Posted on 01/15/2005 9:21:08 PM PST by nickcarraway
A new documentary accusing Arab professors of intimidating Jewish students has touched off a fierce warof wordson the Upper West Side. Where does free speech end and bullying begin?
Of all the political documentaries that have ignited controversy in the past year, Columbia Unbecoming is by far the shortest, sparest, and lowest-budget. Still, it quickly attracted an illustrious audience. It was first screened in March to a handful of university alumni. Then it was shown to a trustee, then to a high-level administrator, and then eventually to the university provost, Alan Brinkley. By October, Natan Sharansky, Israels minister for Jerusalem and Diaspora Affairs, had seen it, as had the Columbia University president, Lee Bollinger; Judith Shapiro, the president of Barnard College, had seen it too, and she mentioned the film in a speech one day at a national womens conference. That was when the press demanded to see it. It did. A bonfire of ugly headlines about anti-Semitism ensued. The universitys public-affairs department spent the final month of the fall semester at the university gates, braced with a fire hose.
Columbia Unbecoming is a 40-minute reel of testimony from fourteen students and recent graduates who describe, among other things, moments of feeling cowed by professors for expressing pro-Israel sentiment in the classroom. The startling thing about the video, made by a group called the David Project, isnt just that these students showed their faces. Its that they dared to name names, and that all of the professors are in the universitys Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures, known around campus as MEALAC. One student, an Israeli and a former soldier, says a professor named Joseph Massad demanded to know how many Palestinians hed killed; another woman recounts how George Saliba, one of the countrys foremost scholars on Islamic sciences, told her she had no claim to the land of Israel, becauseunlike himshe had green eyes, and therefore was not a Semite. At one moment, the video simply shows a block of text, pulled from an article in the Egyptian Al-Ahram Weekly: Half a century of systematic maiming and murdering of another people has left its deep marks on the faces of these people, it says, referring to Israeli Jews. The way they talk, the way they walk, the way they handle objects, the way they greet each other, the way they look at the world. There is an endemic prevarication to this machinery, a vulgarity of character that is bone-deep and structural to the skeletal vertebrae of its culture. The passage was written by Hamid Dabashi, the former chairman of MEALAC.
Of course, there is more than one side to every story. In a gracious editorial in the Columbia Spectator, Saliba said he didnt remember ever having that conversation about green eyes, but assumes the studentwho got a high mark in his classmisquoted an argument I sometimes make . . . that being born in a specific religion, or converting to one, is not the same as inheriting the color of ones eyes from ones parents and thus does not produce evidence of land ownership of a specific real estate.
Massad, meanwhile, wrote a scathing piece in Al-Ahram, calling Columbia Unbecoming the latest salvo in a campaign of intimidation of Jewish and non-Jewish professors who criticise Israel. The New York Civil Liberties Union decried what it saw as a witch hunt aborning on campus, and many Columbia students and faculty members seemed to agree: A petition went around on Massads behalf; students organized press conferences and rallies; the faculty quickly convened panels on academic freedom, sensing its scholarship was imperiled. On October 29, The Jewish Week reported that Massad was getting hate mail, including a note that said: Get the hell out of America. You are a disgrace and a pathetic, typical Arab liar.
Nestled in the middle of the countrys largest and most diverse city, Columbia University has for a long time lived in fluctuating, ambivalent relation to the world outsidesometimes insulating its students from it, sometimes absorbing all of its wild rhythms and tensions. Whenever the campus does the latter, as it is doing today, it makes headlines. Mayor Michael Bloomberg has weighed in, praising the university for taking the allegations seriously. Anthony Weiner, a Democratic congressman from Brooklyn who happens to want Bloombergs job, has called on Columbia to fire Massad, who is up for tenure this year. (Neither Massad nor his two tenured colleagues, Saliba and Dabashi, would return New Yorks calls for this story.)
All of which puts president Bollinger in an extremely delicate, even unwinnable, position, forcing him to walk a line between protecting his students and defending the scholarly prerogatives of his faculty. We can say universities should never take up, in scholarship or in teaching, really contemporary controversial issues, he says in a conversation just a few days before the new year. But I think that would be a huge mistake. Universities have a major role to play in addressing some of the most difficult, seemingly intractable questions of our time, and in ways that differ from how theyre addressed on the outside.
Its very, very difficult, he concedes. And Columbia, of all the places in the world, is probably the most difficult place to do it. But its probably the most important place to do it. And we have to make it possible to do.
What that means, though, remains to be answered. This could be the beginning of a very long academic war.
One incident that disturbed me and made me feel personally uncomfortablepractically for the rest of the semesteroccurred to me in one of my early Arabic classes. This is Aharon Horowitz speaking. Hes kippah-clad and round-faced, looking directly into the camera. Its one of Columbia Unbecomings more memorable moments. The professor used the word man a na, which means to prevent in Arabic, he continues. I asked him how to use the verb. And he wrote on the board: Israel prevents ambulances from going into refugee camps. Here, Horowitz pauses, then points to his scalp. I have to say, I really dont think he would have said that had I not been wearing this on my head.
Columbia Unbecoming contains a number of such momentsmost of which, as it turns out, took place in 2002 and 2003, during and after Israeli incursions into the West Bank and the building of the security wall. Students describe professors who became red in the face and shouting when discussing the Mideast conflict; they recount how professors Saliba and Dabashi abruptly canceled classes in order to attend a pro-Palestinian rally. But even assuming these incidents happened as described, do they really constitute intimidation? Or do they merely constitute, say, obnoxiousness? Or gratuitous political speechifying? Is a professor allowed to have politics in his classroom? With the exception of the most unambiguous casesand the film contains fewintimidation is a subjective notion, a devil without contours. What one student finds intimidating, another may find provocative, even intoxicating.
Im sure youve had conversations where things grew increasingly heated and you said things you wish, in retrospect, you hadnt, says Zachary Lockman, chairman of the Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies department at New York University. So okay, that happens. But as a student, you can say, Okay, the guys a schmuck. And then you can move on. He emphasizes that he hasnt seen Columbia Unbecoming and that he himself wouldnt choose to say some of the things the professors are alleged to have said. Thats not grounds for firing somebody, he says. And in part, there may be an effort here to take advantage of the American culture of victimization, right? To frame this in terms of harassment. It gives you some kind of leverage. Theres also a piece of this that suggests students are really stupid. But theyre not. They have a capacity to filter things and to figure out where their professors are coming from.
Among the films allegations, none claims the professors punished the students with bad grades for their points of view. In fact, Noah Liben, an affable and handsome kid and the only interviewee in Columbia Unbecoming to have taken a course with Massad, told me in an interview he got an A-minus. (Though he added that he wrote a final paper based on an idea he didnt really believe in.) In Al-Ahram, Massad points out that he and Liben exchanged e-mails all semester, which hardly suggests that Liben felt cowed by his behavior. Liben told me that this may be true, but hes thick-skinned. Not all of his classmates, he says, were the same way.
Unfortunately, there are likely to be problems in any situation where people come to a place where they meet very different people with very different ideas, says Rashid Khalidi, director of Columbias Middle East Institute. He is bearded, compact, powerfully charismatic; one of his colleagues, attempting to sum up his intellect, told me, As smart as you think a person can be, hes smarter.
Khalidi is Columbias spiritual heir to Edward Said, the handsome, prolific, and flamboyantly controversial champion of the Palestinian cause who died of leukemia in September 2003. He has a $2.5 million endowed chair in Saids name and is frequently called upon, as Said was, to explain the ways of the Arab and Muslim world to the West. (When Yasser Arafat died, Khalidi spoke to no less than 34 media outlets in a 24-hour period.) From 1991 to 1993, he served as an adviser to the Palestinian delegation in the Madrid and Washington peace negotiations; on a more problematic note, a rumor persists that he once also served as a spokesman for the PLO, thanks to a 1982 news story that identified him this way. Right now, its late December, and Khalidi is sitting in his corner office, a rumpus room of comfortable chairs and scholarly clutter, talking at roughly twice the rate of average human speech.
