Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa has been a staunch critic of Israel's treatment of the Palestinian people. He was recently banned from leading a fact-finding mission in Gaza to investigate human rights violations.
Originally uploaded by Pan-African News Wire Photo File
By Hans Pienaar
Archbishop emeritus Desmond Tutu has been barred from addressing students at an American university after local Jewish community leaders condemned him as an anti-Semite and anti-Israel.
Tutu was due to speak before a gathering of a peace and justice group at St Thomas University in St Paul, Minnesota. But after campus authorities heard of the coup in getting Nobel Prize winner Tutu, the organisers were told that his visit would be "out of the question".
In addition, the head of the university's justice and peace studies programme, Cris Toffolo, has been demoted as departmental head after alerting Tutu to opposition to his visit and warning him that he might face a smear campaign.
Tutu was judged to have made offensive remarks during a previous appearance in the US, when he spoke out against Israel's crackdown on and treatment of Palestinians in 2002.
Doug Hennes, St Thomas's vice-president for university and government relations, was quoted by the Minnesota press as saying: "We had heard some things he said that some people judged to be anti-Semitic and against Israeli policy.
"We're not saying he's anti-Semitic, but he has compared the state of Israel to Hitler, and our feeling was that making moral equivalencies like that are hurtful to some members of the Jewish community."
The muzzling has enraged peace activists, especially Jewish campaigners against Israeli policies. They believe the action was taken because Tutu was seen as a threat by pro-Israel lobbyists, as being able to turn US Christians against Israel.
This article was originally published on page 3 of The Star on October 05, 2007
Published on the Web by IOL on 2007-10-05 14:32:00
Desmond Tutu barred from speaking at a Minnesota University
A peace and justice group at St. Thomas University in St. Paul, Minnesota has been forced by the university president to cancel an appearance by Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
The cancellation was accompanied by the removal of the chair of the Justice and Peace Studies program, Prof. Cris Toffolo from her position as chair. She has tenure, but no longer heads the department.
The university president, Father Dennis Dease, decided against Tutu's appearance after consulting one representative from the local Jewish Community Relations Council and several rabbis affiliated with the university. This, apparently, amounted to a Jewish "consensus" in Father Dease's mind.
The rumor of Tutu's alleged "anti-Semitism" is based entirely on a propaganda campaign waged by the extremist group, the Zionist Organization of America. Though he is outspoken in his criticism of Israel's occupation regime, sometimes even bellicose, Tutu has never displayed anything other than deep concern for all peoples and his sympathy for Palestinians suffering under the yoke of occupation.
Please write to Father Dease and urge that he reverse this tragic course. Tell him you want to see Prof. Toffolo reinstated as chair of the Justice and Peace Studies program and that the words and views of Bishop Tutu are important ones for the students at St. Thomas University to hear.
Tutu: Anatomy of a smear, the appalling double-standards of the thought police
Posted by Cecilie Surasky
All roads lead to Minnesota today. First, we wrote recently about the country’s first Muslim Congressman, Minnesota’s Keith Ellison, who got publicly whacked at the knees by the ADL’s Abe Foxman for comparing 9/11 to the burning of the Reichstag, Bush to Hitler. (In a despicable move, after hours of negotiations with Ellison, the ADL still released a press release excoriating him. The ADL apparently owns the trademark to “Hitler” and even “Reichstag”)
Now in Salon, best-selling author Glenn Greenwald documents in detail the appalling frequency of right-wing attacks on liberal groups, using, yes, words like Holocaust, Nazi, Gestapo and Hitler. The juicy part? The almost daily barrage of Nazi language is coming from many Fox News personalities.
And who appears frequently at ADL events and got the highest award possible from the Simon Wiesenthal Center? Fox News owner, Rupert Murdoch. (Meanwhile Ted Turner of CNN got an Abe Foxman letter for comparing Murdoch to Hitler.) Gee, think there’s anything political here?
