התמודדות עם אתגרי התקופה הנוכחית
אנחנו, בלשכת סגנית הנשיא לקשרים בין לאומיים, אוספים באופן מרוכז מידע על חרמות ופגיעה בחוקרים מבן-גוריון בכנסים, במחקר ובמפגשים אקדמיים, על רקע אירועי התקופה.
תוכלו למלא פרטים מסודרים על אירועים מן הסוג הזה בקישור הבא:
הצהרת אוניברסיטת בן-גוריון בנגב בנושא החרם האקדמי על ישראל
Since the heinous attacks of October 7th, we have witnessed a shocking increase in antisemitism on campuses globally, along with increasing calls to boycott Israeli academic institutions and researchers. In response, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) has established a team to address these challenges, led by President Daniel Chamovitz, Rector Chaim Hames, and Vice President for Global Engagement Michal Bar-Asher Siegal. This team works regularly with leaders of other Israeli universities.
BGU shares the commitment to peace and justice in the region expressed in the statement by the "Association of University Heads, Israel." We condemn all forms of hatred, including that aimed at Jews or Arabs. Like our public counterparts in North America and Western Europe, BGU operates autonomously in all academic matters. Any attempt to portray us as governmental or military institutions is incorrect.
Founded over half a century ago, BGU is committed to promoting diversity and upholding principles of free expression, including the right to demonstrate on campus. We believe BGU and Israeli academia can serve as vital components in bridging divides, but only through continued partnership and engagement with the global scholarly community. We stand ready to collaborate, share our experiences, and develop strategies to combat antisemitism and promote inclusive, shared societies on our campuses.
The attacks of October 7th were devastating for the BGU community, located just 40 kilometers from Gaza. We suffered immense personal losses: Within hours, 75 members of our community were murdered, 8 were kidnapped to Gaza, and over 600 were rendered homeless. The human toll is staggering. Examples include:
- Nili Margalit, a nursing faculty member, spent 55 days in captivity, unaware her father had been murdered.
- Noa Argamani, a 3rd-year systems engineering student, was kidnapped and recently rescued after over 250 days in captivity.
- Baruch Saar, a 1st-year electrical engineering student, was murdered in captivity weeks after being kidnapped.
-
Dina Kapitshar, an employee from human resources, was killed along with her husband and two young children.
While we mourn our losses, we also acknowledge the grave suffering experienced by Palestinians caught up in the ensuing war.
BGU was founded with the mission of providing affordable, quality education to underserved populations in Israel's Negev desert, including the local Bedouin Arab community. We have always integrated Arab students, faculty, and leaders, and continue to increase representation and foster dialogue through programs like the Shared Life Ambassadors initiative.
For decades, BGU has been actively involved in regional peace and cooperation efforts. Our campus hosted the historic Israel-Egypt peace treaty signing in 1979. Today, our institutes host students from Palestinian territories and other Arab nations for cross-border educational and research opportunities that build bridges amidst conflict.
Our commitment to diversity and inclusion is exemplified by our Vice President for Diversity and Equity, Prof. Sarab Abu Rabia, Israel's first Bedouin female professor. Last September, Prof. Abu Rabia led a delegation of Arab and Jewish BGU students to a U.S. university to conduct seminars on building shared societies. Our campus, where Jews and Arabs continue to live and learn together even in the shadow of recent events, can serve as a model for the difficult but essential discussions on creating a truly shared society.
We believe BGU and Israeli academia can serve as vital components of bridging divides, but only through continued partnership and engagement with the global scholarly community.
We call on academic institutions worldwide to strengthen academic collaborations with Israeli academia, upholding our mutual global aspirations towards a better future together, advancing knowledge and truth-seeking.
BGU statement on the current events - PDF file >>
הצהרת ועד ראשי האוניברסיטאות
We, the leaders of Israel’s universities and research institutions, are
concerned over the current effortsin universities around the world to suspend relations and collaborations with Israeli Universities. Let us be clear: we share the commitment to peace and justice in the region and join condemnation of antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other forms of hatred.
The situation in Israel/Palestine is undoubtedly complex with deep historical roots and profound human suffering on both sides. As presidents of Israel's public research universities, we cannot be unbiased. However, we will strive to address this issue with nuance.