Most kids who come to Columbia come from environments where almost everything theyve ever thought was shared by everybody around them, he says. And this is not true, incidentally, of Arab-Americans, who know that the ideas spouted by the major newspapers, television stations, and politicians are completely at odds with everything they know to be true. Whereas kids from, I dont know, Teaneck. Or Scarsdale. Or Levittown. Or Long Island City. Many of them have never been exposed to a dissonant idea, a different idea, as far as the Middle East is concerned. And so you have a situation where its going to be problematic.
He swings around to his computer, starts surfing the university Website. Were not in an environment where Jewish students, as they were in the history of the Ivy League, are discriminated against, he says. Indeed, the university Hillel estimates that roughly a quarter of Columbias undergraduates, or about 2,000 students, are Jewish. Have you looked at the Hillel Website here? Khalidi asks. It blew my mind! He finds it, starts to scroll. Look at this. They have ten, twelve paid employees. (Well, at least seven, and five rabbinic interns.)
The field has been under attack for years, and this is a huge club in that attack.
He looks back at me with intense blue eyes. Im not saying that professors should necessarily ever do certain things. Im just saying that in a polarized environment, and in a situation where overall theres no reason for a person whos Jewish at Columbia to feel persecuted, well, whatever might have happened in the classroom in the hothouse atmosphere of 20022003 has to be put in that context.
Indeed, in a postSeptember 11, post-security-wall, and post-Iraq-invasion world, it is bitterly challenging to have a calm conversation on the Middle East. These are times when our religions, nationalities, and even political opinions are as essential to our identities as our gender or the color of our skin. Given the intellectual and emotional connection that some professors of Mideast studies have to their subject matter, and given the intellectual and emotional connection some of their students have to that same subject matter, its startling, in a way, that these clashes dont happen more often. In a way, its a miracle they dont happen all the time.
The David Project is a grassroots, six-person organization based in Boston. Like Campus Watch, a Website devoted to monitoring departments of Middle East studies around the country for pro-Arab bias, the organization was born in the aftermath of September 11, when the moment seemed right to influence public discourse about Israel. And like Campus Watch, the David Project directs its efforts almost exclusively at universities, where, for the past 35 or so years, sympathy for the Palestinian cause has been easier to express than anywhere else in American public lifeand where Israel is often considered politically incorrect to support. Last year, the organization assisted Rachel Fish, a graduate student, in her drive to force Harvards divinity school to return a $2.5 million gift from the leader of the United Arab Emirates. (Fish succeeded, and she is now the David Projects New York representative.)
We thought there was dishonest discussion and discourse about the Mideast on college campuses, says Ralph Avi Goldwasser, the David Projects executive director and executive producer of the film. And we found that students who support Israel were not getting support from the Jewish community. In the past two years, he and his colleagues have visited Harvard, Northeastern, and MIT, trying to assess the needs of Jewish students. But at no place did they find a problem more pronounced, he says, than at Columbia. About 30 students showed up, he says, describing his visit last year. We were amazed. We thought, With all these organizations in New York, with a YankeesRed Sox game on TV, why would 30 students listen to two unknown Jews from Boston? As the students were describing their troubles, one of them, Daniella Kahane, proposed they make a video testimonial to show alumni. The only time Columbia reacts, explains Goldwasser, is when donors or contributors say something. Thats the only reason theyre reacting now.
The film is still a work-in-progress. The David Project keeps adding and cutting material; in the latest version, Rabbi Charles Sheer, who has served Hillel at Columbia University for 34 years, appears, recalling the bitter written responses he got from Dabashi and Saliba after he wrote an editorial in the Spectator. One of them [the letters] said it was like I am starting the Spanish Inquisition and that no rabbi has a right to question the principles of academic freedom, he says.
