Sunday, January 2, 2011

Leila Beckwith Article on Olive Tree Initiative

(Olive Tree Initiative logo)


My friend, Leila Beckwith is a professor emeritus at UCLA and one of the few faculty members in the UC system with the courage to speak out on the problem of anti-Semitism on American university campuses. The below article has just been published by American Thinker with her feelings on the Olive Tree Initiative at UC Irvine.

http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/01/the_olive_tree_initiative_a_fi.html



Sandow the Strongman


January 02, 2011


The Olive Tree Initiative: A Fig Leaf for Anti-Semitism?

By Leila Beckwith

A fig leaf is a device intended to conceal something regarded as shameful or indecent. At the University of California at Irvine (UCI), the administration uses the Olive Tree Initiative (OTI) to provide an illusory cover for the administration's lack of will to address the existence of anti-Semitism on its campus; its lack of resoluteness to condemn anti-Semitism when it occurs; its laxity about enforcing University of California policies to combat anti-Semitism. But for those with a discerning eye, the fig leaf actually reveals the shame it was intended to conceal.

As described in "A Blind Eye to Campus Anti-Semitism" by Kenneth Marcus , September 2010,


"...during the first years of the 21st century, the virus of anti-Semitism was unleashed with a vengeance in Irvine, California. There, on the campus of the University of California at Irvine, Jewish students were physically and verbally harassed, threatened, shoved, stalked, and targeted by rock-throwing groups and individuals. Jewish property was defaced with swastikas, and a Holocaust memorial was vandalized. Signs were posted on campus showing a Star of David dripping with blood. Jews ...were called "dirty Jew" and "fucking Jew," told to "go back to Russia" and "burn in hell. "


Many of the incidents during the period described by Marcus began in an anti-Israel guise.

In 2007 in an effort to ameliorate this intolerable situation, a small group of students of different ethnic and religious identities formed the Olive Tree Initiative. Its stated goal was "to promote dialogue and discussion regarding the Israeli-Arab conflict." The Initiative became an integral part of the UCI Center for Citizen Peacebuilding, with a salaried director, and faculty from the School of Social Sciences. Under OTI auspices, there have been 3 trips to Israel and the West Bank, as well as more than 70 forums on and off campus.

Dr. Daniel Wehrenfennig, the Director of the program has asserted that the OTI has "become an important hub for bridge-building, dialogue and cooperation between students and student groups." UCI has touted the OTI as "sowing the seeds of peace," and Chancellor Drake has given its founders an award for "Living Our Values." When the Regents of the University of California held a special meeting March 24, 2010 to address a rash of incidents of bigotry that included the mocking of Black History month at a fraternity party and nooses at UCSD, swastikas and anti-gay graffiti at UC Davis, and the disruption at UCI of the speech of the Israeli Ambassador to the U.S., Chancellor Drake acclaimed the OTI as proof that students on his campus "live and practice tolerance." In May 2010, the Orange County Human Rights Commission commended the OTI , and later that month, President Yudof publicly congratulated the OTI and two of its student leaders with a first ever President's Award for Outstanding Leadership.

However, despite the praise and accolades the OTI has received, and the investment of significant university resources, the campus climate for Jewish students at UCI has not improved since the establishment of this program, and in some ways it has deteriorated. The Muslim Student Union (MSU), the major perpetrator of the anti-Semitic actions and harassment of Jews at UCI has not become more moderate.

If anything, the opposite is true. For instance, in February 2010 the MSU, in an organized campaign, planned beforehand, as revealed by emails and minutes of an MSU meeting anonymously sent to the university administration, deliberately disrupted the lecture by Israeli ambassador to the U.S., Michael Oren. MSU members screamed slogans such as "propagating murder is not an expression of free speech", "killer' and "how many Palestinians did you kill?" Although the Dean of Political Science and the Chancellor, himself, pleaded with the audience to be polite and courteous, it was to no avail.

In March 2010, the UCI student council passed a resolution condoning the disrupters' behavior. Jewish student leaders, including those who founded and were involved in the OTI, appeared before the UCI student council and asked "when will the student government stand up for me?"

