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Norman Finkelstein under attack |
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Prof. Norman Finkelstein, who accused Jews of
using Holocaust to stifle criticism, agrees to resign from
DePaul University [9-6-07]
We have reported before on the campaign to deny
tenure to political science professor Norman Finkelstein because
of his argument the Israel uses charges of anti-Semitism to
stifle criticism of Israeli policy. He agreed on Wednesday to
resign immediately "for everybody's sake," and read a joint
statement announcing his resignation while about a hundred
protesters gathered outside the dean's office to support him.
The full report >> |
Outspoken political scientist Norman
Finkelstein denied tenure at DePaul
[6-11-07]Norman Finkelstein,
the political scientist whose bid for a permanent position at DePaul
University stirred up charges of anti-Semitism, personal vendettas
and outside interference in the hiring process, was informed Friday
[June 8, 2007] that he had been denied tenure by the university.
The full report in the New York Times >>
The Chicago Sun-Times reported on Friday >>
The Sun-Times reports
Finkelstein as saying of his firing,
"They can deny me tenure, deny me the right to teach. But
they will never stop me from saying what I believe."
What Finkelstein – the son of Holocaust survivors – believes is
that his people are culpable in the plight of the Palestinians.
He drew wrath from prominent Jewish leaders [especially from
Harvard Law professor and attorney Alan Dershowitz] when he
accused some of exploiting Jewish suffering to block criticism
of Israel, and made other enemies when he accused some survivors
of conducting a "shakedown" to get payments from Germany.
The Chronicle of Higher Education notes that DePaul
University’s president, the Rev. Dennis Holtschneider, affirmed the
decision against granting tenure, adding that the intense outside
interest in the case "was unwelcome and inappropriate and had no
impact on either the process or the outcome of this case."
A Roman Catholic priest was quoted to your WebWeaver, by a
friend, as saying:
Anyone who denies the long arm of the powerful Israeli lobby
in America need only to note today that distinguished Professor
Norman Finkelstein of De Paul University was denied tenure.
Without any doubt this was due to his outspoken criticism of
Israeli policies. This was a great triumph for leading Zionist
scoundrel Alan Dershowitz and his crusade to have Finkelstein
denied tenure. Finkelstein's great sin has been his defense of
the Palestinian people and his criticism of Israeli policies
toward them. Because Finkelstein's family were Holocaust
survivors and his Jewish credentials impeccable his courageous
stance for justice was intolerable for the likes of Dershowitz
and the Israeli lobby.
The greater shame is that of the Catholic university of De
Paul for knuckling in to the pressures from the Zionist lobby. I
have attended Finkelstein's brilliant lectures and treasure his
autographed book.
This is a disgrace and a violation of academic freedom. The
excuse given for tenure denial is limp and contrived. Shame on
De Paul.
Scroll down a bit to read Dr. Finkelstein's letter to Commissioners
to the 217th General Assembly, discussing the issue of Israel and
divestment as they prepared for the Assembly.
For
background on the attacks on Finkelstein because of his criticism of
Israel >> |
| A Jewish professor
of political science writes in support of divestment
Commissioners preparing for the 2006 General Assembly
received great heaps of letters and other communications from people
and groups wanting them to hear their point of view.
But one letter in the flood was worth reading, whether you’re a
commissioner or not.
Norman G. Finkelstein, who teaches [well, taught] political
science at DePaul University in Chicago, has long paid attention to
the Israel-Palestine conflict, and has worked for lasting peace
between the two nations.
His letter reflects both his experience and his concerns, and
explains why he supports the Presbyterian study of the possibility
of what he rightly calls "a phased, selective divestment from
companies profiting from Israel's occupation."
The letter:
1 May 2006
Dear Commissioner or Advisory Delegate,
Permit me to introduce myself. My name is Norman G. Finkelstein. I
teach political science at DePaul University in Chicago and am the
author of many publications on the Israel-Palestine conflict. I am
Jewish. Both my late parents were survivors of the Nazi
concentration camps. Every member of their respective families was
exterminated during the war. The most important lesson they taught
me and my siblings was not to be silent in the face of other
people's suffering.
In the spirit of this legacy I have devoted most of my adult life to
achieving a just and lasting peace in Israel and Palestine. Like
many others I was moved and elated by the resolution taken at the
216th General Assembly (2004), Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), to
consider a phased, selective divestment from companies profiting
from Israel's occupation. Recently I have been informed that, in
various Presbyteries of the PCUSA, pressure has arisen to rescind
that bold initiative at the forthcoming 217th General Assembly
(2006) of the PCUSA - pressure coming from organizations both within
and outside the church, some claiming to speak for the Jewish
community.
I believe that rescinding or weakening this resolution would be a
terrible mistake. A moral enquiry would pose two questions: Do
Israeli human rights violations warrant your church's initiative,
and is such an initiative the best tactic to achieve the desired
goal of ending these violations? In my view, the answer to both
these questions is an emphatic yes.
Israel's real human rights record in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory is barely known. This is primarily due to the formidable
public relations industry of Israel and its uncritical defenders
abroad as well as their tactics of intimidation, such as labeling
dissenters from Israeli policy anti-Semitic.
