Foxman pushed UC-Santa Barbara to investigate professor
Anti-Defamation League’s national director personally pressured UCSB
representatives to act against faculty member
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Contact: Jeb Sprague, (805) 886-0429, jhsprague@umail.ucsb.edu.
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — Anti-Defamation League National Director
Abraham Foxman held a confidential meeting in early March with
University of California officials on campus to pressure them to
investigate charges of “anti-Semitism” against sociology professor
William I. Robinson.
The meeting included Dean of Students Michael Young, a second dean, and
at least seven faculty members.
Some of the meeting participants told Robinson that Foxman, who was in
Santa Barbara to meet with local funders, requested the meeting at UCSB
for the sole purpose of demanding that university officials investigate
Robinson for introducing materials critical of Israeli state policies
in a course on globalization in January.
The materials included a photo essay that Robinson forwarded to
students from the Internet and that had been circulating in the public
realm. The photos compared images of Israeli abuse against Palestinians
during the recent military invasion of Gaza with Nazi abuses during the
holocaust. Two students took offense at the images and withdrew from
the course, prompting the Anti-Defamation League to pressure the
university to investigate Robinson for “anti-Semitism.”
Robinson said participants at the meeting with Foxman were unaware
beforehand of the ADL’s intentions. He said the attendees assumed the
meeting had been convened to discuss university efforts to hire a chair
for a Jewish studies program. “But when the meeting started, Foxman
made clear that the only agenda point was his demand that I be
investigated,” Robinson said.
Robinson said such intimidation against critics of Israel is standard
ADL policy, but Foxman’s personal intervention at UCSB constitutes a
marked escalation of pressure tactics that sets a dangerous precedent
for the future of academic freedom here and at other universities.
Foxman, 69, has been director of the Washington, D.C.-based ADL since
1987 and has worked with the organization since 1965. He is an
international lobbyist who has met frequently with national and world
leaders, including all U.S. presidents since Richard Nixon.
Members of the ADL’s Santa Barbara/Tri-Counties Office — which serves
Santa Barbara, Ventura and San Luis Obispo counties — accompanied
Foxman to the meeting on campus.
It’s unclear what effect Foxman’s pressure had on university officials.
However, the Academic Senate has opened a formal investigation of the
charges against Robinson.
The decision to investigate the professor spurred an angry backlash on
campus. Students formed a Committee to Defend Academic Freedom and have
created an online blog to coordinate efforts to cease the investigation
against Robinson.
For detailed information about the Robinson case, visit the committee’s
blog at http://www.sb4af.wordpress.com.
For media inquiries, call Jeb Sprague at (805) 886-0429, or write him
at jhsprague@umail.ucsb.edu.