Fired for protesting Israel’s war

August 7, 2014

Dr. Steven Salaita, a Palestinian American and prominent American Indian studies scholar, was fired from his new position as associate professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, apparently because of his public criticism of Israel's barbaric war on Gaza.

Salaita had accepted the position in UIUC's American Indian Studies program and subsequently resigned from his previous post at Virginia Tech. Now he has been left without a job, nor a home, since he had already left his previous residence.

Salaita is well-known for his support of Palestinian liberation and opposition to Israeli apartheid. He is the author of Israel's Dead Soul and The Uncultured Wars: Arabs, Muslims and the Poverty of Liberal Thought, and he has written extensively for publications such as Electronic Intifada and Salon. Salaita was also a prominent campaigner in support of the American Studies Association's decision to join the boycott of Israeli academic institutions.

During Israel's ruthless offensive against Gaza, Salaita commented regularly on social media, displaying legitimate outrage and passion about the war crimes being committed against Palestine. This appears to have earned him the hostility of UIUC officials--he learned from Chancellor Phyllis Wise that the position he had accepted had been withdrawn--as well as pro-Israel academics, like Cary Nelson, a self-proclaimed "civil libertarian" who nevertheless defended the decision to fire Salaita, explicitly because of his "venemous" tweets.

Supporters of academic freedom and solidarity with Palestine have moved into action to protest this appalling violation of free speech and academic freedom. A committee of Illinois members of the American Association of University Professors released the following statement protesting Salaita's firing and demanding his position be reinstated.

THE FOLLOWING is a statement by the Illinois AAUP Committee A on the case of Steven Salaita at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign:

THE ILLINOIS Conference Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure of the American Association of University Professors supports the honoring of the appointment of Steven G. Salaita in the American Indian Studies program at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Reports that the university has voided a job offer, if accurate, due to tweets on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict would be a clear violation of Professor Salaita's academic freedom and an affront to free speech that we enjoy in this country.

Professor Salaita resigned his position at Virginia Tech and was about to assume his new appointment at the University of Illinois. We stand by the appointment and by Professor Salaita and defend his right to engage in extramural utterances.

The AAUP 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure states in reference to extramural utterances: "When they speak or write as citizens, they should be free from institutional censorship or discipline." It affirms that "The common good depends upon the free search for truth and its free exposition." While Professor's Salaita's tweets are construed as controversial, the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure affirms the virtue of controversial speech. While the Statement refers to classroom teaching, the virtual classroom today has no limits. In 1970, the 1940 Statement was revised with new "Interpretive Comments." The Interpretive Comments would encompass Professor Salaita's right to be controversial: "The intent of this statement is not to discourage what is 'controversial.' Controversy is at the heart of the free academic inquiry which the entire statement is designed to foster."

Steven Salaita
Steven Salaita

Professor Salaita's words while strident and vulgar were an impassioned plea to end the violence currently taking place in the Middle East. Issues of life and death during bombardment educes significant emotions and expressions of concern that reflect the tragedy that armed conflict confers on its victims. Speech that is deemed controversial should be challenged with further speech that may abhor and challenge a statement. Yet the University of Illinois cannot cancel an appointment based upon Twitter statements that are protected speech in the United States of America.

The AAUP 1940 Statement does require a professor to be "accurate, to exercise appropriate restraint, to show respect for the opinions of others...." However in the AAUP Committee A Statement on Extramural Utterances it states in reference to the 1940 Statement:

[An] administration may file charges in accordance with procedures outlined in the Statement if it feels that a faculty member has failed to observe the above admonitions and believes that the professor's extramural utterances raise grave doubts concerning the professor's fitness for continuing service.

What you can do

Contact UIUC Chancellor Phyllis Wise by email at pmwise@illinois.edu to demand that Salaita be reinstated. Click here to e-mail from the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation website.

Sign a Change.org petition calling for Chancellor Wise to take corrective action.

We are unaware that the university has afforded Professor Salaita any due process. In the absence of due process, particularly if a contract was signed, any institutional action to reverse an offer of appointment would be a grave violation of academic due process. Furthermore, there is nothing in the Salaita statements about Israel or Zionism that would raise questions about his fitness to teach. These statements were not made in front of students, are not related to a course that is being taught, and do not reflect in any manner his quality of teaching. What one says out of class rarely, in the absence of peer review of teaching, confirms how one teaches. Passion about a topic even if emotionally expressed through social network does not allow one to draw inferences about teaching that could possibly rise to the voiding or reversal of a job appointment.

One must not conjecture about a link between extramural statements and the quality of classroom teaching, absent an unmistakable link that would raise issues of competence. None exist here. Indeed, we affirm that fitness to teach can be enhanced with conviction, commitment and an engagement with the outside world. As a professor who was proffered an appointment in American Indian Studies, we are particularly concerned if a university would void a contract of a professor exercising a right of citizenship in protesting actions of another country that much of the global community including the U.N. Secretary General and even the U.S. State Department have found "disgraceful."

Signatories
Peter N. Kirstein, Chair of Illinois Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure, Saint Xavier University
Iymen Chehade, Columbia College
Loretta Capeheart, Northeastern Illinois University
J. Walter Kendall III, John Marshall School of Law
John Wilson, Illinois State University

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