Friday, November 05, 2010

Letter to editor in BC Heights today‏

To: Rebecca Clark
Subject: my letter to editor in BC Heights today


http://www.bcheights.com/2.5479/using-campus-resources-responsibly-1.1744669
In a shameful abuse of University resources, the sociology department is sponsoring use of the Vanderslice Cabaret Room for a fundraiser at Boston College Nov. 14 for the pet political cause of one of its faculty members. This political fundraiser is for a virulently anti-Israel organization founded by sociology professor Eve Spangler. Her group, which calls itself American Jews for a Just Peace (AJJP), advocates a cultural and economic boycott of Israel and the Israeli people. Other AJJP activities include weekly protests at the Israeli Consulate in Boston and sponsorship of a Gaza flotilla-inspired boat to challenge Israel's and Egypt's partial blockade of the Gaza Strip. Regardless of one's views on the merits of these activities, there can be no pretext that AJJP is simply a neutral charity, promoting an unobjectionable vision of what justice and peace look like. Professors are free to be political activists of any stripe they please. First and foremost, however, they are obligated to be educators, and to observe basic academic standards in their professional work. This is both an intellectual and an ethical responsibility. The sociology department's sponsorship of a fundraiser for a faculty member's personal political crusade erases all distinction between academic affairs and political activism.

Unfortunately, this political fundraiser is not an isolated incident, but part of a pattern in the sociology department of abusing the professor's position of power in the University to wage political campaigns. This abuse includes Spangler's extraordinarily partisan course about the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, a subject in which she has zero academic training, and about which she disavows any responsibility to treat with scholarly standards.

Such abuse of the professor's position of power in a university makes a mockery of the notion of academic freedom. It is an embarrassment to a university devoted to the highest standards of scholarship and teaching. I know that BC is a far better institution and community than this, but I worry that criticism of misconduct is most uncomfortable precisely when it is most important.
[A paragraph deleted in the paper for reasons of space:
I hope that even those who sympathize with this cause can recognize the dangerous precedent such activities set. Why not allow the Economics Department to sponsor a fundraiser for the Tea Party? Maybe a Theology professor who rejects the legitimacy of the modern state of Ethiopia, or of Pakistan, or of Spain should organize a course to impart her concerns to undergraduates and mobilize them as activists in her cause? Any of these campaigns would be just as inappropriate for a department to advocate, although perhaps not as intellectually fashionable as condemning Israel.]
--
Rebecca R. Clark

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