Lynn Mahoney - university president silences Palestinians

Started by yankeedoodle, November 06, 2021, 10:25:58 AM

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yankeedoodle

SFSU President sides with tech giants on silencing of Palestinian voices
President Mahoney's decision upholds the University's acceptance of Big Tech's increasing control over academic discussion, and its complicity with Zionist organizations.
https://mondoweiss.net/2021/11/sfsu-president-sides-with-tech-giants-on-silencing-of-palestinian-voices/?utm_source=mailpoet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=daily-email-mailpoet

Editor's Note: The following press release was issued on November 4, 2021 by the International Campaign to Defend Professor Rabab Abdulhadi. The press release comes as San Francisco State President Lynn Mahoney overturned the decision of a campus panel that ruled the school failed to protect Professors Rabab Abdulhadi and Tomomi Kinukawa from censorship when Zoom, Facebook, and YouTube denied their services for an event featuring Leila Khaled. For more on this story see here https://mondoweiss.net/2021/09/professors-fight-to-defend-palestine-and-protect-academic-freedom/  . Mondoweiss occasionally publishes press releases and statements from organizations in an effort to draw attention to overlooked issues.

QuotePRESS RELEASE: November 4, 2021

SFSU President Lynn Mahoney overrules her own faculty panel & supports Big Tech intrusion on academic freedom and the silencing of Palestinian narratives

In an outrageous and insulting decision, President Lynn Mahoney of SFSU has disregarded the legitimate reprimand of a faculty panel that recommended redress to Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi, founding director of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies (AMED) program, for the University's failure regarding violations of Professor Abdulhadi's and her colleague Professor Tomomi Kinukawa's academic freedom. 

President Mahoney's decision upholds the University's corporatized acceptance of Big Tech's increasing control over academic discussion and its complicity with Zionist organizations that stifles all discourse on issues of human rights and dignity for the Palestinian people. 

The President's decision follows a ruling  by the faculty member panel based on a six hour hearing following the arbitrary cancellation by Zoom and other social media outlets of Drs. Abdulhadi and Kinukawa's online open classroom, "Whose Narratives? Gender, Justice and Resistance: A Conversation with Leila Khaled." The University is bound by contract, law and AAUP policy to protect academic freedom rather than subcontracting the responsibility to private companies. Further, universities must maintain structural independence from the whims and demands of partisan lobbying organizations, including Zionist groups like the Academic Engagement Network (AEN) and the Lawfare Project.

In its ruling, now vetoed by President Mahoney, the faculty panel affirmed that: "San Francisco State University has inflicted harm upon Dr. Abdulhadi (and co-instructor, Dr. Kinukawa) and that her academic freedom was, in fact, violated. We characterize this harm in two ways: 1) that the university did not provide adequate support to Dr. Abdulhadi against the actions of the corporate entity, Zoom, and, more importantly against the outside organization, Lawfare Project."  Furthermore, the panel ordered the university to provide remedy in the form of a public apology to Dr. Abdulhadi and to provide "a site for rescheduling the event with Leila Khaled on an alternate platform, without interference".

Clearly, with this decision, SFSU is continuing its policy of harassment of Dr. Abdulhadi, intensifying its efforts to dismantle the AMED program, and confirming its complicity with Zionist organizations that seek to silence Palestinian voices on campuses across the country as Israel has pursued against Palestinian human rights organizations. SFSU's lip service to academic freedom flies in the face of limiting Palestinian speech in favor of an overriding concern for its corporate bottom line.

As with this week's criminalization of 6 legitimate Palestinian human rights organizations by the Israeli government, SFSU chose to follow the Zionist playbook of demonizing all actions in support of Palestinian liberation and teaching about Palestine as "terrorism" and "anti-Semitic".

President Mahoney's decision was written by Ingrid Williams, Vice President of Human Resources.  According to University by-law, the President's veto will trigger an automatic and independent arbitration hearing for a final decision on Dr. Abdulhadi's grievance.

abduLMaria

I suggest the LAROUCHE book,

https://www.amazon.com/Ugly-Truth-About-Anti-Defamation-League/dp/0943235073

"The Ugly Truth About the Anti-Defamation League"


It provides a very useful history of how the ADL continued COINTELPRO - in San Francisco, in the early 90's.

If you remember ... in 1991, there were MASSIVE anti-war protests in San Francisco, in response to Bush41's drive by / fly by attacks on Iraq.  50,000 people literally.

(Paradoxically, Bush41 was not pro-Israel enough ... another news story.)


In preparing for 9-11, Israel knew that they would have to change the culture of San Francisco.

The LaRouche book details some of that.

BUT LaRouche is "controlled opposition" - just read their articles about 9-11.


I personally witnessed some of Israel's predation on the anti-war Gentile population, in 1994/5.

They stopped operating out of ADL offices, and set up "Jews for Jesus" offices.

They had a grand total of -1- member, who was an Asian woman, who handed out fliers at the corner of Van Ness & Market.  i.e. they had a religious congregation of -1- visible member.

I lived at the corner of Market & Gough, 1670 Market.

The Jews for Jesus office was on Haight, just up the street from Gough.


I had an ad in the SF yellow pages, in the computer section, which attracted their attention.  This resulted in 2 interviews with the US gov., i.e. the CIA.  The first interview was a performance interview, which I thought was fun.

I guess I "passed" ... sort of.  The elderly male interviewer made it a point to look at my bookshelf, which was crammed full of technical and history books.

He commented about the anti-war sentiment expressed by the books.

They made a job offer at the second interview, which involved another male employee (of the CIA) inviting me down to Pacific Bell corporate headquarters, at 150 Montgomery.

They gave me a tour of a very impressive network, and also showed me their version of Skype (in 1994.)

That guy had a very greedy pro-war vibe.  I essentially declined the job offer, by not accepting it.

This upset them, resulting in 3rd and 4th (sort of) "Fraternity Hazing" sessions where they tried to coerce me into adopting the Jesus Mythology.


In the process of trying to coerce me into becoming a Zionist Christian, they taught me to detest Christians and to HATE militant Jews.

At this point, San Francisco has become pretty much a Jewish ghetto, with pockets of the 1960's anti-war people.  Mostly diluted by greedy high-tech workers who only think about tech and money.

That Cultural Change did not happen by accident.
Planet of the SWEJ - It's a Horror Movie.

http://www.PalestineRemembered.com/!

yankeedoodle

A Victory!  Professor Rabab Abdulhadi wins second grievance at SFSU
A faculty panel unanimously sided with Professor Rabab Abdulhadi in a grievance against San Francisco State University, vindicating Abdulhadi, AMED, and Palestine Studies.
https://mondoweiss.net/2022/02/a-victory-professor-rabab-abdulhadi-wins-second-grievance-at-sfsu/?utm_source=mailpoet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=the-shift-newsletter
A faculty panel has unanimously sided with Professor Rabab Abdulhadi at San Francisco State University (SFSU) in a grievance she filed through her union, the SFSU chapter of the California Faculty Association. Dr. Abdulhadi's grievance reiterated her demand for SFSU to fulfill its outstanding commitment to build Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas (AMED) Studies by hiring two additional tenure-track faculty members, institutionally supporting AMED, stopping the attempt to dismantle AMED, and ending the creation of the hostile work environment to which Dr. Abdulhadi has been subjected for at least 13 years for her directorship of AMED and her refusal to abandon it.

Issued yesterday by the three-person Faculty Hearing Committee that adjudicated Dr. Abdulhadi's grievance on February 4, a report agreed with Dr. Abdulhadi's claims that SFSU breached her hiring contract and fostered a hostile work environment to pressure her to give up AMED Studies. The Faculty Hearing Committee supported Dr. Abdulhadi, and upheld AMED's independence and integrity.

The statutory grievance filed by Dr. Abdulhadi documented SFSU's refusal to honor the original Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU) which the university signed when it recruited Dr. Abdulhadi to create and direct the AMED program in 2005. That MOU stipulated that two additional tenure-track positions would be hired along with Dr. Abdulhadi to ensure a full and sustainable academic, communal and advocacy multi-site space on the history, politics, cultures and social movements of Arab, Muslim and Palestinian communities as they intersect with and contribute to the indivisibility of justice within and outside of the College of Ethnic Studies at SFSU. The fact that those faculty positions were never filled served to thwart AMED Studies and turn it into a token, one-person operation without possibility of growth and development – had it not been for Dr. Abdulhadi's tenacity and determination to resist such designs.  In addition, the grievance detailed how the university created a hostile work and study environment on campus for Dr. Abdulhadi and her Arab, Muslim and Palestinian students and their allies, including anti-Zionist Jewish students, staff and colleagues. These efforts have been publicly decried by numerous scholars and academic organizations, including the SFSU chapter of the California Faculty Association.

The February 4 Faculty Hearing Committee rejected the university's claims, including several bad faith actions that sought to undermine the transparency of the grievance hearing. Not only did the SFSU Administration fail to submit the list of witnesses and evidence on time as per their own deadline. The university representatives made a mockery of the proceedings by sharing the names of their witnesses less than 24 hours before the hearing, contrary to the very agreement on which they had insisted.

The three committee members, Drs. Rita Melendez (Chair), Elahe Essani, and Hui Yang, relied on "written documents, direct testimony, and cross-examination of witnesses" to reach their findings defining Dr. Abdulhadi's grievance "to be serious, thus requiring an immediate remedy." The committee's report recognized that Dr. Abdulhadi "met the burden of proof and provided evidence that the former Dean of Ethnic Studies (Dean Monteiro) promised two new faculty positions in AMED as a condition of Dr. Abdulhadi coming to SFSU," as stipulated in her job offer.  The report rejected the attempt by the SFSU Administration to engage in character assasination of Dr. Abdulhadi, stressing that SFSU "has fostered a hostile environment" and that "lack of hires has resulted in intellectual isolation for Dr. Abdulhadi and has had negative consequences in terms of her building an AMED program." The report ordered SFSU to "issue an apology to Dr. Abdulhadi for not fulfilling the promise made to her upon her hire and for years of denying the requests for the faculty hires." 

