Pitzer faculty err on Israel
Re “Israel debate causes rift at Pitzer,” Dec. 8
The Pitzer College faculty members who voted in favor of suspending the study abroad program at the University of Haifa in Israel due to concerns about the treatment of Palestinian students and visitors to Palestinian universities displayed dubious logic.
It is the universities in Israel that maintain a keen interest in protecting human rights.
In the recent case of Lara Alqasem, initially denied entry to Israel before entering a master’s program in human rights at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, it was the university that joined Alqasem’s appeal to the Supreme Court and provided intellectual firepower so she could win her case and study in Israel.
Little is to be gained by standing on a soapbox in Claremont when students could travel, study, interact and judge for themselves through study-abroad programs. Lois Fishman
Los Angeles
I support Palestinian rights, but I think it would have been better for Pitzer to start a parallel program at a Palestinian campus such as Bethlehem University
Or, Pitzer could have created a component of the study-abroad program where the participants volunteer with Palestinian humans rights organizations to fully expose the students to people with a wide range of opinions and experiences.
Rather than denying any type of learning in that critical environment, create the experiences that you want people to have. Isolation breeds ignorance, and we all know what ignorance breeds. Lori Chudacoff
San Anselmo, Calif.