NEW YORK The president of Kent State University decried the behavior of a professor who shouted death to Israel during a lecture given by a former Israeli diplomat.
Ishmael Khaldi, the former deputy consul general at the Israeli Consulate in San Francisco, was confronted by Kent State University history professor Julio Pino during a question-and-answer session following Khaldis speech at a campus eventlast week.
Khaldi was speaking about his life as a Bedouin in Israel who rose through the ranks of the Foreign Ministry, as well as Middle East issues.
Pino, a convert to Islam and a tenured professor, asked Khaldi how the Israeli government could justify providing aid to countries like Turkey to which Israel recently sent earthquake aid with blood money from the deaths of Palestinian children.
After briefly arguing with Khaldi, Pino left the auditorium shouting Death to Israel. An audience member responded by shouting Shame on you after him.
KSU President Lester Lefton said in a letter published on the universitys website that Pinos behavior was reprehensible, and an embarrassment to our university.
Lefton wrote that he believed it as Pinos right to pose a provocative question to Khaldi, but that while it was also Pinos right to shout invective against Israel, it is my obligation, as the president of this university, to say that I find his words deplorable, and his behavior deeply troubling.
We value critical thinking at this university, and encourage students to engage with ideas that they find difficult or make them uncomfortable. We hope that our faculty will always model how best to combine passion for ones position with respect for those with whom we disagree.
Calling for the destruction of the state from which our guest comes (as do some of our students, faculty and community members) is a grotesque failure to model these values, Leftons statement said.
We welcome President Leftons clear condemnation of Professor Julio Pinos deplorable conduct, said Nina Sundell, the ADLs Ohio regional director.
Statements such as Death to Israel extend beyond legitimate political discourse. When the statement is shouted by a university professor at a university student organization event on campus, it is even more harmful.
Pino has courted controversy for years, writing an opinion column in 2002 in which he praised a suicide bomber.
In 2007 he faced allegations that he was behind the website Global War, which bills itself as a jihadist news service. At the time, Pino refused to comment on the allegations, describing it as a freedom of speech issue.
However, his department chair said that Pino had told him that he contributed articles to the site.