The report comes on the heels of another recent victory achieved by Dr. Abdulhadi, AMED Studies communities, and Palestine scholarship and pedagogy. In October 2021, a Faculty Hearing Committee ruled unanimously that SFSU violated the academic freedom of Dr. Abdulhadi and her colleague, Dr. Tomomi Kinukawa, when the university failed to stand up to Zoom's silencing and cancellation of an open classroom they co-organized on Palestine, titled "Whose Narratives: Gender, Justice and Resistance: A Conversation with Leila Khaled", on September 23, 2020. The Faculty Hearing Committee members ordered the university administration to apologize to Drs. Abdulhadi and Kinukawa and host the censored webinar without interference from big tech corporations while also faulting the administration for colluding with The Lawfare Project, a right-wing organization that has been part of a network of pro-Israel lobby industry groups intent on smearing, bullying and silencing scholarship, pedagogy and advocacy for Palestinian freedom for years, including that of Dr. Abdulhadi and AMED. The Lawfare Project's federal lawsuit against SFSU and Dr. Abdulhadi (the only faculty member named in this lawsuit) was dismissed with prejudice in federal court in 2018 after 18 months of persistent attacks against Dr. Abdulhadi. 

Rather than respect members of the SFSU faculty who volunteered their time and exerted their intellectual energy to serve on the Faculty Hearing Committee, SFSU President Lynn Mahoney vetoed the committee's unanimous decision that called for redress to Drs. Abdulhadi and Kinukawa. In so doing, President Mahoney sought to nullify the committee's recommendations and sabotage the grievance process. Intellectuals and academics were outraged by President Mahoney's disregard of faculty rights and due process and called for her immediate resignation. These outcries and calls coincided with similar calls for the resignation of California State University (CSU) Chancellor Joseph Castro, who in fact resigned on February 17, 2022 after reports appeared that he mishandled misconduct complaints. Chancellor Castro had been supportive of Mahoney, giving her a 10% salary increase despite faculty uproar over budget cuts and the firing of a significant number of lecturers, using the COVID pandemic as an excuse.  Castro also presided over the cancellation of the Edward Said faculty position at CSU-Fresno under Zionist pressure.

Academics, public intellectuals, and the broader Palestine justice movement welcome yesterday's ruling and congratulate members of the Faculty Hearing Committee, Dr. Abdulhadi and the SFSU chapter of the California Faculty Association for their persistence in protecting faculty rights and refusing to join the SFSU Administration in its collusion with the Zionist, orientalist and racist agenda that seeks to silence the teaching of Palestine.  During the 6-hour virtual February 4 hearing, SFSU arrogantly dismissed the seriousness of Dr. Abdulhadi's grievance and disregarded the university's own proclaimed principles of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI). SFSU's actions demonstrated its cynicism regarding the university's well-publicized support for multiculturalism, equity and inclusion, which directly contradicts the history of SFSU's collaboration with and preferential treatment of Zionist groups, including the recent agreement with Hillel, Hillel International and the Academic Engagement Nework, as well as the SFSU's longstanding unjustifiable harassment of Dr. Abdulhadi by subjecting her to multiple baseless audits for the sole purpose of discrediting Dr. Abdulhadi and placating the AMCHA Initiative, a pro-Israel lobby group. SFSU's deceitful practices, misrepresentation of facts, and continued attempts to smear Dr. Abdulhadi's character in the recent hearing once again showed SFSU's disdain for the AMED Studies program and its complicity with outside organizations that seek to silence Palestinian voices (see Mondoweiss).

Evidence presented in this most recent hearing, including testimonies by witnesses who were unable to testify due to SFSU's attempt to subvert the process, such as Dr. Robin D. G. Kelley, Dr. James Martel and doctoral candidate Saliem Shehadeh, further demonstrates the corporatization of SFSU and its administration's collusion with right-wing and Zionist organizations trying to dismantle and destroy the critical AMED Studies program. Testifying for Dr. Abdulhadi were Dr. Tomomi Kinukawa, Dr. Marc Stein, Dr. Blanca Misse, and AMED/Ethnic Studies Graduate Student Leith Ghuloum. Dean Amy Sueyoshi, Associate Dean Catriona Rueda Esquibel and Dean of Faculty Carleen Mandolfo testified for the Administration. Dr. Abdulhadi was represented by Professor of English and member of the Executive Board of the SFSU Chapter of the California Faculty Association, Dr. Larry Hanley. Professor Hanley was supported by a committed team of scholars, public intellectuals and activists representing AMED communities of justice who worked tirelessly and voluntarily to defend Dr. Abdulhadi and AMED Studies and its students as they have done throughout the last 15 years of Dr. Abdulhadi's battle to build AMED Studies and refusal to be stymied by the Zionist and corporatized agenda within and outside SFSU. Yesterday's report by the February 4 Faculty Hearing Committee bodes well for the sustainability of critical challenges to these reactionary efforts and the racism and anti-intellectualism they entail.

For more information, contact The International Campaign to Defend Professor Rabab Abdulhadi https://www.facebook.com/DefendProfAbdulhadi  or write to Team@professorabdulhadidefense.com.