In response to Jerusalem: The Future of the Past
(August 17, 1989)
To the Editors:
Amos Elon's article, "Jerusalem: The Future of the Past," opens with a useful brief synopsis of late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century socialist-Zionist attitudes to Jerusalem. But even in its opening columns the article is skewed by Elon's neglect of the rich history of religious Zionist yearning and striving for Jerusalem. Ben Gurion's statement to Monsignor MacMahon of the Vatican, which Elon quotes, is also very much to the point here. " . Jerusalem was Israel's capital a thousand years before the birth of Christianity." Jews most assuredly did not return to Jerusalem in order to spite the Pope, local Arabs, or Amos Elon.
I want to correct a factual error and add another perspective on the relations between Arabs and Jews in Jerusalem and at the Hebrew University in particular. Elon writes: "In 1988 there were about a thousand Arab students [at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem] (6 percent of the total). All were Israeli Arabs, mostly from Galilee; not a single Palestinian student from East Jerusalem was attending the University." In 1988 I personally had two Arab students from East Jerusalem in my M.A. seminar of 10 students, a seminar on Middle English literature. At one point, with the intafada gaining momentum, the attendance of these two students became sporadic. This became especially problematic as their turn came around for doing required class presentations on the topic of their proposed final seminar paper. When I spoke to them about this, asking if curfews or police roadblocks were preventing them from coming to class, they both explained to me, with evident pain and frustration, that it wasn't the Israelis who were responsible for their absences from class, but rather their fear of having their cars or homes burned by their Arab neighbors; for in attending a course on Chaucer and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at the Hebrew University they were guilty of "consorting with the Zionist enemy." In 1988 there were a further half-dozen or more Arab students in the English department of the Hebrew University. Several had obtained first degrees at Bir Zeit, Bethlehem, and other West Bank universities. There were probably others I did not know about. Elon's statement to the contrary is simply not correct.
Lawrence Besserman
Director, Office of Academic Affairs
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
The points raised by Lawrence Besserman are extensively dealt with in other chapters of my forthcoming book, Jerusalem: City of Mirrors—the piece published in the August 17 issue consisted mainly of the concluding chapter of that book. I don't know who Besserman's two (!) "sporadic" students are. I base myself on a statement by the official spokesman of the Hebrew University that no Palestinians from East Jerusalem attended that institution in the academic year 1988.