Dartmouth Dialogues

In today's world, and on today's college campuses, informed and respectful debate across difference is more critical than ever
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In January, President Sian Leah Beilock announced the launch of Dartmouth Dialogues. It's a wide-ranging series of initiatives that will showcase Dartmouth's commitment to programming across the institution that facilitates conversations—and ensures that people have the skills to bridge political and personal divides.

It's also a project that has deep roots in Dartmouth's history. "Dartmouth has long championed dialogue across difference," says President Beilock. "From the Great Issues course introduced by then-President John Sloan Dickey in 1947 to presidential debates held on campus since 1984, Dartmouth Dialogues brings a renewed focus on our ability to think critically, to question, and to probe and reflect, rather than blindly follow a predetermined ideology."

The first phase will center on the Dialogue Project, a campus initiative years in the making that will offer training in the development of collaborative dialogue skills among students, faculty, and staff.

The Dialogue Project currently features four main components: a special topic series, the first of which is Middle East Dialogues, encompassing courses and events related to timely challenging topics; a new partnership with the nonprofit StoryCorps' One Small Step program, which brings strangers with different perspectives together to record a conversation about their lives; workshops where faculty, staff, and students can practice the skills of collaborative dialogue; and guest speakers on campus who model and specialize in dialogue-related skills.

Dartmouth's interdisciplinary programs in Jewish Studies and Middle Eastern Studies have a longstanding commitment to fostering dialogue, community, and joint academic inquiry. Dartmouth Jewish Studies professor Susannah Heschel and Middle Eastern Studies professor Tarek El-Ariss were interviewed in November on National Public Radio's Weekend Edition about how their programs collaborated to present public forums fostering dialogue about the Israel-Hamas war. With thanks to NPR, we're pleased to provide a transcript of that conversation in the pages that follow.

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SCOTT SIMON (host): Anger and fear are felt on many college campuses since the October 7 attacks on Israel. A student at Cornell University in upstate New York has been arrested and charged with threatening the lives of Jewish students. And both Jewish and Arab students at a number of schools say they're reluctant to express their views publicly. At least one campus, though, has tried to do what educational institutions are supposed to do—teach. Dartmouth College is putting on forums where faculty from the Jewish Studies and Middle Eastern Studies programs answer questions about the conflict and its roots in history. The forums have drawn packed auditoriums, and many hundreds of people have also watched the events online. The two professors who've organized these forums, Susannah Heschel and Tarek El-Ariss, join us now. Thank you so much for being with us.

SUSANNAH HESCHEL: Thank you.

TAREK EL-ARISS: Thank you for having us.

SIMON: Let me ask you both—I gather you were on the phone shortly after the October 7 attacks and decided we need to do something. What was your thinking? Professor El-Ariss?

EL-ARISS: I was actually in Cairo when the events happened. And we immediately talked—Susannah and I—and said we need to address these issues. We need to create a forum for students to come and understand and think and reflect and ask questions. And we're also, you know, teaching courses about these topics. We wanted this conversation to extend to the wider community and engage with what people were feeling, thinking, engaging with.

SIMON: Professor Heschel?

HESCHEL: It's very important for us that we've worked together as faculty, as student groups, as programs—Jewish studies and Middle Eastern studies—for many years. So we have a relationship already on campus. And because of that relationship for so many years, we were able to jump right in immediately and bring the campus together and make sure we would not become polarized. So we wanted students of a range of political views—Jewish students, Arab students, Palestinian students, Christian students—to come together and talk together with faculty in an academic setting.

SIMON: Were you concerned about events getting out of hand, for lack of a better word, becoming even unsafe for people?

EL-ARISS: Susannah and I teach a course called The Arab, The Jew and the Construction of Modernity. And it's a packed course, and we have students who are originally from Palestinian background, Arab background, Jewish backgrounds. And these were the students who came. And these are students who know us, who trust us, who are already part of a conversation. And so some of them, of course, were upset, angry, scared. But they brought these emotions, the soul baggage also and expressed it. But they expressed it in a thoughtful way, and things remained really civil throughout.

