Academic year ends with students and faculty policing Israel-related events. Antisemitism is normalized as BDS-connected academics and politicians make absurd claims regarding Jews and Israel.

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The academic year ended with BDS-led policing of student and faculty connections to Israel, including overseas study, events, and clubs. At the same time the normalization of antisemitism by BDS connected politicians and academics expanded. Ludicrous claims regarding Jews, Israel and Palestinians complement accusations that Jews and Israel are ‘whites’ and ‘white supremacists.’ BDS led antisemitism has thus aligned completely with ascendant racialist narratives. As these have spread from campus to politics and increasingly the corporate world, the threats to Jews and Israel expand.

Analysis

The most prominent aspect of BDS in May was the expanded policing of campus expressions of support for Israel. This took several forms. At DePaul University the faculty council officially condemned a faculty member after writing an op-ed in which he expressed the idea that there should not be a Palestinian state. Calling the statement “morally objectionable,” the faculty council went on to ‘reaffirm’ the faculty member’s freedom of speech. Local Palestinian students claimed that they were made ‘unsafe’ by the op-ed. The university provost also condemned the op-ed.

Also at the institutional level, the New York University Department of ‘Social and Cultural Analysis’ voted to boycott the university’s Tel Aviv campus, on the basis of Israel’s laws barring BDS supporters from entry and on its alleged discrimination against Arab and Palestinian students. The proclamation of ‘noncooperation’ “seeks to protect the department from complicity with these forms of racial, religious, and political profiling.”

No evidence of Israel barring or harassing NYU students was cited, and the allegations regarding Arab and Palestinian students in general were vague. The university quietly expressed disapproval of the resolution. The university’s branch of the American Association of University Professors issued a statement in support of the department and criticized the university’s low-key disapproval while over 140 medical school faculty members condemned the department and the university’s growing atmosphere of antisemitism. A student also filed a lawsuit against the university alleging it had permitted antisemitic harassment and intimidation.

The administration’s indulgence of anti-Israel sentiment was demonstrated by a graduate commencement speaker who lauded BDS, called Israel and ‘apartheid state,’ and called President Trump a ‘fascist.” The university president, who was videoed applauding the speech, demonstrated NYU’s duplicity. The university president had earlier given the local SJP chapter a presidential award and then denied involvement. The administration later issued a statement calling the commencement speech “objectionable” and reiterated the university’s opposition to BDS. The speaker (whose antisemitic tweets were later exposed) will assume a position teaching journalism at Northwestern University in the fall, which in turn preemptively issued a statement defending his free speech rights but reiterating its opposition to BDS.

At the student level there were a number of incidents in which Israel-related individuals and groups were subjected to discrimination and abuse. At Williams College the student government voted not to recognize a pro-Israel group, a decision that was defended on the basis of Israeli ‘state violence.’ The student recording the minutes of the meeting, however, indicated the tone of the discussion, noting “clearly anti-Semitic things I didn’t type down. I want repeat them, but I didn’t type those things down.” The college president expressed disapproval and the group was recognized was only after external pressure.

At Brandeis and the University of California at San Diego pro-Israel displays were repeatedly vandalized with pro-Palestinian slogans. In contrast, there were no reports of ‘apartheid walls’ being defaced. BDS supporters disrupted a public pro-Israel event at NYU while at the University of Washington the local SJP chapter protested the inclusion of Hillel at a campus wide cultural festival. After running a pro-Israel op-ed, the editors of the Tufts student newspaper apologized in a follow-up piece. These incidents were in addition to a spate of ‘apartheid walls’ and demands that Hillels cease Birthright trips.

More positively, a student judicial board at the University of California at Davis voted unanimously that the BDS resolution adopted by the student government was unconstitutional, while the student government at California Polytechnic passed a resolution condemning antisemitism and effectively banning BDS. The University of Michigan also issued guidelines stipulating that faculty must write letters of recommendation solely on the basis of merit. After a bitter lead up, faculty at the University of Cape Town voted to ‘defer’ a decision on BDS pending further consultation. At Columbia University, a BDS proposal in the guise of ‘human rights’ resolution was narrowly defeated in the joint faculty –student senate.

The impunity with which BDS efforts are proceeding was demonstrated by the weak condemnations of ‘eviction notices’ distributed at Emory University by the local ‘Students for Justice in Palestine’ chapter. The university characterized these as not being antisemitic but the SJP chapter protested all criticism of its actions and demanded its critics be censured. The SJP chapter at Columbia University similarly called for its critics to be boycotted while those who disrupted the event at NYU complained about hostile comments they received. At UCLA the student government passed a resolution declaring that the SJP chapter was ‘not antisemitic.’

The policing of faculty and students by the BDS movement and the repeated examples of ‘deplatforming’ are part of a larger movement towards censorship in the universities. Examples include removal of a law professor from a housemaster position at Harvard after students protested his role as a defense attorney for Harvey Weinstein, student demands that cultural critic Camile Paglia be removed from her faculty position over her statements regarding transgender issues, demands that a Chik-fil-A franchise be removed from campus, the firing of a Cambridge University sociologist after protests regarding his research on human intelligence, and expanding efforts to ban traces of ‘imperialists’ including Winston Churchill.

