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David
Tell, opinion editor
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THE QUESTION raised by our editorial in last week's issue--whether the American
Association of University Professors would "censure" the University
of South Florida for having
fired indicted Palestinian Islamic Jihad chieftain Sami
Al-Arian--has been resolved. Sort of. Temporarily.
Winding up their 89th annual meeting here in Washington
on Saturday, roughly 300 AAUP delegates from around the country spent about
90 minutes debating a final, advisory
report on the matter by the Association's "Committee A on Academic
Freedom and Tenure." That report was harshly critical of President
Judy Genshaft and other USF administrators:
"Committee A condemns the administration's actions against the
professor" and "does not view the professor's arrest and
incarceration as excusing the administration's grave departures from
Association-supported standards of academic due process."
Nevertheless, "despite the harms suffered by the professor,"
Committee A was unable to identify any "reasonable remedial
action" it might request USF to take "at this time,"
Al-Arian having decided to defer grievance procedures against the
university pending completion of his criminal trial--and having been denied
bail in the meantime. Given such "unique circumstances,"
Committee A recommended that the AAUP delegate assembly take "no action"
in response to the professor's plight.
But Saturday's AAUP plenary session rejected this advice. According to
the St. Petersburg Times, "many" of the Association members who
lined up at the microphone during Saturday's debate, apparently under the impression
that Al-Arian had been victimized merely for exercising what one of them
called "the right of the professor to say what he believes,"
urged that USF be added to AAUP's full-scale
"censure" blacklist. And while majority sentiment for that move
did not materialize, the delegates did end up endorsing something almost as
drastic: a resolution that "condemns" USF for dismissing
Al-Arian "based on political issues entirely apart from any legitimate
academic concerns"--along with an accompanying motion referring the
university's "severe violations of academic freedom" back to
Committee A for ongoing review and "reconsideration."
It's a peculiar decision. The Association has "censured" many
institutions over the past 89 years, but its "condemnation" of
USF is believed to be a first--and its insistence that Committee A spend
another year monitoring the case seems entirely pointless: Al-Arian's
criminal trial isn't scheduled to begin until January 2005, so there'll be
no new facts for the committee to "reconsider" before the AAUP
reconvenes next summer.
Moreover, there's that pesky, 50-count, 121-page indictment implicating
the professor in a lengthy and elaborate terrorism conspiracy. At this
point, it's increasingly difficult--if not impossible--to find anybody
familiar with that indictment's details who's still prepared to call Sami Al-Arian a suitable candidate for continued tenure
at an American university. USF faculty senate president Greg Paveza, previously a critic of his school's response to
the controversy, now tells the Tampa Tribune that he's changed his mind:
"There's enough information [in the grand jury's charges], along with
what individual information the university had, to justify the university's
decision to terminate him." In other words: Sami
Al-Arian is probably guilty.
In other, other words: The AAUP has just "condemned" the
University of South Florida for firing a man who's spent the last 10-plus
years organizing suicide bombings out of his campus office.
David Tell is opinion editor of The Weekly Standard.
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