۵ اردیبهشت ۱۴۰۳ |۱۵ شوال ۱۴۴۵ | Apr 24, 2024
News ID: 352705
28 July 2018 - 17:35
Israel forces teachers to leave Palestine

Israel is obstructing academic freedom at Palestinian universities through various measures, including closing colleges and denying visas for visiting professors.

Hawzah News Agency (Occupied Territories of Palestine) - On 14 July, Israeli police raided and shut down the Hind al-Husseini college in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of occupied East Jerusalem, prohibited an academic conference from taking place and detained 15 participants of the conference.

Police acted on the order of Gilad Erdan, Israel's minister of public security and strategic affairs, who claimed that the conference promoted "incitement" against the Israel.

 

 

As well as being in charge of policing, Erdan leads Israel's global effort to thwart activism in support of Palestinian rights.

The president of Arab American University, a private institution based in the West Bank city of Jenin, condemned Israel's closure of the college. Ali Abu Zuhri argued it was an attempt to impose new facts on the ground aimed at changing the cultural and historical identity of Jerusalem, according to the Palestinian news agency Wafa.

 

 

"Cultural genocide"

Israel's closure of Hind al-Husseini college “is one more manifestation of Israel's relentless assault on Palestinian education and culture, a systematic assault that is tantamount to cultural genocide," Nada Elia, an organizing committee member of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (USACBI), told The Electronic Intifada.

"Israel imposes a Zionist curriculum on Palestinian schools in annexed East Jerusalem and has devised a Kafkaesque system of work permits in the West Bank that prevents faculty who hold foreign passports from teaching there legally, making them prone to arrest and deportation," Elia explained.

 

 

 

At the same time, she said, Israel claims that the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement, "rather than its own assault on Palestinian education, is preventing academic exchange and the free flow of ideas."

 

Forced to leave

Birzeit University – headquartered beside the West Bank city of Ramallah – released a statement earlier this month admonishing Israel’s "breach of academic freedom" after 15 of its academics who hold foreign passports had their visa renewals either significantly delayed or denied outright.

Already, "some professors have been forced to leave the country,” the university stated, while others remain under threat of removal from faculty positions.

 

 

"These international professors play a critical role not only in the ongoing provision of quality education at Birzeit University but also in the long-term development of Palestinian higher education," it said, warning that if this policy continues, Palestinian universities "will be further isolated from the global academic environment."

More than half of Palestinian academics who hold foreign passports and work at Palestinian universities have had delays or denials of Israeli visas over the past two years, preventing them from beginning or staying in their faculty positions, according to the Palestinian Authority's minister of education.

 

 

"House arrest"

Israel has placed foreign academics who teach at Birzeit "effectively under house arrest" in order to avoid any of the hundreds of checkpoints around the West Bank, explained Elia, writing for Middle East Eye.

Birzeit underscored the right to education as a fundamental human right enshrined in international law and admonished Israel for ignoring its responsibility as an occupying power in preventing Palestinians’ access to education.

 

 

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