Now - the disgusting anatomy of a smear against Tutu, who, as we reported, was banned from Minnesota’s U. of St Thomas because of criticism of Israeli human rights violations.
My colleague Mitchell Plitnick has written about this and the reprehensible charges of anti-Semitism in his blog, The Third Way.
(As I was finishing this, I also got an email alert on an article of the same name by Richard Silverstein at Tikun Olam, about the same story. Let’s hope others pick this up and we can put an end to this disgusting lie about Archbishop Tutu. Digg these articles, Stumble them, Reddit- whatever you can.)
First: the lie, the Zionist Organization of America, and its circulation in the right-wing echo chamber
In defending the decision to bar Tutu from speaking, Doug Hennes of St Thomas said:
“But he’s compared the state of Israel to Hitler and our feeling was that making moral equivalencies like that are hurtful to some members of the Jewish community.”
The Jewish Telegraphic Agency (a source we think is usually quite good) reported (though, after calls, later qualified the statement. We’re hoping they eliminate it altogether.):
“Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.”
Charles Jacobs, the head of the David Project wrote in an op-ed recently that Tutu said:
“Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.”
David Horowitz of Frontpage magazine wrote that Tutu said:
“Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.”
The Executive Committee of the National Christian Leadership Conference for Israel said in an official statement that Tutu said:
“Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.”
And so on….
The source of the lie?
In 2002, the extremist right-wing group the Zionist Organization of America issued a press release in which they claimed that the respected Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that Tutu said, you got it, “Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.” But look at the original Haaretz article here, or the actual transcript document complete with applause lines that the Star Tribune posted here. Tutu said nothing like it. Ever. He was talking about a litany of bad things that ended. Like apartheid, occupation will end, was his real message.
But as my colleague Mitchell Plitnick pointed out in his piece, the ZOA press release has headers in quotes in front of every bulleted list of Tutu quotes. By putting the header that ZOA made up in quotes next to the actual quotes, with just a tiny colon separating them, the ZOA’s words became Tutu’s. Read Mitchell’s piece for more about “radical zealot,” the head of ZOA, and how this was done.
What Tutu actually said
From the typed transcript of Tutu’s speech, he begins with this:
I would actually have preferred that the title … the title here is ‘Occupation is Oppression.’ Now, I would like for us to have changed that and said – give peace a chance – for peace is possible. You see, we are bearers of hope for God’s children in the Holy Land. For God’s people the Israeli Jews, and God’s people the Palestinian Arabs. We want to say to them: our hearts go out to all who have suffered as a result of the violence of suicide bombers and the violence of military incursions and reprisals and express our deepest sympathies to all who have been injured and bereaved in the horrendous events of recent times. We want to say to all involved in the events of these past days – peace is possible. Israeli Jew, Palestinian Arab can live amicably side by side in a secure peace. And, as Cannon Ateek kept underscoring, a secure peace built on justice and equity. These two peoples are God’s chosen and beloved, looking in their face back to a common ancestor Abraham and confessing belief in the one creator God of salaam and shalom.
I give thanks for all that I have received as a Christian from the teachings of God’s people the Jews. When we were opposing the vicious system of apartheid, which claimed that what invested people with worth was a biological irrelevance – skin color – we turned to the Jewish Torah, which asserted that what gave people their infinite worth was the fact that they were created in the image of God. Thus, on this score, Apartheid was unbiblical, evil without remainder and therefore, unchristian. And when our people groaned by virtue of the burden of racist oppression, we invoked the God who addressed Moses in the burning bush, we told our people that our God had heard their cry, had seen their anguish, and knew their suffering, and would come down, this great God of exodus, this liberator God as in the past to deliver us as God had delivered Israel from bondage. We told them that God was notoriously biased in favor of those without clout; the poor, the weak, the hungry, the voiceless, as God had shown when God intervened through the Prophet Nathan against King David on behalf of Uriah, Bathsheba’s husband.
