We stand with our colleagues from and in Palestine, Kashmir and Manipur and the South Asia more broadly, and their struggle for the liberation of the land and mind

Our members have signed the statement issued by academics and supported by the India Academic Freedom Network

Statement of Solidarity with Palestine and Condemnation of Attacks on Academic Freedom Related to Palestine

As academics and other concerned persons, we, the undersigned, are outraged at the manner in which discussions on the ongoing war against Palestine are being silenced on Indian campuses, and in the public sphere more broadly. We are issuing this statement to call upon university administrators and the government to respect our academic freedom. We would also like to remind everyone of India’s own long history of anti-colonial struggle which has historically provided the lens through which the Palestinian struggle for self-determination, equality and human rights has been viewed in India.

We object to the way in which any discussion of the historical context of the occupation of Palestine and the barbaric Israeli assault on Gaza, along with the denial of food, fuel and water, since October 7th 2023, is being projected as support for the brutal terror attack on civilians in Israel by Hamas on October 7th.

We object to the Israeli ambassador’s interference with academic freedom on Indian campuses. This disrespects the competence of Indian scholars to analyze historical and political situations for themselves. Defending the right to life and dignity of Palestinians, or pointing out the links between Zionism and Hindutva as supremacist ideologies, is not equivalent to antisemitism.

We strongly condemn the hijacking of the Palestine issue to further Islamophobia within India. In all the attacks on campus events on Palestine, we see the Hindutva ecosystem at work – known Hindutva individuals who tweet against the faculty members concerned, groups which organize protests against them on campus, and a pliant media which engages in defamation of the academics as terror supporters.

We demand that the Indian government, as well as all political parties in power in different states stop criminalizing protests in solidarity with Palestine. The FIRs filed against students of Aligarh Muslim University, and detentions of youth and students in Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Coimbatore are examples of this. Many Opposition parties have failed to show sufficient solidarity with the people of Palestine and have thus betrayed the history of India’s own freedom struggle.

We call upon University administration to uphold their statutory and constitutional obligations and respect the intelligence, competence and integrity of their own faculty and students, and their right to organize talks and invite speakers as pedagogical interventions.

Signatories

1. Nandini Sundar, sociologist

2. Nivedita Menon, political scientist

3. Ravi Sundaram, media scholar

4. Rajshree Chandra, political scientist

5. Rohan D’Souza, historian

6. Pamela Philipose, journalist

7. Maya John, historian

8. Karen Gabriel, English literature

9. Achin Vanaik, political scientist

10. Apoorvanand, Hindi literature

11. Ayesha Kidwai, linguist

12. Atul Sood, regional development

13. Anita Rampal, educationist

and 457 others (see PDF here with full list of signatories).

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InSAF India Annual Newsletter (Jan 2024)

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InSAF India's submission to the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion and Expression (UN Office of the Human Rights High Commissioner)