Brandeis University has suspended its decade-old partnership with Al-Quds University following a recent Nazi-style rally at the Palestinian school in Jerusalem.
At the Nov. 5 rally, Al-Quds students wore black military gear, carried fake automatic weapons, gave the Nazi salute and surrounded the main square of their campus with banners depicting images of “martyred” suicide bombers.
“While Brandeis has an unwavering commitment to open dialogue on difficult issues, we are also obliged to recognize intolerance when we see it, and we cannot — and will not — turn a blind eye to intolerance,” the Jewish-sponsored university said in a press release announcing the suspension Nov. 18. “As a result, Brandeis is suspending its partnership with Al-Quds University effective immediately. We will re-evaluate our relationship with Al-Quds based on future events.”
Brandeis said its president, Fred Lawrence, had asked Al-Quds President Sari Nusseibeh to issue an “unequivocal condemnation of the demonstrations.” Nusseibeh emailed Lawrence an English translation of a statement posted in Arabic on the Al-Quds website, and Brandeis said it considered the statement “unacceptable and inflammatory.”
Rather than exclusively addressing the Nazi-style rally, the Al-Quds statement also described “vilification campaigns by Jewish extremists” against the university.
“These extreme elements spare no effort to exploit some rare but nonetheless damaging events or scenes which occur on the campus of Al-Quds University, such as fist-fighting between students, or some students making a mock military display,” the statement said. “They cite these events as evidence justifying their efforts to muster broad Jewish and Western opinion to support their position. This public opinion, in turn, sustains the occupation, the extension of settlements and the confiscation of land, and prevents Palestinians from achieving our freedom.”
On Nov. 14, two Brandeis faculty members left for a trip to Al-Quds that had been scheduled before the rally, and planned “detailed discussions” with administrators at the Palestinian university regarding the rally, said Brandeis spokeswoman Ellen de Graffenreid.
“The Brandeis University community abhors the actions that took place on the Al-Quds University campus and condemns all acts that incite or encourage senseless violence,” Lawrence, the school’s president, wrote on the Brandeis First blog.
In 2003, Brandeis and Al-Quds formed “a unique intercultural partnership, linking an Arab institution in Jerusalem and a Jewish-sponsored institution in the United States in an exchange designed to foster cultural understanding and provide educational opportunities for students, faculty and staff,” according to the Brandeis website.
The partnership “was initiated with the best of intentions for opening a dialogue and building a foundation for peace,” Brandeis said Nov. 18.
“While recent events make it necessary for us to suspend our current relationship with Al-Quds, we will continue to advance the cause of peace and understanding on our campus and around the world,” the school said.