the he says this
I believe that Israel has a right to secure borders, internationally recognized, in a land assured of territorial integrity and with acknowledged sovereignty as an independent country. That the Arab nations made a bad mistake in refusing to recognize the existence of sovereign Israel and in pledging to work for her destruction. It was a short sighted policy that led to Israel’s nervousness, her high state of alert and military preparedness to guarantee her continued existence. This was understandable. What was no so understandable, what was not justifiable was what Israel did to another people to guarantee her existence. I have been very deeply distressed in all my visits to the Holy Land, how so much of what was taking place there reminded me so much of what used to happen to us Blacks in Apartheid South Africa. I have seen the humiliation of the Palestinians at the road blocks and recall what used to happen to us in our motherland, when arrogant, young white police officers would hector, and bully us, and demean us when we ran the gauntlet of their unpredictable whims – whether they would let you through or not. When they seemed to derive so much fun out of our sullen humiliation. I have seen such scenes, or heard of them, being played out in the Holy Land. The rough and discourteous demands for IDs from the Palestinians were so uncannily reminiscent of the infamous pass law raids of the vicious Apartheid regime. We saw on those visits, or read about things that did not happen even in Apartheid South Africa. The demolition of homes because of a suspicion that one or other family member was a terrorist. And so, all paid a price in these acts of collective punishment. Seemingly being repeated more recently in the attacks on Arab refugee camps. We don’t know the exact truth because the Israelis won’t let the media in. What are they hiding? But perhaps, more seriously, why is their no outcry in this country at the censorship of their media. For you see, what now is going to happen is that you will frequently be being shown the harrowing images of what suicide bombers have done, which is something we all condemn unequivocally. But you see, you don’t see what those tanks are doing to the homes of just ordinary people.
and finally
People are scared in this country to say wrong is wrong. (applause) Because the Jewish lobby is powerful – very powerful. Ha, Ha, Ha ha! So what? So what! This is God’s world! For goodness sake this is God’s world! The Apartheid government was very powerful, but we said to them: Watch it! If you flout the laws of this universe, you’re going to bite the dust! (applause) Hitler was powerful. Mussolini was powerful. Stalin was powerful. Idi Amin was powerful. Pinochet was powerful. The Apartheid government were powerful. Milosevic was powerful. But, this is God’s world. A lie, injustice, oppression, those will never prevail in the world of this God. That is what we told our people. And we used to say: those ones, they have already lost, they are, they are going to bite the dust one day. We may not be around. An unjust Israeli government, however, powerful will fall in the world of this kind of God. Because we don’t want for that to happen but those who are powerful have to remember the litmus test that God gives to the powerful – what is your treatment of the poor, the hungry? What is your treatment of the vulnerable, the voiceless? And on the basis of that, God passes God’s judgment.
We should put out a clarion call. Let’s, let’s make a clarion call to the government of the people of Israel. A clarion call to the Palestinian people and say peace is possible! Peace based on justice is possible! And we are meeting today, and we will continue going on, calling for this, for your own sakes Israeli Jews, for your own sakes Palestinian Arabs. Peace is possible and we will do all we can to assist you in achieving this peace which is within your grasp, because it is God’s dream that you will be able to live amicably together as sisters and brothers, side by side because you belong in God’s family. Peace! Peace! Peace!
(applause – standing ovation)
What’s so sad about this story is that barring Archbishop Tutu from the University of St. Thomas only confirms the awful suspicion of many that “the Jews” won’t let the truth be told. The three Jews they asked about Tutu had every right to express their opinions. But it was the university, in the end, that decided to bar Tutu. If this was the way that administrators in a Catholic university wanted to demonstrate that they are allies to Jews, an admirable goal to be sure, as Mitchell Plitnick points out, they couldn’t have picked a worse way to show it.
These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
No comments:
Post a Comment