[Salon] Meet the First Tenured Professor to Be Fired for Pro-Palestine Speech



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“UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS ARE LOSING THEIR JOBS OVER “NEW MCCARTHYISM” ON GAZA”

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https://theintercept.com/2024/09/26/tenured-professor-fired-palestine-israel-zionism/

 

Meet the First Tenured Professor to Be Fired for Pro-Palestine Speech

Natasha Lennard September 26 2024

 

 

 

In this March 2, 2011 photo, shown is a sign at Muhlenberg College, in Allentown, Pa. The college is named for a patriarch of the American Lutheran church, but is also one of the hottest campuses in the country for Jewish students. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Maura Finkelstein never hid her support for Palestinian liberation during her nine years working as a professor of anthropology at Muhlenberg College, a small liberal arts school in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

“I have always had an ethical practice of making sure that I include Palestine in my teaching,” Finkelstein told me. “It was never outside the bounds of what I do.”

For Finkelstein, who is Jewish, this was not always easy. More than 30 percent of Muhlenberg’s 2,200 students are Jewish, many of them vocal supporters of Israel.

Neither her longtime public support of Palestinians, however, nor the courses on Palestine she taught in her early years at the school prevented Finkelstein from earning tenure in 2021. Following the arduous tenure process, professors are supposed to enjoy lifetime job security and robust safeguards of academic freedom. The bar for dismissal from a tenured academic position is by design meant to be extremely high, requiring justifiable cause.

In late May, however, Muhlenberg told Finkelstein that she was fired. The reason? She had shared, on her personal Instagram account, in a temporary story slide, a post written not by herself but by Palestinian poet Remi Kanazi calling for the shunning of Zionist ideology and its supporters.

“Do not cower to Zionists,” Kanazi wrote on January 16. “Shame them. Do not welcome them in your spaces. Why should these genocide loving fascists be treated any different than any other flat out racist.” At the time, Israel had already killed over 22,000 Palestinians in Gaza, the majority of whom were women and children.

For Finkelstein’s repost of Kanazi’s words, the college determined that their employee of nine years had violated its equal opportunity and nondiscrimination policies.

“The College at all times follows its mission, policies and procedures with respect to matters arising under our Equal Opportunity and Nondiscrimination Policy and the Faculty Handbook,” said Todd Lineburger, Muhlenberg’s vice president for communications. “Per those policies and procedures, the College does not comment on confidential matters.”

“The First Case”

In this time of extraordinary repression in academia, Finkelstein appears to be the first professor to be dismissed from a tenured job over anti-Zionist speech. Her dismissal sets a grim new precedent against a backdrop of right-wing attacks on higher education nationwide. As The Intercept has reported, numerous professors without the protection of tenure have faced the loss of work in apparent retaliation for speaking out against Israel’s genocidal war and apartheid regime. Hundreds of students have faced and continue to face grave disciplinary consequences for participating in Gaza solidarity encampments and protests.

In the last 11 months, other tenured professors have been suspended and investigated for making strong criticisms of Israel and Zionism in their extramural speech — statements made outside the classroom. In 2014, in the closest precursor to Finkelstein’s case, Palestinian American scholar Steven Salaita sued the University of Illinois for revoking the offer of a tenured position after his tweets criticizing Israel’s bombardment of Gaza drew right-wing media censure. The university settled with Salaita for $845,000 after public records requests revealed that the administration had been responding to pressure from wealthy donors to rescind the job offer.

Until Finkelstein, however, no other tenured professor has reported losing their long-held job for speech or _expression_ relating to Israel–Palestine, let alone sharing a social media post.

“This is the first case that we’ve seen,” said Anita Levy, senior program officer at the American Association of University Professors, a nonprofit organization that advocates for faculty rights and academic freedom and seeks to hold higher education institutions accountable when standards are violated. “The apparent violations of her academic freedom are quite egregious, especially because they appear to primarily involve her posts on social media, what we would call her extramural speech.”

Levy said, “We are taking this case seriously.”

Repression and workplace retaliation are not somehow worse in Finkelstein’s case by virtue of her tenured position; all academic workers should enjoy the freedom that tenured faculty get. Yet the firing of a tenured professor over an anti-Zionist Instagram repost signals the extent to which institutions of higher education are willing to betray their own purported standards to bend to intellectually dishonest, conservative pro-Israel narratives.

Pressure Campaign

Muhlenberg’s decision to dismiss Finkelstein did not begin and end with the Kanazi Instagram story, which she posted in mid-January. It followed monthslong efforts aimed at pressuring the college to remove the professor, with online crusades primarily led by anonymous Muhlenberg alumni.

Finkelstein was the subject of a campaign of thousands of anonymous, bot-generated emails sent every minute for over 24 hours to the school’s administrators — as well aslocal news outlets and politicians — demanding the professor’s removal and accusing her of “Jew hatred.” Finkelstein said she was told by college leadership that numerous families of students had called to express concern about her position. A Change.org petition started in late October by unnamed “Muhlenberg College Alumni and Supporters” called for Finkelstein’s firing over allegedly “pro-Hamas” rhetoric; it gained over 8,000 signatures.

