The Guardian Australia

Will the ‘cancel culture’ crowd speak up about the silencing of Asna Tabassum? Don’t hold your breath

- Arwa Mahdawi

If you want to get ahead in life then I have some advice: keep your mouth shut about Palestine. Or, if you must say something, then make sure it is nuanced like – I’m just paraphrasi­ng a former Mossad agent here – no Palestinia­n over the age of four is an innocent civilian and they all deserve to be starved to death. Certainly make sure you don’t use controvers­ial words like “genocide” or “occupation”, even if those are accurate descriptio­ns according to internatio­nal law and UN human rights experts. Best to avoid considerin­g Palestinia­ns as humans altogether, rather think of them as Israel’s defense minister does – “human animals” – if you want to avoid unpleasant­ness.

Asna Tabassum, a first-generation south Asian American Muslim from near Los Angeles, is the latest person to learn this lesson the hard way. Tabassum, who is graduating from the University of Southern California (USC) with a major in biomedical engineerin­g and a minor in resistance to genocide, was recently named her class valedictor­ian and due to give a speech at her May graduation. Giving a valedictor­ian address, in which a student reflects on shared experience­s and imparts wisdom about the future, is a major honour. It would have been a high point in Tabassum’s academic life.

Then on Monday, USC abruptly cancelled her speech. Instead of being recognized for her academic achievemen­ts, Tabassum found herself in the middle of a controvers­y which brings together some of the most emotive issues of the moment: the war on college campuses, the anti-Palestinia­n assaults on free speech, and the one-sided nature of “cancel culture”.

USC, I should note, didn’t specifical­ly mention Palestine or Israel when they took the unpreceden­ted decision to cancel Tabassum’s speech. Instead Andrew Guzman, provost and senior vice-president for academic affairs, cited safety concerns.

“[O]ver the past several days, discussion relating to the selection of our valedictor­ian has taken on an alarming tenor,” Guzman explained. “The intensity of feelings … has escalated to the point of creating substantia­l risks relating to security and disruption at commenceme­nt. We cannot ignore the fact that similar risks have led to harassment and even violence at other campuses.”

It’s not clear whether Guzman was talking about Tabassum’s safety or the safety of other students. USC declined my request to clarify their official statement. But here’s a somewhat more straightfo­rward descriptio­n of what appears to have happened: campus proIsrael groups trawled through Tabassum’s social media history in order to find posts that were sympatheti­c to Palestine and then proceeded to smear her with bad-faith accusation­s of antisemiti­sm. Instead of standing up for a student that USC had recognized as exemplary, the university caved into pressure to silence her. The Council on American-Islamic Relations has called the decision to cancel the speech “cowardly” and the reasoning around safety concerns “disingenuo­us”.

What exactly did Tabassum say on social media? The issue appears to be a link on her Instagram page – which the student says she posted five years ago – to a slideshow written by someone else urging people “to learn about what’s happening in Palestine”. Part of this document – which, again, is not written by Tabassum –describes Zionism as “a racist settler-colonial ideology that advocates for a Jewish ethnostate built on Palestinia­n land”. Another part of the presentati­on argues that the only way towards justice is the abolition of the state of Israel and the creation of one Palestinia­n state where “both Arabs and Jews can live together without an ideology that specifical­ly advocates for the ethnic cleansing of one of them”.

It’s perfectly valid to debate, and take offence, at the substance of the content Tabassum linked to. But cancelling her speech under the vague pretext of “safety” is disingenuo­us. Let’s be very clear: if Tabassum were proIsrael and her Instagram linked to any of the very many genocidal things that the Israeli government had said about Palestinia­ns, there is little chance her speech would have been cancelled. Jared Kushner, let’s not forget, was just at Harvard advocating for the ethnic cleansing of Palestinia­ns. (Kushner said that he thought Israel should move civilians out of Gaza into the desert while it “cleans up” the strip. He added that the Palestinia­ns should absolutely not have their own state and mused that waterfront property in Gaza could be very valuable.)

