U.K. Professor Cancels talk at York University - Cites administrations failure to condemn attack on Jewish Students

Dear Dr. Shoukri,
(President and Vice Chancellor, York University)

I am Shalom Lappin Professor of Computational Linguistics at King's College, London, and I am currently a visiting professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Toronto, where I am on sabbatical for the semester.

I was recently invited to give a talk on my research on computational modeling of grammar induction in the Colloquium of the Cognitive Science Program of the Philosophy Department at York, on March 25. I accepted the invitation with great pleasure. I received my BA in Philosophy from York in May 1970, and I welcomed this opportunity to return to my first academic home. It is therefore with considerable regret that I must now withdraw from this engagement in light of the York administration's handling of the attack on Jewish students that
took place on the afternoon of February 11.

The reports of this attack that I have read in both the Canadian and the foreign press (confirmed by eyewitness accounts that I have received) converge on a disturbing sequence of events. A group of approximately 100 students supporting the York Student Federation broke up a press conference organized by other students campaigning to impeach the YSF. This group then pursued approximately 40 of the students from the press conference, most of them Jewish,
to the offices of the campus Hillel, where the latter locked themselves in for fear of physical assault. The YSF supporters banged on the door and the windows of the offices, shouting threatening comments at the students trapped inside. The students in the Hillel headquarters appealed to campus security for assistance but received none. They then called the Toronto Police, who eventually arrived to escort them out of the offices, through lines of hostile YSF supporters chanting angry slogans and hurling insults at them.

To date I have seen no public statement by any University official on this incident, beyond the expressionon of an intention to investigate it. I called your office on Monday, February 23 to seek clarification of the administration's view of the attack. A member of your staff called me back today and graciously listened to my concerns. However, she was unable to do more than
reiterate the University's official position that the matter is still under investigation. Given that the incident took place two weeks ago, I find it odd that the administration has been unable to come to any conclusions on what took place. It is particularly remarkable that it felt no need to
release at least a general statement specifying that violence and abuse of any kind will not be tolerated on campus, and confirming that all students have the right to express their views without fear of intimidation.

The fact that the University has not taken up this assault with the students who launched it, nor acted to reassure the students who they targeted indicates a severe failure on the part of the administration to fulfill its reponsibility to sustain a campus free of physical violence and harrassment. Several of the Jewish students at York claim that the assault was not an aberration, but part of a general atmosphere of extreme hostility that they have been forced to contend with over an extended period of time. I am in no position to evaluate this assertion. But it seems to me that the administration is obliged to address the grievances of students who feel that they are being victimized, particularly in light of a significant incident which lends some credence to their charge.

I do not regard the ethnic identities or the political views of any of the participants in this event as of relevant concern. All sides to a controversial question have an equal right to be heard in a civil environment of tolerance and mutual respect. Nor do I see criticism of Israel as the problem here. I have frequently spoken out publicly against the policies of the Israeli government, most recently in a joint letter and comments critical of Israel's operation in Gaza, published in the Observer in January.

If one group of students is permitted to engage in violent harrassment of another without the decisive intervention of the University's administration, then the conditions for a free and unfettered exchange of ideas are completely undermined, and the primary purpose of university life is betrayed.

When I was an undergraduate at York in the late 1960s the University was home to lively political activity on a variety of issues. The Israeli-Palestininan conflict was one of these, and discussion was intense, occasionally heated. However, at no time did this discussion degenerate into systematic bullying, initimidation, or expressions of bigotry. Nor would the administration of that period have allowed it to do so. It is a source of great sadness to me that the current administration is either incapable or unwilling to insure the existence of a basic culture of decency, civility, and free speech on its campus. This culture is a necessary feature of any serious institution of higher learning.

Sincerely,

Shalom Lappin
Professor of Computational Linguistics
King's College, London

Max –   – (9:12 PM)  

If more decent professors - the "silent majority" - would take a similar stand, York University wouldn't be able to get away with their shameful silent endorsement of violent anti-semitism.

erik.larsen  – (9:25 PM)  

All ten people who hear about this story - it will never go anywhere in the MSM I bet - will understand

dal –   – (9:57 PM)  

At least NYU had the guts to suspend the 18 morons who "occupied" the food court. Of course if they were Muslims, NYU might have been as spineless as York.

Blazing Cat Fur  – (10:23 PM)  

All 10 people? hey I get a lot more traffic than that;)

The LS from SK –   – (8:56 AM)  

BCK - more traffic? You retired remember?

Here is a neat piece in today's UK Daily Mail on Clint Eastwood on Freedom of Expression. Kinda fits re: the crazy old Indian story Gunter is getting flak for.

"Clint Eastwood goes gunning for PC killjoys by saying we should laugh at race-based jokes

By Allan Hall
Last updated at 1:16 AM on 26th February 2009

Clint Eastwood, who is promoting his new film Gran Torino, says political correctness has gone too far Clint Eastwood believes the rise of political correctness is no laughing matter.

He says the world would be a better place if we could still laugh at inoffensive jokes about different races.

The Hollywood actor and director, 78, said we live in constant fear of being labelled racist for simply laughing about national stereotypes.

'People have lost their sense of humour,' he told Germany's Der Spiegel magazine.

'In former times we constantly made jokes about different races.

'You can only tell them today with one hand over your mouth otherwise you will be insulted as a racist.

'I find that ridiculous. In those earlier days every friendly clique had a "Sam the Jew" or "Jose the Mexican" - but we didn't think anything of it or have a racist
thought.

'It was normal that we made jokes based on our nationality or ethnicity. That was never a problem.

''I don't want to be politically correct. We're all spending too much time and energy trying to be politically correct about everything.'

His comments come in a week in which BT suspended 30 call centre staff after they had circulated an Irish joke by email.

BT, however, insists other serious matters were involved and that a joke was not the sole reason for the suspensions."

erik.larsen  – (11:47 PM)  

Sorry BCF - didn't mean it like that :-)

Seraphic Single  – (2:32 PM)  

It's so sad. York used to be very welcoming for Jewish students. For a very long time, it was the Toronto university that made Jewish holy days campus-wide holidays. (I suppose the Jewish population was big enough to justify this.) But now this practise has been questioned (or eliminated?) and there are violent incidents against Jewish students.

Did Gilary Massa play any cameo role in the incident, I wonder?

dal –   – (12:37 AM)  

At least NYU had the guts to suspend the 18 morons who "occupied" the food court. Of course if they were Muslims, NYU might have been as spineless as York.

Seraphic Single  – (12:37 AM)  

It's so sad. York used to be very welcoming for Jewish students. For a very long time, it was the Toronto university that made Jewish holy days campus-wide holidays. (I suppose the Jewish population was big enough to justify this.) But now this practise has been questioned (or eliminated?) and there are violent incidents against Jewish students.

Did Gilary Massa play any cameo role in the incident, I wonder?

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