Home          Archives           Jerusalem Center Homepage       View the current issue           Jerusalem Center Videos           
Back

Harvard's Latest Assault on Israel


(Wall Street Journal) Ruth Wisse - In 1948, when the Arab League declared war on Israel, no one imagined that six decades later American universities would become its overseas agency. A conference at Harvard next week called "Israel/Palestine and the One-State Solution" is but the latest aggression in an escalating campaign against the Jewish state. The roster of speakers and subjects makes their hostile agenda indisputable. A featured speaker is Ali Abunimah, creator of the website Electronic Intifada, who opposes the existence of a "Jewish state" as racist by virtue of being Jewish. He also keynoted a recent University of Pennsylvania conference urging "Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions" (BDS) of, from and against Israel. The economic war on Israel did not start with BDS. In 1945, before the founding of Israel, the Arab League declared a boycott of "Jewish products and manufactured goods." Ever since, the Damascus-based Central Boycott Office has tried to enforce a boycott prohibiting importation of Israeli-origin goods and services, trade with any entity that does business in Israel, and engagement with any company or individual that does business with firms on the Arab League blacklist. Freedom of speech grants all Americans the right to prosecute the verbal war against Israel. But let's differentiate toleration from abetting. Harvard may tolerate smoking, but its medical school wouldn't sponsor a conference touting the benefits of cigarettes. Students who are inculcated with hatred of Israel may want to express their national, religious or political identity by urging its annihilation. But universities that condone their efforts are triple offenders - against their mission, against the Jewish people, and perhaps most especially against the maligners themselves. Smoking is less fatal to smokers than anti-Jewish politics is to its users. The writer is a professor of Yiddish and comparative literature at Harvard University.
2012-02-29 00:00:00
Full Article

Subscribe to
Daily Alert

Name:  
Email:  

Subscribe to Jerusalem Issue Briefs

Name:  
Email: