
Israeli soldiers
take position as Palestinian, Israeli and international students
demonstrate during a protest against the checkpoints in Atara
Checkpoint near the northern entrance to the West Bank town of
Ramallah June 3, 2006
In the flurry of
letters and comments against the boycott of Israeli academics who,
according to Natfhe, are complicit through their work or silence,
in the military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, the reality
facing the other side of the coin, that of Palestinian academics,
researchers and educational institutions, has been ignored. The
crux of the "anti-boycott but pro-peace" argument is that academia
is one of the few places where constructive argument is possible,
and Israeli academic freedom is the cornerstone for the push for
change in Israeli policy and ultimately, for the end of military
occupation in the Palestinian territories.
The circle this argument fails to close is that without the
freedom of Palestinian education the prospect of any genuine
dialogue on the long-term solution to the conflict cannot
materialise. And in the absence of a sizeable and meaningful
denunciation of Israeli clampdowns on Palestinian education, what
other mechanisms are there to awaken the pro-dialogue, pro-peace
camp?

Teargas was fired
at the Surda Roadblock, on the road that links Ramallah to Birzeit
University, as it was suddenly closed by Israeli occupation forces
on 21 May 2003, trapping hundreds on the wrong side of the
roadblock. (Birzeit University)
Under Israeli
occupation, all eleven Palestinian universities have been closed,
the longest being Birzeit between 1988 and 1992, and the most
recent, Hebron Polytechnic, which was closed by military order for
8 months in 2003. During these periods community-based classes
were criminalized and its teachers and students arrested. Since
2000, 185 schools have been shelled and scores of teachers and
students have been shot at and arrested. Then there are the less
extreme but just as effective obstacles like the 700 restrictions
of movement by checkpoints, road-blocks and earth mounds. Through
creating and controlling a system of internal borders in the
occupied territories, the Israeli military prevents students from
accessing Palestinian universities far from their homes.
University campuses are then increasingly ghettoised; Birzeit now
attracts the vast majority of its new students from the Ramallah
and Jerusalem areas, and its intake of people from Jenin has
dropped by 100%. This also means students are limited in their
course choices; 12 students from Gaza have been denied permission
to go to Bethlehem and study Occupational Therapy (a course not
available in Gaza) despite them not representing a security threat
to Israel – a point the military admitted at the Israeli High
Court where the decision is currently being challenged.

Israeli soldiers
harass Birzeit University students outside campus, checking
student IDs, on 17 March 2004. (Birzeit University)
However, the latest
round of Israeli attacks on Palestinian education has been through
the control of its external borders. As an occupying power, Israel
is legally responsible for guaranteeing all human necessities and
rights in the occupied territories, including the right to
education, and is in de facto control of all that goes in and out
of the territories, including foreign academics, researchers and
students. The procedures that those wishing to study or work in
Palestinian universities have to go through are bad at the best of
times. Students are often denied entry if they reveal they will be
based inside the occupied territories, and refusal on this basis
is so common that Palestinian universities even advise students to
claim they will be tourists in Tel Aviv instead. While other
countries’ foreign students are given visas for the duration of
their courses, in the occupied territories they suffer the stress
of insecurity and the burden of having to lie – itself in breach
of their universal right of access to education. The overall
message here is clear: if you want to study, you cannot do it in
Palestine.

Despite orders to
avoid the university, Israeli soldiers harassed students and
demanded IDs for no apparent reason on 17 March 2004. (Birzeit
University)
Only in March this
year, two students from the internationally well-reputed Birzeit
University in the West Bank were interrogated, humiliated and
deported, without being given any explanation. The European female
student was called a prostitute for having had a relationship with
a Palestinian man, accused of having separatist tendencies for
coming from a German-speaking minority in northern Italy, and
asked why she didn’t study Hebrew instead of Arabic. The American
student received even worse treatment. He was strip searched,
yelled at, called an “arsehole”, had his face photographed as if
he were a criminal, and when it transpired he was half-Arab the
interrogator responded “what a pity, what a pity”.

