Pro-Israel forces attempt to silence 
University of California Santa Barbara professor

By Jack Cody
25 May 2009

On January 19 University of California Santa Barbara sociology Professor
William Robinson sent an email to students on the roster of his Global
Affairs course in which he compared the Israeli occupation of Gaza to the
Warsaw Ghetto. He was subsequently brought up on disciplinary charges by the
Academic Senate of the university, as well as subjected to harassment and
persecution by pro-Israeli elements.

The charges against Robinson pose a serious threat to academic freedom. They
are an effort to intimidate critics of Israeli policy at a time when that
regime's actions have produced widespread revulsion. Ultimately, the aim of
such witch-hunts is to silence those opposed to the policies of one of the
US government's key allies.

Robinson's January 19 email began with a strong denunciation of the Israeli
assault on Gaza. The professor, who is Jewish, wrote: "Gaza is Israel's
Warsaw-a vast concentration camp that confined and blockaded Palestinians,
subjecting them to the slow death of malnutrition, disease and despair,
nearly two years before their subjection to the quick death of Israeli
bombs. We are witness to a slow-motion process of genocide (Websters: 'the
systematic killing of, or a program of action intended to destroy, a whole
national or ethnic group'), a process whose objective is not so much to
physically eliminate each and every Palestinian than to eliminate the
Palestinians as a people in any meaningful sense of the notion of
people-hood."

Robinson then juxtaposed photographs of Nazi operations and atrocities with
images of Israeli crimes in Gaza. A caption over the images reads: "The
grandchildren of Holocaust survivors from World War II are doing to the
Palestinians exactly what was done to them by Nazi Germany...."

The photo series is arranged such that each image from one time period is
displayed next to a corresponding image from the other. Pictures of the
Warsaw Ghetto are on the left, Gaza on the right. The photographs are
disturbing, as is the often-uncanny similarity apparent in the side-by-side
images.

The full original course material can be viewed at the Committee to Defend
Academic Freedom at UCSB, a blog created in defense of Professor Robinson,
and the principal of academic freedom by a group of UCSB students
(http://sb4af.wordpress.com/).

On February 9 Robinson received a copy of a letter that the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL) sent, in addition to Robinson himself, to the president of the
University of California system based in Oakland, the chancellor of UCSB,
his dean and the chair of his department. The ADL, a prominent defender of
Israeli policy, accuses Robinson of anti-Semitism and of abusing his access
to university resources by using the student mailing list to disseminate
personal views unrelated to course material.

On February 19 these same accusations appeared in two official grievances
filed with the university by two of Robinson's former students. The pair had
withdrawn from the course, unbeknownst to Robinson, because they claimed the
content of the email was intimidating and, according to one student, made
her "nauseous." The claims of misconduct put forth by the two students are
nearly identical and are very similar to those cited in the ADL's February 9
letter.

The accusations against Robinson are baseless and politically motivated. In
an interview with the World Socialist Web Site, he discussed the issues
involved.

"The essence of the charges," Professor Robinson said, "is that the course
material I submitted was anti-Semitic, and according to these letters [from
the ADL and the two students], it was anti-Semitic because it was critical
of the state of Israel. That is absurd, that the condemnation of the
policies of the state of Israel is equivalent to anti-Semitism. One,
anti-Semitism, is the discrimination against and oppression of a
religious/ethnic group, and the other, criticism of Israel, is a
condemnation of the policies of a nation-state."

As to the charges that the material contained in the email was unrelated to
the course, Robinson responded: "How in the world the invasion of Gaza in
January is unrelated to a course on global affairs in the same month is
absolutely beyond my comprehension!"

The UCSB catalogue describes the course as a "[s]urvey of the principal
theories and debates in globalization studies, with a focus on economic,
political and cultural transnational processes." According to this
description, the military occupation of one sovereign territory by another
is clearly highly relevant to such a course.

"On March 9," Robinson pointed out, "Abraham Foxman, the president of the
ADL convenes a meeting on the campus of the University of California Santa
Barbara with about ten faculty members and two deans. Some people at the
meeting assume the purpose of the meeting was to search for a chair of the
Jewish Studies program, but when the meeting starts, Foxman announces that
the only thing on his agenda is the demand that I be prosecuted.

"On March 25 the university announces it is opening up a formal inquiry, a
formal investigation of me and bringing me up on charges of possible
violation of the faculty code of conduct. What is going on here is a
tremendous assault on academic freedom; an assault in which the community
has been complicit, and an assault which has been orchestrated from outside
the university by the Israel lobby.

"What became clear is that the entire grievance process had been
orchestrated from the outside by the Israel lobby. This is part of a more
systematic campaign. The Israel lobby goes after anyone and everyone that
criticizes the state of Israel.

"What is particularly egregious in this case," says Robinson, "is that the
University of California Santa Barbara is undermining academic freedom,
bringing shame to the university. Some university officials have been
complicit with this attack against me and this attack against academic
freedom. We have documented a whole series of procedural irregularities."

Professor Robinson has received strong support from students and professors
on the campus, as well as concerned members of the local community. A group
of students created the Committee To Defend Academic Freedom at UCSB and
launched a Web site documenting up-to-date details of the Robinson case and
mobilizing resources to counter the pro-Israeli forces. "Students on the
campus, graduates and undergraduates, when they heard of this, became
enraged," says Robinson. "They feel that the integrity of their own
education is under threat."

A forum to discuss academic freedom originally scheduled to take place on
the campus of UCSB on May 7 was put off until May 21 to make arrangements to
accommodate a larger audience due to the amount of popular interest over the
Robinson case within the Santa Barbara community.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/may2009/prof-m25.shtml

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