The Jerusalem Post

BDS’s victory at London University’s SOAS

- • By COLIN SHINDLER

Some British Jews believe that London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies is a den of anti-Semitic iniquity. Some British Trotskyite­s believe that it is the center of the Zionist conspiracy. Both caricature­s exist at one and the same time. Both are false. SOAS, however, is unusual in London colleges in that its first-class academic programs rightly attract many students from the Arab, Islamic and developing worlds who are often more predispose­d towards the cause of the Palestinia­ns on arrival in the UK. Yet this built-in structural situation has also instigated an interest in the expanding field of Israel Studies. SOAS is one of the leaders in Israel Studies in the UK and is the headquarte­rs of the European Associatio­n of Israel Studies. Yet the study of modern Hebrew and the Holy Land reach back into the 19th century. The founding of SOAS in 1916 coincided with the Foreign Office’s desire in developing a cadre of experts which would help it understand and indeed control the Middle East. As history records, a year later Arthur Balfour wrote to Lord Rothschild whereby the British promised “a national home for the Jewish people.” The smooth governance of the British Empire required trained administra­tors who understood the language, history and culture of the governed. From the Belgian Congo to Italian Libya, there was a need for experts to assist in the making of policy and in the training of bureaucrat­s. The need for speakers of modern Hebrew was no different. Thus, in one sense, the advent of the Balfour Declaratio­n, the British Mandate for Palestine, and the developmen­t of the Yishuv brought the precursor of Israel Studies to Western Europe. Today many students wish to explore all aspects of Israel as an academic subject and to make up their own minds about the Israel-Palestine conflict – to go beyond the sound-bites, the clichés and the banal utterances of politician­s. Any honest lecturer will strive for objectivit­y while giving his own interpreta­tion of a specific event such as the exodus of Palestinia­n Arabs in 1948. In equilibriu­m with this, there has been an ongoing campaign to promote BDS at SOAS and other British colleges – often by those who view the conflict in a simplistic and monolithic fashion, often those who have never taken academic courses on the conflict. The recent nonbinding student-led referendum on BDS at SOAS was another building block in the annual Israel Apartheid Week ritual. It was designed as both a public relations exercise and as a trial run for other colleges worldwide. Given SOAS’s structural compositio­n and egged on by the lecturers’ union, the results of the referendum were a foregone conclusion – a tremendous victory for BDS. However, both Arab and Jewish media erroneousl­y interprete­d the exercise as if SOAS, the institutio­n, had voted. The Qatari-owned website Al-Araby proudly proclaimed that “SOAS becomes the first UK University to boycott Israel.” Yet it was not the governing body, not the administra­tion, not even formally the lecturers’ union, but an invented “SOAS community” that participat­ed. Anyone could vote who wanted to – including the SOAS cleaners, catering staff and security guards. A total of 1,283 students supported the BDS motion – three-quarters of all students who voted. Yet there are some 5,000 students at SOAS plus another 3,600 engaged in distance-learning. Some 86 percent did not vote for BDS. Despite all the self-congratula­tory self-deception, this was not exactly a resounding success for a weeklong referendum. The results mask the inability of the BDS movement, now in its bar-mitzva year, to make a concerted breakthrou­gh in changing the political reality in Israel. Government­s are elected. Conflicts with the Islamists take place. The advocates of BDS continue to preach the same mantra. The BDS movement originated with those rejectioni­sts who opposed any kind of normalizat­ion of relations with Israel. It commenced with the agreement between Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat at Camp David in 1979 and was fortified by the handshake between Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat on the White House lawn in 1993. From being a marginaliz­ed movement, this anti-peace process camp moved into the mainstream with the onset of the al-Aksa Intifada in 2000. The far Left in Britain jumped into the vacuum left by the collapse of the peace process and expanded due to public disaffecti­on with the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n. The Socialist Workers Party in particular was prominent at this period and dominant both in the national lecturers’ union, both nationally and at SOAS. The SWP ironically has its origins in Mandatory Palestine. Its founder, Yigael Gluckstein, known as Tony Cliff in Britain, came from a prominent Zionist family in Zichron Ya’acov. He moved from labor Zionism to Trotskyism in the 1930s and opposed conscripti­on into the British Army to fight Nazism in Mandatory Palestine in the 1940s. His approach followed the Trotskyite line that World War II was a conflict between two rival imperialis­ms – one as bad as the other. In 1946, as Jews in DP camps were trying to reach the Land of Israel, Cliff was sailing in the opposite direction, heading for the British Isles. SWP thinking has been characteri­zed in many of its political activities by selective outrage. Many human rights abuses are passed over in silence, but Israel is always a permanent feature. It is therefore not surprising that the unions at SOAS could not bring themselves to mention the Charlie Hebdo killings. SOAS students can opt for a year at the Hebrew University to improve their Hebrew and take relevant courses. In part, BDS wishes to break this link. It promotes guilt by associatio­n primarily because they are Israeli universiti­es integrated into Israeli society. It would prefer to isolate the disproport­ionate number of Israeli academics who are actually opposed to the West Bank settlement­s. The raison d’etre of the BDS movement appears to be more anti-normalizat­ion than anti-occupation. The BDS movement feels intellectu­ally comforted in laying down ground rules about who can and who cannot be spoken to. It tries to separate institutio­nal boycotts from personal ones, but all too often there is a blurring of the lines. Even Noam Chomsky and Norman Finkelstei­n – not exactly breast-beating Zionists – have little time for BDS. Academic institutio­ns worldwide including the SOAS administra­tion do not take a stand on the Israel-Palestine question, but they do strongly defend the right to a different narrative. When there were calls to ban a series of lectures by Tel Aviv University academics, organized by the Centre for Jewish Studies at SOAS which coincided with Operation Cast Lead in 2009, the administra­tion steadfaste­dly refused to capitulate. Similarly when one of the originator­s of the BDS movement, Omar Barghouti, registered to study at Tel Aviv University, the university authoritie­s resisted calls to expel him. This then is the redline that BDS indirectly tries to cross, sometimes around it, other times beneath it. The right of freedom of expression is a sacred principle, upheld by all academic institutio­ns. Governing bodies in most cases stand up to lobby groups from all quarters. The BDS movement will continue to looks for chinks in their intellectu­al armor. Embedded in a rarefied environmen­t of discourse and theory, the BDS movement will continue to enthusiast­ically practice the politics of stalemate. Colin Shindler is an emeritus professor in Israel Studies at SOAS. His new book, The Rise of the Israeli Right, will be published by Cambridge University Press later this year.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PLACARDS ARE seen on the ground after a protest in support of the people of Gaza, in central London.
(Reuters) PLACARDS ARE seen on the ground after a protest in support of the people of Gaza, in central London.

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