As Birzeit students
headed to polling places for student council elections on 19th
April 2006, Israeli occupation soldiers harassed and intimidated
students, firing on them with tear gas and live ammunition. (Birzeit
University)
University faculty
members and staff with foreign passports undergo similar ordeals.
Most have to leave the country every three months just like the
foreign students despite having built their professional and
family lives in the West Bank. They have no guarantees they will
be able to stay from one visa application to the next. A few lucky
ones are given 6-months visas from the Israeli military
administration in the settlement of Bet El, but despite being
allowed to make in-country applications, they still have no
guarantees the application will be successful. If the pro-peace
camp is serious about the sanctity of academic freedom, one of
first things they should be actively protecting is the access of
academic staff and students to Palestinian universities,
especially if they are also serious about wanting a partner for
dialogue. In March 2006, two faculty members of Birzeit University
have had their visa renewals rejected, one of which has been
deported. After being shouted at and humiliated by young soldiers,
the faculty members were told they had abused the visa system –
despite having never overstayed – and were denied re-entry. Both
had been legally living in the West Bank since the 1990s and
neither was given any explanation for why they had suddenly become
a threat to Israel.

4 students were
injured by live ammunition fired by Israeli soldiers at Birzeit
students voting in student elections on 19 April 2006. (Birzeit
University)
As arbitrary and
outrageous as it already seems, the repression of Palestinian
education casts its net even wider. In February 2006, a research
student linked to a prestigious British university was detained
for 8 hours, asked to become an informant for Israeli services and
denied a visa for his PhD research. In April 2006, the wellknown
assistant professor at Columbia University in New York, Joseph
Massad, was refused entry to attend a conference at a university
in the West Bank. In May 2006, the British human rights lawyer,
Kate Maynard, was refused entry to attend a legal conference in
Jerusalem, and less than one week ago, a volunteer with the
Ramallahbased human rights research office Al-Haq, was deported.
The systematic
obstruction of Palestinian education not only violates
the human rights of the individuals involved, but is also an
attack on the development of Palestinian society as a whole. It
should also be stressed that none of the people mentioned here
were given any legal justification for their visa refusals, and
given the carte blanche status of the ‘security’ argument in
Israel, and anywhere in the world, it is clear that had their
activities posed a genuine threat to the state of Israel (however
tenuous the link) they would have been arrested and charged, even
if later deported. None of them were.
It is increasingly
apparent that
any
academic activity - be it research, debate or voluntary work - on
the mere subject of Palestine, in Palestine, is either obstructed
or forbidden. So while Israeli academics and political figures are
busy mobilizing their supporters worldwide to protect the academic
freedom of their intellectuals and institutions, other academics,
researchers and students exercising their academic freedom in
Palestine, are effectively being boycotted. The objective of this
boycott is to thwart the advancement of Palestinian educational
institutions, networks and discourse, and although any nationality
can be subjected to it, its target is in fact the constitution of
Palestinian education itself.

A poster developed by
the Right to Education Campaign at Birzeit University.
If the asymmetries of
the facts on the ground are not enough to justify the boycott of
Israeli academia, then at the very least the limitations and
pretence of the pro-dialogue argument must be realised. If there
is no boycott of Israeli academia and current circumstances
persist, Israeli academics would turn into the gatekeepers of any
debate on Israel-Palestine – for only their freedoms would be
secured by the Israeli state. What would be of the pro-dialogue,
pro-peace anti-boycotters then? Where would they find their
authentic ‘partners’ to dialogue with? The legitimacy of the fight
for Israeli intellectual freedom is in itself dependant on there
being the same freedom for Palestinians. Such a basic and
fundamental point should be a no-brainer but yet it continues to
be conveniently ignored by those claiming to have the most
equitable and long-standing interests at heart.
The Right to Education Campaign was set up by Birzeit University
to reach out to academics, students and campaigners worldwide to
support the right to education in Palestine. Through ongoing
monitoring and research on the issues affecting Palestinian
education under occupation, as well as building an active campaign
network in Palestine and worldwide, the Right to Education
Campaign seeks to raise international awareness about the
obstruction and denial of education in Palestine and to bring
pressure to bear on governments, decision-makers and ultimately
the Israeli authorities to guarantee safe and free access of all
Palestinians to their educational institutions.
Source:
http://right2edu.birzeit.edu/news/article393