These destructive trends have meshed with the long term efforts to ‘decolonize the curriculum’ by banishing Euro-Americans and Euro-American studies, and tarring such fields (and all critics) as ‘white supremacist,’ ‘alt right’ or ‘racist.’ In turn, the speed at which the humanities and social sciences are collapsing, measured by student enrollments, is accelerating. In response, efforts to expand ‘social justice’ into the sciences have expanded, much to their detriment.

Parallel to this are explicit efforts by the BDS movement to describe Jews and Israel as ‘white’ and ‘white supremacist.’ In response to an op-ed that described how Israel was not comprised of “privileged and powerful white Europeans,” academic and prominent BDS supporter Marc Lamont Hill claimed that ‘Mizrahi Jew’ was an ‘identity category’ invented as part of “the racial and political project that transformed Palestinian Jews (who lived peacefully with other Palestinians) into the 20th century identity category of ‘Mizrahi’ as a means of detaching them from Palestinian identity.” This preposterous assertion is simultaneously historical revisionism that denies the history of Palestinian Arab hostility towards indigenous Jews and bolsters the allegation that Israel is a ‘white’ ‘settler colonialist enterprise.’

Hill’s comments were echoed in a talk at UCLA by another BDS supporter, San Francisco State University Arab and Muslim Ethnicities Professor Rabab Abdulhadi, who called Israelis ‘white supremacists’ who want to ‘ethnically cleanse’ the Middle East, a conference at the University of Massachusetts which featured prominent BDS supporter Linda Sarsour, and a BDS supporting speaker at Columbia University who expressed ‘understanding’ for antisemitism.

Not to be outdone, in an interview leading BDS supporter Representative Rashida Tlaib stated:

There’s always kind of a calming feeling when I think of the tragedy of the Holocaust, that it was my ancestors – Palestinians – who lost their land and some lost their lives, their livelihood, their human dignity and their existence, in many ways, has been wiped out… in the name of trying to create a safe haven for Jews, post-Holocaust, post-tragedy and the horrific persecution of Jews across the world at that time. And I love the fact that it was my ancestors that provided that in many ways.

Tlaib was attacked for her comments regarding the Holocaust but more substantively for its historical revisionism, which denied Palestinian Arabs abject hostility toward Jews, including Holocaust survivors.

By claiming the right to define Jews and antisemitism and rewrite history, and by painting Jews and Israel as ‘white’ and Palestinians as ‘people of color,’ the BDS movement has grafted itself onto the dominant racialist narrative emanating from academia into politics and culture.

Mainstreaming and legitimizing antisemitism through anti-Zionism by the media also expanded in May. The New York Times published two editorial cartoons, one of which showed a blind President Trump being led by a canine Benjamin Netanyahu. A resulting firestorm prompted a weak apology from the newspaper but there is little evidence of fundamental rethinking of anti-Israel biases.

The other vector for legitimizing antisemitism remains the simultaneous covering up and celebration of statements by Representatives Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar. Tlaib’s ludicrous statement was defended by political leaders including Nancy Pelosi and dismissed by media figures such as late night entertainer Seth Meyers. Since her fundamental cause is promoting a one state solution and the destruction of Israel, with BDS a key tool, her prominence only serves those ends.

The politicization of BDS from the Democratic side has been matched by support for anti-BDS legislation from the Republican side. In the latest effort, an anti-BDS amendment attached to retirement finance bill was narrowly rejected.

Finally, in cultural news, the Eurovision competition took place in Israel despite intense pressure by the BDS movement. In the lead up to the competition it was revealed that a small number of BDS supporters had orchestrated a large scale online campaign using fake accounts, bots, and other tools.

Academic year ends with students and faculty policing Israel-related events. Antisemitism is normalized as BDS-connected academics and politicians make absurd claims regarding Jews and Israel.

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AUTHOR

Alex Joffe

Editor SPME / BDS Monitor

Alexander H. Joffe is an archaeologist and historian specializing in the Middle East and contemporary international affairs. He received a B.A. in History from Cornell University in 1981 and Ph.D. in Near Eastern Studies from the University of Arizona in 1991. From 1980 to 2003 he participated in and directed archaeological research in Israel, Jordan, Greece and the United States. Joffe taught at the Pennsylvania State University and Purchase College, and has been Director of Research for Global Policy Exchange, Ltd., and The David Project, Center for Jewish Leadership.

Joffe's work is uniquely broad. Since 1991 he has published dozens of studies on the archaeology of the Eastern Mediterranean and is a leading figure in contentious debates over the relationship between archaeology and politics in the Middle East. He has also authored numerous works on contemporary issues, including Middle Eastern environmental security threats from pollution and weapons of mass destruction. His work on the problem of dismantling intelligence agencies is widely cited by experts and democratic reformers alike.

In the past decade Joffe has written and spoken on topics as varied as the future of American Jews, the Palestinian refugee problem, and nationalism. During that time as well he has been deeply involved with combating the problems of campus antisemitism, the ‘boycott, divestment and sanctions' movement against Israel, and in educating Jews and others about threats to Israel and the West. His current projects include a biography of a British World War II general and several novels. He and his family reside near New York City.


Read all stories by Alex Joffe