The BDS movement's advocacy of an academic boycott of Israel is contrary to scholarly values and the free exchange of information, but that cannot possibly justify anti-BDS tactics that are themselves contrary to principles of academic freedom. Regrettably, an organization called Canary Mission has crossed that threshold by advocating a blacklist of pro-BDS faculty and students. Most intolerable is their suggestion that future employers should take note of students' anti-Israel activism, thus reviving a tactic from the McCarthy era.
Academic freedom means academic freedom for everyone, both pro- and anti-Israel, and whether they support or oppose BDS.
For this reason, the Alliance for Academic Freedom has published the following statement in opposition to the Canary Mission blacklist. It originally appeared in Tablet, and you can read the entire statement below.
[Note: The authors of the statement constitute the executive committee of the Alliance for Academic Freedom (AAF), a group of faculty members who are opposed to academic boycotts and who believe that empathy for the suffering and aspirations of both Israelis and Palestinians, and respect for their national narratives, are essential if there is to be a peaceful solution to the conflict. I am a member of AAF, but I am not on the executive committee.]
In the spring of 2015 an anonymous group of people established a website announcing the formation of an organization they called Canary Mission. They began posting photos of college student activists working on behalf of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel, along with brief accounts of their activities. They described the website as a database “created to document the people and groups that are promoting hatred of the USA, Israel and Jews on college campuses in North America.” A smaller number of pro-BDS faculty were also documented on the site. From about 50 dossiers in the spring, the site grew to 150 by fall 2015. Canary Mission also began tweeting notices about BDS advocacy and organizing, along with tweets about the people the site was highlighting. As of mid-October 2016, there are 63 faculty members and 602 “individuals,” mostly students, identified on the site.
The purpose behind the large student database, it is clear, is not merely documentation. The introductory video on the Canary Mission website concludes with a call to action based on the organization’s mission. It fills the screen in capital letters: ensure that today’s radicals are not tomorrow’s employees. The video details a series of claims and warnings:
The canary in the coal mine has long been a metaphor for the persecution of a minority that subsequently spreads to the general populace. Today college campuses are filled with anti-Semitic and anti-American radicals waving Palestinian flags and placards and screaming “Apartheid” and “Murderer.” A few years later these individuals are applying for jobs within your company. There’s no record of their membership of [sic] radical organizations. No one remembers their yelling profanities on campus or attending Jew-hating conferences and anti-American rallies. All evidence has been eradicated, and soon they will be part of your team. We are Canary Mission, an organization dedicated to documenting these acts of hate, exposing them, and holding these individuals accountable.
After a collage of campus demonstrations, including one of an anti-war rally, it continues: “Join us to combat this wave of hatred, protect freedom, and make campus life safe for everyone. It is your duty to ensure that today’s radicals are not tomorrow’s employees.”
As part of its fear-mongering agenda, the video tracks slowly across a Holocaust photograph. Whether this allusion is more absurd or despicable may depend on your perspective. But one thing is clear: few will recognize the uncompromisingly alarmist portrait Canary Mission paints of the American campus itself. The McCarthyite tenor of Canary Mission’s claims is enhanced by its crude equation of anti-American and pro-Palestinian sentiment, a link that certainly can exist on campus but is hardly universal.
Some supporters of Israel will be tempted to sympathize with the impulses behind Canary Mission, since anti-Semitic actions or outbursts at colleges and universities have at times been linked to anti-Israel organizing. Are some departments offering demonstrably anti-Israel courses that cross the line into anti-Semitism? Yes. Does the BDS movement assault academic freedom by disrupting lectures by Israeli speakers and blacklisting Israeli academics? Yes. Have BDS protesters sometimes taken over public spaces on American campuses or so dominated campus programming and debate that pro-Israeli students are left feeling marginalized or unwelcome? Yes.
In the current campus environment, there is, appropriately, empathy and solicitude for black, Latino/a, or Muslim students who are targeted by hostile groups or suffer from significant bias in their institutions. But pro-Israel Jewish students are typically extended far less empathy and concern, even though they, too, have grounds for unease in the face of a highly organized, often-virulent political movement that often denigrates their religion, their ethnicity, or their attachment to a nation that is intimately linked to Jewish identity.
Yet while the impact of the BDS movement is real, perspective is still needed. We cannot endorse Canary Mission’s hyperbolic claim that a “wave of hatred” is sweeping over our campuses. Few Jewish students are in peril from the rise of campus anti-Israel activity. Nor, despite Canary Mission’s Holocaust analogy, does the campus climate herald the spread of anti-Semitic persecution “to the general populace.” The alarmist rhetoric seems designed to justify the extremist tactics the website employs.
