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Israeli academics say their universities are ‘best chance’ for peace

As campus protests urge Canadian officials to cut ties, academics say they offer reconciliation path
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Among the demands of pro-Palestinian activists, many of whom have set up protest encampments on university campuses in Canada and the United States, is for Israeli universities to be isolated. Pro-Palestinian activists at their encampment on the McGill University campus in Montreal, Wednesday, May 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz

One of the demands of pro-Palestinian activists who have set up protest encampments on university campuses in Canada and the United States is a severing of ties with Israeli universities.

Tel Aviv University and other research institutions in Israel are accused of being accomplices in that country’s war in Gaza and its occupation of Palestinian territories. But some prominent Israeli academics argue their universities are also home to leading voices for peace and have been at the forefront of the internal protest movement against the right-wing government of Benjamin Netanyahu.

“Academics in Israel are striving for peace — maybe more than any other part of the Israel community,” Prof. Ran Barkai, who teaches prehistoric archeology at Tel Aviv University, said in an interview Wednesday from Israel.

Israeli universities should be empowered, he added, because they are home to the major forces pushing for reconciliation with Palestinians.

“Good relations should be kept with them because they are the centre of sanity of Israel — if sanity can be reached it’s through people in universities … decreasing relations with Israel universities would only harm chances for peace.”

To the McGill and Concordia University branches of Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights, which are among the organizers of an encampment erected Saturday on the McGill campus, Israeli universities are complicit in the war and there is nothing to be gained through dialogue with them. They say the encampment will remain until their schools “cut all academic ties with Israeli institutions.”

Leo Corry, president of The Open University of Israel, is clear about the responsibility of academics in his country with regard to the conflict with the Palestinians. Professors, he said, like most other Israeli citizens, pay taxes and take part in the military — the state requires male citizens over 18 to serve in the defence forces for at least 32 months and women for at least 24 months.

“In a way we are all part of what happens here,” Corry said in an interview from the Tel Aviv area. “Part of the problem that I and others have is the way (the conflict) is presented as black and white, and I think that’s pernicious and misleading and problematic.”

Israeli scientists, he said, and other academics have taken part in producing some of Israel’s defence weapons, like the Iron Dome, which was credited with helping to prevent serious damage or casualties from an unprecedented attack in April by Iran involving hundreds of drones, ballistic missiles and cruise missiles.

“Fortunately for us we have that. Imagine what would have happened if we hadn’t,” Corry said.

“We live in a very difficult part of the world. And if you are at McGill or any other place in the United States or Canada, you can shout or scream, but you’re not going to come to defend us when we need it, right? So we need to defend ourselves — but that doesn’t mean that whatever the army does, what the government or certain parts of society supports, is considered by me to be the correct thing to do.”

If Canadian scholars cut ties with Israeli universities, Barkai said, then academics in Canada lose the ability to influence Israeli intellectuals. International researchers can gain from the insight and innovation in Israel, but “these connections work both ways,” he said.

Israeli academics, he added, learn a lot from their international colleagues. “They get a better perspective of how we are seen in the world. It makes us understand how we should behave, what we should do better.”

Before Oct. 7, when Hamas launched a deadly attack on southern Israel, the country was wracked for months by civil unrest against Netanyahu and his ultranationalist and ultra-Orthodox political allies, who were pressing ahead with plans to pass contentious changes to Israel’s judicial system.

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