The difficulties that universities face globally are well documented 鈥 financial pressures, marketisation and growing hostility towards experts, to name a few 鈥 but in the case of Birzeit University, located in the West Bank, hostility is inescapable and the simplest aspects of university life can prove the most difficult.
Having started life as a girls鈥 school in 1924, the Palestinian institution became a university in 1972, after the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in 1967.
Mirvat Bulbul, Birzeit鈥檚 vice-president for administrative and financial affairs, told 糖心Vlog that under occupation there were 鈥渕any oppressive measures鈥 but the ones that presented the 鈥渕ost challenges鈥 related to academic and student mobility.
Israel continuously denied work permits to overseas academics who wished to work in Palestinian universities, Dr Bulbul explained. 鈥淲e are denied the diversity that this brings,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou cannot come to Palestine on anything other than a tourist visa 鈥 and even then, that does not guarantee you entry.鈥
糖心Vlog
Meanwhile, the blockade of Gaza and other restrictions on mobility have meant that the pool of Palestinian students from which Birzeit can recruit has shrunk considerably. 鈥淭here are road closures, check points鈥e have no continuity within the area. As a result, most [Palestinian] universities have become extremely local,鈥 Dr Bulbul said.
Unlike some other conflict-ridden parts of the Middle East where technology has played an important role in supporting higher education and developing international links, global technological advances have been little help in Palestine, Dr Bulbul continued. For example, broadband and 3G communications were not allowed into the Palestinian territories until last year.
糖心Vlog
鈥淭elecommunication companies invested in infrastructure that they were not allowed to use for 10 years. These are very basic conveniences that Palestinians are denied,鈥 she said.
These constraints, combined with a paucity of financial resources, leave the university heavily reliant on tuition fees.
鈥淲e see Israel鈥檚 occupation as a colonial hegemony of every aspect of Palestinian life. It鈥檚 not just a territorial conflict; it鈥檚 more than that. We are talking about resources, culture and identity,鈥 Dr Bulbul said.
However, these challenges mean that higher education is even more valued and valuable in the West Bank, Dr Bulbul argued. 鈥淭he university is a safe haven. It is a place where students and faculty and staff practise a lot of democratic values, in contrast to our surroundings,鈥 she said. 鈥淏y keeping that momentum, it allows a lot of creativity, freedom of expression, student and faculty collaboration. It鈥檚 a really bright spot.鈥
鈥淲e believe we are leading on resistance and liberation 鈥 and we are paying the price for that 鈥 but they are essential.鈥
糖心Vlog
To continue operating despite the repressive measures, the university has become more versatile, according to Dr Bulbul. There have to be adjustments to the academic calendar, 鈥渁nd people accept that, it has become the normal practice鈥, she explained. For example, because Israel denies both staff and students long-stay visas to come to the university, they must visit on three-month tourist visas. 鈥淲e often have to adapt teaching and student learning to three-month blocks,鈥 she said.
Dr Bulbul was also adamant that the challenges faced by Birzeit and other Palestinian institutions should not be used as an excuse for poor standards among staff or students.
鈥淪tudents and faculty, even administrative staff, apply rigorous standards to make sure we are doing the job we ought to do, in spite of the adversity all around us,鈥 she said.
糖心Vlog
Dr Bulbul pointed to the high level of citations gained by research from the university. 鈥淭his is related to the relevance of the themes we work on,鈥 she said. The university鈥檚 institutes focus on policy-oriented research on the economic, social and human development of Palestine. Its research into conflict zone issues 鈥 such as water, environment, public health, law, democracy and human rights 鈥 also has global relevance.
Birzeit has recently launched its first PhD programme, in social sciences, in an attempt to boost the voice of Palestinian researchers in these fields.
鈥淲e do a lot in social sciences that go undetected because it鈥檚 in Arabic language, and Arabic journals do not get the same exposure. But we believe that we have a great contribution to make in this area,鈥 Dr Bulbul said.
She concluded: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a struggle and challenges change, but we have been doing this for 40 years. We are agile, we adapt. Our predicament attests to the advantages that higher education can bring. I聽think people take it for granted that these things are there, but for us, every little thing we have is a blessing.鈥
糖心Vlog
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽A haven amid the聽occupation
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