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Israel critic finds job offer revoked after Gaza tweets

By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed

Published on
August 11, 2014
Last updated
February 16, 2017

Source: Alamy

Many faculty job offers contain language stating that the offer is pending approval by the institution鈥檚 board of trustees. It鈥檚 normally just a formality, since many college by-laws require such approval.

Not so with a job offer made to Steven G. Salaita, who was to have joined the American Indian studies programme at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign this month. The appointment was made public, and Salaita resigned from his position as associate professor of English at Virginia Tech. But he was recently informed by Chancellor Phyllis Wise that the appointment would not go to the university鈥檚 board, and that he did not have a job to come to in Illinois, according to two sources with knowledge of the situation.

The university declined to confirm the blocked appointment, but would not respond to questions about whether Salaita was going to be teaching there. As recently as two weeks ago, the university confirmed to reporters that he was coming. The university also declined to answer questions about how rare it is for such appointments to fall through at this stage.

Salaita did not respond to numerous calls and emails.

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The sources familiar with the university鈥檚 decision say that concern grew over the tone of his comments on Twitter about Israel鈥檚 policies in Gaza. While many academics at Illinois and elsewhere are deeply critical of Israel, Salaita鈥檚 tweets have struck some as crossing a line into uncivil behaviour.

For instance, there is this tweet: 鈥淎t this point, if Netanyahu appeared on TV with a necklace made from the teeth of Palestinian children, would anybody be surprised? #Gaza.鈥 Or this one: 鈥淏y eagerly conflating Jewishness and Israel, Zionists are partly responsible when people say antisemitic shit in response to Israeli terror.鈥 Or this one: 鈥淶ionists, take responsibility: if your dream of an ethnocratic Israel is worth the murder of children, just fucking own it already.鈥

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In recent weeks,听听and others have started to draw attention to Salaita鈥檚 comments on Twitter. But as recently as 22 July (before the job offer was revoked), a university spokeswoman defended Salaita鈥檚 comments on Twitter and elsewhere. A spokeswoman told听听for an article about Salaita that 鈥渇aculty have a wide range of scholarly and political views, and we recognize the freedom-of-speech rights of all of our employees鈥.

While Salaita has until recently been听听he stopped posting several days ago, which is unusual for him. He is an active writer beyond Twitter, with op-eds (which of late have听听him as an Illinois professor) and with campaigns on behalf of the movement to organise an academic boycott of Israel. He has also published scholarly books, including听(Temple University Press) and听听(Palgrave Macmillan).

Salaita鈥檚 writing last year, while at Virginia Tech, drew fierce attacks (including death threats). In a piece in听听he questioned the idea that people should be asked in various ways to 鈥渟upport the troops鈥.

鈥溾楽upport the troops鈥 is the most overused platitude in the United States, but still the most effective for anybody who seeks interpersonal or economic ingratiation,鈥 Salaita wrote. 鈥淭he platitude abounds with significance but lacks the burdens of substance and specificity. It says something apparently apolitical while patrolling for heresy to an inelastic logic. Its only concrete function is to situate users into normative spaces.鈥

While Virginia Tech did not fire him (as many critics urged it to do), some faculty members thought that the university 鈥 in pointing out that his views didn鈥檛 reflect those of the institution 鈥

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Some who have raised questions about Salaita at Illinois have stressed that they are focused on what they see as incivility and bigotry, not opposition to Israeli or American policies.

Cary Nelson, a long-time English professor at Illinois and a past president of the American Association of University Professors, has defended many professors who hold unpopular views. But he has also in the past said that it was legitimate 鈥 at the point of hiring 鈥 to consider issues of civility and collegiality. In this case, he said, that would lead him to oppose Salaita鈥檚 appointment.

鈥淚 think the chancellor made the right decision,鈥 he said via email. 鈥淚 know of no other senior faculty member tweeting such venomous statements 鈥 and certainly not in such an obsessively driven way. There are scores of over-the-top Salaita tweets. I also do not know of another search committee that had to confront a case where the subject matter of academic publications overlaps with a loathsome and foul-mouthed presence in social media. I doubt if the search committee felt equipped to deal with the implications for the campus and its students. I鈥檓 glad the chancellor did what had to be done.鈥

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Asked if he feared that the withdrawal of the job offer could represent a scholar being punished for his unpopular political views, Nelson said he did not think that was the case. 鈥淚f Salaita had limited himself to expressing his hostility to Israel in academic publications subjected to peer review, I believe the appointment would have gone through without difficulty,鈥 he said. Nelson added that harsh criticism of Israel is widespread among faculty members. 鈥淪alaita鈥檚 extremist and uncivil views stand alone. There is nothing 鈥榰npopular鈥 on this campus about hostility to Israel.鈥

Robert Warrior, director of the American Indian studies programme at Illinois, said that Salaita was a strong scholar, worthy of joining the faculty at Illinois. Warrior noted that he was on Salaita鈥檚 dissertation committee and so has known and admired his work for some time, and that he played no role in winnowing down the pool to finalists.

In an interview, Warrior declined to discuss his feelings about the university鈥檚 decision to block the job offer. But he was willing to discuss why he wanted Salaita as a colleague. 鈥淪teven is an innovative scholar who works from a rigorous training in Native American studies in doing a broad range of critical work, including what we were most interested in for this search, his work in comparative American Indian-Palestinian-Arab American studies.鈥 Warrior said that Salaita had been a scholarly leader in such comparative work, starting with his book听听(Syracuse University Press).

In terms of Salaita鈥檚 political writing on social media and elsewhere, Warrior said, 鈥淚 think that any public statement that someone makes is fair game for consideration. However, I don鈥檛 think that everything somebody says is part of their scholarly record. I have plenty of colleagues with whom I disagree politically.鈥

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Salaita was to have taught two courses in the fall. Warrior said that he had yet to make new plans for the courses in light of the developments of the last week, but that he was committed to offering the courses. 鈥淭hey are still on the books,鈥 he said.

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