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Why Are We So Afraid of Controversy?

According to in today鈥檚 New York Post, Brown University鈥檚 Hillel has rescinded a speaking invitation to Egyptian-born author Nonie Darwish after complaints from Brown鈥檚 Muslim Student Association. The Post鈥檚 Adam Brodsky writes:

It is Hillel鈥檚 right to disinvite Ms. Darwish, just as it was their right to invite her in the first place. But the incident says something very sad about many students鈥 attitudes toward free speech. It seems that at least some students (and in my opinion, one student is too many) have internalized the dangerous message that universities have been spreading for years: that people have a 鈥渞ight not to be offended,鈥 and that controversy is to be avoided at all costs. The university鈥攚hich is supposed to be the quintessential marketplace of ideas鈥攊s exactly the place where controversial but crucial issues such as the conflict between Muslims and Jews in the Middle East should be hashed out openly and without fear. Instead, potentially controversial speakers are unwelcome because their opinions might 鈥渁larm鈥 others (you may recall another incident several months ago, when Columbia University Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad).

The fact that Brown鈥檚 Hillel believed that Darwish鈥檚 speech would jeopardize its relationship with the Muslim Student Association speaks volumes about the free speech climate at Brown (which is also currently taking heat for arbitrarily suspending a religious student organization). It signals that too many students do not appreciate the value of free speech and open debate鈥攕omething that I believe is in large part the fault of a university culture that bombards students with the message that individual sensitivities trump free speech. In an environment where free speech was valued, both Hillel and the Muslim Student Association would welcome debate on an issue profoundly affecting both groups.

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