Indeed, that letter, also published in the Spectator, came from Dabashi, who has never underreacted when faced with the slings and arrows of the opposition. Back in September, after receiving an angry e-mail about his Al-Ahram story from an Israeli grad student, Dabashi wrote to the provost, requesting extra campus-police protection because the student had served in the military. (I see nothing threatening about the message, the provost wrote back.)
Recently, a professor of Hebrew literature and an old lion of the MEALAC department, Dan Miron, has also stepped forward and said that the videos allegations could very well be true. I am the wailing wall of the Jewish students here, he says. They come and tell me that when they dared, in class, to take issue with the professors views of Israel, theyd be humiliated, laughed at, dealt with in a brutal way. Were talking about dozens of students.
But the film has also earned plenty of critics. A student named Eric Posner is perhaps the most vocalwhen the film was first screened on campus, he showed up wearing a sign that read I SERVED IN THE ISRAELI ARMY & I LOVE JOSEPH MASSADand hes outraged that neither he nor any other MEALAC majors were invited to appear in it. He says Ariel Beery, a student prominently featured in the film and the student-body president, approached him about participating but lost interest when Posner informed him hed never experienced any anti-Semitism in the department. Yeah, Posner says he told him, they keep three Cossacks in a storage closet and take them out on a weekly basis to rape and beat the Jews.
Beery, who at 19 elected to make aliyahthe Hebrew term for choosing to adopt Israel as ones homeremembers nothing of the sort, saying their exchange was brief and harmless. He also doesnt understand why Posner has made this film his bête noire. Weve said this every time weve screened the film: If this werent so complex a situation, it would have been caught a long time ago, Beery says. It would have been a categorical issue. But it isnt.
The participants in Columbia Unbecoming argue that their film is about academic intimidation, nothing more. But is it really? In the context of the Mideast conflict, it is hard to separate the question of intimidation from the question of academic bias: bias in the way Mideast studies is taught, bias in the way certain professors think, bias in campus sentiment about Israel.
Columbia Unbecoming is not a very professionally made film, concedes Miron. Hes sitting in his office, another shadow box of books and papers. Its not even a very useful piece of propaganda, he adds. They were slim on facts and gave much too much space to emotional reactions. But since the issue is there, it erupted. The phone rings, and he takes it, speaking in a mellow Hebrew. He hangs up, then looks at me. But I see [classroom conduct] as the minor problem, he continues. The major problemand the one which, quite frankly, I dont know how to deal withis the intellectual content of what is being said in the classroom. Israel is being delegitimized. Students are learning that Zionism, as an ideology, is racism. This is, in fact, precisely what Massad has written, in both scholarly and journalistic outlets. Its this premise that has created a flurry of Israel-divestment petitions across the country, including at Columbia. Over 100 members of the faculty have signed it.
Before the Second World War, departments of Middle East studies devoted themselves to the study of language, history, literature, and philology. There was nothing especially contemporary about their approach. But during the Cold War, the United States urgently needed scholars who understood the culture, politics, and dynamics of the region in the effort to keep communism and radical nationalism at bay. Area studies emerged as an academic genrepeople became specialists in Latin America, Africa, the Middle Eastand Middle East institutes began cropping up at prestigious universities, funded in part by government money. Then came the rise of the New Left and Israels 1967 occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. Professors became radicalized. And at Columbia University, Lionel Trilling, a liberal academic in the English department who also happened to be a Jew, hired Edward Said.
Said made his reputation in the sixties by doing work on Joseph Conrad. It wasnt until 1978 that he wrote Orientalism, an academic blockbuster whose basic claim was that the West had created a certain image of the Orientmeaning the fragmented remains of the Ottoman Empirethat in fact had little to do with what the region was actually like. The book had a profound effect on Middle East studies everywhere. Too much so, some would argue.
