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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Bright is not necessarily right

June 24, 2011 10:35
3 min read

On December 17 last, I devoted this column to a consideration of the academic accomplishments of Ms Jennifer Peto, who had submitted to the University of Toronto a Master's thesis entitled The Victimhood of the Powerful: White Jews, Zionism and the Racism of Hegemonic Holocaust Education.

In this thesis, and on the basis of what I considered its shallow consideration of two Holocaust education projects, Ms Peto had sought to condemn "Jewish people of European descent" who enjoy what she termed "white privilege" and who perpetuate (in her opinion), "claims about Jewish victimhood" merely to garner support for the state of Israel.

I asked how such an esteemed seat of learning could think it right to award academic credit for a work of unbridled propaganda.

Following publication of that column, several of you contacted me to ask why I had not seen fit to allude to the fact that Ms Peto is Jewish. I deliberately refrained from alluding to this because it seemed to me irrelevant to the argument I was making, which was one related to the academic standards of the University of Toronto, and not to Ms Peto's ethnic and/or religious identity.

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