President
MacLauchlan's response to
SAFS
February
21, 2006
Dear
Dr. Seligman,
The Society for Academic Freedom and
Scholarship
misjudges or deliberately minimalizes the harm arising from the
publication of
the controversial cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.
SAFS favours publishing the cartoons
despite the fact
that there have now been almost 50 deaths world-wide, including more
than 25 on
the weekend of February 18. SAFS would say these events are far
removed
from UPEI's campus – in effect, that
we are
free to engage in reckless free speech in Canada
because we have a tolerant, civil
society. Perhaps that was the thinking of the Danish cartoonist.
How
would SAFS respond to a PEI Muslim woman who describes the hurt
caused by the cartoons to be “... as if
I had been raped out on the street while the people surrounding me
watched.”
I expect SAFS would say that she should develop a thicker skin. UPEI takes seriously these feelings of hurt
and humiliation, as well as those of Muslim students and colleagues at
UPEI and
the broader Muslim community on PEI
and across Canada.
The SAFS letter fails to credit the UPEI
Student
Union with a leadership role in the withdrawal of the Cadre.
The Student Union withdrew support for publication of the cartoons and,
as
owner of the paper, asked for its return, acknowledging “we must take
into
account the overwhelming reaction that these cartoons have caused
worldwide.”
While SAFS appears to prefer an academic
environment
where shouting and disorder are barometers of freedom, I believe we
must
continually strive for an engaged and positive learning
environment.
Universities must become ever better and richer places of learning and
animated
debate. The discourse on our campuses, including what we model
for our
students and future leaders, should include speaking and listening
(which includes respect), courage and curiosity
(which
includes humility), discretion and a sense of proportion.
At UPEI, there are ongoing animated debates
about the
cartoons, about press freedom and responsibility, about the intensely
integrated nature of our global community, and about the quality of the
tolerant, dynamic and robust community that we enjoy and must continue
to
build.
Today, in the aftermath of the cartoon
controversy,
Muslim students at UPEI tell me that they are engaging with other
students
about their religious beliefs. The Cadre
will appear this week with
a full debate (including an interview with myself). Students will
hold a
colloquium to reflect on issues of expression and diversity raised by
the
controversy. Professors and students are actively talking about
all of
the issues, in and out of class.
I am absolutely convinced that the climate
on campus
at UPEI and the quality of our debates are much the richer today than
they
would be if the cartoons were still in circulation. Apparently,
SAFS
would say that I am overstepping my bounds as president to act to
support this
safe and positive learning climate. With respect, I
disagree.
Sincerely,
H. Wade MacLauchlan
President
and Vice-Chancellor
University of Prince Edward Island
Published
in the National Post, February 23, 2006,
p.A17 and The Cadre, February 22, 2006,
p.1, online