Chronicle of Higher Education, Wednesday, October 27, 2004
U.S. Lawmaker Urges Columbia U. to Fire Critic of Israel
By JENNIFER JACOBSON

A U.S. congressman has demanded that Columbia University fire a
nontenured professor of Arab politics who has been an outspoken critic
of Israel. The congressman, Anthony D. Weiner, a New York Democrat up
for re-election on Tuesday, said that Joseph A. Massad had crossed a
line "between vigorous debate and discussion, and hate."

Fellow academics have come to the professor's defense and have
circulated a petition calling on Lee C. Bollinger, Columbia's president,
to "issue a categorical statement in defense of Professor Massad and
against this campaign of defamation."

The dispute comes at a time when the discipline of Middle East studies
has come under fire from critics who have denounced the programs as
anti-American and anti-Israel. At Columbia the controversy came to a
head last week after editorials in the New York Sun and Daily News
reported that in a yet-to-be released documentary, Columbia students
complain of anti-Israel sentiment among faculty members. Professor
Massad is reportedly mentioned in the film.

"Massad is alleged to have likened Israel to Nazi Germany, said that
Israel doesn't have the right to exist as a Jewish state, and asked an
Israeli student, 'How many Palestinians have you killed?' and then
refused to allow the student to ask questions," Representative Weiner
said last week in a statement in which he accused the professor of using
his classroom to espouse anti-Semitic views.

In a letter he sent to Mr. Bollinger last week, the congressman wrote:
"Recent events continue to suggest a disturbing trend in which
Columbia's administration has not been sensitive to issues of race. By
publicly rebuking anti-Semitic events on campus and terminating
Professor Massad, Columbia would make a brave statement in support of
tolerance and academic freedom."

"There's nothing wrong with having a debate about the Middle East or a
debate about politics in general," Representative Weiner told The
Chronicle. "But when you deal with students in the way this professor
did, and make comments that this professor did, it's clear that's beyond
debate. It has become harmful."

The lawmaker, who represents Brooklyn and Queens, said he was not aware
of whether Mr. Massad had denied making the remarks. "So far the
professor's defenders have just argued as a college professor you have
the right to say any outrageous, hateful thing you want, and I disagree
with that," he said.

Mr. Massad, an assistant professor in the Middle East and Asian
languages and cultures department, did not immediately respond to e-mail
and telephone messages seeking comment.

"The university does not condone anti-Semitic behavior and expression of
any kind," said Susan M. Brown, a spokeswoman for Columbia. "We take
very seriously any concerns raised by a congressman and respond to them."

The allegations prompted Mr. Bollinger to release a statement last week
on the university's policy on academic integrity and freedom of
expression, saying that Columbia is committed to upholding both. "At the
same time, we believe that the principle of academic freedom is not
unlimited," he said. "It does not, for example, extend to protecting
behavior in the classroom that threatens or intimidates students for
expressing their viewpoints or that uses the classroom as a means of
political indoctrination."

Mr. Bollinger said he asked Alan Brinkley, the university's provost, and
Nicholas Dirks, vice president of arts and sciences, to work with
Columbia's deans and chairmen to review the grievance processes in place
for professors and students so that those "who feel they have
experienced classroom threats or intimidation have a place where their
complaints will be addressed."

More than 700 people, mainly faculty members from all over the world,
have signed a petition that Neville Hoad, an assistant professor of
English at the University of Texas at Austin, circulated to support Mr.
Massad. The two attended graduate school at Columbia together in the 1990s.

"Professor Massad has never been notified that any student in any of his
classes has ever lodged a formal complaint about his teaching with the
Columbia administration," Mr. Hoad wrote in an e-mail message to The
Chronicle. He declined to be interviewed by phone, citing "the generally
poisonous atmosphere around this issue."

What is happening to his colleague, he wrote, "strikes at the heart of
academic freedom and university self-governance, and therefore it is
crucial that the academic community at large respond."

Rashid Khalidi, director of Columbia's Middle East Institute, signed the
petition. "Unsubstantiated accusations are being used for a witch hunt,"
he told The Chronicle. "You can't try somebody in the court of public
opinion."

He said it was an academic matter that the university should deal with.
"I would be very unhappy if students did feel they couldn't bring issues
they have around these kinds of matters to a university forum," he said,
"but I do worry about faculty being intimidated."

Mona Baker, a professor of translation studies at the University of
Manchester's Institute of Science and Technology, posted the petition on
her Web site (http://www.monabaker.com), and urged academics to sign.
She wrote that Mr. Massad "is the target of a new and particularly
vicious attack by the pro-Israel lobby in the States, aimed at getting
him dismissed and destroying his highly promising career." She said that
she knows him "personally" and called him "a man of dazzling
scholarship, academic and personal integrity, and a tireless advocate
for peace with justice in the Middle East."

Two years ago, Ms. Baker, who owns St. Jerome Publishing, an academic
press specializing in translation studies, dismissed two Israeli
scholars from the boards of academic journals published by her company,
which is British. Ms. Baker said she dismissed them as part of an
academic boycott of Israel.

Mr. Hoad sent the petition to Columbia's president Tuesday and said that
he has never met Ms. Baker and has no affiliation with her but is
"grateful" for her help in circulating the petition.

Ms. Brown said she didn't know whether Columbia officials had received
the petition, but said that the university was "very appreciative of
people taking the time to let us know their concerns. We do take them
seriously."

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