Friday, July 21, 2006

Thomas Klocek press release

Crossposted on Marathon Pundit. Posted here at the request of another Illinioze contributor.

Grant Crowell of Walking Eagle Productions has put together the below press release. Be sure to click through the link to PRWeb, as Grant has some links to videos he's made about Professor Thomas Klocek's free speech struggle with DePaul University. The Chicago college prides itself as the nation's largest Catholic college.

Donations to Thomas Klocek's legal fund are being accepted, information on how to contribute can be found in the bottom third of the press release.

What's Ward Churchill got to do with this sad story? The likely soon-be-fired Colorado professor, was an invited paid speaker at DePaul several months after DePaul fired Klocek. In DePaul-think, it's Churchill, yes, Klocek, no.

The Scholars for Peace in the Middle East (SPME) petition to reinstate Thomas Klocek, the Roman Catholic faculty member who was suspended without a hearing by DePaul University for an on-campus argument with students on Middle East issues. The petition has already amassed over 1,200 signatures in just three weeks, and organizers are calling for more professors and teachers everywhere to sign it to reach their goal of 2,000. The petition, which can be viewed and signed at http://www.spme.net/cgi-bin/display_petitions.cgi?ID=3 calls for his complete reinstatement without prejudice or penalty.

Chicago, IL (PRWEB) July 20, 2006 -- Responding to what has been condemned as a violation of academic freedom, professors, scholars, and students worldwide signed a petition by The Scholars for Peace in the Middle East (SPME) to reinstate Professor Thomas Klocek to his teaching position at DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois.

Titled "A Petition to Reinstate Professor Thomas Klocek to DePaul University With No Prejudice or Penalty," the petition is to be delivered to DePaul's president and Dean upon its goal of 2,000 signatures. As of this announcement, SPME needs 742 more signatures to reach its goal. Supporters can fill out the Klocek petition on SPME's Web site at www.spme.net.

DEPAUL'S ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF ACADEMIC FREEDOM

In an interview with Walking Eagle Productions, a documentary film company covering the DePaul controversy, Klocek said that he was suspended by DePaul administration and ultimately lost his position and teaching benefits after engaging in an out-of-class argument with pro-Palestinian students at a student activities fair on campus.

Klocek shared that he served 14 years a part-time adjunct professor in DePaul's School of New Learning and that he was considered a popular professor, with large class enrollments and received excellent student reviews, with no prior complaints about Klocek's behavior. But after engaging in heated discussion with two Muslim student groups at a Student Involvement Fair on DePaul's campus, the student groups Students for Justice in Palestine (SPJ) and United Muslims Moving Ahead (UMMA) went to the administration to call for Klocek's firing. Both groups were backed by CAIR (Council on American Islamic Relations) Chicago, and other local Muslim advocate groups, some of whom called for even harsher punishment.

Klocek said that although no 3rd party witnesses were provided by the offended parties, DePaul's Dean of the School of New Learning, Susanne Dumbleton, had him suspended without any hearing, and held his insurance benefits in jeopardy. Once Klocek was removed from his teaching position, Dumbleton then publicly castigated Klocek in DePaul's student newspaper, The DePaulia, stating that Klocek was being punished by the DePaul Administration for expressing what she deemed to be Klocek's "erroneous assertions" to the Muslim student groups.

Christina Abraham, Civil Rights Coordinator for CAIR's Chicago branch office, granted an interview to Walking Eagle Productions to explain their reasons for filing the original complaint to DePaul on behalf of the student groups. Abraham stated that she believed all of the student group's allegations, and that they were serious enough to demand Klocek's immediate firing.

First Amendment groups, such as the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), protested DePaul's actions. FIRE's then-president David French stated in its own press release that Klocek's suspension violated DePaul's policies guaranteeing academic freedom as well as its contractual promise of due process "because his statements were allegedly offensive."

"While DePaul may now argue that the issue is one of professionalism, its public statements at the time of Klocek's punishment make it clear that Klocek's real crime was offending students during an out-of-class discussion of a controversial and emotional topic." said French. "Academic freedom cannot survive when professors who engage in debate on controversial topics are subject to administrative punishment without even the most cursory due process."

A PEACE ORGANIZATION RALLIES FOR ACADEMIC FREEDOM

How did Scholars for Peace in the Middle East become involved in Klocek's defense?

"SPME is an academic community of scholars." explains SPME President Dr. Beck, in an interview with Walking Eagle Productions. "And as such, we're trying to support another scholar on what we see as a violation of his academic freedom and due process. The goal is to raise awareness among faculty members that we may not be as safe as we think we are, and to get him reinstated without penalty."

Klocek is undeterred and confident that true scholars will rise above such divisiveness, and support the petition on behalf of him. "The issue of free speech and academic freedom," says Klocek, "extends to all faculty members, part- and full-time, non-tenured and tenured alike."

While the petition is open for everyone to sign, SPME is especially encouraging signatures from professors. SPME however, has expressed the important role students can play in circulating their petition professors in their own schools and classes, or contacting professors who remain active during the summer in online forums and web blogs.

CONTRIBUTIONS FOR KLOCEK NEEDED

A fund has also been created to assist Klocek law counsel with legal expenses. Contributions may be sent to the following address:

Thomas Klocek Legal Defense Fund
c/o Cole Taylor Bank
P.O. Box 88481
Chicago Il 60680

ABOUT SPME

Scholars for Peace in the Middle East is an independent, faculty-driven, not-for-profit [501 (C) (3), "big-tent" grassroots community of scholars with well over 6000 academics and members, dedicated to peace in the Middle East consistent both with Israel's right to exist as a sovereign Jewish state within safe and secure borders. Full information can be read at http://www.spme.net/aboutus.html

For Further Information Contact, Dr. Edward S. Beck, President, 717.576.5038

4 comments:

Anonymous,  11:41 AM  

Hey Moron,

Do you really think it's fair to compare a college Dean to a Nazi? Or are you just trying to touch off a debate but hide behind free speech? You are an intellectual coward. You enter the debate at the very bottom, with no attempt to hold any real dialouge. I don't see how the level of your extremism is ok, and someone else's isn't. I hope that you live every day as the bitter angry man that you seem to be.

Marathon Pundit 11:55 AM  

The graphic with Dumbleton, Ward Churchill, and Prof. Klocek is a caricature...and I'm not, sad to say, the artist.

Didn't you see that Larry Flynt movie? Such stuff is covered by the first amendment.

I like your handle, though.

If I didn't want dialogue, I would've closed comments.

By the way, please show some respect, and refer to me as "Mr. Moron."

Anonymous,  1:14 PM  

There seems to be a lot of controversy about what actually occurred. Unfortunately, your post does not acknowledge this.

If Klocek was suspended because he engaged students in a discussion of his beliefs, then DePaul is in the wrong.

However, if Klocek -- a college instructor and thus someone who shoulders responsibility for civil discourse -- used profanity and flipped students off, he should be suspended. [Klocek claims he merely "thumbed his chin"; the students claim he flipped them off.]

I make no claims on knowing who is telling the truth, but it appears that this issue is not clear cut. We do know that the court threw out Klocek's claim that DePaul breached his employment contract; the claims the DePaul defamed him are still pending.

So, my question to Marathon Pundit is: if Klocek did in fact throw literature back at the students, used profantiy, and then flipped them the bird, do you think DePaul's actions were justified? [I recognize that you believe that Klocek engaged in a civil discussion and did not flip the bird; nevertheless, the question is legitimate.]

Anonymous,  1:08 AM  

Sure this is a press release... from about a year ago. Why is this news? This has been going on for so long it's not even funny. Klocek disrespected students and was not fired for his beliefs. The Multi-Cultural Center went behind the administrations back and asked Churchill to come. It's not like Academic Affairs said "We need this guy to come." DePaul also gave money to a student organization that brought the former wrestler Warrior to campus. He said absurd stuff, like "Our society is upside down. We live in a world where the queer is as valid as the straight". That was one of the all right quotes. DePaul brings a wide arrary of campus thinkers, Churchill and Warrior just happen to be shock jock academic extremes that people wanted to bring to campus.

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