HESCHEL: I'll just say that when I started to hear about the slaughter that Hamas was perpetrating against Israeli civilians, I was shattered and terrified. And I have to say I was overwhelmed emotionally. I did not expect the kind of rage and polarization on college campuses. I didn't anticipate that. I don't think anyone did. And I'm horrified by what's appeared around the country. We've also—both of us—have been consulted by colleagues at other universities, thanking us for what we're doing and asking us what they can do—what advice. And the problem is that in many colleges, Jewish studies and Middle Eastern studies have not been allied, working together all these years the way we have. That's a problem.

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SIMON: I want to play a question for you that I gather was asked at the second forum. And I say this as someone who was once a reporter in the Middle East—I don't know how I'd handle it. The question is, is Israel—can it be fairly called an apartheid state? Here's the question.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: My question—all major international human rights organizations—Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, even Israeli ones like B'Tselem, use the term apartheid to describe the Israeli treatment of Palestinians. But it seems like in a lot of these spaces, apartheid gets kind of dismissed and ignored, as though it makes people uncomfortable. I would like to get your direct thoughts on apartheid and stop skirting around the question. Thank you for your time.

SIMON: Two of your colleagues took that question, I gather. What would you have said if you were there that night?

HESCHEL: So I was there. Our colleague Ezzedine Fishere, who is, in fact, a former diplomat from Egypt, responded to the student and pointed out that the definitions and the international law of apartheid do not apply in that blanket way to Israel, first of all. And second of all, he asked the student, what are you trying to accomplish? So what's the purpose of calling Israel an apartheid state? It becomes an epithet to arouse people's rage in Israel. And what does that accomplish? More anger, more tension, more conflict, more war. What is the point? So we have to think about the kinds of questions we want to raise here and think about the goal we want to achieve. And the goal is ultimately peace, two people living in peace next to each other.

EL-ARISS: Yeah. You know, when does the conversation stop? Or when does recognizing the power differential becomes the end of the conversation, you know? OK, now I identified who's the bad guy and who's, you know, being violated, and we stop there. And it's—and this is not our job—is simply stop at the condemnation. We want to understand, want to revisit the historical context, want to imagine a different future. You know, we need to do all this other work around. And we don't want to stop at just simply saying, this is the bad guy. This is the good guy, you know, and then stop just right there.

SIMON: Let me ask you both if there—as the great teachers you are—if there's one thing you could isolate now to tell all of us during this time, what would that be? Professor Heschel?

HESCHEL: I want people to think in complex terms, not to be satisfied with the reductionist approach, to place the present in a larger context of the past but also, as we've been saying, to think about a better future, to imagine it. I had to give a talk recently about the Sabbath. The Sabbath is supposed to be a foretaste of Paradise. And the problem is nobody thinks about Paradise anymore. We're so immersed in the horrors of the present and the past...

SIMON: Yeah.

HESCHEL: ...We don't have a vision of a future. And that, I think, is true society wide. So what can we envision for a future—and not in a punitive way? That's also part of the problem. There's something right now in the response to this current horror in the Middle East that feels very punitive and a bit sadistic. People need to be punished. Israel has to be punished. Hamas has to be punished. Why are we thinking in those terms? We're talking about human beings.

SIMON: Professor El-Ariss?

EL-ARISS: I grew up in Beirut during the civil war, and I've experienced bombing and displacement. And actually, I just wrote a book about it. And I also had to teach the Middle East in New York on 9/11. I was supposed to meet with my students on that day. So I learned the hard way of how to deal with these—talking about the region, talking about conflicts but also engaging when conflicts arise and how to really listen. And this is not the first time. For many of us, this is an ongoing spectacle, which—but every time it fills us with sadness. But also, it is something that we need to engage and allow, you know, those emotions, as well, to make us reflect more and do more work, to teach more courses and bring more people into this conversation.

SIMON: Susannah Heschel is chair of the Jewish Studies Program, and Tarek El-Ariss is chair of Middle Eastern Studies—both at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. Thanks for being with us.

EL-ARISS: Thank you, Scott.

HESCHEL: Thank you, Scott.

Copyright © 2023 NPR. All rights reserved. Listen to the conversation on the NPR website.

 

Illustrations by Greg Mably

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