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		University of California board weighs 
		statement on anti-Semitism 
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		[March 18, 2016] 
		By Steve Gorman
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The governing 
		board of California's flagship public university system is to vote next 
		week on a statement condemning anti-Zionism as a form of anti-Jewish 
		bigotry, a proposal sparking sharp faculty debate over the line between 
		free speech and intolerance.
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			 The controversy playing out at the University of California 
			reflects a broader clash between pro-Israel groups and Palestinian 
			rights activists over what constitutes legitimate criticism of 
			Israeli polices in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. 
 The UC's Board of Regents is slated to act next Wednesday on a draft 
			document produced by a working group to address the issue. Both 
			sides in the debate say they believe that if adopted it would be the 
			first such policy statement by the leadership of a major U.S. public 
			institution of higher education.
 
 The University of California is considered one of the most 
			prestigious public university systems in the country, comprising 10 
			campuses, among which are the University of California, Berkeley and 
			the University of California, Los Angeles.
 
 Supporters say the document grew out of a recent rise in 
			anti-Semitism on UC campuses stemming from heated anti-Israel 
			protest frequently expressed as anti-Zionism, which supporters 
			define as calls for Israel's destruction or denials of its right to 
			exit.
 
			   According to proponents of the draft, such rhetoric constitutes a 
			contemporary brand of anti-Semitism that is often accompanied by or 
			escalates into more explicit forms of anti-Jewish hatred.
 Foes of the proposal say it would trample on academic freedom. Some 
			call it a thinly veiled attempt to squelch political criticism of 
			Israel, including student movements pressing for divestiture or 
			boycotts against the Jewish state.
 
 A letter of opposition signed by more than 250 UC faculty members 
			argued that anti-Zionism is a "loose term and is often deployed 
			against any number of political positions" that should "not to be 
			conflated with anti-Semitism."
 "We urge you not to adopt a 
			position that will censor political viewpoints that are rightly 
			considered to be constitutionally protected speech," the letter 
			said. 
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			A separate letter from 130 other faculty insisted the proposal was 
			necessary to address "a lack of understanding of when healthy debate 
			about Israel and the Middle East ends, and anti-Semitism begins."
 Critics, however, says the draft's very formulation is ambiguous.
 
 As currently written, references to Zionism are confined to a brief 
			introduction stating: "Anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism and other forms 
			of discrimination have no place at the University of California."
 
 But the term is omitted from the 10 "Principles Against Intolerance" 
			that follow, with anti-Semitism condemned, along with forms of 
			bigotry based such factors as race, national origin, religion and 
			gender.
 
 It remained unclear whether the regents would vote on the principles 
			alone or adopt the entire document as enforceable policy.
 
 (Editing by Leslie Adler)
 
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