JERUSALEM — Stephen W. Hawking, the University of Cambridge physicist and cosmologist, has pulled out of a high-profile conference to be held here in June in order to support an academic boycott of Israel, conference organizers and the university said on Wednesday.
The academic and cultural boycott, organized by international activists to protest Israel’s policies toward the Palestinians,
is a heated and contentious issue; having Dr. Hawking join it is likely
to help the anti-Israel campaigners significantly.
Daniel Taub, Israeli’s Ambassador to London, unsurprisingly expressed dissapointment with Hawking’s decision.
"It is a great shame that Professor Hawking has withdrawn from the president's conference … Rather than caving into pressure from political extremists, active participation in such events is a far more constructive way to promote progress and peace."
Daniel Taub, Israeli’s Ambassador to London, unsurprisingly expressed dissapointment with Hawking’s decision.
"It is a great shame that Professor Hawking has withdrawn from the president's conference … Rather than caving into pressure from political extremists, active participation in such events is a far more constructive way to promote progress and peace."
“Never has a scientist of this stature boycotted Israel,” said Yigal
Palmor, the spokesman for Israel’s Foreign Ministry.
Organizers of the fifth annual Israeli Presidential Conference, held under the auspices of President Shimon Peres,
said they had received a letter over the weekend from Dr. Hawking, a
longtime Cambridge professor, announcing his decision.
Cambridge issued a statement indicating that Dr. Hawking had told the
Israelis that he would not be attending “based on advice from
Palestinian academics that he should respect the boycott,” according to
The Associated Press.
Earlier, the university’s director of communications, Tim Holt, said by
telephone that Dr. Hawking, 71, had withdrawn from the Israel trip for
health reasons. The university later said it had been told otherwise by
Dr. Hawking’s office.
Israel Maimon, the chairman of the conference, strongly criticized the
professor’s decision, saying in a statement, “The academic boycott of
Israel is in our view outrageous and improper, certainly for someone for
whom the spirit of liberty lies at the basis of his human and academic
mission.”
Mr. Maimon, a lawyer and a former Israeli government cabinet secretary,
added: “Israel is a democracy in which all individuals are free to
express their opinions, whatever they may be. The imposition of a
boycott is incompatible with open, democratic dialogue.”
There was no immediate comment from Mr. Peres’s office.
The Guardian newspaper first reported Dr. Hawking’s change of mind and cited a statement by the British Committee for the Universities of Palestine,
which The Guardian said was published with Dr. Hawking’s approval. It
described the cancellation as “his independent decision to respect the
boycott, based upon his knowledge of Palestine, and on the unanimous
advice of his own academic contacts there.”
Dr. Hawking last visited Israel and the Palestinian territories in 2006
at the invitation of the British Embassy in Tel Aviv.
Matthew Gould, the British ambassador to Israel, spoke out against the
academic boycott when he received an honorary doctorate from Ben Gurion
University of the Negev in December. “We believe that boycotts divide
people and reduce understanding,” he was quoted as saying, “when what we
need is to bring people together.”
The Oxford University Student Union decisively rejected a motion supporting a boycott of Israel in a vote in February.
Under pressure from pro-Palestinian activists, a string of high-profile
artists have canceled performances in Israel in recent years, among them
the Pixies, the American alternative rock band; the British rocker
Elvis Costello; and Gil Scott-Heron, the American rap poet and musician
who died in 2011.
Other performing artists, like Rihanna, Elton John, Rod Stewart and
Madonna, have given concerts in Israel in the last few years. Barbra
Streisand is slated to give two concerts in Tel Aviv in June and to
perform at the Israeli Presidential Conference in honor of Mr. Peres’s
90th birthday this summer.
The conference, called “Facing Tomorrow 2013,” is billed as a meeting
place for exploring the developments shaping the future of Israel, the
Jewish people and the world. Its program includes former heads of state,
academics, artists and business executives. Former President Bill
Clinton is to receive an award from Mr. Peres.
Also listed among the speakers is Munib al-Masri, a Palestinian tycoon
from the West Bank city of Nablus who has been working to promote
internal Palestinian reconciliation. via: nytimes
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