Those tactics must be condemned. Above all, the project of holding students permanently accountable for their campus politics and the campaign to undermine their employment opportunities takes Canary Mission’s McCarthyism from metaphor to reality. Unlike the faculty members profiled, many of whom already have national recognition for their books and essays supporting BDS or fundamentally denying Israel’s right to exist, most student activists have merely local reputations—if they have anything like a reputation at all. Many are new to political issues, and some will change their minds about things several times even before they graduate. Many adults look back on their student views with bemusement or regret. The moral urgency we felt decades earlier may not survive unchanged. Immortalizing ephemeral student opinion carries a high risk of misrepresentation. Indeed, Canary Mission produces scant evidence for the student attitudes it purports to identify. Canary Mission wants both to give BDS student activists national name recognition and to tether them to the positions they take as youth.
Lists alone, it should be clear, are not in themselves blacklists. The BDS movement itself generates lists of its self-identified supporters in the form of signed public petitions or faculty-endorsed boycott or divestment resolutions in professional associations. Reprinting those lists exercises a First Amendment right. Canary Mission, however, is not simply creating lists. It urges action to punish the students it targets, including the call to private organizations to shun them when hiring. But private organizations with a political mission are better off interviewing and inquiring to make sure they are making appropriate hires, rather than relying on Canary Mission’s dubious lists. They don’t need and should not turn to any blacklist to help them screen applicants. Canary Mission’s efforts enhance the potential for the unethical political screening of job applicants.
Canary Mission’s blacklisting of students based on their political activities is a direct threat to free expression and academic freedom on campus and deserves to be condemned. At the same time, it should not be forgotten that the effort to boycott Israeli academics and/or academic institutions also constitutes a blacklisting project. For nearly fifteen years we have seen that purported boycotts of Israeli universities inevitably generate sanctions against individual students and faculty. Such discrimination against individuals based on religion and nationality violates not only academic freedom but, more profoundly, fundamental democratic and humane principles. We therefore invite those who condemn the academic boycott of Israelis and their universities to join the Alliance for Academic Freedom in condemning Canary Mission’s efforts, and we likewise ask those others who condemn Canary Mission to raise their voices against the blacklisting of Israeli academics and their universities. Though both blacklisting campaigns grow out of the debates over the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, they employ different strategies and embody different political aims. Yet each undermines academic freedom and does harm to members of the academy. We think both are fundamentally misguided.
As anybody who has followed my posts, you would know that Ronald Arms For Hostages Reagan and I were bosom buddies during the 80s. Thank God President Elect Gore hadn't invented the Inter Webs yet and Smart Phones didn't exist. These poor kids on this list, I feel for them. Holy crap, there but for the grace of God, go I. The profiled Prawfs probably view their profiles as a badge of honor and are seasoned enough to know that this type of "list" comes with the territory.
Posted by: Captain Hruska Carswell, Continuance King | October 27, 2016 at 01:03 AM
Steve, your post is excellent and I generally concur with the gist of your message. But...and it is a yuge But...I think you are under estimating the truly negative feelings aimed at jewish americans. This is not alarmist rhetoric. While your colleagues wont say this to your face, a surprisingly large number do hold negative views and the fact it is legitimately discussed is a glaring sign. And it has no connection to the mid east. The me narative simply serves as a legtimate board to vent feelings. Truthfully, many who hold negative views are not bad people but you have to understand when nations are teetering economically, when healthcare is not affordable, when low wage jobs are the mainstay, people are upset and look for the problem. Whether the blame is totally offbase or spot on or in the middle is not the issue. Perceptions are the important factor and from that perspective, the concern some in the jewish community have is not alarmist.
Posted by: DearSteve | October 27, 2016 at 03:40 AM
DearSteve poster,
Your post can be summed up in two words: Prejudice and Stereotype. When the ADL or Southern Poverty Law Center profiles groups, they don't single out folks who carry a banner and shout at police, have a different view point, discuss or write an article. They target individuals like the Bundy's and the David Dukes of the world who are documented threats. They target actions not just a few words.
Your post left me feeling cold. I am not entirely sure if your post added to the discussion or was a veiled attempt to "diplomatically" tell Lubet that Jews are negatively viewed by some of his colleagues.
Posted by: Captain Hruska Carswell, Continuance King | October 27, 2016 at 03:30 PM
The Captain seriously muses about another comment "I am not entirely sure if your post [has] added to the discussion" and he supposes that readers "follow [his] posts."
The Captain presumably believes his "posts" "add to the discussion" and are "followed" by eager readers of the FL with great and continuing interest.
Need anyone say more?
Posted by: anon | October 27, 2016 at 04:55 PM
anon,
Believe me, they do.
Posted by: Captain Hruska Carswell, Continuance King | October 27, 2016 at 08:17 PM