As the
world recoils from yet another atrocity, offering platitudes of “standing with
Manchester” while actually doing very little to challenge terrorism, the City
University of New York’s School of Public Health is getting ready to send the
wrong message to its graduates.
Palestinian-American
activist Linda Sarsour, who has a history of inflammatory behavior toward Israel
and its supporters and supports the violent intifada, will be a keynote speaker
at that school’s commencement. She’ll share the stage with New York’s first
lady, Chirlane McCray, and Mary Bassett, Commissioner of the New York
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene as “public health and social justice
leaders.” This
honor is ostensibly in recognition of her role in organizing the massive
women’s march on Washington protesting against Donald Trump, in which potential
cuts to health services were decried.
The
irony is stark: It’s hard to conceive of a bigger public health threat than
terrorism -- The weaponization of disaffected young people around the world via
online channels, recruited to commit despicable acts in places like Jerusalem,
San Bernardino, Orlando, Paris, Istanbul ....the list goes on.
Sarsour,
who has forged alliances with many liberal Jewish leaders, condemned the 5/22
attack on the Ariana
Grande concert
in Manchester, calling it in a Facebook post “a whole different level of evil”
for targeting children, and “sickening.”
But such
statements are inconsistent with her stated support for the Palestinian
intifada and the boycott-divest-sanction movement against Israel. BDS is a form
of soft terrorism, as it is focused on one side of the conflict with the
intention of forcing Israel into territorial concessions that are against its
interests. Given Israel’s precarious geography, those concessions could
ultimately cost lives on a scale bigger than any one suicide bomb.
Activists
gathered outside CUNY headquarters on May 25 to demand the invitation be
revoked, but that’s unlikely, given the fallout from a similar controversy in
2011, when Jewish Israel critic Tony Kushner had his honorary degree yanked
under pressure. Pro-Kushner forces prevailed and the school did a 180.
Chancellor James Milliken released
a statement in April saying “the fact that Ms. Sarsour might hold views that
are controversial cannot be the basis for withdrawing an invitation to speak,”
while noting that the university itself “sees BDS as anathema to the values of
higher education.”
But
where are those values when Sarsour declares that “you can’t be a Zionist and a
feminist.” Is she kidding? Where in the Middle East are women’s rights
protected better than in Israel, which had a female prime minister in 1969.
Maybe she would prefer the feminism of Saudi Arabia, where women can’t drive,
much less run for office, or of Jordan, where they need a husband’s permission
to travel.
Israel’s
leaders continuously cast aside politics in the name of humanity, allowing
relatives of Hamas leaders who want to destroy them to be treated in Jewish
hospitals, and sending aid around the world in times of need. Arab citizens
have full rights in Israel and serve in the Knesset. And yet Linda Sarsour
calls Zionism “creepy.”
CUNY
isn’t the only public institution sending mixed signals about terrorism and the
Middle East conflict.
A Public
Broadcasting System curriculum is drawing fire from conservative critics for
its effort to create understanding about the motivations of suicide bombers
(who should more properly be called homicide bombers.)
The
lesson plan “Dying to be a Martyr,” is 10 years old and likely came to light
now because the fight over federal funding for public broadcasting, which is on
President Trump’s budget chopping block. But that fact should not take away
from serious discussion about the content.
High-school
teachers are encouraged to show their students interviews with would-be
Palestinian bombers. The lesson teaches students to empathize with violent
Palestinian terrorists who are willing to murder Jews in Israel and beyond.
Perhaps
there is a shred of a noble intention in this program’s origins, but it is at
best naive, bordering on biased. There are many peoples in the world who
collectively feel aggrieved and don’t resort to terrorism and violence, and
they are better off as a result.
Page Fortna, an associate political
science professor at Columbia University wrote in a recent paper,
highlighted in The Atlantic following the Manchester bombing, that “The
disadvantages of terrorism generally outweigh its advantages.” She concluded
from a detailed study of 104 recent global conflicts that terror historically
hurts rather than helps a cause. “None of those
that deliberately killed large numbers of civilians through terrorist attacks
won its fight outright,” Fortna said.
So it’s
surely in no one’s interest to promote a mindset that terrorism is an
inevitable (or effective) product of an uprising against a more powerful enemy.
In
defending the programming, PBS in a statement said “In no way does it condone
the heinous actions of individuals who would target innocent civilians. PBS
would strongly condemn any assertion that terrorism is ever appropriate.”
But just
watch the video, which features a sympathetic kid who ultimately decided that
God told him not to carry out an attack in an Israeli town. Everything we know
about these bombers, much of it from the videos they leave behind, is that they
believe God wants the exact opposite. So it’s not as much frustration with lack
of a peace diplomacy but rather a twisted religious fervor (denounced by mainstream
Islam) that guides these acts.
PBS’s
ombudsman, Michael Getler noted in a column that “Dying to be a Martyr”
contains “what I consider to be some legitimate questions about the content, or
more precisely as I read it, a lack of more contextual content, within this
lesson plan.” He concurs that what is missing from the curriculum is
instructions for teachers to denounce suicide bombing and radical Islamic views in general,” something we might assume
to be a given. Some teachers, however, might be too afraid of offending people
to do that.
There’s nothing healthy about either supporting terrorism
outright or trying to understand it rationally, and the sooner institutions
like CUNY and PBS realize that, the better off we’ll all be.
Originally Published by The Algemeiner
Originally Published by The Algemeiner