Progressive Jews at Princeton University oppose banning book that says ‘Israel’ maims Palestinians

Princeton (QNN)- Hundreds of Jewish undergraduate and graduate students, alumni, faculty, and community members at Princeton University have expressed their solidarity with professor Sateya Larson, after the academic came under fire from pro-Israel groups for teaching a text that says ‘Israel’ intentionally maims Palestinians.
In an open letter, penned by the Alliance of Jewish Progressives, over 250 signatures said, “We are deeply troubled by the attempt to censor professor Larson, ban Puar’s book, limit intellectual inquiry, and silence faculty-student exchange within and beyond the classroom, particularly on issues of such political, moral, and philosophical significance.”
Larson’s course, scheduled for the upcoming fall semester, covers the field of trauma studies, focusing on perspectives from the Global South.
“Re-orienting healing as a decolonizing process enables students to re-politicize personal trauma as it intersects with global legacies of violence, war, racism, slavery, patriarchy, colonialism, orientalism, homophobia, ableism, capitalism, and extractivism,” a description of the class says.
The texts included in the class are Orientalism by Edward Said; Wretched of the Earth by Franz Fanon; and Colonial Trauma by Karima Lazali.
On August 8, the US-based Zionist group StopAntisemitism, accused professor Larson of teaching “blood libel”, citing one of the texts being taught, Jasbir Puar’s The Right to Maim: Debility, Capacity, Disability, which says that ‘Israel’ intentionally maims Palestinians as a method of controlling the population.
The book, released in 2018, won the National Women’s Studies Association Alison Piepmeier Book Prize but has also faced attacks from Zionist groups.
On August 9, Israel’s minister of diaspora affairs sent a letter to Princeton’s President Christopher Eisgruber, calling on the school to remove the text from Larson’s class and to conduct a review of all material being taught at the university.
The Jewish students’ letter pushed back against the calls from ‘Israel’ and Zionist groups, saying that not studying “controversial texts represents an attack on the very mandate of the University”.
“While far-right Jewish leaders in America and Israel claim to speak for us, they do not. This latest attempt to silence educational discourse related to Israel-Palestine is part of a pattern in which the [Center for Jewish Life] aims to interfere with academic and co-curricular events, inquiry, and debate on campus,” the open letter added.