Orientalism didnt just propound a theory, says Martin Kramer, author of Ivory Towers on Sand: The Failure of Middle Eastern Studies in America and a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. It became a manifesto for affirmative action. If you were a dean or a provost or a department chairman, you had to ask yourself, How can I be sure Im not appointing an Orientalist? At Columbia, Middle East studies became a rogue department, a friend-brings-a-friend department, and the guys who came in on Saids coattails didnt have his finesse. They were just garden-variety extremists.
In Kramers view, the problem with Columbias Middle East studies departmentand such departments generallyis the same problem that afflicts so much of the academy: insufficient intellectual diversity. We usually assume that the university should provide a smorgasbord, says Kramer. But here, the tendency is to reinforce their ranks with like-minded people. Which may make the faculty meetings and sherry parties more pleasant. But the students lose.
The university should have looked at MEALAC five or ten years ago, says Richard Bulliet, a historian and colleague of Khalidis. Its become locked into a postmodernist, postcolonialist point of view, one that wasnt necessarily well adapted to giving students instruction about the Middle East. He adds that politicizing a curriculum, or what some call advocacy teaching, isnt always a bad thing. Weve had advocacy in the classroom for a long time, he says. But in the areas where its most visible, like black studies and womens studies, the point of view tends to coincide with the outlook of the Columbia communityno one feels you have to give the slaveholders or male-chauvinist pigs point of view. He pauses for emphasis. But here, he concludes, we have an area where no consensus exists. And thats the problem.
But lets suppose, for a moment, that many Middle East studies departments do lack the full seven-octave range of intellectual opinion. Lets even assume that they skew in an Arabist direction. What NYUs Lockman wants to know is this: Why is that such a scandal? I think you can see this the other way, he says. That universities or these departments are very much in the minority in the larger American setting. What you get from the media or government officials on the Middle East, the whole way the debate is framed, is very different.
And perhaps because Arabist voices are seldom heard in American life, Middle East studies departments have for a long time found themselves under scrutiny, which has only intensified in recent years. In the fall of 2003, the House of Representatives passed a resolution calling for an independent advisory board to vet all area-studies programs for intellectual diversity before giving them government money. (It later died in the Senate.) When Columbia revealed that the United Arab Emirates had contributed 8 percent of the funding for Khalidis endowed chair, or $200,000, it created a big stir. (Maybe the 8 percent solution is a dangerous proportiona controlling interest for a regional superpower like the United Arab Emirates, Khalidi says. Pause. I hope my sarcasm came across just now.)
A new generation of Israeli historiansTom Segev, Avi Shlaim, and Benny Morris prominently among themhave also emerged in recent years, challenging the received wisdom about the foundations of their country. Theres a very mysterious process that happens in the academy whereby, little by little, the center of controversy changes, says Bruce Robbins, a Columbia comp-lit professor and co-author of an open letter from American Jews to the Bush administration that ran in the New York Times. And therefore, the center around which balance can be demanded changes. You can debate why the Palestinians were driven out of Israel in 1948. But most people would agree that they were driven out, whether theyre pro-Israel or not. So if you want to argue, you argue why. But you cant say, as my mother would say, There are no Palestinians.
I ask Robbins what he thinks of Dabashis essay in Al-Ahram, which referred to the vulgarity of [the Israeli] character. But theres a rational kernel under it, right? asks Robbins. Its something that gets discussed all the time in Israel, what they call checkpoint syndrome. You give 18-year-olds automatic weapons and godlike power, and there are measurable psychological effects. Occupying is not good for the occupier.
From a quick glimpse at the university course catalogue, its clear that Columbia hardly deprives its students of opportunities to learn about the Mideast from a pro-Israeli, or at least ideologically neutral, point of view. In fact, says Bulliet, at one point during the eighties, a rabbi from Englewood taught a course on the conflict from an unquestionably Zionist point of view. Today, however, the course thats focused most narrowly on the conflictand is offered with the most regularityis taught from an unquestionably Palestinian perspective, by Joseph Massad. Hes extremely frank about it. On day one, students say, he tells his class they shouldnt expect balance. Theres even a disclaimer in his syllabus.
