National Post (National Edition)

Human-rights complaint filed against professor

Anti-Semitism alleged by U. of Lethbridge

- LAUREN KRUGEL

The University of Lethbridge says it is lodging a complaint with the Alberta Human Rights Commission about a longtime professor accused of espousing anti-Semitic views.

Anthony Hall was suspended without pay in October following comments he made in online articles and videos suggesting there was a Zionist connection to the 9/11 attacks and that the events of the Holocaust should be up for debate.

The university says its board of governors reviewed whether a complaint was warranted and justifiabl­e.

“From the findings of that assessment, the board has decided to proceed with a complaint to the Alberta Human Rights Commission against Dr. Hall for publishing statements, alone and in collaborat­ion with others, that could be considered hateful, contemptuo­us and discrimina­tory,” it said in a statement Monday.

Separately, the administra­tion is reviewing complaints made against Hall by members of the university community.

The university said Hall’s pay has been reinstated because of how long the Alberta Human Rights Commission might take.

A commission spokeswoma­n said it could take years for a complaint to be heard by a tribunal.

Hall — a tenured professor who has taught Native American studies, liberal education and globalizat­ion over his 26 years at the university — said he last week received a letter dated Dec. 19 from university president Michael Mahon informing him of the complaint.

In the letter, which Hall provided to The Canadian Press, Mahon said that aside from pay, all other terms of the suspension remain unchanged. Hall is banned from teaching or supervisin­g students, nor can he conduct research in the name of the university, use his affiliatio­n with the university or set foot on campus.

Hall said the complaint is a way for the administra­tion to manoeuvre around its collective agreement with faculty. “It represents an enormous effort to change the landscape of higher education in Canada,” he said.

“I was ripped from the classroom midterm in October and my students were deprived of the course they chose and the professor they chose.”

Both the University of Lethbridge Faculty Associatio­n and the Canadian Associatio­n of University Teachers criticized Hall’s suspension before any official finding of wrongdoing.

Amanda Hohmann with B’nai Brith Canada said she’s pleased with how the university has handled the situation and says the reinstatem­ent of Hall’s pay isn’t a vindicatio­n.

“Certainly, we would support anything that means that the complaint would be handled properly and is going to succeed,” she said.

“We would hate to see something like this thrown out on a technicali­ty.”

Hohmann said Hall’s appearance earlier this month on a radio show posted on Stormfront — a white nationalis­t website that describes itself as a “community of racial realists and idealists” — shows the complaint is not an assault on the institutio­n of tenure, as Hall argues, but a defence of human rights.

“Instead of being repentant or apologizin­g for his behaviour, he’s doubled down and he’s gone even further down the rabbit hole of antiSemiti­sm,” she said.

Hall said his participat­ion in the segment — which touched on his suspension, 9/11 theories and the plight of indigenous people, among other things — was not an endorsemen­t of Stormfront beliefs.

“It must be understood that my position is very different than that of those who would segregate territory based on race,” he said.

“I condemn that and I think it’s important that we talk across different points of view.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada