08) CAMPUS CLAMPDOWN A
DESPERATE TACTIC
(The
following
article is from the March 16-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
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Youth Fightback Column
Ronnie
Kasrils nailed it.
"I've been
quite taken aback by
what is happening here," the veteran South African Jewish Communist,
ANC member, fighter against apartheid, and former government minister
said. He was speaking at Toronto's Israeli Apartheid Week in early
March. "These university presidents, and your government, are locked in
a time warp. They don't get it. Being anti‑Israel, or anti‑Zionism does
not in any way equal anti‑Semitism.
"But this
fact is lost with the
presidents of various universities. It's lost on the Jason Kenneys.
They still hold on to that notion if you `cry wolf,' and say this is
anti‑Israel and therefore anti‑Semitic, that this will still carry any
weight. And what I say in dialogue with Zionists, is that around the
world this claim is really something that is now over. It is finished.
Finito."
Kasrils
could have been
referring to his month‑long wait to get a Canadian visa, which cost an
extraordinary $1,600 South African Rand despite a letter of invitation
from CUPE (Ontario). But he was actually talking about the fact that
everywhere he spoke at Israeli Apartheid Week events - Toronto,
Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, etc. - organizers experienced a clamp‑down.
In an open
letter to these
institutions, Toronto's Educators for Peace and Justice outlines
numerous attempts to silence debate. They are glaring:
- Statements from 19 university
presidents in the summer of 2007 to foreclose debate on the academic
boycott of Israel, citing "academic freedom."
- Visits to Israel by eight
university presidents in the summer of 2008, with no equivalent
outreach to Palestinian institutions.
- Efforts to ban the use of the term
"Israeli Apartheid" at McMaster University in February‑March 2008,
overturned only through a campaign of protest.
- Discipline against students
involved in peaceful protests for Palestinian rights at York University
in March in 2008.
- Attempted discipline against a
faculty member who addressed a rally against Israeli Apartheid at York
University in 2008.
- A pattern of cancelled room
bookings for meetings concerning Palestinian rights at the University
of Toronto and York University in 2008.
- The use of fees to cover security
costs to impede campus meetings about Palestinian rights.
- The imposition in February 2009 of
an exorbitant fine of $1000 on Students Against Israeli Apartheid, plus
an additional fine of $250 against the group's spokesperson, by the
York administration.
- The censoring by Carleton
University administration of an Israeli Apartheid Week poster on the
basis that it could incite others to violate the Ontario Human Rights
Code.
- The disciplining of a professor at
the University of Ottawa who has been outspoken in support of
Palestinian Human Rights.
The gross
inequality experienced
daily by Palestinians has appalled the world, but not our government,
or the administrators of many Canadian universities. (YouTube "Canadian
University Complicity in Apartheid.")
Of all
places this is happening
on campuses, where freedom of inquiry must be a cardinal principle of
democratic, quality education. What do such paternalistic and hostile
attitudes towards students contribute? The rights of youth and students
should unquestionably include organizing free from administration and
outside restrictions and interference.
This new
heavy‑handed approach
is desperate. Last year, Hillel tried to ban a pamphlet in the U of T
library published by a Communist Party containing this quote: "The most
typical example of the unity of racism and chauvinism is Zionism -
weapon of world reaction, shock force of anti‑communism, enemy of the
national liberation movement of the Arab people, and foe of working
Jews all over the world."
No wonder
the Palestinian
solidarity struggle is an issue of great prominence in the Canadian
youth and student movement. The young people who spend hours
organizing, making banners, and fighting censorship are loud, noisy and
insistent, because they have justice on their side.
They can
lack restraint, but
never energy. They tend to march with seven league boots and take no
prisoners. Some find this spirit a little offsetting. Get used to it.
Five years
ago Israel Apartheid
Week kicked‑off its first event in Toronto. Now it happens in over
forty cities internationally. As Kasrils said, "This movement is
building a wonderful pillar of resistance. What we're doing here is
vital. And we must never stop until Palestine is free."