CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ANTI-SEMITISM ISSUE BECOMES TEST FOR UC CHIEF”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ANTI-SEMITISM ISSUE BECOMES TEST FOR UC CHIEF”
It’s rather doubtful that Janet
Napolitano worried much when she first heard vandals scrawled swastikas and the
message “Jews to the gas chamber” inside a restroom on a University of
California campus.
Or, later, when she learned “grout out
the Jews” and “Hitler did nothing wrong” had been daubed on other campus walls.
Just a form of college hijinks, she
probably thought. Chances are, she also paid little heed a couple of years
earlier when Muslim students carrying dummy submachine guns on the Berkeley
campus set up mock checkpoints and stopped only students who appeared to be
Jews.
But the current crisis over these and
many other campus incidents now threatens to undermine Napolitano’s authority
in ways that quarrels over admissions standards, faculty salaries and top-heavy
administrative budgets never have.
There is no doubt anti-Semitism has
been allowed to run rampant at UC, and not merely via incendiary sloganeering
on walls and other structures. There has been a bleeding over of anti-Israel
sentiment into plain old-fashioned, almost medieval anti-Semitism spurred by an
ever-growing Arab presence on the campuses, partly a side effect of the
university’s increased willingness to accept foreign students because they pay
$24,000 a year more tuition than in-state students. UC flat-out needs their
money because of years of decreased state funding under ex-Govs. Pete Wilson,
Gray Davis and Arnold Schwarzenegger.
The expanded Muslim contingent on
campus portrays Israel to home-grown minority students as a colonial power, an
image furthered by the growth of Jewish settlements on former Palestinian
lands. Many minority students, ignoring a long history of Jewish support and
sacrifice on behalf of their civil rights, have helped the Palestinian movement
encourage a boycott of Israeli products, university divestment from companies
doing business there and other sanctions against the Jewish state.
Interestingly, this movement does not
specifically target Israeli students, of whom there is a tiny contingent at UC.
Rather, it focuses on all Jews, the vast majority of whom have never been there
and don’t make Israeli policy.
The upshot is that nothing has been
done to deter anti-Semitism, in part because campus administrators fear being
accused of stifling academic debate. But how is academic freedom involved when
mathematics professors spout anti-Jewish rhetoric, as has happened
occasionally? What would happen to the same faculty if they regularly spewed
the N-word or anti-feminist or anti-Muslim messages?
So in late May, in an interview with
National Public Radio, Napolitano pledged to submit to her Board of Regents in
July a policy statement adopting the U.S. State Department’s definition of
anti-Semitism, as it is manifested in attacks on Israel. It is not, by those
standards, anti-Semitic to question Israeli policy on settlements or anything
else. But it is anti-Semitic to deny the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish
state. That would be equivalent to denying Japan’s right to exist as a Japanese
state. The State Department also calls it anti-Semitic when Israel is condemned
for the same practices routinely engaged in by other countries.
Pope Francis goes farther, observing
the other day that “To attack Jews is anti-Semitism, but an outright attack on
the state of Israel is also anti-Semitism.”
Both, of course, happen frequently on
UC’s 10 celebrated campuses.
Meanwhile, Napolitano reneged on her
pledge to offer the Regents a policy banning anti-Semitism on campus,
postponing the subject for two months before proposing a milquetoast
anti-intolerance statement in September.
This spurred rebellion among the
Regents. Norman Pattiz, the head of the national Westwood One radio network,
observed that “To completely disregard the people who brought (this) to our
attention…I think is insulting.”
Added fellow Regent Bonnie Reiss,
director of an institute at
USC, “When we hear lines of students giving us examples of swastikas
on…fraternities or challenging a Jewish student’s (right) to serve on a council
just as a result of her religious identity, of statements that “Hitler was
right,” I hope I’m not the only one feeling chilled…”
It was a very unusual outcry from
usually acquiescent Regents, and a direct challenge to Napolitano.
It’s now up to her and the committee
she’s appointed to draft a new statement to fix this, stop the continuing wave
of campus anti-Semitism – or lose what credibility she has as chief of the most
prestigious university system in America.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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