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Tales of Student Torment

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The truth is that pro-Israel lobbies like the AJC are attempting to shut down the free speech rights of groups supporting Palestinian rights and the boycott of Israel. Their supporters on campus are active, aggressive, and in fact more un-American (their efforts are blatantly unconstitutional) than those who support oppressed and discriminated against Palestinians. It is the latter, and not the former, who stand up for human and civil rights and international law.

As pro-Palestinian advocacy has increased both on and off American college campuses, there have, as noted above, been occasional confrontations. Some have turned "disrespectful." However, apart from the anti-constitutional effort to outlaw the historically legitimate tactic of boycott, and the propaganda effort to cast those critical of Israel as "anti-Semites" all of which the AJC supports -- most of these confrontations seemed spontaneous. But that is not what Mr. Kogen would have us believe. He is suggesting that there is some sort of premeditated effort to "torment" and "harass" Jewish students who support Israel. Yet, you have to understand, he is, in part, paid to generate a picture of renewed hostility to Jews while suggesting that most Jews are Zionists like himself. That certainly seems to be a consequence of his job.

Part III -- Campus Scene in Israel and the Occupied Territories

While we are on the topic of "what it is like to be a Jew on Campus" in the U.S., I thought it would be appropriate to examine what it is like to be a Palestinian on campus in Israel and its Occupied Territories. Here are some examples which in fact typify the treatment of Palestinians:

Birzeit University is the premier Palestinian institution of higher learning on the Occupied West Bank. Students attending Birzeit are subject to arrest by Israel's occupying army at any time, and "in the last months of 2019, the Israeli occupation has launched one of its most aggressive arrest campaigns against Palestinian students in recent years." Statistics kept by the Palestinian prisoners' rights organization Addameer indicate that "some 250 Palestinian university students are currently imprisoned by Israel." And what are these university students guilty of? The Israelis claim that they are members of "armed Hamas cells" on campus, but evidence that is not manufactured by the Israelis themselves is sparse. The real "crime" is that these students are standing up and protesting their own oppression.

The aim of these arrests is to break the morale of Palestinian students and make politics a subject to be avoided. Speaking from his campus office, Sameeh Hammoudeh, [a Birzeit] university professor, said the "present context has had a stifling impact on politics: there is fear, he said, 'in the heart of the students', inspired by a real threat of torture and abuse."

Moving from the Occupied Territories to Israel proper we find that "Palestinians in Israel are discriminated against systematically -- and this is especially true in Israeli academia." Israeli Arab High School students "attend [ethnically segregated] schools with poor budgets, and are taught content that does not prepare them for the PET, the Psychometric Entrance Test, an exam for securing places in universities."

Those Israeli Palestinians who do make it to an Israeli institution of higher learning face an environment of estrangement and tension. As a Palestinian student at Haifa University observed, "you can't escape the feeling of alienation when you are an Arab student in the Israeli universities. On the one hand, you are in an academic environment, but on the other hand you are surrounded with guns. It has reached a point where it's difficult to see the contradiction. It has become the norm -- uniformed soldiers carrying automatic weapons are part of the academic landscape."

This is a part of Seffi Kogen's "truth about this country that means so much to all of us." Yet we can be sure that it is a truth not mentioned to the "university presidents and student affairs officers" he invites on the AJC junkets.

Part IV -- Conclusion

It would seem that Seffi Kogen and the AJC are guilty of both hypocrisy and misdirection: hypocrisy because the Zionists, both here and in Israel, are much more active at harassing their opponents than are Palestinians and their supporters (who in the U.S., by the way, are often Jewish); and misdirection (i.e., Jewish pro-Israel students on U.S. campuses are being "tormented") because they now attribute to their opponents the unethical tactics they themselves practice.

Kogen and the AJC are also guilty of purposeful confusion of two different groups: Jews in general and Zionists. While these categories can overlap, they are not inclusive. An increasing number of Jews are opposed to Zionist ideology and the racism and oppression it has engendered. And, an increasing number of Zionists are not Jewish, but rather, among others, U.S. Christian fundamentalists as well as non-Jewish immigrants coming to Israel (which in 2018 reached 54 percent of the total).

TSo, as is usual with hotly debated topics, one has to be careful to analyze the arguments and watch out for disinformation. Of course, the side that has lots of money, lots of well-organized cadres, and help from agents of the government has a significant advantage in pressing their message -- be it accurate or not. But, when it comes to the Zionist state, this propaganda machine has not been able to keep up with Israeli villainy. According to the United Nations, the "nation that means so much to all" is so consistently in violation of human and civil rights that of all the resolutions citing such criminal behavior issued by the UN, over 40 percent name Israel as the offender. Such a wretched record speaks louder than Mr. Kogen's words.

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Lawrence Davidson is a history professor at West Chester University in Pennsylvania. He is the author of Foreign
Policy Inc.: Privatizing America's National Interest
; America's
Palestine: Popular and Offical Perceptions from Balfour to Israeli
Statehood
; and Islamic Fundamentalism. His academic work is focused on the history of American foreign relations with the Middle East. He also teaches courses in the history of science and modern European intellectual history.

His blog To The Point Analyses now has its own Facebook page. Along with the analyses, the Facebook page will also have reviews, pictures, and other analogous material.

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