CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“UC REGENTS: DEFINE ANTI-SEMITISM OR
ENABLE IT”
Top University of California officials
including President Janet Napolitano and several campus chancellors publicly
deplore the way activists pushing UC to boycott Israel seemed to
spawn outright anti-Semitic actions and outcries over the last few
months.
But they've done nothing to stop it.
Students who set up mock checkpoints on campuses to harass Jewish students and
no one else were not penalized. Nor were students who questioned candidates for
student government about their Jewish identity. No one has even been caught in
several cases where Nazi-like swastikas were daubed on campus buildings. And no
one was caught after the message “Zionists…to the gas chambers”
was scrawled on a UC Berkeley wall.
Partly this is because UC has no
firm standard by which to tell when protests of some of Israel’s policies sink
into outright anti-Semitism.
Now, at last, the 10-campus system’s
top policymakers will have a chance to set a standard. The Board of Regents is
tentatively due to vote during its July 22-23 meeting in San Francisco on
whether to adopt the U.S. State Department’s “Three D” definition of when
political protest becomes outright anti-Semitism.
The State Department criteria are simple: If an action aims to
delegitimize Israel, denying the Jewish state’s very right to exist, that’s
anti-Semitic. If a protest aims to demonize Israel in ways not employed against
any other country, that’s also anti-Semitic. And if a protest employs a double
standard judging Israel differently from other countries, that’s anti-Semitic,
too.
Here’s one clear-cut double-standard
at work today: When Israel accidentally killed civilians while destroying
ammunition dumps and rocket launch sites planted in crowded schools and
neighborhoods in Gaza last summer, loud protests by campus groups led by
Students for Justice in Palestine went on for months over the deaths of
children and other non-combatants.
But while Saudi Arabian jets bombed
Shiite Moslem insurgents in Yemen daily this spring and summer, often killing
more civilians in a day than Israel did in its entire Gaza campaign, the same
protesters said nothing.
In a springtime letter to Napolitano
and all regents, nearly 700 UC professors, student groups, alumni and rabbis
urged adoption of the State Department definition, and that it be followed by
training of campus personnel to stymie anti-Semitic acts and talk, while not
interfering with political protests against things like roadblocks, censorship
or settlements in occupied territory.
“It is essential for campus
(personnel) to be trained…to identify anti-Semitic behavior and to address it
with the same promptness and vigor as other forms of racial, ethnic and gender
bigotry and discrimination,” the letter said.
Napolitano soon after said in a radio
interview that she thinks UC should adopt the Three D definition and that she
will put it on the Regents’ July meeting agenda.
That’s progress. For double standards
and lies have abounded at UC throughout the so-called “BDS campaign” to boycott
and sanction Israel, while demanding the university divest from companies doing
business there. For example, the
pro-Palestinian SJP group has denied being anti-Semitic for years, while
steadily demonizing Israel as “an apartheid nation,” even though it has
absorbed many thousands of black Jews from Ethiopia and taken in several
thousand non-Jewish refugees from black African countries like Sudan and
Somalia.
SJP denies singling out Israel for
protest, saying since it was organized about 10 years ago that it will protest
injustice everywhere. But the group has never protested against anyone but the
Jewish state.
If the Regents act as Napolitano
recommends, they will be adding to a recent series of defeats for SJP, whose
BDS campaign was officially rejected by the Illinois and Tennessee legislatures
this spring, one dominated by Democrats, the other by Republicans. The Indiana
state Senate passed a similar resolution. Student governments at several
universities around the nation also rejected pro-boycott resolutions, leaving
student officials at the UC campuses in Berkeley, Davis and Los Angeles
and those at Stanford almost alone in passing them.
Because it’s well documented that
heated debates over those resolutions were soon followed by outright
anti-Semitic acts not prevented or punished on any campus, the reality is that
inaction by the Regents would amount to conscious enabling of blatant
anti-Semitism.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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