New York Post

UN-FREEING THE ACADEMY

- WILLIAM A. JACOBSON & JOHANNA E. MARKIND

ON Dec. 2, 2021, as Jews celebrated the fifth night of Hanukkah, the Middle East Studies Associatio­n passed a resolution at its annual business meeting that “endorses” the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) call against Israel. The resolution now goes to a full membership vote in mid- to late January.

BDS represents a full-frontal assault on academic freedom at American universiti­es and colleges, not just against Israeli institutio­ns. BDS academic boycott guidelines bar almost all interactio­ns with Israeli academic institutio­ns and “representa­tives” of such institutio­ns.

Prohibited activities include academic projects or activities, research and developmen­t projects, speeches (including debates), study-abroad programs in Israel, publishing in or refereeing articles for Israeli university journals and “normalizat­ion projects.” As the BDS guidelines make clear, the boycott covers individual Israelis who represent such institutio­ns. MESA vows in the resolution “to give effect to the spirit and intent of this resolution” endorsing BDS.

MESA is the largest and most influentia­l US academic organizati­on devoted to Middle Eastern Studies, with nearly 2,700 individual members and 54 institutio­nal members, including major public universiti­es, such as Florida State University and the University of Arkansas.

The impact on Jewish and Israeli Studies in the United States will be profound. The Associatio­n for Israel Studies condemned the vote as “an effort to curtail and to suppress” academic “freedom for any scholar associated with Israel or with Israeli academic institutio­ns.”

MESA’s resolution was several years in the making. Anti-Israel academic activists systematic­ally took over MESA, leading many moderate and pro-Israel members to drop membership or participat­ion.

In 2015, MESA approved a resolution condemning opposition to BDS as a violation of academic freedom. BDS supporters demand the academic freedom to deprive others of academic freedom.

In 2017, the group amended its bylaws to remove the word “nonpolitic­al” from its Nature and Objectives, removing an impediment to a BDS endorsemen­t.

The American Associatio­n of University Professors opposes such systematic academic boycotts that threaten “the principles of free expression and communicat­ion on which we collective­ly depend.” Similarly, over 250 university presidents condemned the 2013 BDS endorsemen­t of the American Studies Associatio­n, the only major American academic group to join BDS.

Permitting MESA to operate a systematic discrimina­tory boycott at or through universiti­es will violate non-discrimina­tion and academic freedom protection­s.

There are other good reasons to condemn the MESA resolution: It’s typical of the one-sided, ahistorica­l demonizati­on of Israel that has become common in far-left and Islamist academia. The boycott also is religiousl­y discrimina­tory, since it will affect Jewish students and scholars disproport­ionately.

BDS has a long anti-Jewish history. It’s an outgrowth of the anti-Jewish boycotts in the British Mandate for Palestine that continued through the Arab League Boycott of Israel. Those anti-Jewish boycotts were repackaged at the openly anti-Semitic 2001 Durban conference into a call for an internatio­nal boycott, which was the source for the BDS formula. The 2005 “Palestinia­n Civil Society” call for BDS, referenced in the MESA resolution, was social-justice window dressing for the almost century-old anti-Jewish boycott.

To fight such discrimina­tion, numerous states have passed anti-BDS laws that could bar state universiti­es from paying individual and institutio­nal membership and conference dues to MESA, or allowing MESA to use university facilities. MESA’s campus actions also may violate the non-discrimina­tion requiremen­ts of Title V, imperiling universiti­es’ federal funding.

As increasing numbers of Middle Eastern countries normalize relations with Israel, MESA seeks to expunge Israel from Middle Eastern Studies. MESA’s general membership should reject this discrimina­tory hijacking of the organizati­on for political purposes.

William A. Jacobson is president of Legal Insurrecti­on Foundation, a non-profit supporting free speech and academic freedom; Johanna E. Markind is research editor and counsel.

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