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- cross-posted to:
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A leading Jewish American philosopher has been disinvited from taking up a prestigious professorship at the University of Cologne after signing a letter expressing solidarity with Palestinians and condemning the killings in Gaza carried out by Israeli forces.
They said the letter, titled Philosophy for Palestine, which was signed by Fraser and several hundred other academics, was separate from Fraser’s work as a scholar and that her guest professorship had nothing to do with the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Cologne University said in a statement its decision to cancel the invitation had been made “with great regret”. It said the reason was that in the letter signed by Fraser, “Israel’s right to exist as an ‘ethno-supremacist state’ since its foundation in 1948 is called into question. The terror attacks by Hamas on Israel of 7 October 2023 is [sic] elevated to an act of legitimate resistance.”
TL;DR:
I read two articles about this, two statements of Uni Cologne and the open letter to form an opinion. My opinion: Either Cologne decision makers need new reading glasses, or they are too biased in order to take a sufficiently critical stance or I am an idiot and misunderstood a lot.
Long version:
Well that doesn’t sound too well. I was curious about the background of this, read abother german news article which covered that and read the open letter "Philosophy for Palestine, which was signed by Professor Fraser. You can read it here:
https://www.philosophyforpalestine.com/
As far as I understood, questioning the state’s Israel’s right to exist can be a crime under german law, also given specific circumstances. (I didn’t take the time to fully understand it. But stuff like calling for violence against Israel is surely highly problematic, while mere critique against atrocities committed by israel military forces should be okay.)
Although there were imo some difficult passages in the open letter, I think it’s overall a clear cry for ceasefire and peace with a focus on sparing the lifes of innocent civilians; thereby stopping a possible genocide as well.
The difficult passages are imo:
Even though it’s true that the state was formed for Jews, labeling the whole state as “ethno-supermacists” leaves me with an impression which tries to bring Israel to one level with other ethno-supermacies from the past or present. Of course the old Nazis are the first thing that comes to my mind. But seeing how much violence has been committed against Palestines and how several independent observers report apartheid-like conditions, it’s also hard to completely disagree with this choice of wording.
Framing Israel as “the oppressor” is one of the other expressions I find difficult. The history of the conflict between Palestina and Israel is huge and complex and I don’t want to oversimplify things. I am still not sure I’ve understood the most important points. Based on that limited understanding I can see how Israel appears as an oppressor. Some folks at the UN just decided to give land, where one culture was at home most recently, to another bunch of people. Conflict arised and it’s still a hot mess since then.
However, borders were created and treaties were signed. Are Israelis oppressors now? I think there are good reasons to feel that way and other ones which would disagree with that. And I still don’t have a fucking clue what to make out of that.
What I think might be problematic here is that labeling Israel as an oppressor would mean that their military reaction as a consequence to the october massacre is not justified. Destroying the organization which committed such atrocities seems like a legitimate reason. Defending your people and ensure that it won’t happen again is not the worst reason to start a war. I am not a fan of this as I see myself more as a pacifist. Nevertheless, from my point of view this doesn’t make one an oppressor.
But let’s not forget that the history here isn’t that simple.
What I don’t see in this letter though, is what – in my opinion – would be a good reason to deny Professor Fraser the seat as visiting professor with those special honours. She didn’t deny Israel’s right to exist, nor did she call for violence against the state or it’s people. To the contrary, she supports critique of Israel’s severe military retaliations and asks for peace for the sake of innocent lives.
So why the fuck did Cologne still do this?
They made a statement on this, you can read it here:
https://portal.uni-koeln.de/universitaet/aktuell/presseinformationen/detail/absage-der-albertus-magnus-professur-2024 (German)
To sum up their reasons are based on the contents of the open letter:
Regarding the latter they link to their statement about the Hamas massacre:
https://portal.uni-koeln.de/universitaet/aktuell/presseinformationen/detail/stellungnahme-zur-situation-in-israel-und-im-nahen-osten (German)
It’s worth a read to evaluate this whole ordeal. They show compassion for the victims and those close to them. Also, they worry about an escalation of the conflict and about peace in the whole region. At the same time they expect open and civilized discussions about this on their campus.
It’s also worth mentioning that they don’t forbid Professor Fraser to be a visiting professor at all. They “just” deny her the Albertus-Magnus-professorship which would have been a special way of honouring her. This can be found at the top of their first statement I linked here.
My opinion about their reasons:
“To focus, as we do here, on the actions of the Israeli state and the unflagging support it receives from the US and its allies, is neither to celebrate violence, nor to equivocate on the value of innocent lives. Civilian deaths, regardless of nationality, are tragic and unacceptable.”
I can imagine how the sentence after that can be misunderstood:
“Yet to act as though the history of violence began with Hamas’s attacks on October 7, 2023 is to display a reckless indifference to history as well as to both Palestinian and Israeli lives.”
But I don’t understand that as downplaying or justification. To the contrary, I think it highlights the complexity and also urgency or interventions in order to stop the violence on all sides.
My conclusion:
I think those in Cologne who made these decisions are either opportunists or biased, who don’t wish to anger their friends in Israel, or idiots who did not understand the open letter (or even their own statements).
Maybe I am the idiot. Did I get something wrong?
By the way, Professor Fraser will hold the lectures, which she would’ve held in Cologne, elsewhere now. I don’t know where and when, though. If someone of you knows, I would be happy if you could share that info here.
To me it feels like they’re trying their hardest to not anger anyone from Israel. Thats not a good stance for a supposedly academic institution.
But that is clearly also based on limited understanding of the conflict. I find it hard to justify picking a side like seemingly everyone did. And if someone tries to voice concerns over Israeli actions you could quickly be labeled as pro terrorist (literally happened to me). I think both sides to horrible stuff, but civilians deserve support in this situation, and the ones in Gaza don’t get enough from what I’m hearing (especially because Israel has control over the infrastructure)
Really? The guys running a concentration camp starving 2.2 million people and committing Genocide are “not the oppressors”…
I encourage you to read up a little on the West Bank where people are regularly murdered by israel to steal their land without any Hamas in the equation. Israel has been a brutal oppressor for 75 years.
Yes the Nazis have a long and complex history too. World War 2 was long and complex as well. Many different events happened. But that is irrelevant. You don’t have to know the entire history of WW2 to know Nazi Germany was bad. And you don’t have to know the entire history of Palestine to know that israel committing the same style of Genocide as the Nazis makes them not the good guys.