Crackdowns on the movement for Palestinian rights are becoming increasingly severe in college and university communities across the United States, where young campaigners and the scholars who educate them are systematically intimidated, harassed, and punished for exercising free speech that is critical of Israel, two new studies find.
These educational institutions are being targeted precisely because students are organizing dynamic and effective direct actions, protests, and boycotts to address Israel’s human rights violations, charge the reports, whose summaries were obtained by Common Dreams ahead of their Wednesday release. The resulting suppression is doing untold harm to rigorous and open debate, campus communities, and social justice more broadly.
“Fearful of a shift in domestic public opinion, Israel’s fiercest defenders in the United States—a network of advocacy organizations, public relations firms, and think tanks—have intensified their efforts to stifle criticism of Israeli government policies,” reads the report, , released by the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and Palestine Legal.
In addition, the study continues, “high-level Israeli government figures, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and wealthy benefactors such as Sheldon Adelson and Haim Saban have reportedly participated in strategic meetings to oppose Palestine activism, particularly boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) campaigns.”
The repression, the report charges, is a “reaction to the increasingly central role universities play in the movement for Palestinian rights.”
The result is a coordinated attack that turns schools into battlefields—and extends far beyond campus borders.
The report states that, in 2014 alone, Palestine Legal responded to 152 incidents of “censorship, punishment, or other burdening of advocacy for Palestinian rights and received 68 additional requests for legal assistance in anticipation of such actions.” Just halfway through 2015, the organization had responded to 140 such incidents, marking a considerable increase.
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The vast majority of these cases—89 percent in 2014 and 80 percent in the first six months of 2015—impacted students and scholars. The most widely-reported tactics are false accusations of anti-Semitism and terrorism, bureaucratic barriers, official denunciation, legislation, threats to academic freedom, and criminal investigations.
For example, the anonymous website Canary Mission has published a list of predominantly Muslim, Arab, and non-white students it claims—without evidence—are terrorists due to their Palestine solidarity activism.
“Even if they fail to shut down your activism, they can frighten, intimidate, and wear you down,” Rahim Kurwa, a doctoral candidate at the University of California at Los Angeles, told researchers. “It often feels like anti-Palestinian groups try to make an example out of us in order to discourage other students from joining the movement.”
The crackdown also extends to the legislative front. In 2014, 11 pieces of legislation aimed at rebuking or restricting Palestinian advocacy, including BDS, were introduced—and that number jumped to 16 in the first half of 2015. Also in 2015, Illinois became the first state to implement an anti-BDS law.
This targeting is having a real impact, as exemplified in the high-profile case of Professor Steven Salaita, who was terminated from his tenured faculty position at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2014 for criticizing Israel on social media.
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