UPEI Faculty Opposes
Gag Laws
Henry Srebrnik
The
threat of censorship lately has hung over the campus of the University of Prince Edward Island. Last month, the president of the school,
Wade
MacLauchlan, had the February 8 issue of The
Cadre, the student newspaper, confiscated after it published the
notorious
Danish cartoons of the Muslim prophet Muhammad.
MacLauchlan
stated that he ordered the papers removed from "the property" to
prevent "the possibility of a reckless invitation to public disorder
and
humiliation." He cited the deaths that had already occurred elsewhere
in
the world – though PEI is one of the most peaceful corners of the
globe.
MacLauchlan
met with the president of the Student Union four times in the days that
followed, and the Student Union finally agreed to destroy the offending
issue
of the paper, although at first they had rejected the idea. MacLauchlan
afterwards praised the Student Union for its wisdom in seizing and
destroying
the papers, insisting this had been their decision, not his.
"I
was especially proud of the leadership shown by the Student Union in
addressing
a situation that was obviously not of its choosing," he remarked.
A
few days after the controversy began, MacLauchlan staged a meeting with
a
Muslim woman on PEI, someone entirely unconnected with the university,
who had
written a letter congratulating him. He had the local paper, the Charlottetown Guardian,
cover their conversation. She appeared in a photo with him, reading her
letter
as he looked on benignly.
"It
was very honourable on your part to stand up to do what is right," she
wrote. "Your action has set a great example of integrity, courage,
justice, and wisdom, as befits a strong chief administrator of an
educational
institution." MacLauchlan then posted her lengthy letter on the
official
university website for a week.
An
"open letter" from SAFS published in the National Post on February 16
criticized his action, and his behaviour also met with negative
comments locally.
But he continues to justify his actions.
"Is
UPEI a more positive, dynamic and animated learning environment
today than
we would be if
the cartoons
had been left in circulation for the intervening three weeks, and their
publication defended by the University as free speech?" asked
MacLauchlan
in a letter to faculty on February 28. Of course! "I am absolutely
convinced that our learning environment is better for having limited
the
publication of the caricatures."
Things
looked like they might get worse. The university administration is
currently in
negotiations with the Faculty Association over a new collective
agreement. They
were particularly insistent that the new contract include a "Code of
Conduct" which would obligate the faculty to be respectful, punctual
and
reliable – do some professors
arrive hours
late to class? – and to "act in a
manner
that will contribute positively to the overall vision, mission, and
reputation" of UPEI.
But
who, pray tell, would determine whether the "reputation" of UPEI has
been
harmed? Note that the administration was not proposing that they also
be bound
by this code, though one could argue that the president has done more
damage to
UPEI than anyone on faculty or staff. Yet it would be the professors
who would
be, to say the least, discouraged from criticizing university policies.
One
doesn't need a PhD in political science to be troubled by such
developments.
This was an obvious attempt to infringe on the basic right of freedom
of
speech, something every Canadian should hold dear. No other faculty
collective
agreement in Canada contains such language.
The
president of the Faculty Association, Wayne Peters, told the membership
that
this clause alone was sufficient reason to go on strike – after all, if it were now in effect, I
presume even a tenured
full professor like myself would be liable to dismissal for writing
this very article.
Due
to the publicity generated by those opposing this code, which included
letters
of support from, among others, the Harry Crowe Foundation, the
ad-ministration
dropped its demand for the code. It was clear the faculty would never
accept
such a draconian clause.
A
university is the very last place where one should try to stifle debate
with
gag laws. Where there is no check on
power, those in control
can act in
arbitrary
and
capricious
ways. This is an old tale.
I've
been teaching a course on African politics at UPEI this semester, and
we've
been dealing with the many sad stories of the so-called "big men" who
ruled their countries in totally arbitrary and capricious ways, and
brought
them to the brink of ruin. I guess that's why all this sounds so
drearily
familiar.
Henry Srebrnik is a professor in the Department of Political
Studies
at the University of Prince Edward Island in Charlottetown.
A
shortened version of this article was published as a Letter to the
Editor, National Post, March 15, 2006.