The most troubling incident described in Columbia Unbecomingto me, anywayinvolved Massad. It was the moment when Tomy Schoenfeld, a former Israeli soldier, says the professor demanded to know how many Palestinians hed killed. I asked, What? How come its relevant to this discussion? he says in the video. And he said, No, its relevant to the discussion, and I demand an answer. How many Palestinians have you killed? And I said, Im not going to answer, but Im going to ask you a question: How many members of your family celebrated on September 11, if were starting with stereotypes?
Later, in Al-Ahram, Massad said hed never met Schoenfeld and had no record of Schoenfelds taking his class. Which is true, says Schoenfeld, in the strictly Clintonian sense. He never did take Massads class; he attended a lecture Massad gave at a Columbia sorority. And Schoenfeld says he didnt formally introduce himself; he quickly identified himself by name and as an Israeli during the Q&A that followed. But he insists there was really no more context than that: no heated discussion beforehand, no glares. He simply raised his hand, and this was the abrupt response he got.
I ask Schoenfeld if Massads question happened to hit a nervewhether, in fact, he did feel at all conflicted about his service in the Israel Defense Forces. His response contained worlds: how Massad may have bullied a potential ally; how any person in Massads circumstances, in an unguarded mood, might have done so. Massad is from Jordan, more than 60 percent of whose population is Palestinian. I have no doubts about my service, Schoenfeld answers. Because at least when I was in the military, we had specific rules about how you can fire and who you can fire upon. The military in Israel is mostly very ethical.
He stops here. But its hard to be ethical when youre conquering, he says. No matter how you slice it. The reality is that Israel controls 3 million people. And weve ruined their lives. The Palestinians have to go through checkpoints. Every family there has one kid who died. I mean, Im No. 1 for security. But an Israeli soldier should not stand and have the dilemma about whether an ambulance should cross or not cross, because maybe they hide . . . He trails off. Im not saying we should just give them everything they want. I think the occupations a necessity. But definitely we should understand its an occupation.
Determining academic intimidation is a lot like determining sexual harassment. It all boils down to two competing narratives, a hologram whose very image all depends on where you stand. The problem in this instance, unfortunately, is that people like Khalidi, who are passionately invested in the future of Mideast studies, are forced to defend their colleagues before knowing whether the allegations against them are true. Columbia Unbecoming has stained his discipline, sent his colleagues into despair.
What are we supposed to do? he asks, choking back obvious frustration, his vocal cords so taut they sound as if theyre being strangled by snakes. Wait until this idiot wind has blown through? There are people who are trying to shut down Middle East studies. This field has been under attack for years, and this is a huge club in that attack. Im supposed to fold my hands and let people batter us about the head because of what may or may not have happened in the spring of 2002?
These are allegations between faculty members and specific students that were not handled, in my view, properly at the time by the university, continues Khalidi. Or since.
He leans into his desk. You know, he concludes, it could be the case that there are students who have serious grievances and its the case that threats to our academic freedom have developed over the last two years. This is a situation where you have to assume its possible to walk and chew gum at the same time.
On a grim, wintry day, I sit with Lee Bollinger in his office in Low Memorial Library. Hes handsome and peacockish in a sportscaster sort of waylongish gray hair, semi-iridescent blue stripes on his suitbut clearly exhausted from this contretemps. In my view, we have failed in making ourselves as available to talk about these issues as we could have, he concedes. Im not satisfied with the processes we have for students to be able to say what they were saying in the film.
Bollinger is a First Amendment scholar, a useful credential for a man whos been forced to fathom the limits of academic freedom. Yet over the course of his presidency, he has also doubtless discovered that academic freedom, or the privilege of teaching and pursuing the ideas of ones choosing, is often a very hard notion to defend to the public. Not everyone agrees it should go uncheckedjust ask anyone involved in stem-cell researchand complicating matters even further is how dependent universities have become on outsiders for money: parents who pay tens of thousands annually, alums, corporations, the government. Many of these contributors believe they have the same kinds of rights as shareholders in a company, which, theoretically at least, they do not. (At this moment, in fact, Columbia is planning a huge capital drive, and some of its donors are active in national and international Jewish causesa fact that cant be entirely lost on Bollinger.)
