By Jacob Kamaras
JNS.org 

Pro-Israel groups denied presentation at Modern Language Association confab

 

Wikimedia Commons

A BDS protest. The Modern Language Association's (MLA) upcoming annual convention will include a session on BDS featuring only supporters of the anti-Israel movement.

The pro-Israel campus groups Hillel International and the Israel on Campus Coalition (ICC) have been denied the right to present a discussion on Israel at the Jan. 9-12 Modern Language Association (MLA) convention in Chicago, JNS.org has learned.

MLA's convention includes a roundtable discussion that will feature supporters but no opponents of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel. The discussion-titled "Academic Boycotts: A Conversation about Israel and

Palestine"-is seen as a possible precursor to an MLA academic boycott of Israel, which would mirror recent boycotts by the American Studies Association and the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association. The MLA convention will consider a resolution that condemns Israel for alleged "arbitrary denials of entry to Gaza and the West Bank by U.S. academics who have been invited to teach, confer, or do research at Palestinian universities."


Hillel and the ICC asked the 30,000-member MLA for the chance to present what they called an "open discussion featuring MLA members regarding academic freedom in Israel, its territories, and Gaza," but MLA said the deadline to book a meeting at the convention had passed.

"The MLA convention has procedures for its members to organize sessions, and that deadline was 1 April [2013]," MLA Executive Director Rosemary G. Feal, the MLA's executive director, wrote in an email to ICC Executive Director Jacob Baime. "We do not rent space at our convention for nonmembers to hold discussions."

The existing MLA session's speakers will include BDS movement co-founder Omar Barghouti; University of Texas professor Barbara Jane Harlow, who has stated her support for the ASA boycott of Israel; University of Southern California professor of English David Lloyd, a well-known BDS activist; and Wesleyan University professor Richard Ohmann, who signed a 2009 letter that described Israeli treatment of Palestinians as "one of the most massive, ethnocidal atrocities of modern times." University of Texas professor Samer M. Ali, who publicly defended the ASA boycott, organized the roundtable.


"We believe the members of the MLA deserve to hear a far more diverse set of perspectives on the issue of academic freedom in Israel and nearby countries. The MLA members, as academics, certainly can appreciate the value of multiple perspectives on what is a very controversial issue," ICC's Baime said.


ICC and Hillel said they are now considering organizing a "balancing panel" discussion at a nearby location during the MLA convention. The panel would feature MLA members who oppose the anti-Israel resolution being considered at the convention.

Ali, the organizer of the convention's roundtable on BDS, told The Chronicle of "We believe the members of the MLA deserve to hear a far more diverse set of perspectives on the issue of academic freedom in Israel and nearby countries. The MLA members, as academics, certainly can appreciate the value of multiple perspectives on what is a very controversial issue," ICC's Baime said.

ICC and Hillel said they are now considering organizing a "balancing panel" discussion at a nearby location during the MLA convention. The panel would feature MLA members who oppose the anti-Israel resolution being considered at the convention.

Ali, the organizer of the convention's roundtable on BDS, told The Chronicle of Higher Education that the roundtable assumes that Israel violates the rights of Palestinians, and that the debate will center on what to do about it.

"If people want to come and debate occupation, I think it will be a waste of their time, because that's not what the roundtable is about," Ali said.Higher Education that the roundtable assumes that Israel violates the rights of Palestinians, and that the debate will center on what to do about it.

"If people want to come and debate occupation, I think it will be a waste of their time, because that's not what the roundtable is about," Ali said.

 

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