COMMENTARY: SMEAR CAMPAIGN LAUNCHED AGAINST BDS OPPONENTS

SAN DIEGO JEWISH WORLD
By Roz Rothstein and Roberta Seid
April 6, 2012
SAN DIEGO — The University of California San Diego (UCSD) student
government soundly defeated an anti-Israel divestment resolution
presented by Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) on February 29 by a
vote of 20 to 13. For the past two years, the Associated Student
government has debated and tabled divestment resolution, but this year
they voted on it. After seven hours of emotional public testimony,
divestment was defeated.
The call for divestment at UCSD is part of the larger organized
movement to delegitimize the state of Israel in what is known as BDS–the
Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement. In the past, Israel’s
fight for survival took place on conventional battlefields in the Middle
East. Today, the war against Israel has expanded into a global campaign
to demonize the Jewish state through BDS, most often on college
campuses.
While student organizations like SJP and the Muslim Student
Association claim that divestment from Israel is merely a neutral way to
reduce violence in the region, the reality is that divestment is
divisive and biased, and creates a hostile campus climate for students
who support Israel. During the debate, divestment advocates repeatedly
tried to discredit their opponents, accusing them of “racism.” They
singled out UCSD Professor Dubnov as a racist. They continually charged
that an opinion piece against divestment was signed by “racist”
professors as if arguing against divestment made one guilty of the sin
of prejudice. They argued that rejecting divestment would be divisive,
and would make them feel unsafe on campus, overlooking the fact that
they themselves had introduced the divisive measure.
While political losses often can lead to angry recriminations, in
this case, after divestment was defeated, Students for Justice in
Palestine launched a disturbing tactic. They abandoned argument about
the issue and turned solely to ad hominem attacks, publicly defaming
their opponents. SJP, the Student Affirmative Action Committee (SAAC)
and their allied groups sent a letter to the UCSD administration on
March 2, accusing their opponents of “racism” and “harassment.” They
claimed that people who videotaped the event and the recipients of the
footage were “racists, classists, homophobes, sexists and bigots.”
The letter also attacked specific individuals: Shlomo Dubnov, music
professor and campus leader of the international faculty group Scholars
for Peace in the Middle East (SPME); a UCSD staff member; and Alyssa
Wing, the president of the UCSD student government. The sponsoring
groups charged that Professor Dubnov harassed a student in the hall
after she spoke. Dubnov denies the incident ever occurred and has
brought charges of harassment against his accusers. The appropriate
campus office is now investigating the case.
They vilified Alyssa Wing as “corrupt,” and of using “offensive”
rhetoric because she spoke out against divestment. In a stunning
violation of procedural rules and fairness, the board of the UCSD
Faculty Association, a branch of the American Association of University
Professors, accepted the accusations without waiting for the university
to investigate, and issued a letter of condemnation on March 6. The
letter singled out Dubnov and the staff member, neither of whom was
given the chance to defend themselves.
The letter was also presented at a March 8 meeting of UCSD’s
Committee on Campus Climate, a branch of the UC-wide effort to reduce
hate and inter-group tensions on campus. The SJP complaints were
discussed even though the Dubnov case is still under investigation.
Divestment advocates have crossed the line from political debate into
a smear and defamation campaign that can stain the reputation and
jeopardize the careers of those who oppose them. The divestment
advocates should not be able to bully their current and future opponents
into silence. We can only hope that the UCSD administration and UC
authorities expose and address this travesty in which political
disagreement is termed harassment, reputations are defamed and
accusations are accepted without proper investigation. Otherwise, the
bedrock American valued of free speech and democracy will be undermined
and free debate on campus will be suffocated.
Roberta Seid, PhD is the education director at StandWithUs, and Roz Rothstein is the CEO and co-founder.