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Israel Shaming on College Campuses

  

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Via:  buzz-of-the-orient  •  8 years ago  •  9 comments

Israel Shaming on College Campuses

Israel Shaming on College Campuses

By Liz Wahl, Jerusalem Post, April 21, 2016

I recently returned from a tour of college campuses, in which I screened a documentary film class I host entitled Media101: Reading Between the Lines. The film advocates media literacy, explores different aspects of media bias and helps students to identify skewed news coverage. While the elements of bias can be broadly applied, in this film we specifically explore coverage of Israel and the Middle East. 

My reasons for partnering with Jerusalem U, a Jewish educational organization, to make this film are twofold. My experience working for, and ultimately publicly resigning from the Russian-backed television station RT TV, opened my eyes to the dangers of biased and propagandized media. I resigned when the station took a shameful turn toward using information manipulation to distort reality during the bloody conflict in Ukraine. With the radical transformation of the media environment in the digital age spawning outlets with varying agendas and dedication to truth, now more than ever, media literacy is a crucial tool for a functional and informed democracy.

Secondly, I felt compelled to make this film due to the bizarre backlash following my resignation from internet commentators and social media users on the far left, charging me with being part of a Zionist conspiracy to ignite World War 3. The accusations had no basis in reality. But the rhetoric was shockingly anti-Zionist and anti-Semitic.  They played on conspiratorial stereotypes that bigots have used to condemn Jews for centuries. And I’m not even Jewish. Nor do I have ties to Israel. But you don’t have to be Jewish to be disturbed by this language.

The film screenings, followed by Q &A sessions with students, were hosted by pro-Israel groups on college campuses. The campuses I visited, from Syracuse to University of Central Florida to University of Connecticut are not known to be politically charged. Yet I was shocked to hear some of the stories from students. Here, the shame of showing positive perspectives toward Israel came from professors. 

At Elon University in North Carolina, Sophomore Carly Goldstein told me about her hopes to study abroad in Israel, but was advised against it by several professors. She recalled a history class with a focus on the Middle East and how Israel came to be in which the professor said the existence of Israel was made possible because “Jews had Jews back home to send them more money and the poor Arabs didn’t have any rich Arabs to fund them.”

While she said she hasn’t experienced anti-Semitism on campus, she worries that lessons like this can be associated with the Jewish people in general. “To know that this is the only thing they might know about Israel is frightening to me,” said Goldstein. 

A PhD student in religious studies from Duke University who attended the screening discussed a paper he recently presented. His professor for this class is known to be a supporter of the anti-Israel BDS movement, a global campaign that aims to economically and politically suffocate the country. After his presentation, the professor asked him if he was Orthodox, to which he replied that that he is Jewish, but does not identify as Orthodox. “I didn’t make any judgments but she kind of took it as pro-Israel,” said Dave who did not want to disclose his last name because he wishes to get a good grade. “It makes me feel unfortunate that I have to think twice about what I write about. It makes me feel uncomfortable that I have to be subjected to the scrutiny of these professors that have a bias when they’re grading papers.”

Alex, another student in attendance that also did not want to give his last name due to grading concerns, came to the screening from a nearby community college. He recalled a history class in which the teacher “has made remarks where she indicated that she preferred for Israel not to exist... she taught that Jews don’t want the word Holocaust to be applied to the Armenian genocide because no one can suffer as much as them. She said Jews don’t think anyone can suffer as much as them.”

“There’s nothing wrong with a teacher being more liberal, that’s perfectly fine. But when it crosses the line into a kind of hatred that makes students uncomfortable, I think that there’s a problem,” said Alex. 

I did not have to dig deep to hear these stories. They were quickly recalled from students on campuses with student bodies they describe as largely apolitical. I can’t imagine what it’s like at other campuses where anti-Israel groups are known to be vocal and intimidating. 

In the academic age of safe spaces and hypersensitivity to political correctness, you would think this kind of rhetoric would be obviously off limits. These aren’t “microaggressions” – a term that has become ubiquitous particularly on campuses to describe subtle, yet unintentional comments or actions that might offend minorities. These are macro assaults on freedom of speech, cultural identity, and stifling of academic debate on a profoundly complex conflict.  

Some students worry that what happens on campus transfers on to the real world. 

“If they teach things that aren’t accurate about Israel then students might have a distorted sense of reality and they can become the future policy-makers in this country,” said Dave
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Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient    8 years ago

"She recalled a history class with a focus on the Middle East and how Israel came to be in which the professor said the existence of Israel was made possible because “Jews had Jews back home to send them more money and the poor Arabs didn’t have any rich Arabs to fund them.”"

The poor Arabs didn't have any rich Arabs to fund them? No rich Arabs? laughing dude


“If they teach things that aren’t accurate about Israel then students might have a distorted sense of reality and they can become the future policy-makers in this country,”

Like Bernie Sanders?

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
link   Krishna  replied to  Buzz of the Orient   8 years ago

and they can become the future policy-makers in this country,”

Like Bernie Sanders?

Well . . . actually there isn't much of a chance that Sanders will become a future policy maker-- let alone even coming close to getting the Dem. nomination for president...

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Krishna   8 years ago

I thought he was a Senator - wanting to become the misinformed POTUS.

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
link   Krishna  replied to  Buzz of the Orient   8 years ago

I thought he was a Senator - wanting to become the misinformed POTUS.

That's what he wants.

But he will never get elected, let alone even winning the nomination over Hillary.

 
 
 
Randy
Sophomore Quiet
link   Randy  replied to  Krishna   8 years ago

Senators help make policy (unless they're like some who just goof off in the Senate or Congressmen who do the same) but do not actually make policy themselves. Most of the policy making that comes out of Congress, House and Senate, is set by the party leadership in each institution.

 
 
 
Petey Coober
Freshman Silent
link   Petey Coober    8 years ago

Middle east studies departments in the US are funded by wealthy Arabs . They are going to be biased to reflect that funding .

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Petey Coober   8 years ago

And so they are...

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Expert
link   Perrie Halpern R.A.    8 years ago

I am presently putting together an article about the BDS movement. It is the most influential movement on college campuses today. I was quite surprised to find out some of the information that I did. But I do know that there is more and more antisemtitism on college campuses than ever before. Here is an interesting article about it:

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
link   Krishna  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A.   8 years ago

I am presently putting together an article about the BDS movement. It is the most influential movement on college campuses today. I was quite surprised to find out some of the information that I did. But I do know that there is more and more antisemtitism on college campuses than ever before. Here is an interesting article about it: 

Actually, there's relatively little true anti-Semitism in the U.S. today. 

But there's one glaring exception-- and that's on college campuses. I think many Americans would be shocked if they knew the extent of what's actually happening. In a few extreme cases, its seems more like what you might expect in Saudi Arabia- or modern day France.

I came across this video a while back that gives some idea what its like (although its probably gotten a lot worse since).

 

 
 

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