Anat Biletzki
Anat Biletzki (Hebrew: ענת בילצקי, born 1952) is a professor of philosophy at Tel Aviv University and Quinnipiac University in Hamden, CT.[1][2]
Biletzki was born in Jerusalem, Israel. She was a member of B'tselem,[3] an Israeli human rights NGO, acting as chairperson from 2001 to 2006, and has served as a B'tselem Board member since 1995.
Biletzki is a member of the executive board of FFIPP-I (Faculty for Israeli-Palestinian Peace International),[4] which describes itself as "a network of Palestinian, Israeli, and International faculty, and students, working in solidarity for a complete end of the occupation and just peace."[5]
Biletzki is unusual in her explicit and controversial criticism of "Jewish Israel" as distinct from Israel as a nation or political bodies within Israel. In a New York Times opinion piece [6] she writes that "[the 2015 minority government bloc] is unambiguous in its Jewish, nationalistic agenda," and that "norms of exclusive Jewish rights and exclusion of Arab citizens" are inherent to Zionism. As well, Biletzki suggested that controversial statements made by Prime Minister Benjamin Netenyahu in the days before the election, specifically the assertion that a two-state solution would never happen during his tenure, and an expression of anxiety that supposedly large amounts of Israeli Arabs were voting, represent implicit norms of "Zionist, Jewish Israel."
References
- ↑ "Speakers at Cape Town meeting compare situation in occupied territories with South African apartheid; Participants discuss situation in Occupied PalestinianTerritory.", M2 Presswire, 30 June 2004, retrieved 2011-07-08
- ↑ Fox, Maggie (2010) "Study shows Israelis and Palestinians both retaliate", Reuters, 4 October 2010, retrieved 2011-07-08
- ↑ "Diplomacy can work, Rice proves", Lincoln Journal Star, 16 November 2005, retrieved 2011-07-08
- ↑ "FFIPP International". FFIPP-I.
- ↑ "Who is FFIPP?". FFIPP-I.
- ↑ "Making it Explicit in Israel".
External links
- "Life in the O.T.: Anat Biletzki" Interview by Eyal Danieli, The Brooklyn Rail (June 2004)