UCT is an inversion of what a university ought to be
I am a University of Cape Town (UCT)
alumnus. In a letter published in the Cape Argus today concerning vice-chancellor
Max Price and the university executive disinviting former cultural editor of Jyllands-Posten, Flemming Rose, I said the alumni
department must remove my name from the register because I no longer wanted to
be associated with what the university has become.
This has been a while
coming. First, there were the unseemly
circumstances around the removal of the Rhodes statue. Then, UCT censored and removed art.
During the tumult
– the burnings, vandalism, destruction of property and threats against person –
vice-chancellor Max Price displayed egregiously poor leadership, cowering before
fallists and playing politics, and not one who was prepared be a leader and
stand alone if need be, as Pierre
de Vos wrote in Daily Maverick, “stick to principles when it is difficult
to.”
None of the fallist offenders,
who shook the campus and wider community to its core, were prosecuted. And Price governs in an environment of fear
and anxiety. This is not a legacy he, university executive and broad university
community can be proud of.
The philosophy department’s Elisa Galgut
writes, “UCT is becoming a campus where unpopular or contentious views are
often silenced, and where those who are deemed ‘controversial’ are either not
permitted to speak, or unjustly censured if they do”.
Preventing Rose from speaking is the
final straw: I revoke my association with UCT.
Because I am not a celebrity, influential
or wealthy, my gesture is symbolic, like the wearing black armbands to protest
something. I valued my time at UCT as a
student and was proud of my certificate (a masters degree as a mature student),
and respected Max Price, who capped me.
Hence my disavowal is significant to me.
De
Vos’ article about the Rose debacle is, as usual, rational and, up to a
point, persuasive. I am persuaded by his
argument that once the invitation was made, it should have been honoured. (That it wasn’t speaks to Price’s and university
executive’s sense of honour.)
His analysis of whether or not
the Academic Freedom Committee (ACT) should have invited Rose in the first
place is a useful guide on what should be done in future, or should have been
done.
Then his argument becomes
intellectually dishonest, expediently pandering to the reasons university management
made for disinviting Rose. Galgut: “It
is considered a sufficiently good reason to disinvite Mr Rose, that these descriptions
about him are merely ‘regarded’ as being true – not that they are actually true.”
De Vos himself said, “I don’t know Mr
Rose personally, but he denies these allegations (of Islamophobia, etc),
describing himself as ‘a classical liberal’”.
And: “There is no tangible evidence that Rose’s presence on campus would
have led to the destruction of property or violent attacks on individuals”. With these statements, he undermines any
argument not to have invited Rose or
let him speak.
However, on the basis of no evidence that Rose is still, today, publishing provocative
content, holding contentious views or uttering hate speech, and merely based on
his past history, De Vos says he
should not have been invited. Echoing Price and the university executive – except
in the way the matter was handled – it’s sufficient for him that Rose is merely
regarded as being controversial,
rather than it being true.
Where is De Vos’ firmly held principle, stated at the
beginning of his article, that “I remain deeply suspicious of the actions of
any university management aimed at dictating to the university community as to
what its members may say, write, read or listen to”.
If Rose was not guilty then or now – not merely accused or
assumed to be guilty – of making prohibited hate speech or incitement to
violence, I don’t follow why De Vos would, with hindsight, deny ACT from
inviting Rose or from allowing him to give the lecture on the fundamental
principle that a university is the one place where an exchange of controversial
ideas must not only be tolerated, but allowed, irrespective of how
uncomfortable those ideas might be to some.
But how did De Vos and university management know what the
topic, and more importantly, actual content of Rose’s lecture was going to be? De Vos says he doesn’t know Rose, but how
sure is he Rose would have repeated the allegedly offensive views (note: De Vos
says he does not believe Jyllands-Posten’s cartoons were blasphemous) to justify the university withdrawing the
invitation?
Even if Rose is as guilty as
his critics claim (he reportedly denied it), does De Vos, Price, et al know
he has not retracted, repented and made restitution? That his past associations will forever
define who he is, and he can expect, in South Africa, eternal condemnation, no
forgiveness and no reconciliation to our society in general and the academy of
reasonable men and women at UCT?
Does De Vos et al hold this
view despite South Africa’s history of reconciliation where cold-blooded
killers like Eugene de Kock and the St James Massacre’s perpetrators were granted
amnesty and parole? Shall the legal
principle of innocent until proven guilty be indefinitely suspended if and only
if applied to controversial, and formerly controversial, magazine editors and speakers?
De Vos’ article is about the
particular – the invitation to Rose and whether he should have been
invited. But unlike the jurist he is, he
does not apply precedent or extend the argument to the general: That in the
past UCT allowed and in the near future will allow equally controversial
speakers on campus – Edward
Said, “an anti-semite and terrorist sympathizer” and Hamza
Tzortzis, a “highly controversial lecturer who propagates a radical version of
Islam”.
My conclusion is that there is an
unhealthy tension: On the one hand, he upholds freedom of speech at all times –
well, some of the time. On the other,
his nuanced liberal, leftist views have sympathy with the more extreme leftist,
authoritarian clique that presently holds sway at UCT: On the basis of no evidence that Rose is
Islamophobic, etc or his lecture posed a credible threat to safety and security,
it was correct, retroactively, to revoke the invitation.
De Vos’ argument in support of
this is that Jyllands-Posten’s “publication of the cartoons
can be understood as the aggression of a dominant (Danish) majority (95%) against
a vulnerable minority (Muslim 3%) – not as the act of a brave freedom-loving
newspaper standing up for the marginalised and the vulnerable”.
If we accept this proposition, what import do we place that
apparently the sensitivities of local Muslims, who number only 1.5% of South Africa’s population, were considered by UCT in
the Rose matter and in allowing Islamic speakers, who allegedly are radical,
anti-semites and terrorist sympathizers?
De Vos mentioning Jyllands-Posten’s “aggression” against Muslims is therefore
casuistry, a debate best left for general media ethics, comparative religions
and ultimately irrelevant because it is far removed from our social reality in
South Africa.
More importantly, what should occupy us is: What does the
withdrawal of Rose’s invitation mean to us and the state of our universities, and
what do we mean by academic freedom and freedom of expression under our constitution?
The constitutionally-agnostic proposition of Max Price, “We
affirm our commitment to the right to academic freedom and freedom of
expression”, but “the right to
academic freedom (and freedom of speech) is not unlimited”, leaves me puzzled
and cold.
I am puzzled because, in the
present case of Price/UCT and De Vos (“No person has an automatic right to be invited by any
university to deliver a lecture”), neither offered legally, constitutionally-compelling
reasons why the lecture could not proceed, particularly because Rose was not
found guilty of anything except having been politically incorrect.
Instead they offer unsubstantiated, wishy-washy
explanations that is a sop to emotion and to excuse their defective interpretation
of liberalism; ad hominem attacks and
what Michael Corda, writing in Politicsweb, described as the “altar of
political correctness; the pyre where ‘whiteness’ is sent to burn”. While one resignedly expects this from the
pusillanimous, political Price, one expected that legal scholar Pierre de Vos would
be more substantial in his reasoning.
Of agnostics Jesus said, “I know
your deeds, that you are neither hot nor cold.
But because you are lukewarm, I will spit you out of my mouth” (Revelations 3: 15).
As an alumnus, I can no longer abide UCT’s agnosticism – no,
antagonism – on non-negotiable principles and freedoms. The name is now like a swearword; an
inversion of what a university ought to be.
I am a former alumnus of UCT.
This article previously appeared in Politicsweb
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