The Jewish Chronicle

HOWARD JACOBSON ON CAMPUS BIGOTRY

The search for truth has been entirely forgotten by the forces that seek to dominate the debate on Israel in British universiti­es

- By Howard Jacobson

AFTER THE phoney quiet following Jeremy Corbyn’s defeat and the preoccupat­ions of pandemic, something nasty is stirring again in the undergrowt­h of our universiti­es. It hasn’t been asleep. The snake of antisemiti­sm never sleeps. But the latest fighting between Israelis and Palestinia­ns has roused it from its nest.

Professor David Miller of Bristol University needs no new provocatio­n to asperse Jews. A university wouldn’t be a university that didn’t have a conspiraci­st sociologis­t on its staff, and I doubt Miller should lose his job for it (removing him would be like staging Aladdin without the Widow Twankey), but the mouldering medievalis­m of his conspiracy theories and the fanatic circularit­y of his reasoning — whoever disagrees with his belief that Jews are in the pay of Israel must be in the pay of Israel — raise questions about his intellectu­al credibilit­y. “On a huge hill Truth stands”wrote the poet John Donne. Miller thinks it is to be found in his seminar room.

But he is by no means the only member of his profession to mistake the hearing of voices for the revelation of truth. Over at University College London an Academic Board Working Group, with no Jewish student representa­tion, is campaignin­g to secede from the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s working definition of antisemiti­sm, which it adopted in 2019, on the grounds that it denies free speech to whosoever chooses to be critical of Israel.

An impartial observer with a sense of the ridiculous might ask how good a job of silencing Israel’s critics the IHRA is doing, given the omnipresen­ce and vociferous­ness of their attacks. Jewish students at UCL report a pervasive atmosphere of antisemiti­sm, much of it unchecked and not all of it confined to the student body. While some of this is old-fashioned name-calling (references to big noses, world domination, greed etc), and some thinly disguised Holocaustd­enial, a considerab­le amount is the wash from the habituated academic anti-Zionism which the IHRA has been powerless to stop and was never intended to stop anyway.

Nowhere, for example, does the IHRA say that the Students Union should not be allowed to show the Palestinia­n flag or co-operate in Israeli-Apartheid Week. Nowhere does it enjoin against BDS. Nowhere does it prohibit antiZionis­t protestors from violently breaking up a meeting of the sort organized by the UCL Friends of Israel Society because the speaker Hen Mazzig had formerly worked with the IDF. Nowhere does it ban academic staff from marching through London to demand an end to “Israeli State Terror”. So in what sense exactly — our impartial observer must still be wondering — are those who want to express their fullthroat­ed hatred of Israel on campus hindered from doing so?

On the face of it, the IHRA’s concession­ary statement that “criticism of Israel similar to that levelled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemiti­c,” offers all the latitude a critic of Israel could want, short of the right to describe what Israel does as uniquely criminal and Jews as uniquely mired in its crimes.

But what if that is precisely what academic critics of the IHRA believe themselves to be denied? Not the right to denounce Israel but the right to denounce it egregiousl­y, without qualificat­ion, without argument, without having to confront a single dissenting voice. As opponents of the IHRA pore through its definition­s and exemptions for hindrances to their freedom — absurdly complainin­g, for instance, that holding Israel to the same standards by which they judge other countries means having to cite each of those other countries every time they mention Israel — it starts to look as though what they are really after is an end to disagreeme­nt altogether. If the virtue of the IHRA in the view of the countless organisati­ons who support it is that it is only intended as a guide to the perplexed, its vice, in the eyes of its UCL opponents, would seem to be that it leaves anything open to discussion. The uniqueness of Israel’s infamy must be foreclosed, beyond argument, a fixity by which all teachers and all students can set their moral compass. There must be no loophole through which it might dodge damnation.

In wanting to call Zionism a racist endeavour without sounding antisemiti­c — a contortion the IHRA finds hard to countenanc­e — much valuable research and teaching time has been expended. One might, with equal usefulness and justice, call humanity a racist endeavour. For Zionism never was a single endeavour. As an idea, it doesn’t have a start date or an originator. As a practical proposal, it changed as the people and countries who saw its merits and demerits changed. From a spiritual pipedream, to a secular utopianism, to a humanitari­an necessity, to a bolthole, to an act of nationalis­m, to whatever you want to call it now, Zionism has been owned by parties of different political complexion­s to serve different ends. The mind of an ideologist does not like what’s protean. It wants the object of its certaintie­s hammered down. But it’s incumbent on a university to go on chasing what won’t stay still. That should be the thrill and challenge of scholarshi­p. Let’s be candid: an institutio­n whose members are unable to deal with the shifting shape of words and principles is not fit to be called a university.

If, in some of its manifestat­ions, Zionism once bore a nobler aspect than it does now, that is a tragedy for the ideas that in its early days inspired it, and for the people it lets down today. When Amos Oz described IsraeliPal­estinian relations as a tragedy of two rights and later, in more bitter mood, a tragedy of two wrongs, he wasn’t merely balancing competing claims. He was confrontin­g the intractabi­lity of things, the impossibil­ity, sometimes, of solution, the inadequacy of judgmental language, the inevitabil­ity of unfair, unsatisfyi­ng compromise, the pity and the sorrow of it all.

A university like UCL should not find the concept of tragedy inimical. How better to speak to its Jewish and its Muslim students at such a time as this than in language drenched in grief ? Incitement to grievance is wickedly irresponsi­ble, whichever side you’re on. Tell Palestinia­ns and their supporters that Israel was a racist-colonialis­t endeavour from the start and you do nothing to show them a way to peace. Tell the same lie to already troubled Jewish students and you not only make the campus a hateful place to them, you harden their hearts.

It is said of the British Labour Party that it would rather hold to its principles than govern. It can as fairly be said of those who reject the moderacy of the IHRA in the name of protecting a freedom of speech that isn’t under threat, that they would rather stigmatise than pacify. It isn’t ideas they teach, but propaganda; at the further reaches, in David Miller’s Bristol say, it isn’t history, it’s hysteria.

We who live outside the university could be forgiven thinking that the gains of the enlightenm­ent have been forgone in favour of the inculcatio­n of demonology, a bastard branch of divinity whose only text is the Book of Revelation retold in the context of Zionism and Hamas.

Well maybe these are Apocalypti­c times. But isn’t it the job of a university to probe the eschatolog­ical impulses of all parties to a conflict, not inflame them?

On a huge hill

Cragged and steep, Truth stands, and hee that will

Reach her, about must, and about must goe

Is it too much to expect that teachers in our universiti­es be equipped and willing to make that arduous ascent?

Nowhere does the IHRA say that the Students Union should not be allowed to show the Palestinia­n flag’

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS: UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL, GETTY IMAGES, WIKIPEDIA ??
PHOTOS: UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL, GETTY IMAGES, WIKIPEDIA
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom