Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
On many campuses across the country,
pro-Israel students face a well-financed juggernaut of anti-Israel groups whose
sole focus is to demonize Israel.
Toronto’s York University, in particular,
has not been a hospitable place for Jewish students for the past few years.
Many feel that a climate of anti-Semitism, masquerading as “anti-Zionism,” pervades
the university. Some students have feared for their physical safety at times.
Things took an even uglier turn this past January. A pro-Palestinian acrylic painting on display over one of the entrance foyers to the Student Centre since 2013, entitled “Palestinian Roots,” has drawn criticism.
It shows a person looking at a bulldozer close
to a building while holding rocks, wearing what looks like a Palestinian flag
with a map of Israel without its borders – in other
words, a
map lacking the “Green Line” that divides Israel from the West Bank.
At the
bottom of the mural, the words “justice” and “peace” can be seen along with
other text. The artist, Ahmad Al Abid, is a 2013
graduate of York.
Gayle
McFadden, chair of the York University Student Centre, sees nothing wrong with
this. She said the student’s piece was “an artist’s interpretation of what’s
currently going on in Palestine.”
She added the usual boilerplate: “Anti-Semitism is directly against people of the Jewish faith, and I think that is abysmal and horrible, but critics of the state of Israel are not that.” The work is “merely critical of the state of Israel and its continued occupation of Palestine.”
She added the usual boilerplate: “Anti-Semitism is directly against people of the Jewish faith, and I think that is abysmal and horrible, but critics of the state of Israel are not that.” The work is “merely critical of the state of Israel and its continued occupation of Palestine.”
McFadden of course thinks she knows better
than the Jewish students do as to what is and isn’t “anti-Semitic!”
Paul
Bronfman, the chair and CEO of William F. White International Inc., a provider
of movie and theatrical production equipment, was less sanguine when he recently
learned of the mural.
His
company has provided thousands of dollars of equipment and technical services,
as well as access to seminars, student lectures, trade shows and open houses,
to the university.
He
contacted York University, but was told the student centre is its own legal
entity. Administrators, he complained, “gave me a bunch
of political rhetoric” and “nonsense.”
Bronfman told York University president Mamdouh
Shoukri that the school would be “persona non grata” until the painting was
removed. “It’s not artistry; it’s just pure hate,” he contended.
“I’m finally putting my money where my mouth
is. I’m withdrawing all of our student filmmaker support,” Bronfman declared.
“This poster is more than a mere piece of art
-- it is propaganda, and a clear call to murder,” Avi Benlolo, president of the
Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, has stated, adding that
anti-Semitic attitudes are already “rampant” at the university.
Benlolo said he had heard of Jewish students
who no longer wear overt displays of their faith, such as Star of David
necklaces or kippas.
In 2013, the York Federation of Students
officially endorsed the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) campaign, a push
to impose economic and academic sanction on Israel.
Even ordinary Jewish, events are routinely targeted
by protesters. Last December, a Chanukah get-together sponsored
by the Hillel Jewish student group at York was disrupted
by supporters of Students Against Israeli Apartheid. It is, of course, a Jewish
religious holiday more than 2,000 years old.
“If a mural condoning violence against any
other nation was hung on campus, it would rightfully be condemned. Only when it
pertains to Jews do we see this disturbing double standard,” remarked Danielle Shachar, a fourth-year psychology student,
describing York as “a breeding ground for violence, hate and discrimination
against Israel and its student supporters.”
She indicated that it leaves her feeling
unsafe, especially on a campus where there has been violence against Jewish
students in the past.
Natalie Slavat, the president of the York Hillel,
asserted that “while the intentions of the artist are ambiguous at best, the
way in which this piece is perceived by many Jewish students like myself is
anything but vague.” In the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, “stone-throwing
means one thing: Violence.”
Is the painting ant-Semitic? This is a
matter of conjecture, because technically it is only criticizing Israel. But
this may have become a distinction without a difference, since so-called
anti-Zionist attacks more and more morph into simple anti-Semitism. I’m
inclined to agree with the Jewish students, who certainly see it as creating a
chilly climate for them at York. Perhaps they should have the last word.
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