Lincoln University professor makes incendiary remarks about Jews, women, gays

In this Jan. 17, 1996, file photo, Kaukab Siddique, center, raises his fist and shouts his support for Muslim cleric Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, outside the U.S. Courthouse in New York. Siddique, a tenured professor at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, who previously questioned the Holocaust and called for Israel's destruction, is under fire again for incendiary remarks about Jews, women and gays. Lincoln University condemned Siddique's remarks but said it does not plan to take action against him. (AP Photo/Paul Hurschmann, File)
In this Jan. 17, 1996, file photo, Kaukab Siddique, center, raises his fist and shouts his support for Muslim cleric Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, outside the U.S. Courthouse in New York.  (AP Photo/Paul Hurschmann, File)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A tenured university professor in Pennsylvania who previously questioned the Holocaust and called for Israel’s destruction is under fire again for incendiary remarks about Jews, women and gays.
Kaukab Siddique, an English professor at Lincoln University outside Philadelphia, asked on Facebook this month whether Bill Cosby’s accusers took so long to come forward because “many women are sluts.”
Another recent post on Facebook attributed the Supreme Court’s decision to legalize same-sex marriage on “Obama’s homo uprising,” while a third post referred to “dirty Jewish Zionist White Supremacist thugs.”
Lincoln University condemned Siddique’s remarks but said it does not plan to take action against him.
“His latest activities, like his earlier writings, statements and activities, are an insult to women and other groups singled out,” the university said in a statement. “Like all faculty members, he is entitled to express his personal views in conversation or in public forums, as long as he does not present such opinions as the views of the university.”
In 2010, the 72-year-old publicly questioned the Holocaust and called for Israel’s destruction. That led the chairman of the Pennsylvania Board of Education to raise concern about whether Siddique was fit to teach and whether school resources had been used to spread anti-Semitism on campus.
Siddique did not immediately return an email from The Associated Press on Thursday.
His comments are “deeply offensive and outrageous” and “reflect bigoted stereotypes,” Nancy Baron-Baer, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League, said in a statement Thursday.
Lincoln is a historically Black university in Oxford, about 45 miles southwest of Philadelphia. It receives partial funding from the state.
 
 

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