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Opinion

Why do so many academics believe in David Miller?

Marc Goldberg of CST examines the supporters of the now-dismissed professor

October 8, 2021 11:29
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4 min read

Last week Bristol University announced that it had terminated the employment of Professor David Miller. It marked the culmination of an investigation that took 200 days though the original complaint against Miller was made in April 2019. While the news came as a relief to Jewish students at Bristol University and the wider Jewish community it was met by many academics with derision and assertions that academic freedom was under attack by Israel.

The comments which eventually ended Miller’s career at Bristol University were made at an event in February during which he referred to Jewish students as “pawns” of the state of Israel and called for “an end to Zionism as a functioning ideology in the world”. Miller asserted that there was an “all-out onslaught by the Israeli government, mainly through the ministry of strategic affairs but also other ministries too, on the left globally” adding “it's not something to do with the Labour party really, the Labour Party is a mere detail of this attempt by the Israelis to impose their will all over the world.”

Once Bristol University announced an investigation into Miller a petition was set up in his defence that was signed by over 460 people, mainly academics. The founder and Director of Bristol University’s Research Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship Tariq Modood claimed that “I think that the empirical research that David is doing is not antisemitic and is valuable for hunting down evidence that displays the linkages between various organisations and funders in this country, the US and Israel that are not just promoting their own views, of course they have a right to do that, but they’re having the effect of making it difficult for people in this country, including academics, to speak up at conferences etc to speak up for the Palestinian cause without incurring the charge of antisemitism and therefore putting one’s reputation and career at risk”.

Modood also said “the IHRA [International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance] definition of antisemitism with some of its examples mixing up anti-Zionism and anti-Israel with antisemitism is most relevant”.