In response to Columbia Unbecoming, Bollinger asked Columbias provost to convene a panel to investigate the incidents in the film and the more general issue of academic freedom. Sadly, the move only managed to infuriate everyone: Faculty saw it as a creepy, McCarthy-like incursion into their territory, and the students couldnt help but notice that the five-person committee included two professors whod signed the campus divestment petition, and a third whod advised Massad on his thesis.
But intimidation, as Miron points out, may be the easiest of the administrations problems to unknot. Questions of intellectual bias are much harder to sort through. While president of the University of Michigan, Bollinger committed himself to racial diversity, spending years defending its policy of affirmative action; today, he says hes equally committed to intellectual diversity. Which may not augur well for professor Massads longevity at Columbia, no matter how favorably disposed the provosts committee may be to him. I believe a disclaimer before starting your course is insufficient, says Bollinger. It doesnt inoculate you from criticism for being one-sided or intolerant in the classroom. He hastens to add, Thats not to prejudge any claims here. But if youre asking, in the abstract, Can a faculty member satisfy the ideal of good teaching by simply saying at the beginning, Im going to teach one side of a controversy and I dont want to hear any other side and if you dont like this, please dont take my course, my view is, thats irresponsible teaching.
But teaching, at least, happens within the academys walls. What happens beyond, what his scholars do and sayover this Bollinger has little control, even if lobbying groups and members of Congress and the media are baying for retribution. These are polarized times, times of orange alerts and preemptive war. He looks over the offending paragraph in Dabashis essay in Al-Ahram. I want to completely disassociate myself from those ideas, he says. Theyre outrageous things to say, in my view. He leans back in his chair and pushes the essay away. But what a faculty member says in the course of public debate, we will not take into account within the university. Thats a dangerous slope. All I can do is express my views.
I have to be careful, as president, because my disagreeing can be taken as a form of chilling speech, he admits. But I have free speech, too.
Ping!
Interesting. When I was at the University of Chicago, it was about 40% Asian and 25% Jewish. That meant that even us white Christians were in the minority. None of us really cared as we were too busy STUDYING to concern ourselves about racial issues.
BTW: I wish Jewish alumni of Columbia would hold their donations until this matter is cleared up.
President Bollinger:
He looks over the offending paragraph in Dabashis essay in Al-Ahram. I want to completely disassociate myself from those ideas, he says. Theyre outrageous things to say, in my view. He leans back in his chair and pushes the essay away. But what a faculty member says in the course of public debate, we will not take into account within the university. Thats a dangerous slope. All I can do is express my views.
I have to be careful, as president, because my disagreeing can be taken as a form of chilling speech, he admits. But I have free speech, too.
The President of Columbia University is an incoherent, morally bankrupt, gibbering idiot, for the record and on the record, and no one cares. How much do parents spend to send their darlings to this guy to become educated?
I read this article in detail several days ago. The author seemed to do his best to obfuscate the issue by making it look like a he said--he said. But from what I divined, the main theme is that the arabist professors and the administration are shocked that the jewish students actually have the gall to fight back. And that simply doesn't fit their worldview.
And they are totally discombobulated.
So the Jews are the ruling class, the Arabs are the victims, and anything that the Arabs do has to be seen in the context of their oppression by the nasty Jews.
And this is from Rashid Khalidi, who, a colleague says, is smarter than the smartest person anyone else can think of.
I wonder if President Bollinger would feel the same way if Dabashi had said 'We need to kill as many ni***** as possible.'
He'd be out of CU so fast his head would still be spinning.
The lack of coherent thought on the part of a University President is astounding.
L
Leftist, socialist, racist. All of them are.
As a Jewish alumnus of Columbia University (college, journalism and law school), and a passionate defender of Israel, I have no intention of withholding my donations on account of this issue. I gained an enormous amount of knowledge from my years at Columbia, and I have seen no indication that this issue involves more than the MEALAC department at Columbia.
