A Lincoln University professor who drew criticism this week for anti-Israel statements he made at a recent rally said Thursday that he stood by those words and would not back down from detractors he said are out to “threaten academic freedom.”
Kaukab Siddique, 67, an associate professor of English and literature, said that he had the support of his faculty and students and that he would continue to speak his mind, despite pressure from those who have referred to him as an “anti-Semite.”
“I got a little fired and said a few things that were pretty strong,” said Siddique, a tenured professor who has taught at the university since 1985. “That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t say them again.”
Siddique, a vocal critic of what he describes as Israel’s record of human-rights abuses in the Palestinian territories, maintains that he has been misunderstood since a Labor Day weekend protest in Washington.
“I am against Israel - not against Jews,” he said.
Lincoln University officials have distanced themselves from the professor’s personal views.
On Tuesday, the Christian Broadcasting Network aired video of Siddique, an associate professor of English and literature, speaking on Labor Day, saying: “We must stand united to defeat, to destroy, to dismantle Israel - if possible by peaceful means.”
Backed by a crowd of cheering protesters, he continued: “Dear brothers and sisters, unite and rise up against this hydra-headed monster which calls itself Zionism.”
The video and articles in which Siddique questions the validity of the Holocaust have drawn criticism from pro-Israel groups, who question his continued employment at the state-funded university and have mounted a campaign against him.
Two Democratic Pennsylvania state senators, Daylin Leach and Anthony Hardy Williams, joined those ranks Wednesday in a letter asking Lincoln University President Ivory Nelson to ensure that the professor’s “anti-Semitic diatribes” had not made their way into Lincoln’s classrooms.
They cited a recently passed state Senate resolution denouncing hate speech on the part of state employees and faculty at state-funded universities, including Lincoln, the nation’s oldest historically black university.
“We support academic freedom and certainly a professor has the right to criticize Israel, or any other entity or policy he wishes,” they wrote. “However . . . the Holocaust is not a theory or opinion. It is historically documented fact, denied only by those with a hateful or anti-Semitic agenda.”
The university responded in a statement Thursday saying it had not been made aware of any instance in which Siddique’s views were taught in his classes or shared in any public forums on campus.
Siddique, who is from Pakistan, said Thursday that he was used to people questioning his personal views. Since the CBN story aired, phone calls and e-mails from critics have poured in.
“It has become so abusive even my wife is beginning to be worried,” he said. “If I were not tenured I might be under some pressure to leave.”
But he said he would continue to speak out in his free time, no matter how others might feel about those statements.
“I don’t believe in laying low,” he said.