How Arizona college class on Gaza led to doxxing, retaliation
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[December 14, 2023]
By Andrew Hay
(Reuters) - A University of Arizona assistant education professor and
her colleague have led weekly class discussions they hope will help
aspiring teachers one day handle difficult conversations in the
classroom.
When the topic in November was Hamas' attack on Israel and Israel's
retaliation in Gaza, the discussion led to complaints from students, a
viral posting of a student's edited recording of the class and a brief
university-ordered leave for the educators.
It was a lesson in how hard it is to address divisive issues in the
United States, where protests and charged debates have erupted on
campuses across the country since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack. Leaders of
prominent universities have been called to Washington to testify about
the tension between protecting academic freedom and free speech and
ensuring safety and nondiscrimination.
In Arizona, the Gaza violence came up in the fall term of a class called
Cultural Pluralism for Young Children led by Assistant Professor Rebecca
Lopez and Community Liaison Rebecca Zapien for the university's college
of education.
Lopez told Reuters this week that she approached the issue, as she did
other socio-political topics for the class, from the standpoint of
"oppression."
"We're focusing on Palestinian life because those are the ones that are
not being talked about or privileged," Lopez said. "They're the group of
people being oppressed at a higher level."
Lopez said complaints from students who felt this represented bias
against Israel went to the university’s office of institutional equity
which ruled discrimination had not taken place.
Then clips of a student's audio recording of the class discussion were
posted by the Israel War Room, a pro-Israel group, on social media
platform X. The same day, Arizona state legislator Alma Hernandez, a
pro-Israel Democrat, posted on X that Lopez and Zapien were teaching
that antisemitism "isn’t real” and demanded the university “investigate
and do the right thing.”
In the recording, one of the instructors says Hamas appeared to be
anti-Zionist rather than antisemitic, and Lopez compares Hamas to the
African American revolutionary Black Panther Party.
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People march down Flatbush Avenue in the New York City borough of
Brooklyn, during a pro-Palestinian demonstration, amid the ongoing
conflict between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in New
York, U.S., December 9, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Oatis/File Photo
The university said on Nov. 16, four days after the Israel War Room
and Hernandez postings, that it had temporarily replaced Lopez and
Zapien in the classroom and was investigating. The two were allowed
to return to work but not to the classroom on Dec. 1.
"We reaffirm our commitment to an academic instructional setting
that respects all viewpoints,” College of Education Dean Robert
Berry said in a Dec. 1 statement. He added that the department head
would teach Lopez' and Zapien's class for the rest of the semester
and the college would provide workshops on teaching potentially
contentious topics.
The university said in a statement on Wednesday that administrative
leave with pay is not a disciplinary action but offers an
opportunity to obtain and evaluate facts and let the situation cool
down.
Rabbi Shmulie Sanowicz of the university's chapter of Chabad, a
Jewish organization serving college campuses, said Jewish and
non-Jewish students in the class filed bias complaints and some
faced retaliation from professors and other students for doing so.
Attempts by Reuters to speak to students in the class were
unsuccessful.
Websites have called the instructors "terrorist lovers" and
"terrorist sympathizers," disclosed their phone numbers and given
instructions on how to find their addresses, Lopez said, making them
fearful.
"I have two kids and I'm worried about them at school," she said.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay; editing by Donna Bryson and Cynthia
Osterman)
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