'Student
Voices' Exposes Anti-Semitism in the College Classroom
by Cinnamon Stillwell
The Algemeiner
July 26, 2015
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The testimonials of more than 100 students from almost 50 colleges and
universities in twenty states tell of "being intimidated, harassed
or bullied as a Jewish and/or a pro-Israel student," according to Student
Voices (SV). A project of the AMCHA Initiative, which
combats campus anti-Semitism, the data at SV spans the past
year-and-a-half, and typically originates with student op-eds and
articles from sympathetic media.
Although the majority of cited incidents involve Students for Justice
in Palestine (SJP), the Muslim Student Association (MSA), student
government groups, and the BDS movement, several of the examples involve
professors of Middle East studies, many of whom are themselves BDS activists and supporters.
For example, students at Northeastern
University in Boston recount classroom bias and intimidation by M.
Shahid Alam, an economist whose research interests include Islamic
civilization and Zionism, and who once declared it
"a sign of distinction" to be called an anti-Semite:
At Northeastern University, professor Muhammad Shahid Alam demonizes
Israel, delegitimizes Jewish history, and infringes on his students' free
speech by shutting down any differing views. A non-Jewish student that
dropped his class stated that, "if someone does raise a
counterpoint, he uses semantics to twist it around and try to tear
whoever asked the question apart."
At Rutgers
University, a Middle Eastern studies major describes professors who
talk about wiping Israel off the map:
Senior Talia Friedman of Teaneck, a Middle Eastern studies and
economics major, said she has heard professors refer to Israel as
Palestine during classes. "It's right on the map as the sovereign
state of Israel," said Friedman, a student leader at Chabad and a
member of the Rutgers University Student Assembly. "When I tell them
that it is the sovereign state of Israel, not Palestine, they say, 'Right
— Israel, formerly known as Palestine.'"
A University
of Chicago student, as part of the daily onslaught of campus
anti-Israel vitriol, reports on a lecture from Steven
Salaita, the former Virginia Tech professor who, after being spurned
by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for his hateful,
anti-Semitic tweets,
is now
heading to the American University of Beirut (AUB) for the 2015/16
academic year:
I went to see Steven Salaita, a professor whose job offer was
rescinded at University of Illinois, presumably because of a string of
strongly worded anti-Israeli tweets like "I wish all the f—ing West
Bank settlers would go missing" after three Israeli boys were kidnapped,
or "Zionists: transforming 'antisemitism' from something horrible
into something honorable since 1948." At the event, Salaita painted a picture that
could be interpreted to suggest Jews control academia and silence views
they don't like, while repeating several times that he is not an
anti-Semite.
Similarly, a student at the University
of Missouri conveys frustration that Saree
Makdisi, a University of California, Los Angeles English professor,
BDS supporter,
and well-known anti-Israel ideologue, was
invited to speak on her campus with no opposing viewpoints offered:
Recently, six university departments sponsored a talk by author Saree
Makdisi, who has said it is more important to eliminate the Jewish state
than to create a Palestinian one. . . . "But when Students
Supporting Israel or CUFI [Christians United for Israel] asks these same
departments to co-sponsor events, we either don't hear back or we hear,
'we cannot help you.' It's not fair."
Meanwhile, at Wellesley
College, the Jewish representative for the school's "mulfi-faith
council" attended an SJP-sponsored meeting and encountered Sa'ed
Adel Atshan, a Tufts University lecturer, BDS activist,
and proponent
of "pinkwashing" – the claim that Israel
touts gay rights to downplay its alleged oppression of the Palestinians:
Last week [Rebecca] Berger attended a meeting . . . featuring speaker
Sa'ed [Adel] Atshan, a [former] postdoctoral fellow at Brown University's
Watson Institute for International Studies and a lecturer in peace and
justice studies at Tufts University. At the meeting, attended by 60 to 70
students, Atshan said that the Jewish state was established in its
present location "only because Uganda wasn't available," said
Berger. "He equated all non-Zionist Jews with Jews of conscience,
which makes Zionist Jews something else, I guess," she said.
"It was extremely destructive, and with the posters and the lack of
face-to-face dialogue, added to the stalemate on campus."
No doubt there are countless such instances on U.S. college campuses
that remain untold because students are intimidated into silence, or
simply choose to keep their heads down and get on with their studies. It
doesn't help that those who do share experiences of classroom bias are
often falsely accused by the insular, academic world of "reporting"
professors and of being "spies." But
the outside world must learn their stories to help fight the return of
anti-Semitism as a socially acceptable bigotry. Such "student
voices" need to be heard.
Cinnamon Stillwell is the West Coast Representative for Campus Watch, a project
of the Middle East Forum.
She can be reached at stillwell@meforum.org.
This
text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an
integral whole with complete and accurate information provided about its
author, date, place of publication, and original URL.
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