Los Angeles Times

Pitzer faculty err on Israel

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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.

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