And in May, 2010, in solidarity with the campaign initiated by Muslim and pro-Palestinian students on UC campuses to promote anti-Israel divestment resolutions in their student senates, the MSU hosted a week-long event entitled Israel Apartheid Week: A Call to Boycott, Divest, and Sanction Israel. The event featured anti-Semitic imagery and virulently anti-Israel rhetoric from seven speakers well-known for their animus of Israel, including Imam Abdul Malik Ali, a favorite invitee of the MSU. Abdul Malik Ali compared the Jews in the audience to Nazis, expressed support for Hamas, Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad that are listed by the U.S. government as terrorist organizations, and called for the destruction of the "apartheid state of Israel."

Indeed, the campus climate had become so oppressive for Jewish students at UCI that over 100 Jewish UCI students, including the heads of all of the Jewish student groups and even some students who participated on OTI trips to Israel, signed the following statement in June 2010:

"We are Jewish students at the University of California and we are outraged and deeply offended by the behavior of some student groups on campus who sponsor speakers, films and exhibits that use hateful anti-Jewish rhetoric and imagery and openly support terrorism against Israel and the Jewish people. As Jewish students, we are also deeply disturbed by student initiated boycott and divestment campaigns which falsely accuse the Jewish state of crimes against humanity. Please understand that these speakers, exhibits, events and campaigns are as offensive and hurtful to Jewish students as a "Compton cookout" or noose are to African-American students. We demand that the UC administrators recognize and address the concerns of Jewish students in the same way as they respond to those of all other minority groups. "

At about the same time, over 60 UCI faculty members published an open letter in the campus newspaper stating that they were deeply disturbed about activities on their campus that fomented hatred against Jews and Israelis, and that many faculty and students felt intimidated, and even unsafe at UCI.

Perversely, the Olive Tree Initiative has become part of the problem rather than a solution. More than 12 of the 70 OTI speakers who met with students in 2010 have public records that demonize and delegitimize the Jewish state; have advocated for boycotts of Israeli academics, as well as its academic and cultural institutions, divestment from American and Israeli companies, and sanctions against Israel. Some speakers are allied with U.S. designated terrorist groups. By including them in an educational program under the auspices of the prestigious University of California, the OTI bestowed legitimacy on these views, views that have been identified as anti-Semitic by western democracies, including the European Union, the Interparliamentary Coalition for Combating Antisemitism, and the U.S. State Department.

Among the persons and organizations involved in the OTI were those who are foremost in the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions(BDS) movement, a systematic, multifaceted, international campaign based on hypocrisy and double standards that aims to destroy Israel by callously using human rights language to make a false analogy between apartheid South Africa and Israel.

Consider, for instance, the following OTI presenters:

Sam Bahour, a signatory to the California Divestment from Israel Initiative, that calls on the State of California to force two public employee pension funds to divest from American and Israel companies involved in settlement activity or military defense of Israel. Signatures for the initiative are being collected by students from universities in California, who have been cynically exploited and trained at sessions at the University of Southern California and at University of California at Berkeley.

Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh, Bir Zeit University, the co-founder of both the Boycott Israeli Goods campaign and Al-Awda, an organization according to the Anti-Defamation League that opposes Israel's right to exist, supports Hamas and Hezbollah, designated by the U.S. as terrorist organizations, and actively promotes BDS . Al-Awda had made major inroads on California college and university campuses by collaborating with two student groups, Students for Justice in Palestine and the Muslim Student Association (at UCI named MSU). At the Al-Awda regional conference in February 2010, UC students and faculty were prominent leaders in the campaign to force public universities in California to divest from Israel. Qumsiyeh's virulent anti-Zionism is mixed with classical anti-Semitic tropes of Jews controlling the U.S. and Jewish scientists suppressing genetic research.

George N. Rishmawi , co-founder of the International Solidarity Movement(ISM) that has links to terrorist organizations, advocates for the destruction of Israel, sends unsuspecting volunteers (often university students like Rachel Corrie) into life-threatening situations in order to interfere with Israel security measures. The ISM has endorsed and promoted BDS campaigns globally, including at the University of California. George N. Rishmawi is currently the Director of the Palestinian Center for Rapprochement (PCR), who in 2008 , in the name of PCR, called on activists to "initiate boycotts, divestments and sanctions at all levels and including asking leaders to expel Israeli ambassadors."

