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Hasbara Courses at “Israeli” Universities Exposed in New Report

Hasbara Courses at “Israeli” Universities Exposed in New Report
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By Yara Sa'di

Electronic Intifada, 15-07-2013


Various "Israeli" academic institutions have introduced courses and programs on hasbara - the Hebrew-language term used to describe "Israel's" attempts to re-brand its image as its occupation and military aggression makes it increasingly unpopular worldwide.

Hasbara Courses at “Israeli” Universities Exposed in New Report

A new report from the Academic Watch Project shows that instead of promoting critical thought and inquiry, these courses at academic institutions serve to promote the policies of the State of "Israel" and the whitewashing of its crimes. The Academic Watch Project is a group of Palestinian students at "Israeli" academic institutions dedicated to exposing discrimination within "Israeli" academia and its connection with "Israel's" military occupation and apartheid policies.

"A Word on Hasbara" aims to uncover the content of these courses and programs and their funding. It also seeks to reveal their connections with the ministries of foreign affairs and public diplomacy and international Zionist groups.

"Unofficial ambassadors"

One such course - "Ambassadors Online" (or "Ambassadors on the Web") - offered at Haifa University boasts the slogan "Volunteering, Zionism, Digital Diplomacy."

The course's webpage features the logos of two "Israeli" ministries as well as those of Birthright "Israel" and StandWithUs, groups which aim to promote "Israel" among US college students - and offers the synopsis: "[the] goal is to provide "Israeli" university students with the knowledge, skills and tools they need to become unofficial ambassadors of "Israel".

 

Hasbara Courses at “Israeli” Universities Exposed in New Report

 

The cadets of the project receive training which prepares them to effectively challenge the de-legitimization claims, engage in a dialogue with anti-"Israeli" activists and improve "Israel's" image abroad by expanding the positive knowledge about the country."

Eli Avraham, a co-founder of the "Ambassadors on the Web" course, said in an interview with The Canadian Jewish news: "when false claims are made about "Israel", such as labeling it an apartheid state, people need to be equipped with knowledge and tools to speak out against those claims."

He added: "The main idea is that this is about how to use the new media to reclaim "Israel's" narrative and promote "Israel's" point of view" ("Haifa U course teaches web hasbara strategies," 13 March 2012).

Year-long hasbara program

IDC Herzliya's Ambassador Club is a year-long program for more than two hundred students from thirty countries run in partnership with StandWithUs. The program includes lectures on media, economy and history in order to "arm the students with the latest surveys and data and to teach them how to present the "Israeli" narrative" in North America and Europe. At the end of the course, each participant receives "an accreditation endorsed by the "Israeli" Ministry of Foreign Affairs," according to the StandWithUs website.
Student unions at "Israeli" universities also provide hasbara programs.

The National Union of "Israeli" Students aims to fight "anti-Semitism" and "delegitimization of the State of "Israel"" by paying "Israeli" students $2,000 in return for writing comments and letters on social network sites promoting "Israel" and "refuting" criticism of the state's policies for five hours per week.
These hasbara courses were put into practice last November, when "Israel" bombed Gaza for eight consecutive days. The student union at IDC Herzliya, in coordination with the ministries of media and public diplomacy, formed "a war center" to promote the "Israeli" army and its aggression. The "war center" received information directly from the "Israeli" army and the prime minister's office.

Coexistence lie

Even more cynically, these programs are being used to promote a false narrative of coexistence, like the one boasted in a recent Times of "Israel" piece on the Ambassadors Online program at Haifa University. The article, titled "Muslim, Druze and Jewish students band together to improve "Israel's" global image," describes how students are trained to undermine the global boycott "Israel" movement.

But despite the hasbara lie of "Israel" being a bastion of peace and coexistence, as the Haifa University program trains students to promote, the reality for Palestinian students at "Israeli" universities is much different.
While the Ambassadors Online participants "monitored the media for biased coverage and took part in the shaping of positive public opinion towards "Israel"" during the bombing of Gaza last November, Palestinian students at Haifa University who protested the attacks were demonized by the city's mayor as "terrorist supporters" and banned by the university from demonstrating on campus.

What these hasbara programs ultimately reveal is that "Israel" is losing the public relations battle and is desperately investing massive resources into improving its image. The role of "Israeli" academic institutions in these deceptive efforts reaffirm their role in serving the policies of the state, rather than promoting academic values and integrity.

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