Samidoun statement in support of SFSU/An-Najah agreement and Palestinian scholars under attack

najah-delegationSamidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses its strong support for Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi, targeted in a harassment and intimidation campaign by the far-right Zionist organizations Campus Watch, AMCHA Initiative and Middle East Forum.

As an active Palestinian academic, a founding member of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, and the director of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas (AMED) program at San Francisco State University (SFSU), Dr. Abdulhadi has repeatedly been targeted in campaigns by Zionist organizations seeking to silence her scholarship on Arab, Muslim and Palestinian communities.

Her most recent accomplishment in leading the process that led to a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between SFSU and An-Najah University in her Palestinian hometown of Nablus has been at the center of the latest attacks.

This campaign aims to both silence the activity and scholarship of a prominent Palestinian professor – who also serves as faculty mentor to the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS) at SFSU – and to further criminalize Palestinian students, education, politics and society within the US academy and internationally. Thus, the campaign relies on the demonization of Palestinian student political activity in support of Palestinian political organizations working for the liberation of their homeland.

Just as Palestinian students face a constant threat of arrest and imprisonment for involvement with student union activities and student protests, the Zionist campaign against Dr. Abdulhadi and the SFSU/An-Najah Memorandum of Understanding attempts to criminalize Palestinian student political activity as a mechanism to break the bridges between U.S. and Palestinian campuses built by the work of scholars and activists.

The attempts to demonize An-Najah students by Zionist groups working to break the academic partnership and target Palestinian academics in the United States operate hand in hand with the violent military raids and pre-dawn arrests against Palestinian student activists at An-Najah and universities throughout occupied Palestine. Within Israeli prisons are hundreds and thousands of Palestinian prisoners whose education has been denied or delayed due to occupation forces’ arrests and repression.

Rather than an “investigation” of the partnership with An-Najah and of the scholars who have forged that partnership, what is needed are escalating partnerships between international and Palestinian campuses that break the Zionist colonial attempts to besiege and isolate Palestinian students under occupation, and, simultaneously and urgently, the implementation of the academic boycott of Israeli universities, which as institutions are fully complicit in the violent, settler colonial occupation project.

Further, we note that this attack comes amid multiple attempts to criminalize and marginalize activists for Palestine and Palestinian scholars and activists within the United States, from state surveillance and infiltration by police departments and the FBI, to the promotion of anti-BDS legislation, to the use of websites like “Canary Mission” that attempt to use economic pressure against students by threatening their jobs and livelihoods in order to suppress Palestinian, Arab, Muslim and solidarity organizing on campuses. These actions are part and parcel of the project of criminalization and “terror” labeling promoted by the occupation state and its strategic partner in the United States. On the SFSU campus, GUPS itself has endured extensive attacks, often promoted by outside Zionist groups against student activism on campus.

Samidoun expresses its solidarity with Professor Abdulhadi and its full support for the MOU between SFSU and An-Najah. We also reprint the statement of the Anti-Prison, Labor and Academic Delegation to Palestine below, with our full support.

Dr. Abdulhadi and her colleagues on the delegation held a joint event with ex-prisoners and scholars at An-Najah University that highlights the value and importance of building such bridges. 

To sign on in solidarity, please Sign Here:  http://bit.ly/2dtPmzP

Open Letter to San Francisco State University President Leslie Wong by the Prisoner, Labor and Academic Delegation to Palestine

Uphold the MOU with An-Najah University and Support Professor Abdulhadi!

Join us in signing on to the letter and email SFSU President Wong Here:  http://bit.ly/2dtPmzP

Members of the Delegation with faculty and students from An-Najah University.

In March 2016, nineteen of us were part of a multi-racial, multi-generational Prisoner, Labor and Academic Solidarity delegation to Palestine convened by Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi, a professor at San Francisco State University.  A highlight of our trip was a conference we participated in at An-Najah University in Nablus in the Palestinian West Bank.  Faculty and students from An-Najah and members of our delegation shared presentations about the marginalized histories of colonial repression, racism and resistance in Palestine and the U.S.  A dynamic discussion ensued, laying the basis for future academic cooperation and public engagement.  For us it was an exciting model of what international academic exchange between activist scholars should be.

The conference at An-Najah was facilitated by a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) which was established between San Francisco State University and An-Najah in 2014.  The agreement was initiated by Dr. Abdulhadi, who grew up in Nablus, and it grew out of her close ties to both academic institutions.   The purpose of the agreement was to encourage exchange and partnership between the universities and with the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas (AMED) Studies program, an important part of the College of Ethnic Studies at SFSU.

We were very disturbed to learn at the beginning of September that an online petition had been launched by the Middle East Forum, a neo-conservative,  pro-Israel group led by Daniel Pipes and David Horowitz, named as leading Islamophobes by the Southern Law Poverty Center, calling on San Francisco State University President, Leslie Wong, to terminate the MOU with An-Najah. The petition accuses An-Najah of “incitement to violence, anti-Semitism and the glorification of terrorism.” It cites the opinions of other discredited Zionist organizations such as the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) as sources for these inflammatory allegations. The vilification of An-Najah, which is consistently ranked as a leading academic institution in the Arab world, is accompanied by an attack on Dr. Abdulhadi who is condemned for initiating the MOU and for her “record as an anti-Israel activist.” Some of the examples given include her role as a founding member of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel and her service as faculty advisor for SFSU’s General Union of Palestine Students (GUPS).

Unfortunately, the petition is not an isolated diatribe but part and parcel of an escalating backlash by pro-Israeli, Zionist organizations to undermine support for Palestine which has been gaining momentum on college campuses across the United States over the past ten years, catalyzed by the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign. The 2015 report, “The Palestine Exception to Free Speech” by the Center for Constitutional Rights and Palestine Legal explains how pro-Israel groups  “leverage their significant resources and lobbying power to pressure universities, government actors, and other institutions to censor or punish advocacy in support of Palestinian rights.”

Multiple forms of pressure have been employed including the creation of an online hit list by the Canary Mission, a Zionist campus watch group explicitly founded to harass and target students and faculty active in the BDS movement.  Dr. Abdulhadi as well as various SFSU GUPS student members are listed on this website in an attempt to derail their academic careers and invite attacks against them. Another significant pressure point is the spread of McCarthyite anti-BDS legislation which criminalizes businesses, organizations and individuals who participate in boycotts of Israel.  Eleven states have passed such laws and dozens more, including California, are considering them. In June 2016, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order against boycott and divestment.

At the same time, a recent wave of Israeli raids and arrests in Palestine at the end of July have targeted An-Najah students and students in other Palestinian universities. Since it is illegal for Palestinian students to organize protests on campuses, and campus political organizations are banned, there is a constant pretext for the Israeli military occupation to arrest students arbitrarily.  The suppression and increasing criminalization of free speech about Palestine on U.S. campuses represent a move in the same direction.

Recently the AMCHA Initiative, another Zionist campus-focused group, launched a campaign to cancel a course, “Palestine: A Settler Colonial Analysis,” at UC Berkeley. The effort was defeated due to widespread University and public pressure. A number of our Palestine Delegation members live in the San Francisco Bay Area and we expect SFSU to also uphold its commitment to academic freedom and social justice, values that are prioritized by our communities.

We are encouraged by a statement that SFSU’s associate vice president of strategic communications, J. Elizabeth Smith, made to CBS San Francisco defending the right of SF State faculty to partner with An-Najah.  “The university supports the academic freedom of its faculty. Partnerships are initiated by faculty members based on their own academic interests, either for their own particular scholarly pursuits or to advance learning opportunities for their students.”  We encourage President Wong to publicly reaffirm this commitment as well.

In the face of the bigoted attacks on the MOU between San Francisco State University and An-Najah University in the Palestine West Bank and on Professor Abdulhadi, a leading Palestinian scholar, we the undersigned Delegation members and other concerned academics, students and community members, call upon President Wong of SFSU to:

  •         Uphold the importance and validity of SFSU’s historic agreement with An-Najah University.
  •         Reject the defamation of Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi and support her leading intellectual and activist roles in the international justice for Palestine movements.
  •         Support publicly and institutionally the Arab and Muslim  Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies Program (AMED) at SFSU.
  •         Oppose the cyber-harassment and McCarthyite hit list tactics of the Canary Mission against students and faculty at SFSU and at other campuses across the U.S.

Signed by the members of the 2016 Prisoner, Labor and Academic Solidarity Delegation to Palestine:

*All institutional and organizational affiliations are for identification purposes only

  • Diana Block, author and activist, California Coalition for Women Prisoners*,San Francisco, California
  • Susan Chen, Counselor Faculty, San Francisco State University*, California
  • Dennis Childs, author and professor, University of California*, San Diego
  • Susie Day, writer, Monthly Review Press*, New York City, New York
  • Emory Douglas, Revolutionary Artist and Minister of Culture, Black Panther Party, 1967-1982
  • Johanna Fernández, author and professor, City University of New York-Baruch College*; Organizer, Campaign to Bring Mumia Home
  • Diane Fujino, author and professor, University of California*, Santa Barbara
  • Alborz Ghandehari, member of BDS Caucus of UAW 2865, University of California Student-Workers Union*
  • Anna Henry, activist and member, California Coalition for Women Prisoners*, San Francisco
  • Rachel Herzing, independent scholar, Oakland, California  
  • Hank Jones, activist, former US-Held political prisoner and member, Black Panther Party, Los Angeles, California
  • manuel la fontaine, former US-held prisoner and member, All of Us or None*, San Francisco, California
  • Claude Marks, Former US-held political prisoner, Freedom Archives*, San Francisco, California
  • Nathaniel Moore, archivist, Freedom Archives*, San Francisco, California
  • Isaac Ontiveros, Oakland, California
  • Michael Ritter, counselor faculty, San Francisco State University*, California
  • Jaime Veve, Co-Convener, Labor for Palestine*, New York City, New York
  • Laura Whitehorn, Former US-held political prisoner, New York City, New York