A Petition To Refute and Condemn the Anti-Israel Academic Boycott Campaign at Norway’s Trondheim University

Written by: By 246
October 31, 2009 To: Academic Colleagues From Around The World Wishing to Refute and Condemn the Campaign at Norway’s Trondheim University to Boycott Israeli Scholars and Academic Institutions

We, the undersigned Nobel Laureates, scholars and members of the international academic, research and professional community, refute and condemn the campaign to boycott Israeli academics and academic institutions at Trondheim University.

We stand in solidarity with Israeli academics and academic institutions; if you
boycott them, boycott us as well.

Background material

1) Translation of a petition letter against the boycott proposal from employees of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) and Sør-Trøndelag University College(HiST):

To the Boards of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology
(NTNU) and Sør-Trøndelag University College(HiST)

A group of employees at NTNU and HiST have earlier this year in an open letter requested their respective Boards to perform a cultural and academic boycott against Israel. We who sign this letter are employees of the same institutions. We are generally positive to unbiased and objective internal discussions at NTNU/HiST on the Palestine-Israel conflict. However, we are of the opinion that it is
very unfortunate if the institutions as such give their unreserved support to one of the parties in the conflict. In our view, the following arguments support that the proposed boycott should be rejected:
• The primary tasks of NTNU/HiST are research and education, not constructing their own foreign policy. To take sides in difficult political issues gives the impression of not being objective and unbiased. This goes against the university role as a meeting place
of a wide range of thoughts and ideas.
• To be associated with a controversial viewpoint in such a difficult conflict will have negative consequences for NTNU/HiST internationally. Do we really want to be known as the first western university to make an academic boycott against Israel?
• Within NTNU/HiST there are also different opinions on this conflict, and a decision of boycott will tend to make internal divisions. Even we who sign this petition have different views as to how the conflict should be solved.
• We do not know if NTNU/HiST have considered all the legal aspects of a possible boycott resolution. What means are for instance the institutions willing to employ against researchers who may defy the boycott? Will their salaries be reduced, or could they be fired?
• We do not believe that a boycott decision will contribute to a peaceful solution to the conflict, but rather that it will result in an increased polarisation.
• NTNU would also loose by cutting the ties of scientific contact and collaboration with the various internationally renowned academic groups of Israel.
• If NTNU/HiST decide to boycott Israel, it will also be very difficult to produce rational arguments for why we should not also boycott other nations who perform far worse human rights violations. It would thus mean that the institutions initiate an ongoing process where boycott will be used to flag our standpoint in other conflicts as well.
• We therefore request that the Boards of NTNU and HiST vote against the proposal of boycotting Israel. Individuals at our universities are of course free to involve themselves in international conflicts, but it is unwise that the institutions as such choose one side. Our
universities will lose more than we might win by involving ourselves in a boycott.

Letter was signed by Prof. Bjorn Alsberg and colleagues.

Nobel Laureate Endorsers

Kenneth J. Arrow
Economics
Stanford University

Roald Hoffmann
Chemistry
Cornell University

Steven Weinberg
Physics
University of Texas

Claude Cohen-Tannoudji
Physics
Ecole Normale Superieure
• To Sign this petition click here

Visit Scholars For Peace in the Middle East website

 

Another murder solved. Just the other day I was thinking about all the unsolved mysteries in this country and thinking of how little money is allocated to police and their salaries, and here they are coming out with one success after another. I’d say I can sleep better in my bed, but I must confess that from my bedroom window I saw the explosion that blew up Shulman, heard Avia Pappo screaming unsuccessfuly to be saved from her sister’s husband, etc. etc. Yes, they were years ago, but there have been others since. All gangster or family related.

Here’s a little confession for you appropos gangsters. Today Shabtai Kalmanovitz, the spy, was murdered in Moscow, and it reminded me. On my mother’s side my grandmother’s name in Lida was Chaya Keile Kalmanovitz. My grandfather’s name was Yosel Kaganovich ( guess the name of Stalin’s economic advisor) and my father’s family was Rosenstein. Don’t mess with me.

© 2012 Tel Aviv Diary: Karen Alkalay-Gut Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha