With its decision to voluntarily refund the endowment, the university appears to have breached its fiduciary duties to advance its mission by effectively allowing the donor to block research and programming and strip a faculty member of her endowed chair. Recent statements from the university indicate that it is working to remedy these actions with its own dollars and new fundraising efforts, though the public details remain murky.

Most tangibly, thanks to the University of Washington’s highly unusual actions, StandWithUs has an extra $5 million in its pocket with which to wage its battle for hard power over universities. By facilitating the transfer of the endowment to StandWithUs, funds that were originally designated for broad scholarly discussions about “Israel in the Middle East and beyond” will now bolster a political organization’s efforts to discipline and control free inquiry at universities.

Jewish and Israel studies’ reliance on philanthropic support has put them in an enviably strong, though often complicated, position. Especially when universities, facing a decrease in public support, initiate austerity policies and cut costly programs, these programs have survived by the grace of their endowments and donors.

And while responding to community pressure can be complex, it need not be threatening or undermining. Indeed, it can be invigorating to speak to communities that care, that have a real stake in research and its interpretation.

But when outside organizations or donors attempt to translate the productive exchange of ideas among scholars and communities into a bid for hard power to punish scholars and restrict knowledge, then universities cannot afford to look the other way or fold. No gift, whether given or withheld, is worth ceding this kind of power. The stakes are simply too high.


Lila Corwin Berman is a professor of Jewish history at Temple University and the author of The American Jewish Philanthropic Complex: The History of a Multibillion-Dollar Institution (2020).

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