Lisa:
I will comment on two points that concern facts about the BDS movement rather than assessments of its efficacy or rationale:
1. The Palestinian BDS movement targets complicit institutions and not individuals, whether they are artists or academics. This is clearly spelled out in all the statements issued by PACBI (www.pacbi.org) or the Palestinian BDS National Committee (www.bdsmovement.net).
2. BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions) covers a range of actions, including cultural and academic boycott. More can be learned by consulting the BDS website.
Lisa
Me:
Hi Lisa,
I've  been reading up on PACBI and discovered an astonishing piece of  information. Your colleague and co-founder of PACBI, Omar Barghouti, is  apparently a student of Tel Aviv University (I don't know if he's been  expelled or left in recent days, but he was a student long after PACBI  was formed).
 Please answer this question: why  is it OK for founder-members of your organisation to take advantage of  facilities offered by the Israeli state, when you expect Indian artists  to boycott similar Israeli institutions? It seems like hypocrisy on a  grand scale to me.
 regards
GirishMe, again:
Sorry to keep writing, but I just discovered an article on  the PACBI site about Tel Aviv University, headlined, Study: Tel Aviv  University Part and Parcel of the Israeli Occupation:
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1038Is this is the same Tel Aviv University attended by your colleague and co-founder of PACBI Omar Barghouti? 
I've  also read a statement about how it's unfair to criticise Barghouti  since Palestinians don't have any choice in educational matters.  However, from what I read, Barghouti was born in Qatar, and has a degree  from Columbia. He certainly has access to a world of learning, yet he  chooses to stay enrolled in an institution that his own organisation  calls "Part and Parcel of the Israeli Occupation"!
I've  read some articles about you, and I greatly respect what you have done  in your career and the many initiatives you have led to enable greater  educational access for Palestinians. However, PACBI's policies appear to  me not just misguided in themselves, but also fatally compromised by  the Barghouti situation, unless there is more to it than Wikipedia and  other sources put forward.
regards
Girish
regards
Girish
Lisa:
You probably haven't come across the PACBI response to the campaign against Omar Barghouti. Here it is:
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=992
Me:
Hi Lisa,
I did read that statement, and this paragraph in it:
"PACBI has never called upon Palestinian  citizens of Israel and those who are compelled to carry Israeli  identification documents, like Palestinian residents of occupied  Jerusalem, to refrain from studying or teaching at those Israeli  institutions. That would have been an absurd position, given the  complete lack of alternatives available" Omar  Barghouti, I've read, was born in Qatar and educated at Columbia  University, New York. In which case, he certainly did, and does, have  many alternatives available.
The PACBI statement also says:
"leaders  of the anti-colonial resistance movement in India and Egypt, among many  other countries, received their education at British universities at  the height of the colonial era."They did; but they didn't then turn around and ask everybody else to boycott those institutions like Omar Barghouti has done.
I should also point out that the fact that Omar Barghouti was admitted to Tel Aviv University, and continued to be a student even after his anti-Israel activism became well known, is an excellent example of why the parallel with apartheid, which is the basis of PACBI's argument, collapses under close scrutiny. It is inconceivable that a Black African would have been admitted to the University of Cape Town when apartheid laws were in force. A black or coloured ANC activist would have been in jail rather than studying in a prestigious South African institution. The Israeli state allows a remarkable amount of dissent from citizens, and much of that dissent comes from intellectuals employed in state-funded bodies such as universities. That was simply not the case in apartheid South Africa.
regards
Girish
I will update this post if Lisa responds.
"It is inconceivable that a Black African would have been admitted to the University of Cape Town when apartheid laws were in force. A black or coloured ANC activist would have been in jail rather than studying in a prestigious South African institution."
ReplyDelete"The Israeli state allows a remarkable amount of dissent from citizens, and much of that dissent comes from intellectuals employed in state-funded bodies such as universities. That was simply not the case in apartheid South Africa."
The second assertion is true, but the first is not: Mandela was educated in part at Wits, which is the equivalent of UCT. There were a handful of liberal/"English" institutions - UCT, Wits, Rhodes, etc. which didn't do exactly as told in the bad old days (though, in effect, pretty much toed the line by default).
-Achal
Achal, Mandela was at Witwatersrand before the Extension of University Education Act of 1959; apartheid legislation got progressively more segregationist over time, as far as I know, though it's true that some institutions continued to bend the law.
ReplyDelete