Harvard University cancels rights advocate's fellowship for criticizing Israel
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/world-i192570-harvard_university_cancels_rights_advocate's_fellowship_for_criticizing_israel
Harvard University has rescinded a fellowship offer to a former Human Rights Watch (HRW) executive director over his criticism of Israel's oppression of Palestinians.
(last modified 2023-01-07T10:46:09+00:00 )
Jan 07, 2023 10:35 UTC
  • Harvard University cancels rights advocate's fellowship for criticizing Israel

Harvard University has rescinded a fellowship offer to a former Human Rights Watch (HRW) executive director over his criticism of Israel's oppression of Palestinians.

Kenneth Roth, who spent some 30 years as the executive director of HRW before announcing his retirement in April, was offered to join the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard as a senior fellow but was later informed that his fellowship offer had been withdrawn.

According to Press TV, Douglas Elmendorf, the Harvard Kennedy School dean, accused the HRW of “anti-Israel bias”. He also cited Roth’s tweets on Israeli crimes in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, which he said were of particular concern.

Roth, who is Jewish and says he was drawn to the human rights cause by his father’s experience living in Nazi Germany, described the incident in an article published on Friday by the American magazine The Nation as “crazy” and said Elmendorf had “no backbone whatsoever.”

The prominent human rights advocate also said he believes Elmendorf had bowed to pressure from donors who were strong supporters of Israel.

“I falsely assumed that the dean of the Kennedy School values academic freedom. Maybe I’m naive in retrospect, but I assume that criticism of Israel, as criticism of any other government, is just par for the course. That’s what a leading foreign policy center does,” Roth said.

Meanwhile, having been denied the fellowship offered by Harvard, Roth accepted a visiting fellowship position at the University of Pennsylvania.

The New York Times dubbed Roth the “godfather” of human rights in an article that noted how he had been “an unrelenting irritant to authoritarian governments, exposing human rights abuses with documented research reports that have become the group’s specialty.”

During Roth's 29-year-long tenure as the head of HRW, the organization was often taken to task for its statements and publications against the Israeli regime, including the release of various reports on Tel Aviv’s crimes and persecution of the Palestinian people.

ME