http://www.danielpipes.org/article/424
 
  

Extremists on Campus
by Daniel Pipes and Jonathan Schanzer
New York Post
June 25, 2002


For three decades, left-wing extremists have dominated American academics,
spouting odd but seemingly harmless theories about "deconstruction,"
"post-modernism," "race, gender and class," while venting against the United
States, its government and its allies.

Only these ideas are not so harmless. The radical notions espoused in the
classrooms and in campus demonstrations have recently had dangerous
consequences. These are especially visible with regard to the Arab-Israeli
conflict.

Consider some of the steps American professors took during 2002:

* Columbia University: Hamid Dabashi, a specialist on Iran, compared
Israel's military maneuvers in Jenin (to prevent future suicide bombings)
with the Nazi Holocaust. When one student protested his canceling class to
attend a rabidly anti-Israel sit-in, he sneeringly replied, "I apologize if
canceling our class in solidarity with [Palestinian] victims of a genocide .
. . inconvenienced you."

Joseph Massad, a Jordan specialist at Columbia, spoke at that same
anti-Israel rally, calling Israel "a Jewish supremacist and racist state"
that, he proclaimed, "should be threatened." This is in addition to a talk
with the inflammatory title "On Zionism and Jewish Supremacy" and a course
that (students report) served as a soapbox for anti-Israeli polemics.

* SUNY-Binghamton: Robert Ostergard of the political-science department
converted his course into an anti-Zionist platform. One guest speaker, Ali
Mazrui, presented a lecture that a student called "a 45-minute diatribe
against Israel" equating Zionism with fascism, Israel with apartheid South
Africa and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon with Hitler.

* Kent State University, Ohio: Julio César Pino of the history department
published an ode to a Palestinian suicide bomber, lauding her courage and
calling on Allah to "elevate your place in paradise."

* University of Oregon: In a course entitled "Social Inequality," the
sociology department's Douglas Card
<http://www.campus-watch.org/statement_card.php>  reportedly called Israel
"a terrorist state" and Israelis "baby-killers" and insisted that students
agree with his view that Israel "stole land" on the final exam. One student
said Card bashed Israel and Jews "at every opportunity."

* UC-Berkeley: The English department's Snehal Shingavi, a leader of
"Students for Justice in Palestine," announced a course on "The Politics and
Poetics of Palestinian Resistance" with the now-infamous "warning" to
conservatives "to seek other sections."

In brief, instructors routinely tout wild-eyed politics and openly wield
their authority to indoctrinate students. At times, they even admit this, as
in the case of Andrew Ross, the then-Princeton English professor who boasted
in 1990 that he was using his position to radicalize "the children of the
ruling class."

Not surprisingly, some interpret all this as implicit permission to harass
Jewish and pro-Israel students. The result: a wave of verbal and physical
attacks.

* At San Francisco State University, anti-Israel students physically
threatened students marching for Israel while shouting phrases like, "Die,
you racist pigs," and "Hitler should have finished the job," prompting the
school's president to admit that he was never "as deeply distressed and
angered by something that happened on this campus" in his 14 years there.

Even after this incident, pro-Palestinian students continued to use an
SFSU-owned Web page to engage in Holocaust denial and accuse Jews of ritual
murder.

* At Berkeley, anti-Israel students occupied a classroom building, leading
to the arrest of 79 of them, including one charged with a felony for biting
a police officer.

* At the University of Colorado at Boulder, students desecrated an Israeli
flag and chalked anti-Semitic slogans on the main campus walkway.

* At the University of Illinois, they assaulted with rocks a home flying an
Israeli flag, shattering the front window.

Although professors teaching Middle East-related courses are the most
responsible for this degeneration on campus, others, too, are complicit. By
indulging the Middle East specialists' radicalism and efforts at
indoctrination, alumni, administrators, parents, other faculty, Education
Department officials and state legislators effectively condone those
activities.

The time has come for all these stakeholders to take back the universities
as institutions of civilized discourse. This can be done only by ending the
now-regnant atmosphere of extremism and intimidation. The place to start is
by condemning and curbing the leftist activism that too often passes for
Middle East scholarship.



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