by Debbie
Menon
“New legislation in the US
threatens to conflate campus criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism” reports
Kristin Szremski
Great ! This shows the immense power that “the
Organization”, the major pro-Israel organizations such as the Zionist
Organization of America and the Anti-Defamation League has to beat down, censor
and muzzle popular demand against amazing majority numbers in the face of all
reason and “democratic” principle.
And, it also illustrates the cupidity, weakness, and
failures of moral principles of elected representatives in the US and Canada to
stand up for principle and the will of their constituency when confronted with,
promises, offers, influence, coercion, intimidation and probably
blackmail, as well as greed and ambition.
Eventually this will all have to be be brought and argued
before the US
Supreme Court. But, it is so patently a restriction of freedom of speech
and association, that no one will permit it to go that far until they are
absolutely assured that they have the Court stacked solidly enough, and public
opinion sufficiently frightened or conditioned to accept a finding, one way or
the other.
And, that will be a difficult thing to do because, as
ignorant and uncontemplative as most of John Q Publius may be, even the
suggestion of loss of their freedom of speech frightens them. There is
still a strong racist undercurrent of distrust of Jews which has not been
eliminated in America by decades of civil rights legislation but merely hidden
under a very thin veneer of civility, tolerance and fear of being called a
racist, as the Zionists have known for a long time and used it as a weapon… but
when confronted and threatened many of those same John Q Publius will unbutton
their collars and show just how red their necks actually are.
It is a sad thing to contemplate, indeed, that it is this
red-neck of America
which may be the ultimate instrument of its salvation from Zionism in the
end. That is how badly the culture has suffered at the hands of these
people.
Now I am beginning to sound like John Kaminski so I had
better go and rest my tired brain and leave you to ponder below some hard truths
and facts as reported by Kristin Szremski. Perhaps American college student
troops can help bring Israel
to its senses.
If the voice of the students are not to be heard and are
under attack on college campuses in North America, they should shout louder and
every one of them go on strike, and picket the entire University until it comes
to a standstill.
Large amounts of grant money which supports the University,
most of which comes from AIPAC, ADL and American-Jewish controlled foundations
in America, is important, but students and American student satisfaction are
ESSENTIAL to the Institutions’ survival
****************************************
New moves to curb criticism of Israel in US and Canada
by Kristin Szremski
New legislation in the US
threatens to conflate campus criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism.
A number of new initiatives to curtail freedom of speech by
conflating opposition to Israeli crimes with anti-Semitism are underway in the United States and Canada.
The Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Anti-Semitism
(CPCCA) issued a report in early July recommending the adoption of strict new
standards defining anti-Semitism and the types of speech and campus activities
that would violate them. Its report urged the Canadian government to adopt the
European Union Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia’s definition of
anti-Semitism (“Report on the Inquiry Panel,” 7 July 2011 [PDF]). That
definition suggests that any questioning of whether Israel has the right to exist as a
state that privileges Jews over people of other religions or ethnic backgrounds
amounts to anti-Semitism.
Though the Canadian group is not linked to the Ottawa government, it has
22 parliamentarians as members. Activities it deems as anti-Semitic and,
therefore, calls to be banned, include events such as the Israeli Apartheid
Week that was founded in Toronto
and now takes place on college campuses internationally every March.
The Canadian report is just the latest attempt at stifling
public discourse about Israel.
Free speech and the unimpeded exchange of ideas are also under attack on America’s
college campuses. Pro-Israel supporters have targeted federal funding for
academic institutions, including support for research and academic conferences,
under the pretext that criticism of Israel is “hate speech.”
Federal authorities from the Office of Civil Rights with the
US Department of Education are investigating charges of anti-Semitism against
the University of California Santa Cruz, as well as at other institutions
within the California university system, according to published reports. These
are the first investigations taking place since Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act was re-interpreted in October 2010, allowing Jewish students, as members of
a religious group, to claim discrimination under a provision that previously
applied only to racial and ethnic bigotry.
A “dear colleague” letter issued by the Office of Civil
Rights in October 2010 said that discrimination against a student who is a
member of a religious group violates Title VI when the discrimination is based
on the group’s “actual or perceived shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics …
or when it is based upon the student’s actual or perceived citizenship or
residency in a country whose residents share a dominant religion or a distinct
religious identity,” David Thomas, a US Department of Education spokesman,
explained by email.
Bowing to the Zionist lobby
Major pro-Israel organizations such as the Zionist
Organization of America
and the Anti-Defamation League have lobbied for this re-interpretation for
years. Title VI now can be applied to Jewish students who claim universities
create hostile campus environments if they allow pro-Palestinian events or even
class lectures critical of Israeli policies.
In other words, since Israel bills itself as a Jewish
state, of which all Jews everywhere are automatic citizens, Jewish students can
file complaints of anti-Semitism and discrimination based upon their perceived
ethnicity and citizenship or residency in a country that has a “dominant
religion.”
Dr. Hatem Bazian, a Palestinian-American professor of Near
Eastern and Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, who
founded the Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) there in 2001, takes issue
with the amended understanding of Title VI. While he agrees that Jewish students,
as well as Muslim students, should be protected from discrimination based on
their religious identity under Title VI, he believes the reinterpretation is
actually being used to silence debate about Israel.
“Attempts to silence opposition to the illegal Israeli
occupation and policies is un-American and amounts to political and academic
censorship,” Bazian said via email. (Bazian is also the chairman of American
Muslims for Palestine, the organization with which this writer is employed).
The Title VI reinterpretation and the subsequent case
against Santa Cruz
is part of a growing trend of stifling of protected political speech on college
campuses. Several lecturers and professors have been censured and even denied
tenure because they openly criticized Israeli policies or advocated for
Palestinian rights.
Perhaps the most widely publicized cases are those of former
DePaul University
professor Norman Finkelstein and North
Carolina State University professor Terri Ginsberg,
both of whom were not given tenure because of their open criticism of Israeli
policies in 2007 and 2008, respectively. Ginsberg initiated legal action
against North Carolina
State and her case is
currently on appeal.
Freedom of information denied
The new interpretation has rejuvenated a 29-page complaint
brought against the University
of California Santa Cruz
in June 2009 by lecturer Tammi Rossman-Benjamin, the contents of which have
been kept secret by the Department of Education and university officials.
On 13 April, American Muslims for Palestine
filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for the complaint with the San Francisco Office of
Civil Rights. Federal authorities declined the request on 22 April, saying that
supplying the complaint would “constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy” and that it could “reasonably be expected to interfere with
enforcement proceedings,” both of which are listed as exemptions under the
federal FOIA statute.
What is so troubling in the University of California
Santa Cruz investigation is that the amended
interpretation is being applied retroactively to Rossman-Benjamin’s complaint,
which she filed more than one year before the October 2010 “dear colleague”
letter. No one contacted from the university or the Department of Education would
discuss how an institution can be held liable for something that was not
considered to be a violation at the time it occurred.
“[The Office of Civil Rights] received the UC-Santa Cruz
complaint … on 25 June 2009,” Thomas wrote in an email to American Muslims for Palestine. “On 7 March
2011, OCR formally notified the university and the complainant that OCR was
opening for investigation the allegations that a hostile environment existed
for Jewish students at the university in 2009 in violation of Title VI and that
the university had notice of the hostile environment but did not have a process
to adequately respond to hostile environment complaints.”
Thomas failed to respond to American Muslims for Palestine’s direct
question about how the new interpretation could be applied retroactively,
though it was posed three times in three separate emails on 13 and 15 April.
Jim Burns, a University of California Santa Cruz spokesman,
also would not address that issue and instead referred it back to the
Department of Education’s civil rights office. He did tell American Muslims for
Palestine in an email, however, that the Office
of Civil Rights is reviewing a complaint that “speech on campus that is
critical of Israel
creates a hostile environment for Jewish students.”