Director Wehrefennig of the OTI justifies his inclusion of individuals and organizations whose aim is the destruction of Israel and are involved in anti-Semitic actions, by his aim of "an experiential learning initiative that shows both, or even multiple sides and narratives of the Israeli-Palestine conflict."

Yet, the University of California in dealing with racism on its campuses does not aim to give an equal platform to racists and to African-Americans. The University of California in dealing with gay-bashing does not give an equal platform to those who consider homosexuality a moral sin and those who do not. The University of California does not consider racism or homophobia a conflicting opinion in whose "frank expression...lies the greatest promise of wisdom" as Chancellor Drake implied about incidents of anti-Semitism. The University of California openly condemns racism and homophobia; it does not give a stage to persons like Bull Connor, or members of the Ku Klux Klan, or even Billy Graham; and it does not boast of doing so. Why is there a different response to bigotry against Jews?

For eight years, the administration has refused to name, identify, or condemn anti-Semitism at UCI. Even at the Regents meeting to address bigotry, Chancellor Drake disregarded the evidence that the MSU, a student group on his own campus, was the perpetrator of the disorder against Ambassador Oren. Instead, he spoke vaguely of some students and "external organizations or nonaffiliated individuals" as the cause of the intolerance. Even when he broke his usual silence to condemn an endorsement of terrorism made by Imam Malik Ali, during a speech sponsored by the MSU May 15, 2010, Chancellor Drake ignored Malik Ali's statement that "You Jews...are the new Nazis", and ignored the MSU posters with clear anti-Semitic imagery. In a bizarre identification of anti-Semitic speech and imagery as a benign interchange of beliefs, Chancellor Drake praised the MSU event as "the hallmark of an educational institution committed to an exchange of ideas."

So bigotry against Jews is a tolerant "exchange of ideas" according to the UC administration whereas bigotry against other groups is forcibly condemned. When UC President Yudof states that his administration has "a responsibility to speak out against activities that promote intolerance or undermine civil dialogue", he chooses to ignore the fact that accusing Jewish students of being Nazis is a promotion of intolerance. Neither he nor any Chancellor spoke out. An egregious double standard does exist at the University of California.

The University of California flaunts the OTI as a fig leaf, but the OTI actually exemplifies the problem and does not provide a solution. Turning a blind eye to the shame of anti-Semitism at UCI does not, has not, will not diminish its expression. The University of California must finally directly address its responsibility to ensure a non-hostile environment for Jewish students. California taxpayers and the University of California should not fund nor support the Olive Tree Initiative. Terminating public funding for the OTI would be an important first step in the right direction.

15 comments:

  1. It's great when someone captures the essence of the problem and communicates it so well. Beckwith is right when she writes "California taxpayers and the University of California should not fund nor support the Olive Tree Initiative. Terminating public funding for the OTI would be an important first step in the right direction."

    She should add members of the Jewish community to those who should not fund the program. While the Jewish Federation claims they only finance the cost for Jewish students to be included in the program and further claim that no students were actually influenced, overall, it is a net negative. After 3 years of the program, the MSU programs are worse and anti-Semitism at UCI continues.

    The blame for the failure to deal with the problem of the intractable Muslim Student Union radiates out from UCI to the Jewish community organizations.

    UCI administration and faculty resonate with the Leftist/Muslim world view that Israel is the one in the wrong on these issues. Therefore, they side with the MSU and don't care to see their trespasses (as in the Galloway event) and are lenient in their punishments(as in the Oren event), if they must go that far.

    The Jewish community organizations in turn similarly don't care to see UCI's biases, not because they resonate with the Muslim world view, but because
    too often they suspend their critical faculties. They are too quick to buy into programs like OTI that sound good but are badly flawed in the execution. Then they are defensive when confronted with criticisms, not only on specific programs but on the deteriorating situation at UCI.

    .

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  2. Miggie,

    I concur with your analysis. I also think that we are holding the Muslim and Palestinian side to a lower standard, which we should not do. Poor behavior should not be excused.

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  3. This could be summarized in very few words: OTI was a good idea, but everyone isn't buying into peaceful dialog. Some, including some Muslim students, persist in rejecting this alternative and indulging in violence and intimidation. That's no reason to stop OTI, but OTI is no excuse for not quashing violence and intimidation.

