Darren. From another thread >>> Academic fortresses of repression by George Jonas National Post February 10, 2003 A two-day conference on anti-Semitism begins today at the University of Toronto's Munk Centre for International Studies. Launched by former prime minister Brian Mulroney with an invitation-only speech last night, the conference has been prompted, at least partly, by two recent events.
The first occurred last September at Montreal's Concordia University, when rioters cowed university authorities into cancelling a speech by former Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Then last month, Toronto's York University came close to cancelling a speech by the Philadelphia-based scholar, Daniel Pipes. Under pressure from pro-Palestinian students and faculty, York's student government withdrew permission for use of the campus pub where Dr. Pipes was scheduled to speak. The intimidators' argument was "no free speech for racists" -- a familiar slogan, used to silence anyone protesters like York University's Ali Hassan and his Middle East Students Association don't want people to hear.
Dr. Pipes is a historian with a PhD from Harvard who argues that Middle East peace depends on Arab acceptance of Israel. If this makes him a racist, I'm one, too, for I've been arguing the same thing for years. Dr. Pipes also runs Campus Watch, a controversial Web page that monitors and critiques Middle East scholars for bias in their academic work. Whatever one thinks of such an Internet site, monitoring and critiquing only extend free debate. Intimidating and rioting deny it.
Since York University president Lorna Marsden is made of sterner stuff than her counterpart at Concordia, Dr. Pipes' speech was re-scheduled in a gymnasium on university property. Still, it dismayed many people to see left-wing rowdies and partisans of political correctness turning a university, a traditional seat of inquiry and debate, into something resembling Kafka's Castle.
I've fewer illusions about universities. It seems to me they've always been fertile grounds for intolerance. The twin evils of the 20th century, Nazism and communism, incubated at universities. Young people are tailor-made for proto-Fascism: They're energetic, self-righteous, idealistic, naive and impressionable. They're afflicted by that "little learning" which, as the poet Alexander Pope pointed out, "is a dangerous thing." Many are also educated beyond their intellectual means, which is even more dangerous. Society's relentless promotion of academic degrees has created a glut of simpletons pursuing PhDs -- hardly good news for the liberal arts or for liberal democracy.
If many students are receptive to extremism, some faculty are even more so. Ambition, pedantry, hauteur -- common intellectual vices, along with resentment of, and contempt for, contrary views -- all serve to turn institutions of inquiry into fortresses of repression. Embittered academics with no power but unbounded arrogance often become gurus for academic hooligans or apologists for Nazi-type systems. Martin Heidegger, rector of the university of Freiburg, is an oft-cited example, but there have been countless others, from Nazi professors and student organizations in Germany's Weimar republic to Marxist professors and student activists throughout America and Europe during the turbulent 1960s and '70s. In fact, the foul breath of political correctness that permeates academic institutions today is a miasma arising from this totalitarian swamp.
Universities have often acknowledged their role in nurturing evil -- sometimes a little belatedly, as when Rector Alfred Ebenbauer said in 1997: "As a human being, and as a representative of the University of Vienna, I am ashamed by the university's culpable involvement in the horrors of Nazism." His apology referred to Vienna U's famous medical atlas, "Topographical Anatomy of the Human Being," compiled by Eduard Pernkopf, rector between 1943-45, who may have used the bodies of Holocaust victims to illustrate his anatomical text.
I don't mean to create the impression that universities are only hotbeds of iniquity. Far from it. Many professors and students bring to their disciplines impeccable honesty and intellectual rigor. Some adhere to the highest principles of free inquiry and debate. It's actually remarkable how the best and the worst coexist at universities; how peerless examples of learning, tolerance and character can be found just down hall from the shabbiest manifestations of fanaticism, coercion and stupidity.
It's especially noteworthy when such total opposites are present not just in the same institution, but in the same individual's mind. The philosopher Heidegger is an obvious example, but many contemporaries, from the linguist Noam Chomsky to the historian David Irving, have exhibited similar intellectual and moral dichotomies.
Despite all efforts by the Middle East Students Association and some faculty members to import the tone of the Middle East into this country, Canadians who wished to hear the American scholar speak could do so last month, though only in a curtained-off corner of a basketball court and not before going through metal detectors. Later, Dr. Pipes described the scene:
"Several bodyguards took me through a back entrance to the gym and sequestered me in a holding room until I entered the gym," he wrote in this newspaper. "But surely the most memorable aspect of this talk was the briefing by James Hogan, a detective in the Hate Crime Unit of the Toronto Police Service, to make sure I was aware that Canada's Criminal Code makes a variety of public statements actionable, including advocating genocide and promoting hatred of a specific group."
The sheer audacity of this takes one's breath away. Cops lecturing a scholar on the law against hate crimes before letting him into an auditorium is like cops lecturing a shopper on the law against shoplifting before letting him into a department store. It would be mind-boggling even if it were done as a matter of routine -- but what makes it worse is that it's done selectively. Such a demeaning, officious insult is offered these days only to a speaker perceived to be on Israel's side in the Mideast conflict. By subjecting Dr. Pipes to Det. Hogan's briefing, for no other conceivable reason than that he's a scholar of Jewish background with pro-Israeli views, it was the Toronto Police that came closest to committing a hate crime that day. Perhaps this is something for Mr. Mulroney's conference on anti-Semitism to consider. Message 18563863 |