Moreover, in my view, a complaint by a giving alumnus carries more weight than a complaint by one who has not given in several years.
I think that, now that this issue has seen the light of day, the situation will be corrected.
Unfortunately the Jewish liberals created this monster. They embraced every 1960's anti US, anti capitalism, multiculturalism, political correctness. Today their grandchildren and our country are bearing the brunt of the hate. The sad part is these liberal Jews will still support academic freedom even if the professor is calling for the destruction of their homeland (the US), their only refuge from prosecution (Israel) and in the end their race (the Jewish people and liberals Jews not excluded).
"I think that, now that this issue has seen the light of day, the situation will be corrected."
Really? Based on what? It sounds more like a wish than a thought.
True. ... extremist clap-trap is the harvest that was sown by the red diaper baby generation 30 years ago.
"As a Jewish alumnus of Columbia University (college, journalism and law school), and a passionate defender of Israel, I have no intention of withholding my donations on account of this issue."
LOL. And the extremist pro-PLO professors wont go anywhere either.
And sheep will get shorn.
Sadly, I am in total agreement with your statement.
It is wishful thinking, but I don't think unreasonable.
There has been so much publicity that it has become a major distraction to the administration. It is sullying the reputation of the school, and so has to be fixed.
Massey is up for tenure this year, and if he doesn't get it, this result will silence some of the most vociferous criticism. In addition, I read in another article that many alumni are threatening to withhold significant contributions unless the situation is resolved.
I don't think that Bollinger (a fairly new president) would want to sacrifice Columbia's reputation on the alter of pro-Palestinianism.
These aren't red diaper babies. These are Arabs.
I was beside myself reading some of the diarrhea spewn by some of these professors.
According to the article, this isn't the case. Lionel Trilling -- who was not a radical liberal -- brought Edward Said to Columbia. In a sleight of hand, while Said was a tenured professor in the English departent, he used his influence to fill the Middle East studies department with anti-Israel Arabs.
The article does not imply that Columbia itself has become a hotbed of anti-Israel sentiment. In fact, it says that one of the Israelis, Ariel Beery, is the president of his class. Moreover, Columbia has a very active Jewish community, including many Orthodox Jewish students who proudly wear their yarmulkes in public without fear of assault or battery.
I hope you are right that the situation will be corrected. Obviously the university President and the professors are worried about their "academic freedom". But, what exactly is "academic freedom"? Are professors not to be teach their students all sides of an issue? Are they not to teach and impart knowledge, rather than propagandize? If they are deprived of the right to propagandize, have they lost their academic freedom?
I do not advocate interfering with a professor's freedom of speech, but doesn't a professor assume the responsibility of restricting his speech to some extent when he accepts the position of professor? I believe CEOs of corporations probably censor themselves in what they say to employees and to the general public to avoid lawsuits and problems in the competitive marketplace. It seems that some discretion should also be expected from a professor.
Certainly, when a professor deals with a student, there is a power difference and, usually, a knowledge difference. Yet, Zachary Lockman, the chairman of the MEALAC department says "There's also a piece of this that suggests students are really stupid. But they're not. They have a capacity to filter things and to figure out where their professors are coming from." While I agree that students are not stupid, they are usually young, impressionable, less educated than the professors and subject to the professors' whims on grades. Mostly, it seems students should be learning, not "filtering" and trying to "figure out where their professors are coming from."
Perhaps most disturbing to me was President Bollinger's reaction to the writing of Hamid Dabashi, former chairman of MEALAC, in the Egyptian Al-Ahram Weekly. As base and horrific as Mr. Dabashi's statement is, President Bollinger says that "what a faculty member says in the course of public debate, we will not take into account within the university...". Apparently even if the statement the faculty member makes seems to reveal deep-seated anti-Semitism, "academic freedom" excuses it.
ps. Pirhana, I suggest that see what Ariel Beery has to say.
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