“I think that the pressure from donors and alums was so intense that I became a huge liability,” Finkelstein said.

The examples of Finkelstein’s allegedly “dangerous” speech listed on the petition include an email the professor sent to Muhlenberg students, staff, and faculty on October 10, in which she called the October 7 attacks “devastating” and wrote, “We must mourn all civilian deaths.” The focus of Finkelstein’s email, however, was to alert the college community that Israel was already bombing Gaza with “airstrikes of unprecedented intensity” and had threatened to cut off basic resources to the imperiled territory.

“For Palestinians in Gaza, Israel’s acts of revenge will likely result in absolute annihilation,” Finkelstein wrote. “Muhlenberg can be a hard space to talk openly about and grieve Palestine and Palestinians. Please know that there are safe spaces on campus – feel free to reach out to me if you need to.”

A screenshot of the email featured in the Change.org petition as a purported example of the threat Finkelstein posed to Jewish students.

The petition also featured screenshots of posts from Finkelstein’s personal social media accounts, none of which name Muhlenberg College. The posts decry Israel as an occupying force and accuse the state of genocide, a claim deemed plausible by the International Court of Justice. None of Finkelstein’s posts are directed at Jewish people — students or otherwise — for being Jewish.

Israeli Military Fundraising

The petition also drew attention to another key moment in Finkelstein’s tensions with the college in the previous 11 months: her reaction to a fundraising campaign for the Israeli military promoted on campus. Finkelstein told me that on October 17, on leaving her classroom, she was shocked by a display table newly laid out by Hillel. 

“You can help raise money for various war efforts in Israel,” a sign on the table read, followed by QR codes linking to campaigns, including one to raise money for the Israeli military. Finkelstein did not immediately post publicly about the fundraiser, but emailed the school’s president, chaplain, and director of Hillel.

“How, in good conscience, can the college allow for this to be displayed to our students? The Israeli military just bombed a hospital in Gaza, killing 500 people,” she wrote. “I think this is an absolute disgrace. I hope it will be taken down ASAP.” Following several complaints to university leadership, Finkelstein was, she said, told that the Hillel students had a right to fundraise for whichever cause they wanted.

“I asked if, since students had the right to fundraise for genocide, whether I or anyone else — other faculty, students — had the freedom to write about it, and was told yes,” said Finkelstein. The following day, she posted a picture of the fundraiser sign to her X and Instagram accounts, without naming Muhlenberg as the location. “Students raising money for genocide,” she wrote. “Grief won’t be extinguished by revenge — ceasefire now.”

This post — a complaint about fundraising on campus for a foreign military that was already in the process of killing civilians en masse — was featured in the Change.org petition as an example of Finkelstein’s “pro-Hamas rhetoric and blatant classroom bias against Jewish students.”

“I was very overwhelmed by the petition,” Finkelstein told me. “People on social media were publishing where my office was on campus.” 

She said she received anonymous rape threats and messages from people saying they watched her while she walked her dog.

Complaints

Throughout the fall semester, Finkelstein was called into regular meetings with Muhlenberg’s provost Laura Furge and Jennifer Storm, the school’s Title IX officer. “I was constantly being asked to tell them what I have been teaching in my classes, what I have been saying to my students, and that students are feeling really unsafe,” Finkelstein said.

Administrators told her that “multiple” students from her classes complained, she said. Finkelstein told me that she later learned, however, through an independent investigation ordered by the college into her conduct, that only one of her previous students had complained about her, and that complaint was never pursued.

The formal complaint that was pursued — and eventually led to her termination — was filed by a student Finkelstein said she had never taught or even met. This complaint focused solely on Finkelstein’s temporary Instagram story, which reposted Kanazi’s call for people to “shame” Zionists.

According to Finkelstein, the meetings with the provost and Title IX officer felt like facing a series of moving goalposts in which she struggled to gain clarity. On top of questions over her teaching content, Finkelstein said she was asked about her extramural writing, including a short essay published in late October titled “Never again means never again for anyone,” speaking from her position as an anti-Zionist Jew.

“Never forget,” she wrote of the central demand of Holocaust memory, “should turn all Jews into activists on behalf of the Palestinian people.” She told me that the provost called the essay “biased” and asked her to ensure that her extramural writing of this sort never mentions her affiliation with Muhlenberg, which it had not. 

“It felt as though the administration needed to get rid of me, and they were trying to first build a case around my teaching and that fell apart,” Finkelstein said. “Then all of a sudden there was great concern over things that I had published.”

“An Icy Tundra”

Finkelstein believed her troubles with the school had “fizzled out” over the winter break, especially with international criticisms of Israel growing. On January 17, however, the first day of the spring semester, she was informed by the provost that she was named in a federal Department of Education complaint against the college.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights currently has 118 open Title VI investigations based on complaints filed since October 7, which fall under the category of “shared ancestry” discrimination. These cases cover alleged incidents of antisemitism, as well as anti-Muslim and other religious discrimination.

 

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