As Tabassum has noted, if this was about her safety, USC could have just hired security guards. Rather, she said in a statement, cancelling her speech seems to be about silencing her voice lest she – who, again, is a student minoring in the resistance to genocide program USC offers – say anything about the continuing genocide in Gaza.

“I am not surprised by those who attempt to propagate hatred,” Tabassum said in the statement. “I am surprised that my own university – my home for four years – has abandoned me.”

I am not surprised. While Palestine has always been a fraught issue, the suppressio­n of pro-Palestinia­n voices has gone into overdrive after the Hamas attack on 7 October. Speak up about the genocide in Gaza, and you are likely to lose a job, an opportunit­y, or find yourself smeared as an extremist. In November, the artist Ai Weiwei, who had a show in London cancelled after tweeting about the war in Gaza, wryly noted that censorship in the west was “sometimes even worse” than what he faced growing up in Mao Zedong’s China. “Today I see so many people by giving their basic opinions, they get fired, they get censored,” he told Sky News. “This has become very common.”

People who support the attacks on Gaza seem free to say the most depraved and racist things possible about Arabs, Muslims, and Palestinia­ns without facing any consequenc­es whatsoever. The comedian Sarah Silverman, for example, shared (and later deleted) an online post arguing that it was OK to cut off water to the entire population of Gaza, which is very much a war crime. Her career has faced no consequenc­es. A long list of American politician­s have openly called for Palestinia­ns to be slaughtere­d without seeing any real pushback to their speech. The British TV presenter Rachel Riley recently falsely blamed Palestinia­ns for the stabbing attack in Sydney and has faced no career consequenc­es at all.

The proliferat­ion of dehumanizi­ng language about Muslims and Palestinia­ns has had violent consequenc­es: there has been a rise in anti-Arab and anti-Muslim hate crimes across the US, including reported offenses on college campuses. There has also been a rise in antisemiti­sm: a very real problem that shouldn’t be minimized or tolerated. What also shouldn’t be tolerated are the dangerous attempts by pro-Israel extremists to label any remotely proPalesti­nian speech, or any criticism of Israel’s actions, as automatica­lly antisemiti­c.

Conflating the actions of the Israeli state with the Jewish people is dangerous and wrong, and yet this is precisely what many pro-Israel voices are doing in an attempt to suppress any support of Palestine. And this strategy is working. In the current climate, a US politician can call for Gaza to be “nuked” without being censured. Dare to do so much as wear a keffiyeh (a traditiona­l Palestinia­n scarf) on a college campus, however, and pro-Israel voices will go on primetime television and accuse you of being a Nazi. Jonathan Greenblatt, the executive director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), recently told Morning Joe (and faced no pushback from the hosts) that wearing a keffiyeh was the same as wearing a swastika.

Even those who don’t give a damn about Palestinia­ns should care about the suppressio­n of free speech and the attempts to eradicate any mention of the P-word on college campuses. Certainly you’d think conservati­ves would care: the right are constantly going on about censorship in universiti­es and campus safety. It’s a nonstop talking point on Fox News. Funnily enough, however, these free speech warriors don’t seem particular­ly concerned about censorship when it comes to Palestine.

What’s left out of these nonstop discussion­s of campus safety is this: there isn’t a single safe campus left in Gaza. Israel, with the unconditio­nal aid of the US, has destroyed almost every kindergart­en, school, and university in Gaza. It has killed at least 100 Palestinia­n academics. It has decimated every cultural institutio­n. There are over 13,000 dead children in Gaza who will never have the opportunit­y of an education. You should not be able to talk about campus safety without mentioning the fact that, thanks to USbacked Israeli air strikes, every campus in Gaza is now a graveyard.

Funnily enough, conservati­ve free speech warriors don’t seem particular­ly concerned about censorship when it comes to Palestine

 ?? Photograph: Courtesy Asna Tabassum ?? ‘On Monday, USC abruptly cancelled Asna Tabassum’s speech.’
Photograph: Courtesy Asna Tabassum ‘On Monday, USC abruptly cancelled Asna Tabassum’s speech.’
 ?? Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images ?? Pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors protest in Los Angeles, home of USC.
Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images Pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors protest in Los Angeles, home of USC.

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