Become a Member
News

Professors duel over 'colonialist' line on Israel

December 29, 2011 12:40

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

A London-born academic at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev has refuted allegations that he compared Israel to the Nazi regime after he cited a well-known poem condemning bystanders during the Holocaust in a piece that was heavily critical of Israel.

Professor David Newman was accused by King's College London Professor Efraim Karsh of being anti-Israel and a "pseudo-academic" following an article that he wrote in the Jerusalem Post last month under the headline Speaking out against the threat.

Writing for the think tank, Middle East Forum, Prof Karsh said that BGU had become a "hotbed of anti-Israel propaganda".

Prof Newman, dean of BGU's faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, who paraphrased Pastor Martin Niemoller's famous 1946 "First they came for…" poem about the Germans, said Israel would do well to acknowledge the message: "When the government denied the sovereign rights of the Palestinians, I remained silent; I was not a Palestinian," he wrote, continuing with the verse to condemn Israel's treatment of "hapless refugees", Arab citizens and human-rights activists.

To get more news, click here to sign up for our free daily newsletter.