October 25, 2007
Intellectual terrorism
By Ghada Karmi
For the sake of free speech, British organisations should confront pro-Israel bullies, not appease them.
http://commentisfre
The newest and least
attractive import from
This week, two Israeli colleagues and I were due to appear at the union to
participate in an important
debateon the one-state solution in Israel-Palestine. Also invited
was the American
Jewish scholar and outspoken critic of
apparently intimidated by threats from various pro-Israel groups.
The Harvard Jewish lawyer and indefatigable defender of
Yet Dershowitz could have restored the balance as he saw it; he was the
first person invited by the Oxford Union to oppose the motion but
he declined due, as
he put it, to "the terms of the debate and my proposed
teammates".
Dershowitz's article attacking the Oxford Union appeared in the Jerusalem
Post in
spat.
In solidarity with Finkelstein and to oppose this gross interference in
British democratic life, the three of us on the "one state" side -
myself, Avi Shlaim
http://en.wikipedia
from the debate. This was not an easy decision, since
the topic was timely and necessary given the current impasse in
the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process, where innovative solutions are in short
supply.
Dershowitz and the other pro-Israel activists may rejoice at their success
in derailing an important discussion. But it is of little comfort
to those of us who
care about freedom of speech in this country. Last May, Dershowitz
interfered in British academic life when the University and
College Union voted
overwhelmingly to debate the merits of boycotting Israeli
institutions. He teamed up with a British Jewish lawyer, Anthony Julius, and
others, threatening<http://education.
"devastate and bankrupt" anyone acting against Israeli universities.
In another example of these bullying tactics, the Royal Society of Medicine,
one of
with threats from pro-Israel doctors demanding Dr Summerfield'
The power of the
network that monitors alleged anti-Israel activity in US academic
institutions. The difficulties of promotion in the
current object of the same campaign of vilification and attack. Finkelstein
himself has been denied tenure at his university and everywhere
else. The authors
of a recent study of the
apartheid<http://www.amazon.
publisher, Pluto Press, is likely to be dropped by its American
distributors, the
Such activities are familiar in the
give in so quickly, nervous of something they do not understand. The UCU
leadership, shocked and intimidated by the ferocious reaction to
the boycott motion
from pro-Israel groups, resorted to legal advice to extricate itself
and announced in September that a call to boycott Israeli
institutions would
be "unlawful". The Oxford Union jettisoned one of its participants rather
than stand up to the threats of its critics. The RSM tried to distance the
offending speaker from its conference to protect itself from
abuse.
All this is understandable, but it is exactly the wrong response. Appeasing
bullies like Dershowitz will not stop them. It will rather
encourage them to
go further. The question is, do we in this country want a McCarthyite witch
hunt? If not, then we must confront the bullies and expose them
for the
intellectual terrorists they are, bent on destroying the values of a free
society. To do otherwise will invite the fate of all repressed people, cowed
and intimidated, hating their tormentors, but too afraid to say
so.