The horrific events of October 7th included the brutal massacre of over 1200 Israelis and foreign civilians and the kidnapping of 240 people, among them toddlers, children, and young and elderly men and women, and included rape and gang rape. Since then, the Hamas has fired more than 10,000 rockets from Gaza and Hezbollah more than 5,000 rockets and dronesfrom Lebanon, causing a massive evacuation and hundreds of thousands of internally displaced citizens. This situation, together with the mobilization of tens of thousands of young men and women for reserve duty, meant that for months Israeli universities could not open the academic year and researchers could not engage in research. Students and faculty were forced to leave their homes and many lost close family members - siblings, parents, children. Students were killed. Others were badly injured and forced to stop their studies. No one’s life or work has returned to normalcy. The grave weight of the war continues to take its unbearable toll and upend all areas of academic life. At the same time, we do not mean to dismiss or diminish the grave suffering also experienced by Palestinians caught up in the ensuing war.
Association of University Heads in Israel Statement - PDF file >>
We blanketly reject statements that paint Israeli academic institutions as involved in the military actions and are compelled to correct this .misunderstanding by drawing attention to our policies and values
We live in an ancient land with legitimate claims and connections for
multiple peoples, cultures, and religions across millennia. Asserting any one ethnic group's sole "ancestral" claim oversimplifies a nuanced history. While the modern state of Israel was established in 1948, the region has experienced successive waves of migration, rule, displacement, and conflict over centuries.
Against the backdrop of our country’s long history of violent regional
conflicts, ethnic and religious tensions, and political polarization,
universities in Israel have always been bastions of democracy, freedom of speech, liberal values, and human rights, including for Palestinians.
Contrary to false allegations, we do not punish our students or staff members for expressing pro-Palestinian views. We are institutions that prioritize freedom of expression, and we protect the rights of our faculty, staff, and students to express ideas that challenge the prevailing consensus even during these difficult and sensitive times. Indeed, we have often suffered politically for our commitment to these values.
Lately, Israeli universities have been vilified for links to the Israel Defense Forces, the supposition being that we are either directly culpable for our government’s actions or an agency of the military.
We need to be clear: Israeli academia is independent of the government and military, and it operates autonomously in all academic matters. According to the 2024 Academic Freedom Index, which measures the state of academic freedom worldwide, Israeli universities are on par with universities in Norway, Canada, and Switzerland in upholding academic freedoms; moreover, we are ahead of countries such as the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and the United States.
Faculty at Israeli Institutions make their own decisions on what to study and how to do so. As in just about every other country, some researchers at our universities, in accordance with their academic freedom and rights, do research on subjects related to national security. Such projects, of course, represent only a small percentage of the research conducted at each of our universities and certainly do not turn our universities into military agencies.
Moreover, as democratic institutions of higher learning, who have a meritbased system of employment, our academic community does not speak with one voice when it comes to the current war, or almost any other subject. World-class research across our campuses also goes into incisive questions about Israel’s governmental and military policies in the current conflict. Our campuses are places where contentious issues are debated based on reason and fact, including all aspects of the war in Gaza.
A claim has been made that our universities are guilty parties since many of our students are also reserve soldiers. First, we are not the only university in the world to have students who serve. But moreover, as you must know, Israel is a small country; most young people here are required by law to enlist in the army when they are 18, and they later serve in the reserves. Since October 7th, many in our communities were enlisted. At the height of the war, approximately 25% of our students were called up for duty. These students, as well as some faculty members, risked their lives to protect their families, communities, and country, and participate in the effort to return the hostages still held in Gaza. Unfortunately, each university counts students and faculty who were killed in action. For those students who have returned, we have a duty to support their reintegration and their mental health. We are proud of the way we perform this duty, as we are sure every university in the world would be.
All Israeli universities are actively and extensively engaged in projects
aiming to promote equality between Jews and Arabs. 18% of our students are Muslim, Christian or Druze Arabs, a figure that closely reflects their percentage in Israel’s population. In addition, over the years, hundreds of Palestinian students from the West Bank and Gaza have studied in our universities. This reality is the result of extensive efforts and demonstrates the commitment of each one of our universities to equality and diversity and to promoting social mobility. These efforts include providing extensive programs of financial aid and fellowships for Arab students in all degree levels, including programs specifically encouraging and supporting promising candidates in advanced degree and post-doctoral programs.
The universities work hard to nurture multi-cultural campuses, taking seriously their responsibility to do so given that the period of study at the university is sometimes the first opportunity for meaningful positive interaction between Jews and Arabs. This requires not only recruiting diverse faculty members and students, but also creating a welcoming atmosphere and fostering meaningful learning opportunities across campus.
For decades, Israeli universities have spearheaded hundreds of projects and initiatives aimed at promoting peaceful relations in the region. Researchers across numerous disciplines collaborate regularly with counterparts in neighboring countries on projects designed to drive innovation on regional challenges in climate change, agriculture, sustainable development, public health and other areas, including recent collaborations with students in Gaza on water research. Other scholars work on promoting equity and social justice for Arab communities within Israel, including through our law clinics, educational initiatives, and community work. Our affiliated hospitals have regularly treated patientsfrom Gaza and have also provided care for refugees from the Civil War in Syria. The space here is insufficient to even begin to enumerate all such projects.
