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? Voices on Antisemitism | Transcript
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Voices on Antisemitism ? A Podcast Series

Robert A. Corrigan

October 7, 2010

Robert A. Corrigan

President, San Francisco State University

Early in Robert Corrigan’s tenure as president of San Francisco State University, students posted a mural on campus that included antisemitic symbols. Corrigan took a strong stand against the hateful imagery, and had the mural sandblasted off. As a result of that turmoil?and the persistence of antisemitism on university campuses?Corrigan decided that San Francisco State should have a concrete plan for addressing such incidents when they occur.

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Transcript:

ROBERT A. CORRIGAN:
Presidents of higher-education institutions have to be willing to speak out on issues that are important not simply to the campus, but society as well.

ALEISA FISHMAN:
Early in Robert Corrigan’s tenure as president of San Francisco State University, students posted a mural on campus that included antisemitic symbols. Corrigan took a strong stand against the hateful imagery, and had the mural sandblasted off. As a result of that turmoil?and the persistence of antisemitism on university campuses?Corrigan decided that San Francisco State, and perhaps all universities, should have a concrete plan for addressing such incidents when they occur.

Welcome to Voices on Antisemitism , a podcast series from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum made possible by generous support from the Oliver and Elizabeth Stanton Foundation. I'm Aleisa Fishman. Every month, we invite a guest to reflect about the many ways that antisemitism and hatred influence our world today. From San Francisco, here's Robert Corrigan.

ROBERT A. CORRIGAN:
At San Francisco State, we have had charges that people were harassed on the campus for wearing the Star of David. We had an atmosphere in which it almost appeared like permission was being granted for people to express sentiments that ultimately were seen as antisemitic in the guise that it was debate over the Middle East. And it became important that the president and the administration make as clear and as unequivocal as they could that there was no place for that kind of language or behavior on the campus. And we have, I think, been successful in getting people to appreciate that you could have debate that didn’t have to turn rancorous.

We have what we call a Crisis Response Team. So if something like this comes along, then at the upper levels of the administration we figure out: how do we deal with this? Is this something that needs media attention? Is this something that needs committees of faculty involved? Is this something that requires a statement from the president? Is it all three of these, or more of these, things? And we got the students engaged. Secondly, we have discovered that we've got to involve the larger community as well. We have brought together, for example, members of the local Arab-American community in a year-long forum with members of the Jewish community and others. We don’t allow these things to be ignored.

What’s that new phrase that everybody’s using now?“man up”? Presidents tend to be surrounded by people who are always cautioning about what donors think, what your image is going to be with this community or that community. You have to listen to people, but you have to affect the dialog as well. To say to a president that he shouldn't speak out on issues or she shouldn't speak out on issues is wrong, and yet increasingly we see that presidents are so concerned about raising money, presidents are so concerned about not offending anybody, that there is a tendency for us to remain quiet and not to speak out. The president has got to stand up for what’s right.

ALEISA FISHMAN:
Voices on Antisemitism is a podcast series of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Join us every month to hear a new perspective on the continuing threat of antisemitism in our world today.

We would appreciate your feedback on this series. Please visit our Web site, www.ushmm.org , and follow the prompts to the Voices on Antisemitism survey. At our Web site, you can also listen to Voices on Genocide Prevention , a podcast series on contemporary genocide.

 


 

Available interviews:

Vidal Sassoon
Michael Kahn
David Albahari
Sir Ben Kingsley
Mike Godwin
Stephen H. Norwood
Betty Lauer
Hannah Rosenthal
Edward Koch
Sarah Jones
Frank Meeink
Danielle Rossen
Rex Bloomstein
Renee Hobbs
Imam Mohamed Magid
Robert A. Corrigan
Garth Crooks
Kevin Gover
Diego Portillo Mazal
David Reynolds
Louise Gruner Gans
Ray Allen
Ralph Fiennes
Judy Gold
Charles H. Ramsey
Rabbi Gila Ruskin
Mazal Aklum
danah boyd
Xu Xin
Navila Rashid
John Mann
Andrei Codrescu
Brigitte Zypries
Tracy Strong, Jr.
Rebecca Dupas
Scott Simon
Sadia Shepard
Gregory S. Gordon
Samia Essabaa
David Pilgrim
Sayana Ser
Christopher Leighton
Daniel Craig
Helen Jonas
Col. Edward B. Westermann
Alexander Verkhovsky
Nechama Tec
Harald Edinger
Beverly E. Mitchell
Martin Goldsmith
Tad Stahnke
Antony Polonsky
Johanna Neumann
Albie Sachs
Rabbi Capers Funnye, Jr.
Bruce Pearl
Jeffrey Goldberg
Ian Buruma
Miriam Greenspan
Matthias Küntzel
Laurel Leff
Hillel Fradkin
Irwin Cotler
Kathrin Meyer
Ilan Stavans
Susan Warsinger
Margaret Lambert
Alexandra Zapruder
Michael Chabon
Alain Finkielkraut
Dan Bar-On
James Carroll
Ruth Gruber
Reza Aslan
Alan Dershowitz
Michael Posner
Susannah Heschel
Father Patrick Desbois
Rabbi Marc Schneier
Shawn Green
Judea Pearl
Daniel Libeskind
Faiza Abdul-Wahab
Errol Morris
Charles Small
Cornel West
Karen Armstrong
Mark Potok
Ladan Boroumand
Elie Wiesel
Eboo Patel
Jean Bethke Elshtain
Madeleine K. Albright
Bassam Tibi
Deborah Lipstadt
Sara Bloomfield
Lawrence Summers
Christopher Caldwell
Father John Pawlikowski
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Christopher Browning
Gerda Weissmann Klein
Robert Satloff
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg