed in many peace plans including most recently that
sponsored by the Saudis and the Arab League."
[3] A resolution along these lines was taken by the
British Teacher's union Natfhe, reported in EducationGuardian.co.uk, April
16, 2002, and is proposed also in a US petition -
boycotts@teacher.com,
BoycottIsraeliGoods@yahoogroups.com).
[4] The information regarding the anti-Apartheid movement
was provided to me by Noam Chomsky.
[5] For more details on these two poles in Israeli
politics, see my articles, 'Evil
Unleashed' and 'The
second half of 1948'.
[6] Sari Hanafi, "Palestinian Israeli People to People
program as a mechanism of conflict resolution", lecture delivered at the
18th conference of the General International Peace Research Association (IPRA),
August 5-9, 2000, Finland. (hanafi@p-ol.com)
Tanya Reinhart is a professor
in Tel Aviv University.
Source:
by the same author:
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