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Activist and scholar Cornel West joins protesters against police violence in Manhattan on April 14, 2015 in New York City. Image Credit: AFP

Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel was a Jewish theologian and civil rights activist close to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Cornel West, the philosopher and African American history scholar who often speaks out on public issues, describes himself as an admirer of Heschel.

But some Jewish organizations and pro-Israel figures say they don’t want West to deliver a keynote address at an upcoming UCLA conference celebrating Heschel’s life and commitment to social justice.

They want West uninvited to the May 3-4 meeting because of West’s sharp criticism of Israel’s policies toward the Palestinians and his support for universities to divest holdings from companies that do business with the Israeli military. West has called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a war criminal for the civilian deaths in the Gaza conflict last year.

UCLA officials, however, say they are sticking with West, who is a professor emeritus at Princeton, teaches at the Union Theological Seminary in New York and co-hosts the public radio show “Smiley & West.” To drop him would violate free speech, according to administrators at the UCLA Alan D. Leve Centre for Jewish Studies, which is sponsoring the Heschel meeting, “Moral Grandeur and Spiritual Audacity.”

West could not be reached for comment Friday. He is scheduled to deliver a speech at the UCLA faculty Centreon May 3 and participate in a panel discussion that includes Heschel’s daughter Susannah, who is a Dartmouth College professor of Jewish Studies.

Todd Presner, director of UCLA’s Jewish Studies Centre, could not be reached for comment Friday but he told the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles this week that he will not revoke the invitation.

“We may have pressure to rescind the invitation but that’s not the plan,” Presner said. “We didn’t ask him to come to UCLA to espouse a particular political position or platform -- we asked him to talk about Heschel and the relationship to the civil rights movement.” He also noted that the conference has 25 other speakers.

UCLA history department chairman David N. Myers, who is on the roster of conference speakers and is a former director of the Jewish studies centre, said in an email to The Times on Friday that “a university should not be in the business of censoring the views of those with whom we disagree.”

He added: “The university is an open marketplace of ideas. Sometimes, we encounter views that are discomfiting. We debate rather than boycott them.”

Heschel was born in Poland and escaped the Nazis, arriving in America in 1940. His emphasis on social justice and spirituality made him one of the most beloved modern Jewish philosophers and his teaching at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York influenced many future rabbis. He was a prominent supporter of civil rights for African Americans and joined King in the protest march in Selma. He died in 1972 at age 65.

The debate over West comes two months after another incident at UCLA upset some Jewish activists.