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  4. Siarlys,

    The issue as I see it is not whether Jewish and/or Muslim/ Christian students should or not be exposed to both sides of the conflict. It is whether Jewish donors would contribute if they know the true nature of the Palestinian figures involved.

    Or we could say-should Muslim donors contribute if they knew their funding would support Muslim students talkinmg with someone like say, Bibi Netanyahu?

    It is alkl about full disclosure and transparency. Then let all donors give or not give as they see fit.

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  5. What is missing in Leila's excellent report on the OTI is that the Ford Foundation(FF)is one of or probably the main organization that financially supports the OTI using/luring Jews to attack Israel.

    See here: http://jewtudes.blogspot.com/2010/12/ford-foundation-up-to-its-old-tricks.html

    The Ford Foundation has a history of anti Semitism. It has collaborated with the Nazis and hasn't stop there. It continues to use fig leafs to do just that.

    If you Google about it you will find ample info. of the FF sinister agenda:

    http://www.google.com/search?sclient=psy&hl=en&client=firefox-a&hs=ZD6&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&source=hp&q=Ford+Foundation+anti-Semitism&btnG=Search

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  6. The Ford Foundation is a big-time lefty institution. Here is what Discover the Networks has to say about FF

    http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/funderProfile.asp?fndid=5176

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  7. "Ford Foundation(FF)is one of or probably the main organization that financially supports the OTI using/luring Jews to attack Israel"

    @Anonymous & Gary:

    This is a ridiculous assumption to make with absolutely no backing, academically or personally. From what I've seen students go from OTI to become Jewish and pro-Israel student leaders.

    Case in point:
    - Every AFI President for the last 3 years
    - Current Hillel President
    - Current MPME President
    - Current AFI Vice President

    Other past Jewish students are now pursuing degrees in Israel, working for the Israeli consulate, and other organizations.

    Shame on you for this faulty information.

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  8. Anonymous,
    Please define leader. Does having a title make you a leader? Arguments can be made that many of the student "leaders," (ie those with important sounding titles) have been anything but true leaders. A title does not a leader make.

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  9. should Muslim donors contribute if they knew their funding would support Muslim students talkinmg with someone like say, Bibi Netanyahu?

    In my seldom humble opinion, yes, absolutely they should. However, they haven't asked me. In general, the more that mortal adversaries meet each other face to face, over a plate of hummus, the harder it is to demonize each other.

    As for transparency, I continue to find that a red herring, BECAUSE everything you have presented suggests that those who donate know exactly what it goes for. The fuss is being kicked up by people who ALSO know, and disapprove. Well, they have a right to disapprove, and to say so. But they're not the ones donating. There is no deception, just a sharp disagreement.

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  10. Actually, Siarlys, there has been some deception. Some donors are upset, as the OTI trip was presented to them by the Federation without including the necessary information about the background of the speakers the students would be speaking to. One even said, "Had I known this was going on, I would never have given a donation." Maybe now that the issue has been discussed there is transparency, but initially, there was not.

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  11. Siarlys,

    Apparently these OTI dissenters know something that Yuli Edelsetein, a Likud Israeli minister, does not. He saw our itinerary for the trip, and even though the dissenters attempted to convince him not to come, he came, loved it, and even applauded the program.

    The fact of the matter is that the right-wing Jewish diaspora cares more about the "delegitimization" of Israel than right-wing Israelis themselves.

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  12. Matan,

    "Right-wing diaspora"?

    Don't you think that deligitimization of Israel is the first step to denying its right to exist?

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  13. Matan,
    This is not about politics, so how about you stick to the facts and leave the right-wing comments out? They add nothing other than to demonstrate your own political bias.

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  14. Anonymous, if every word written here is not "politics" then what in the world is it?

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  15. Siarlys,
    The issue of OTI should be decided based on the facts. Whether someone is right-wing or left-wing in regards to how they view the arab-israeli conflict is irrelevant to OTI and the facts. On a recent blog entry Matan posted on his blog, he labels those opposing OTI as right-wing and comments on their position on the "settlements." One's position on the "settlements" or any other aspect of Israeli policy is irrelevant to the issue of OTI.

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