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الوقت
... الآن صحيفة
الجارديان - 11/6/2007 كما أنني قمت بحملة لمقاطعة نظام
الفصل العنصري في جنوب أفريقيا
قبل عدة سنوات, فانه يتوجب علي
أن أفعل نفس الشئ الآن تجاه
إسرائيل The
time is now Just
as I campaigned for boycotts against apartheid in South
Africa many years ago, now I shall do so against Israeli
apartheid, says Colin Green Monday
June 11, 2007 The
strong and hostile response from pro-Israeli groups, as
well as the UK government fearful of offending Israel,
to a recent motion carried by a two thirds majority at
the University and College Union (UCU) congress is in
marked contrast to the joyful response of Palestinians,
which has been almost totally supportive. Perhaps
the former have misunderstood that motion. After an open
and very serious debate, one outcome upon which all
agreed was that Disagreement
centred entirely on what the trade union movement could
or should do about it. More specifically, we discussed
the role of academic boycotts, which to all academics is
normally an anathema. Free exchange of ideas and debate,
however fierce, is central to our life. However, after
40 years without resolution, many of us believe that the
Israel-Palestine conflict is the epicentre of a global
conflagration so dangerous for all of us that abnormal
responses have become an urgent, indeed desperate, moral
imperative. Even
then, urgency notwithstanding, the motion passed was not
calling for a boycott, but for a 12-month debate about
an academic boycott. I suggest that that is in the best
tradition of academic freedom and free speech. We will
encourage Israeli academics to visit us, as indeed they
did for weeks before the recent debate, and put their
case for or against. There
are, after all, many Israeli humanitarian organisations
and many Israeli individuals who believe that boycotts,
sanctions and disinvestment are the only non-violent
ways to force In
all this response to the UCU motion, or indeed the call
for action against Israeli policies from the National
Union of Journalists, architects, artists and doctors,
the opinion of the Palestinians is little mentioned. As
one in daily communication with them at all levels, from
government ministers, university presidents, professors,
teachers, doctors, nurses and many involved in further
education, not least the students, I can assure you that
they are overwhelmingly in favour of the call for a
debate, preferring that to a straight call for a boycott
without debate. At last they will have the opportunity
to travel outside the occupied territories and describe
to the world the almost complete lack of academic
freedom they endure. Israeli
apologists frequently quote the opinion against boycotts
of a tiny handful of Palestinians, but these have no
credibility whatsoever across campuses in the occupied
territories. This
motion was tabled because of a call of desperation from
the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural
Boycott of Israel (PACBI) as long ago as
2004. PACBI is not some fringe, lunatic or radical
university group, but a confederation of more than 50
organisations from across Palestinian civil society. The
boycott called for by PACBI and supported by the British
Committee for Universities of Palestine
(BRICUP), which tabled this motion, is institutional. We
are not targeting individuals, in some McCarthyite
programme, but organisations that have political aims
and collude in the occupation, however loudly they
protest their innocence. Since
starting academic work in the occupied territories
during the first intifada in 1987, I have travelled a
trajectory of hope to near despair. From a naïve
optimism for a just and lasting peace for Israelis and
Palestinians 20 years ago, in which I welcomed with
great enthusiasm Israeli postgraduates to my institute
for specialist surgical training and research, I now
refuse any collaboration with any Israeli university or
research institution because of the violations of human
rights I have seen over the past two decades and in
which they collude. As
in the past, I still work with Israeli humanitarian
organisations genuinely seeking justice for the
Palestinians. I am no longer prepared to stand idly by
and not come out publicly against the level of
oppression I have seen, including ethnic cleansing and
the establishment of a brutal apartheid regime, a
terrible injustice against the indigenous population of
the occupied territories. What
experiences can have brought about this revolution in
attitude? In 1987, I was buoyed by the gentle,
non-bigoted, optimistic attitude toward the Israelis of
virtually all the Palestinians I met. Even
in the face of the violence and killings in the first
intifada carried out by the Israeli Occupation Forces
(IOF), they believed that reason and good will would
prevail and the international community would come to
their rescue. I was amazed how tolerant academics were
toward their oppressors. None of them did, or could
have, forecast the descent into hell which the
Palestinians would endure in the next two decades, nor
believe that a people who themselves had known such a
hell could possibly descend to the level of barbarity we
are now witnessing. Just
as film documentary images of British soldiers opening
the gates of Belsen in 1945 was a defining moment in my
life, so the immediate aftermath of the Jenin massacre
and the terror of overwhelming military force in the
destruction of Rafah, in Gaza, which I have witnessed in
recent years have had the most profound effect on my
opinions. You have to see it for yourself. We cannot go
on muttering platitudes about academic freedom and
exchange of ideas. What freedom? In
those two decades, the wretched suppression of academic
freedom has been so obvious and overt that the wonder
was that international academe did so little to stop it
or even to comment on it. The
list of restrictions is too long to detail. Examples
include: the closure of Birzeit University for four
years; refusal of entry to that and all other
universities for teaching faculty and students on the
whim of heavily armed Israeli teenagers in uniform at
checkpoints; refusal to allow passage to medical
students to their teaching hospitals; raiding of
campuses in the middle of freezing winter nights forcing
women undergraduates to stand for five or six hours
outside in their nightdresses simply to humiliate them
while their dormitories were ransacked; refusal to allow
doctors to attend their clinics and teach students on
the ludicrous claim that their ID cards (valid for the
previous 15 years) were fake; refusal to allow UK
academics entry to Ben-Gurion airport and forced return
on the grounds they were engaged in subversive acts
simply coming to be medical teachers. Then
has been the refusal to allow a final-year student to
attend his graduation ceremony and to add to his
humiliation and torment by being forced at gunpoint to
stand and watch the proceedings from only 400 metres
away; refusal or long delays in granting exit permits
for Palestinian research workers and teachers travelling
abroad to conferences; the threat that if they travel
overseas (especially if they have a Jerusalem ID) they
may not be allowed back into their own homes again;
endless restrictions on travel within the occupied
territories so that attendance at lectures or important
exams are a daily nightmare; the forced return of Gaza
students "illegally" studying in the West
Bank, some after seven years of separation from their
families and in their final year of medical training;
the deliberate shooting at school buses carrying six to
10-year-old children by Israeli snipers; recently, the
kidnapping and imprisonment without charge of five
senior university lecturers in Nablus; the killing of a
young female medical student by CN gas. All of this I
have witnessed at first hand. My
outrage is not fuelled by bigotry or racism, but by what
I have seen. I am consumed with anger that I have not
come out of the closet many years ago to protest
publicly the wickedness I knew full well was going on in
the occupied territories. Without
inquiring my opinion about Just
as I campaigned for boycotts against apartheid in ·
Colin Green is professor of surgical science at the http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/comment/story/0,,2100391,00.html ----------------- نشرنا
لهذه المقالات لا يعني أنها
تعبر عن وجهة نظر المركز كلياً
أو جزئياً
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