Stop the Dishonest Academic Boycott
by Lawrence Grossman
December 26, 2013
December 26, 2013
By: Lawrence Grossman
Published: December 26th, 2013
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/stop-the-dishonest-academic-boycott/2013/12/26/0/
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/stop-the-dishonest-academic-boycott/2013/12/26/0/
Stop the Dishonest Academic Boycott
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/stop-the-dishonest-academic-boycott/2013/12/26/0/
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/stop-the-dishonest-academic-boycott/2013/12/26/0/
It started as barely a blip on the radar.
At its annual
conference last April, the Association for Asian American Studies, or AAAS,
unanimously approved a resolution calling for an academic boycott of Israeli
universities to protest the country’s treatment of Palestinians.
While the BDS
(boycott, divestment and sanctions) movement had been active for some time on
campuses across the country, it was the first time an American academic
organization had signed on.
But since the AAAS is a tiny group of barely 800
members, and fewer than 100 were still around on the final day of the
conference when the vote was taken, the step was viewed more as a curiosity
than the beginning of a trend.
Now the blip is beginning to look more like a
wave. This month, the much larger American Studies Association, or ASA – it has
nearly 5,000 members –passed a similar resolution by a 2-to-1 margin in an
online vote in which about a quarter of the members participated.
The language,
previously approved unanimously by the organization’s national council, claims
there is “no effective or substantive academic freedom for Palestinian students
and scholars under conditions of Israeli occupation” blames the United States
for “enabling” the occupation; and endorses “a boycott of Israeli academic
institutions.”
While the ASA has long had a reputation for leftist and
anti-Western bias, resolutions to the same effect are expected to be proposed
at the upcoming meetings of the large mainstream academic bodies in the
humanities, such as the Modern Language Association and the American Historical
Association. Both will hold their annual meetings in January.
The professoriate
is the most highly educated sector of our society, its members taking
justifiable pride in their ability to think clearly and not be swayed by faulty
logic. Surely those who come to the subject with no preconceived anti-Israel
feeling will see through the two-tiered hypocrisy of the boycotters.
First, it
is rather odd that the ASA has never before called for severing academic
relations with any other country, not even such authoritarian regimes as China,
Iran, Sudan or Syria, where no academic freedom exists. Whatever failings can
be laid at Israel’s door, it is a democracy with free elections, a free press
and, yes, academic freedom.
Indeed, it was Israel that established the first
Palestinian universities on the West Bank. Far from seeking to oppress the
Palestinian population under its control, Israel is engaged in intensive
negotiations with the Palestinian Authority to achieve a peace agreement
whereby Israeli and Palestinian states can live side by side in peace.
Acknowledging that Israel is hardly among the worst human-rights offenders, the
ASA president insists nonetheless that “one has to start somewhere.” But why
start by boycotting a free society rather than a repressive one – unless you
come to the issue already predisposed against Israel?
Second, for consistency’s
sake, a boycott aimed at Israeli academia should insist on forgoing the use of
anything produced by Israeli brainpower –much of it at the very universities
targeted for boycotting. That would include computer laptops, cell phones,
crops produced by drip irrigation, geothermal power, and a host of biomedical
devices and pharmaceuticals.
At the very least, such a boycott should logically
include an end to the enjoyment of the most visible fruits of Israeli
intellectual life – the path-breaking accomplishments of its 12 Nobel Prize
winners, by far the highest per-capita number of Nobel laureates for any
country in the world.
The fact that none of the would-be boycotters has even
suggested taking such a step raises the strong possibility that the entire
academic BDS campaign is shot through with another form of hypocrisy, one that
decries Israel as an international pariah while at the same time making use of the
life-enhancing and life-saving breakthroughs that the objectionable country has
achieved.
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