We understand that those calling for academic boycotts against Israeli
universities aim to protect and improve Palestinian lives and to end the crisis in Gaza. The truth isthat we too mourn the loss of innocent life in this horrific conflict and want a better future for Palestinians and Israelis both. However, academic boycotts, as blunt tools, often undermine the very principles of open discourse that universities should uphold. By severing ties and excluding Israeli scholars, we inevitably lose important perspectives and opportunities for dialogue across conflicts, not to mention the scientific benefit from collaborative research.
Indeed, weakening Israeli academia would only undermine Israel’s democratic foundations, as well as the very community fighting to protect human rights and establish a more inclusive society. Tragically the result could be an increasingly militant and illiberalstate, one lesslikely to promote regional peace, prosperity, and democracy.
Lastly, we respectfully draw your attention to the potential legal implications of implementing an academic boycott through the lens of institutional policies and regulations. As recipients of public funds, universities have an obligation to remain neutral and avoid discriminatory actions that could be viewed as curtailing academic freedom or discriminating against individual researchers or institutions based solely on national origin. Such actions may conflict with domestic laws, constitutional principles, or treaty-based obligations upholding non-discrimination.
It is imperative that we reinforce academic collaborations to ensure that we live up to our shared global aspirations for a better collective future, and for the pursuit of knowledge and truth.
סדנת הכנה לחברי האוניברסיטה היוצאים לחו"ל
חידוד הנחיות ביטחון והתנהגות מונעת ליוצאים לחו"ל וקישורים שימושיים
כמה המלצות שיעזרו לשמור על ביטחונכם.ן:
- להשתדל להימנע מהגעה למקומות הומי אדם (קניונים, שווקים) ומקומות המזוהים כמשמשים גורמים מערביים/יהודים וישראלים.
- לשמור על ערנות מוגברת במקומות ציבוריים (כולל מסעדות, מלונות, ברים וכו').
- להימנע מהחצנת סממנים ישראלים ויהודים.
- להימנע מהשתתפות באירועים רבי משתתפים שאינם מאובטחים.
- להימנע מפרסום פרטי הנסיעה ברשתות חברתיות ופרסום תמונות ופרטי ביקור טרם הנסיעה ובזמן אמת.
- לדחות נסיעות למדינות עם אזהרות מסע, בדגש למדינות ערב והמזרח התיכון, צפון הקווקז ומדינות עוטף איראן.
- לבדוק את מצב המחאות וגילויי האלימות כנגד ישראל ביעד הנבחר, גם במדינות ללא אזהרת מסע.
- לברר את מספרי הטלפון של שירותי החירום ביעד בו מבקרים (כוחות ביטחון/רפואה), והנציגות הישראלית אם ישנה.
- להתרחק מהפגנות ומחאות.
- לשמור על ערנות בעת השהייה ביעד, ושימת לב למתרחש מסביב.
- מוצע לא לקיים שיח אודות שירות במערכות הביטחון של ישראל, כולל צבא, עם גורמים שאינם מוכרים.
- בעת תכנון הנסיעה לחו"ל מומלץ לוודא כי מסלול הטיסה הנבחר אינו עובר מעל מדינות אויב (ובהן- לבנון, איראן, סוריה, תימן ועיראק) ומדינות ברמת איום גבוהה ואשר אינן מקיימות קשרים עם ישראל, להלן: אפגניסטן, לוב, סומליה ופקיסטן.
- למסור את פרטי הטיול/ביקור (מסלול, מקומות שהייה, טיסות) ודרכי יצירת קשר לקרוב משפחה בארץ (רצוי מקרבה ראשונה).
- להישמע להוראות והנחיות כוחות הביטחון במדינה בה שוהים.
- צמצם למינימום את התיעוד והמסמכים עימם נוסעים ליעד (למשל, ללא תעודות של מקום העבודה, ללא רישיון נהיגה אם אין צורך וכו').
- להימנע מיצירת קשר עם זרים שאינם מוכרים לכם (לא מתייחס לנותני שירותים, אלא לגורמים שאינם קשורים ישירות לביקור/שהייה ביעד).
ניתן כמובן, להתייעץ בכל עת עם מחלקת הביטחון.
טיסה ושהות בטוחה בחו"ל.
- אתר המטה ללוחמה בטרור לבירור אזהרות מסע >>
- אפליקציית TravIL (לחצו או סרקו את התמונה)
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