| Some 
              on Harvard, MIT Faculties Urge Divestment in Israel
 6 May 2002, Boston Globe,by Jenna Russell
 
   A teach-in on the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
              today is the latest development in an ongoing protest of Israeli 
              policy by some MIT and Harvard University professors. According to the Web site where the petition is posted, www.harvardmitdivest.org, 
              Harvard has more than $600 million invested in US companies that 
              do business in Israel, including McDonald's Corp., International 
              Paper, General Electric, and IBM. About 75 faculty members at the two institutions have signed an 
              online petition asking the schools to divest from companies doing 
              business in Israel until its forces withdraw from occupied territories, 
              among other conditions. Noam Chomsky, the well-known linguist and 
              activist, will speak at today's event, along with other critics 
              of Israel.  Nancy Kanwisher, an MIT professor of brain and cognitive science 
              and one of the petition's organizers, said she had been ''politically 
              dormant'' until she saw photographs of the Jenin refugee camp, where 
              Palestinians allege Israeli forces massacred hundreds of civilians 
              and violated the international laws of war during a three-week siege. ''I looked to see where the protest was, and I couldn't find it,'' 
              she said. ''I was shocked.'' Working with a Harvard faculty friend and input from Chomsky, Kanwisher 
              modeled the petition after one organized at Princeton University. 
              It states that signers are ''appalled by the human rights abuses 
              against Palestinians at the hands of the Israeli government,'' and 
              that they ''find the recent attacks on Israeli citizens unacceptable 
              and abhorrent.'' ''But these do not and should not negate the human rights of the 
              Palestinians,'' the petition adds.  Supporting faculty include members of MIT's departments of linguistics 
              and philosophy, architecture, literature, political science, and 
              mathematics. At Harvard, professors of classics, biology, psychology, 
              and Greek and Latin are among those who have signed the petition. As of yesterday, 40 faculty members at MIT and 39 at Harvard had 
              added their names. Another 81 students, staff, and alumni of the 
              schools have also signed. Paul Nemirovsky, a doctoral student at MIT who grew up in Israel, 
              said he thinks many of the professors who signed the petition don't 
              understand both sides of the Israel-Palestinian conflict. He wrote 
              a response pointing out that other nations responsible for ''infinitely 
              larger'' civilian casualties haven't been similarly condemned, and 
              sent it out by e-mail, he said. ''I felt hurt for who I am, as an Israeli and a Jew,'' he said 
              of reading the petition. ''It was the first time in my adult life 
              that I ever felt these things mattered ... What I really hated about 
              it was the fact that they're using the name of an institution that 
              is by definition apolitical.'' At Harvard, a rally protesting the petition drive is scheduled 
              for noon today in front of the Science Center. After hearing details 
              about the movement in the last few days, some students have labeled 
              it hypocritical. ''It's ridiculous,'' said Paul Gottesman, who recently stepped 
              down as president of the zionist Jewish Law Student Association 
              at Harvard. ''The people who are involved in this divestment campaign 
              are basically trying to impose economic sanctions on Israel. These 
              are the same people who continually oppose economic sanctions against 
              countries like Cuba and Iraq. So I wonder what their motivations 
              are.'' And Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz warns, ''Any effort 
              to divest from Israel would fail because it would destroy any university 
              that attempted it. Faculty would leave, students would refuse to 
              attend, the contributors would refuse to contribute. ''I would not remain at any university that would divest from Israel,'' 
              he declared. Kanwisher acknowledges the controversy and said she's not looking 
              for divestment anytime soon. She pointed to the long years campus 
              activists spent protesting investment in pro-apartheid South Africa. Harvard is widely remembered for what was seen as a slow and reluctant 
              response to the campaign against South Africa. ''It would be a mistake to expect any immediate outcome,'' Kanwisher 
              said. ''If people become more willing to question Israeli policy, 
              that will be a step forward.'' She said she's been contacted by people at other universities, 
              including Tufts, where there is interest in beginning similar efforts. According to the Web site where the petition is posted, www.harvardmitdivest.org, 
              Harvard has more than $600 million invested in US companies that 
              do business in Israel, including McDonald's Corp., International 
              Paper, General Electric, and IBM. Numbers posted for MIT are preliminary, 
              but show a smaller level of investment.    |