“We believe that [the Office of Civil Rights’] investigation
will ultimately conclude that [the University
of California Santa Cruz]
diligently enforces laws, policies and practices that protect our students’
civil rights. But we also believe that our review of the matter with OCR will
provide us with an opportunity to examine our relevant policies and practices
to ensure that is the case,” he added.
If federal investigators find a university to be in
violation of Title VI and the institution does not remedy the situation
satisfactorily it could lose federal funding. This is a worst-case scenario to
be sure, but it is one that seemingly threatens the open exchange of ideas on
college campuses.
“While some of the recent allegations … might well raise a
claim under Title VI, many others simply seek to silence anti-Israel discourse
and speakers. This approach is not only unwarranted under Title VI, it is
dangerous,” Cary Nelson, president of the American Association of University
Presidents (AAUP), and Kenneth Stern of the American Jewish Committee, wrote
recently in an open letter on AAUP’s website.
“The purpose of a university is to have students wrestle
with ideas with which they may disagree, or even better, may make them
uncomfortable. To censor ideas is to diminish education, and to treat students
as fragile recipients of ‘knowledge,’ rather than young critical thinkers,”
they added.
American Muslims for Palestine’s
Hatem Bazian said the implications of the re-interpretation go far beyond free
speech in the classroom and at extra-curricular events. Funding for scholarly
research and academic conferences that bring up “legitimate criticism of Israel” may be
at stake, he said.
“The new interpretation will directly, first and foremost,
impact those who administer Title VI funding, and they for sure will be more
hesitant and will engage in self-censorship in funding research or activities
that are critical of Israel,” Bazian said.
Indeed, the Anti-Defamation League was one of 12 national
organizations that urged the Department of Education to amend its Title VI
interpretation. It may have just been a co-signer in that battle but the ADL
has taken the lead in many high-profile cases to stifle free speech and public
debate in its hundred-year history.
In March, the ADL, along with the American Jewish Committee
and the Bay Area Jewish Community Relations Council, protested an academic
conference at the UC Hastings College of the Law in March entitled “Litigating
Palestine: Can Courts Secure Palestinian Rights?” Their protest was so
effective the university board voted to remove its name and endorsement for the
event and it prevented university Chancellor Frank Wu from making opening
remarks.
UC BERKLEY
DIVESTMENT VOTE
Challenging Israel
on campus
Writing about the incident in the San Francisco Chronicle, Cecilie
Surasky, deputy director of Jewish
Voice for Peace, stated that “Perhaps for the first time in US history,
there is an aggressive challenge to a one-sided narrative that covers up or
justifies ongoing Israeli repression of Palestinians” (“Pressure on law conference threatens free speech,” 21 April
2011).
Surasky added, “The center of that challenge is on campuses,
which is why those who have traditionally adopted knee-jerk defenses of Israeli
policies are attempting to stigmatize or shut down alternative viewpoints.”
The same threats of losing federal funding because of an
“anti-Semitic and hostile environment” are being leveled at Rutgers University
in New Jersey, thanks in large part to a
15-page letter written to the university by Zionist Organization of America President Morton Klein, and copied to
the state’s governor, its US
senators and representatives and other officials.
These recent moves, according to Surasky, “suggest that
legitimate criticism of Israeli policy is being conflated with anti-Semitism.
If this is allowed to happen, then serious debate on Israel’s illegal actions in the
Palestinian territories will be shut down.”
Rossman-Benjamin’s complaint against University of California
Santa Cruz could very well be a test case under
the new interpretation of Title VI. The reinterpretation, when viewed against
the backdrop of professors being censured or denied tenure because of their
political views, could have an adverse affect on the free exchange of ideas on
college campuses at a time when debate and concrete examinations of US foreign
policy in the Middle East is needed more than ever.
Source: Global
Research.ca
***********************
Kristin Szremski is an independent journalist and currently
the director of media and communications for the American Muslims for Palestine.
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