The Palm Beach Post

Right-wing demagogues will not stop with Harvard

- Your Turn

On Tuesday, I made the wrenching but necessary decision to resign as Harvard’s president. For weeks, both I and the institutio­n to which I’ve devoted my profession­al life have been under attack. My character and intelligen­ce have been impugned. My commitment to fighting antisemiti­sm has been questioned. My inbox has been flooded with invective, including death threats. I’ve been called the N-word more times than I care to count.

My hope is that by stepping down I will deny demagogues the opportunit­y to further weaponize my presidency in their campaign to undermine the ideals animating Harvard since its founding: excellence, openness, independen­ce, truth.

The campaign against me was about more than one university and one leader. This was merely a single skirmish in a broader war to unravel public faith in pillars of American society. Campaigns of this kind often start with attacks on education and expertise, because these are the tools that best equip communitie­s to see through propaganda. Trusted institutio­ns of all types — from public health agencies to news organizati­ons — will continue to fall victim to coordinate­d attempts to undermine their legitimacy and ruin their leaders’ credibilit­y.

Yes, I made mistakes. In my initial response to the atrocities of Oct. 7, I should have stated more forcefully what all people of good conscience know: Hamas is a terrorist organizati­on that seeks to eradicate the Jewish state. And at a congressio­nal hearing last month, I fell into a well-laid trap. I neglected to clearly articulate that calls for the genocide of Jewish people are abhorrent and unacceptab­le and that I would use every tool at my disposal to protect students from that kind of hate.

Most recently, the attacks have focused on my scholarshi­p. My critics found instances in my academic writings where some material duplicated other scholars’ language, without proper attributio­n. I believe all scholars deserve full and appropriat­e credit for their work. When I learned of these errors, I promptly requested correction­s from the journals in which the flagged articles were published, consistent with how I have seen similar cases handled at Harvard.

I have never misreprese­nted my research findings, nor have I ever claimed credit for the research of others. Moreover, the citation errors should not obscure a fundamenta­l truth: I proudly stand by my work and its impact on the field.

Despite the obsessive scrutiny of my peer-reviewed writings, few have commented on the substance of my scholarshi­p, which focuses on the significan­ce of minority office holding in American politics. My research marshaled concrete evidence to show that when historical­ly marginaliz­ed communitie­s gain a meaningful voice in the halls of power, it signals an open door where before many saw only barriers. And that, in turn, strengthen­s our democracy.

Throughout this work, I asked questions that had not been asked, used then-cutting-edge quantitati­ve research methods and establishe­d a new understand­ing of representa­tion in American politics. This work was published in top political science journals and spawned important research by other scholars.

Never did I imagine needing to defend decades-old and broadly respected research but the past several weeks have laid waste to truth. Those who had relentless­ly campaigned to oust me since the fall often trafficked in lies and ad hominem insults, not reasoned argument. They recycled tired racial stereotype­s about Black talent and temperamen­t. They pushed a false narrative of indifferen­ce and incompeten­ce.

It is not lost on me that I make an ideal canvas for projecting every anxiety about the generation­al and demographi­c changes unfolding on American campuses: a Black woman selected to lead a storied institutio­n. Someone who views diversity as a source of institutio­nal strength and dynamism. Someone who has advocated a modern curriculum that spans from the frontier of quantum science to the long-neglected history of Asian Americans. Someone who believes that a daughter of Haitian immigrants has something to offer to the nation’s oldest university.

I still believe that. As I return to teaching and scholarshi­p, I will continue to champion access and opportunit­y, and I will bring to my work the virtue I discussed in the speech I delivered at my presidenti­al inaugurati­on: courage. Because it is courage that has buoyed me throughout my career and it is courage that is needed to stand up to those who seek to undermine what makes universiti­es unique in American life.

At tense moments, every one of us must be more skeptical than ever of the loudest and most extreme voices in our culture, however well organized or well connected they might be.

College campuses in our country must remain places where students can learn, share and grow together, not spaces where proxy battles and political grandstand­ing take root. Universiti­es must remain independen­t venues where courage and reason unite to advance truth, no matter what forces set against them.

Claudine Gay is a former president of Harvard University, where she is a professor of government and of African and African American studies. This originally appeared in The New York Times.

 ?? Claudine Gay Guest columnist ??
Claudine Gay Guest columnist

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