Israeli human rights violations, many rising to the level of war
crimes and crimes against humanity in the opinion of human rights
organizations, include:
 | Illegal Killings. According to the most recent
figures of B'Tselem, the leading and most authoritative Israeli
human rights organization, three times more Palestinians than
Israelis have been killed and up to three times more Palestinian
civilians than Israeli civilians. Israel's defenders maintain
that there's a difference between targeting civilians and
inadvertently killing them. However, B'Tselem disputes this: "[W]hen
so many civilians have been killed and wounded, the lack of
intent makes no difference. Israel remains responsible."
|
 | Torture. "From 1967," Amnesty International reports,
"the Israeli security services have routinely tortured
Palestinian political suspects in the Occupied Territories."
B'Tselem found that 85 percent of Palestinians interrogated by
Israeli security services were subjected to "methods
constituting torture." Already a decade ago Human Rights Watch
estimated that "the number of Palestinians tortured or severely
ill-treated" was "in the tens of thousands - a number that
becomes especially significant when it is remembered that the
universe of adult and adolescent male Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza is under three-quarters of one million." In 1987
Israel became "the only country in the world to have effectively
legalized torture" (Amnesty). The Israeli-based Public Committee
Against Torture reported in 2003 that, despite an Israeli
Supreme Court ruling that seemed finally to ban torture,
security forces continued to apply torture in a "methodical and
routine" fashion. A 2001 B'Tselem study documented that Israeli
security forces often applied "severe torture" to "Palestinian
minors."
|
 | House demolitions. "Israel has implemented a policy
of mass demolition of Palestinian houses in the Occupied
Territories," B'Tselem reports. Since September 2000 it "has
destroyed some 4,170 Palestinian homes." Until just recently
Israel routinely resorted to house demolitions as a form of
collective punishment. Israel also continues to routinely
demolish "illegal" homes that Palestinians built because of
Israel's refusal to provide building permits. According to
Amnesty, the motive has been to maximize the area available for
illegal Jewish settlers. Israel has also destroyed hundreds of
Palestinian homes on the pretext of security but both Human
Rights Watch and Amnesty agree that Israel's extensive
destruction is not justified by military necessity. Amnesty says
that "(s)ome of these acts of destruction amount to grave
breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention and are war crimes."
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Apart from the sheer magnitude of its human rights violations,
the uniqueness of Israeli policies merits notice. "Israel has
created in the Occupied Territories a regime of separation based on
discrimination, applying two separate systems of law in the same
area and basing the rights of individuals on their nationality,"
B'Tselem has concluded. "This regime is the only one of its kind in
the world, and is reminiscent of distasteful regimes from the past,
such as the apartheid regime in South Africa." If singling out South
Africa for economic sanctions was defensible, it would seem equally
defensible to single out Israel's occupation, which uniquely
resembles the apartheid regime.
Although the PCUSA's initiative can clearly be justified on moral
grounds, the question remains whether quiet diplomacy might be a
more constructive alternative. The basic terms for resolving the
conflict are embodied in U.N. resolution 242 and subsequent U.N.
resolutions. They call for a full Israeli withdrawal from the West
Bank and Gaza and the establishment of a Palestinian state in these
areas in exchange for recognition of Israel's right to live
peacefully with its neighbors. While each year the overwhelming
majority in the United Nations vote in favor of this two-state
settlement, Israel and the United States (and a few South Pacific
islands) have consistently opposed it.
Not only has Israel stubbornly rejected this two-state settlement,
but the policies it is currently pursuing will abort any possibility
of a viable Palestinian state. It has been constructing a wall deep
inside the West Bank that will annex the most productive land and
water resources as well as East Jerusalem, the center of Palestinian
life. It will also effectively sever the West Bank in two. Although
Israel initially claimed that it was building the wall to fight
terrorism, the newly elected Israeli government has explicitly
acknowledged that the wall will serve as Israel's future border. In
addition Israel has signaled its intention to retain the Jordan
Valley within the eastern border of the West Bank as well as a
settlement bloc in the north which will sever this territory yet
again. Palestinians will be confined to half the West Bank in a
multitude of tiny and isolated communities.
The current policies of the Israeli government will lead either to
endless bloodshed or the dismemberment of Palestine. "It remains
virtually impossible to conceive of a Palestinian state without its
capital in Jerusalem," the respected International Crisis Group
recently concluded, and accordingly Israeli policies in the West
Bank "are at war with any viable two-state solution and will not
bolster Israel's security; in fact, they will undermine it,
weakening Palestinian pragmatists…and sowing the seeds of growing
radicalization."
In the face of diplomatic paralysis the moral burden
to avert the impending catastrophe must be borne by individual men
and women of conscience. A nonviolent tactic the purpose of which is
to achieve a just and lasting settlement of the Israel-Palestine
conflict cannot legitimately be called anti-Semitic. Indeed, the
real enemies of Jews are those who debase the memory of Jewish
suffering by equating your church's conscientious initiative with
anti-Semitism.
I am enclosing with this letter a copy of my recent
book Beyond Chutzpah which documents both the misuse of
anti-Semitism by Israel's uncritical supporters as well as Israel's
sad human rights record in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
Should you find the time to read it, I am sure you will be convinced
that the 216th General Assembly (2004) of the PCUSA made the right
decision and that its reaffirmation by the upcoming 217th General
Assembly (2006) will best encourage and promote, in the long run, a
just and lasting peace for Jews, Christians and Muslims in Israel
and Palestine.
Sincerely yours,
Norman G. Finkelstein
You may want to explore his
website >>
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A major
Ghost Ranch event this summer!
July 28 - August 3, 2008
Paths toward Peace and Justice:
Spirituality, Earth-Care, and the Prophetic Word in a time of
Violence
More info >> |
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An index of
our reports
from
BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship
A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice
September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky |
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Check out our report from the
Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security |
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