Dave, even this Zionist writer in The Forward agrees with you.
https://forward.com/opinion/columnists/603640/usc-valedictorian-cancelled-dont-blame-jews-asna-tabassum/
 ( 
https://forward.com/opinion/columnists/603640/usc-valedictorian-cancelled-dont-blame-jews-asna-tabassum/?utm_source=The+Forward+Association&utm_campaign=c124bc89f4-AfternoonEditionNL_%2A%7CDATE%3AYmd%7C%2A_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-878b15fee9-%5BLIST_EMAIL_ID%5D
 )

******************************************************
USC: Don’t blame Jews for canceling your valedictorian
******************************************************

The university needs to tell the truth — and take responsibility

Senior Columnist Rob Eshman ( https://forward.com/authors/rob-eshman/ ) April 
17, 2024

Imagine for a moment that the University of Southern California let Asna 
Tabassum speak.

Imagine that instead of rescinding its invitation ( 
https://forward.com/fast-forward/603016/usc-asna-tabassum-commencement-valedictorian-israel-palestinian-instagram/?utm_source=The+Forward+Association&utm_campaign=737a158e32-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2023_12_01_04_25_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-1323d6a1cf-%5BLIST_EMAIL_ID%5D
 ) to have Tabassum deliver the valedictorian address, which the university did 
on Monday citing security threats, USC stood by its initial decision and said 
Tabassum would be allowed to speak as planned, albeit with heightened security 
measures to ensure her safety and the safety of all students and attendees.

What would have happened? The pro-Israel groups that opposed her appearance 
would have continued to criticize the invitation. Students and alumni on 
different sides of the issues would have challenged or supported the decision. 
Then, on graduation day, Tabassum would have spoken. Some students would cheer, 
others might have gotten up and walked out, or chosen a different way to 
protest whatever she might have said.

In other words: Life would have gone on.

Once USC decided to offer Tabassum the top student speaking spot, the 
university needed to stand by its decision.

Instead, it did something that compounded the shortsightedness and stoked even 
more anger: It blamed Jews.

University administrators did not explicitly name Jews as the reason behind 
retracting Tabassum’s speech, but stated that the intense reaction to 
Tabassum’s selection created insurmountable safety concerns.

“The intensity of feelings, fueled by both social media and the ongoing 
conflict in the Middle East, has grown to include many voices outside of USC 
and has escalated to the point of creating substantial risks relating to 
security and disruption at commencement,” wrote Andrew T. Guzman, USC’s provost 
and senior vice president for academic affairs. “The issue here is how best to 
maintain campus security and safety, period.”

There are two problems with this. The first is that USC knows very well how to 
maintain campus security. I taught at USC for three semesters and the school, 
smack in the middle of Los Angeles, excelled at ensuring a safe campus. I also 
attended the 2023 graduation festivities, as did Barack and Michelle Obama, who 
were there ( 
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-05-12/obama-family-attends-sasha-usc-graduation#:~:text=The%20Obamas%20didn't%20address,that%20the%20Obamas%20were%20there.
 ) to watch their daughter Sasha receive her diploma. It is very hard to 
believe Tabassum would need more security than the former president of the 
United States. I don’t buy the “safety” excuse.

The other problem is that by citing “many voices outside USC” who oppose giving 
a platform to Tabassum, Guzman was blaming largely Jewish and pro-Israel 
critics, accusing them of threatening violence.

Where, exactly, is the evidence for that?

One of the few groups that openly called for Tabassum’s removal as speaker was 
Trojans for Israel ( https://www.instagram.com/p/C5oPPbWtgom/?img_index=2 ) , a 
pro-Israel student group which accused her of using antisemitic and 
anti-Zionist rhetoric. Trojans for Israel has no history of using or 
threatening violence.

USC said it received threats in other ways, including via social media. It 
didn’t make any of those threats public, so it’s impossible to assess who made 
them or how seriously to take them.

But by blaming the cancellations on these amorphous threats, USC insinuated 
that violence-prone Israel-supporting Jews and Jewish groups were behind the 
decision.

So, not surprisingly, came headlines like this one in Yahoo News ( 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-university-pulls-student-speech-202016044.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAEPanrke8X2HONYHYdQNBa2kKypDdSaaO-z-rFdMkSNO_zxsmLm3ogWDy-fUcP95oinR3R678cKvC_UH00j8jCMWkdbdqECIeuV0GWUeMR4tTxb27f0JHBR-ls2QERR_6Uyw4mJpy9MRBbzQK1PESecqrYadGDRSgxD018kkS8At
 ) : “US university pulls student speech after Jewish groups object.”

Jews and at least one Jewish group did object, as they have a right to. But did 
they threaten violence? Or are they taking the blame for USC’s decision to cave 
to controversy and criticism?

The result is university administrators, who failed miserably in their due 
diligence, and failed again by refusing to stand by their decision, sloughed 
responsibility onto Tabassum’s Jewish critics.

Imagine, instead, that USC just told the truth. If it was outside pressure from 
alumni that led to the cancellation, say so. If there really were credible 
threats of violence, then provide more detail. If the threats were serious 
enough that USC feared for attendees’ safety, they should be serious enough to 
lead to arrests.

What existential harm would come from letting Tabassum speak? Israel, which 
just survived 300 drones and missiles launched by Iran, would have survived 
Tabassum. American Jews, who have thrived in a society that allows for the 
expression of unpopular opinions and open criticism, would have survived 
Tabassum. No doubt Jewish groups would have engaged in a healthy 
post-graduation public debate around any parts of the speech they found 
objectionable, as groups did following last year’s incendiary valedictory 
address at CUNY Law School ( 
https://forward.com/fast-forward/562804/cuny-law-school-commencement-student-speaker/
 ).

“Anti-Muslim & anti-Palestinian voices have subjected me to a campaign of 
racist hatred,” Tabassum wrote in a statement released by CAIR-LA ( 
https://ca.cair.com/losangeles/news/cair-la-demands-usc-reverse-cowardly-decision-to-cancel-muslim-valedictorians-speech-in-response-to-anti-palestinian-hate/
 ) after her cancellation. “I was hoping to use my commencement speech to 
inspire my classmates w/a message of hope. By canceling my speech, USC is only 
caving to fear & rewarding hatred.”

She’s only half right. By canceling Asna Tabassum’s speech in the way it did, 
the university is ducking responsibility for its own choices, and stoking more 
hatred at a time when there’s already plenty to go around.

Rob Eshman is a senior columnist for the Forward. Follow him on Instagram 
@foodaism ( https://www.instagram.com/foodaism/?hl=en ) and Twitter @foodaism ( 
https://twitter.com/foodaism ) or email [email protected].

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own and do 
not necessarily reflect those of the Forward. Discover more perspectives in 
Opinion ( https://forward.com/opinion ). To contact Opinion authors, email 
[email protected].


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