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Was the ouster of Harvardâs first Jewish president anti-Semitic in its effect if not its intent?
On a campus with a painful history of anti-Semitism, most professorsâincluding some of Lawrence H. Summersâ most vocal supportersÂâvigorously reject the charge that Summersâ faith had any connection to his downfall.
Yet the suspicion landed in Mondayâs Boston Globe, where columnist Alex Beam quoted professor Ruth R. Wisse as asking, âWas anti-Semitism the driving engine of this coup?â
Summersâ Judaism entered the spotlight a year into his tenure, when he famously said a petition urging the University to divest from Israel was one of several actions that were âanti-Semitic in their effect if not their intent.â
A few of Summersâ supportersâmost notably Wisse and law professor Alan M. Dershowitzâhave claimed that the divestment petition was an important factor fueling the Facultyâs anger with its president.
In an interview Wednesday, Wisse said, âOf course, the divestment petition was anti-Semitic.â And so, she said, anti-Semitism helped turn some professors against Summers.
âIs it one of the factors at play? Yes. Is it the factor at play? No,â said Wisse, who is the Peretz professor of Yiddish literature.
Summers yesterday declined to speculate about the âmotives or judgmentsâ of his critics, but said, âI certainly have not experienced personal anti-Semitism during my time at Harvard.â
âTHE DELICATE DILEMMAâ
Anti-Semitism has been an issue at Harvard since at least the beginning of the last century. A. Lawrence Lowell, the University president in the 1920s, compared Harvard to âa summer hotel that is ruined by admitting Jews,â and tried to set quotas limiting the number of Jews at the University.
More recently, Summersâ religion became an issue in his spat with former Harvard professor Cornel R. West â74, who left the Afro-American studies department for Princeton in early 2002.
â[T]he delicate dilemma of black-Jewish relations was boiling beneath the surface of our controversy,â West wrote of his feud with Summers in his 2004 book âDemocracy Matters.â
While Summers is usually considered Harvardâs first Jewish president, his predecessor, Neil L. Rudenstine, had two Jewish grandparents from Ukraine. Rudenstineâs mother, however, hailed from an Italian Catholic familyÂ.
In the autumn following Summersâ speech on the Israel divestment movement in September 2002, talk of anti-Semitism reemerged after the English Department invited Tom Paulin to speak at Harvard. Paulin, an Irish poet, had told an English-language newspaper in Egypt that Jewish settlers on the West Bank âshould be shot dead.â
While Summers publicly urged members of the Harvard community to ârespect the rights of those who wish to hear the speaker,â an article in The New Yorker suggested that Summers was furious with the invitation and privately pushed the English Department to dissociate itself from Paulinâs views.
âNEVER...ON MY MINDâ
But it was the memory of the Israel divestment petition that led Wisse to indict some of Summersâ opponents with anti-Semitic motives.
âPeople who wanted Summers out wanted him out for their reasonsâmany, many, many reasons,â Wisse said. âHis statements on the divestment issue were certainly prominent among them.â
Dershowitz, the Frankfurter professor of law, echoed Wisseâs view that Summersâ stance on divestment from Israel antagonized professors, but rejected her charges of anti-Semitism.
âThere is in my view no correlation, no interplay, between anti-Semitism and Summersâ ouster,â Dershowitz said yesterday. âBut I think there is some interplay between anti-Zionism and Summersâ ouster.â
Dershowitz said that Summersâ speech on divestment from Israel was âamong the three or four original reasonsâ that emboldened the presidentâs critics on the Faculty. But, he said, âI do not believe that that was anti-Semitic, and indeed, a lot of the strongest opponents of Summers are Jews.â
Other Summers supporters also shied away from using the anti-Semitism label.
Glimp Professor of Economics Edward L. Glaeser, who has frequently spoken out in Summersâ defense, said on Wednesday that the issue of anti-Semitism was ânever the slightest thing on my mindâ during the crisis that forced Summers out.
It was Glaeser who helped revive the charge last month, when he told The Crimson that a magazine exposé on fraud allegations against Summersâ friend and fellow economist Andrei Shleifer â82 was âa potent piece of hate creationânot quite âThe Protocols of the Elders of Zion,â but itâs in that camp.â
Glaeser said on Wednesday that he regretted making the comparison, which recalled a notorious anti-Semitic hoax that first appeared in a Russian-language newspaper in 1903. The similarity he meant to point out, Glaeser said, was âthat people use defamatory information for their own political objectives.â
âI spent a lot of time in the last week apologizing about this, and just feeling awful,â he said.
Summersâ religion was also brought to light last Friday when Bernard Steinberg, president and director of Harvard Hillel, released a âDear Larryâ letter thanking Summers for his âunapologetic identification with the Jewish people.â
In an interview Wednesday, Steinberg called anti-Semitism a âdangerous term.â
âItâs a very serious accusation,â Steinberg said, âand I would hesitate to apply that here.â
âNicholas M. Ciarelli and Javier C. Hernandez contributed to the reporting of this story.
âStaff writer Anton S. Troianovski can be reached at [email protected].
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