It’s my union

by Gadgie, 30 May 2008

… so I’ll cry if I want to.

The SWP Israel obsessives in the UCU have struck again. A bizarre resolution - “colleagues be asked to consider the moral and political implications of educational links with Israeli institutions” - has been passed after the, uncomfortably democratic, proposal to put it to a vote of the whole membership was defeated. It is worth reading really good posts by Eve Garrard, Jim Denham, Jon Pike, George Szirtes, and on Z Blog.

Resolution 25 bundles together a diffuse selection of items. For instance, it declares “criticism of Israel or Israeli policy are (sic) not, as such, anti-semitic“. Indeed it is not necessarily so, but it can be - and frequently is. And the original boycott call was deemed discriminatory. On top of which, parts of the left have been rediscovering their dark tradition of anti-Semitic sentiment.

Then there is this line about the “apparent complicity of most of the Israeli academy“. The logic is impeccable. As a British academic I can now expect a citizen’s arrest from George Monbiot. I deserve no less. But then what about the academics from the Israeli left, supporters of peace and human rights? Hmm…

However, I really want to comment on Sally Hunt’s defensive statement about the resolution,

I have to state that we have passed a motion to provide solidarity with the Palestinians, not to boycott Israel or any other country’s academic institutions.

Well that is one interpretation, though all the measures are aimed at Israel and Israelis. I too have expressed my solidarity with the Palestinians in the past and I have long seen myself as pro-Palestinian, but I am utterly depressed by this constant, ignorant and utterly negative campaign.

There are two solutions to the conflict on offer - one-state and two-state. The one-state solution is largely the preserve of the Israeli and Palestinian nationalist right. It envisages a total victory for one side, denying the legitimacy of the other, often accompanied by calls for the removal of the bulk of their population. It is the politics of continuing conflict, of expulsion and extermination. The left favour a two-state solution, but of a particular kind.

Rather than envisage the division of the land into two hostile and separate entities, temporarily stabilising instead of ending the conflict, it sees that both the Palestinian and Israeli peoples’ national histories are inextricably entwined. A progressive two-state solution is one that would build a constructive relationship between the two peoples and allow for a mutually supportive realisation of national self-determination. This is the painfully difficult politics of peace.

And it is in the advancement of a politics of peace where education can play a key role in helping develop collaboration and coexistence between both nations, of examining and addressing the distortions of history that infect their national narratives, of comprehending the lives of each community, of humanising the enemy. So what does the UCU do? It embraces the politics of conflict. Where is the support for organisations that work across the divide - e.g. IPCRI or One Voice? No mention even of Zochrot, an education project to translate the experience of the Palestinian Nakba into Hebrew. UCU act as if there was no Israeli left or peace movement with roots in Israeli academic institutions.

The present situation is indeed a Palestinian tragedy, simply read the ILO report on conditions in the Occupied Territories for confirmation. Will it be eased by this gesture politics, driven by a misconceived and ill-informed ideological project? Not one bit. The Palestinians need and deserve better.

UPDATE
Read Norm here

“While Motion 25 stands, the union is a tainted, a befouled, organization; it is a cesspit. It accommodates people who would treat their Israeli counterparts as pariahs. It should be held in contempt and shunned. The only good reason for anyone now to belong to UCU is to exert themselves to take it back from the boycotters and turn it into something better than a cesspit”.

The only point of departure for me is that there are other purposes to membership. They are to take collective action to defend, for instance, adult education nationally and to deal with the sometimes difficult industrial relations we can face locally. I have a funny feeling that the proposers of Motion 25 couldn’t give a toss about either.

Comrades, always address the political content

by Will, 30 May 2008

For anyone interested - the dirty ultra-right wing non-historian apologist for imperialism and colonialism and other assorted atrocities, genocides and shit like that - Niall Ferguson - wrote a piece for The Times that is so obnoxious I wasn’t going to even mention it. However - I feel I must.

Disgusting filth like Ferguson should have their ‘jobs’ taken away from them and their families should be deported to islands where no water or food is readily available. Disgusting turd apologist scum and that, that’s what he is and that. Can we not have a place built to house these vermin on said island? I would volunteer for such an enterprise so I would. I am handy with bricks and shit.

Oh fuck — “Let me count the friggin ways…”

by Will, 30 May 2008

blakeandshit.jpg

“Faith is part of our future, and faith and the values it brings with it are an essential part of making globalisation work.”

A few years ago, I remember Nike was flogging a T-shirt that featured Michael Jordan with his arms spread out all fucking jesus-like, and underneath the picture was the quotation “No bird soars too high if he soars with his own wings.” A Blake quote and all that. It may have been better to have used: “Enough Of This Pissing Fucking Bullshit For Once And For All”.