Stifling
criticism
of
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downloaded 10/10/2007
The
Rev. Dennis
Dease, president of the
If the
cancellation of Tutu had
been an anomaly, the story would likely have quietly faded away.
Instead, it is
earning widespread news coverage and international condemnation because
it fits
into a broader pattern in which people critical of Israeli human-rights
violations are either censored or self-censor because they fear being
attacked
for their views.
Dease seems to
have been
motivated by a genuine desire to avoid hurting
For those of us
who have seen the
occupation up close, it is a searing experience filled with the
humiliating
treatment of Palestinians at checkpoints, home demolitions with little
warning,
the arbitrary destruction of family farms and much worse. Tutu, who
toured the
occupied Palestinian territories, has not held back in his condemnation
of
these abuses, and his remarks have sometimes been harsh.
But Tutu's
credentials as a
staunch defender of human rights are unimpeachable. He is one of our
age's
great heroes, and most Jews, whether they agree with everything he says
or not,
believe he has every right to be heard.
The controversy
stems from a
speech Tutu delivered in 2002. An extreme right-wing group, the Zionist
Organization of America, issued a report that made it appear he had
compared
Sadly, the
misinformation about
Tutu's statements has become much more prominent than the man's actual
words.
That said,
Dease's decision does
the Jewish community a great disservice on several counts. First, by
giving the
impression that Jews do not value a free and open debate on Israeli
policies
and mobilized to squelch Tutu -- which they did not -- he has fomented
greater
anti-Semitism.
Second, just as
friends don't let
friends drive drunk, true friends of
By barring Tutu,
Dease has opened
the door for even more people to believe that to criticize
Too many
self-appointed
representatives of the Jewish community act as thought police to
anyone, Jewish
or not, who dares to question U.S.-Israeli policy. The last thing we
need is
for non-Jews who sincerely want to be our allies to take up the same
torch of
censorship and silencing.
After all, while
some of Tutu's
harsher words may make us uncomfortable, millions of Jews around the
world find
the facts of the occupation, and what it's doing to both Palestinians
and
Israelis, infinitely more offensive.
Mitchell Plitnick is director of
policy and Cecilie Surasky is director of
communications for Jewish Voice for Peace, a peace group with chapters
across
the country.
We have just learned that the
president of the University of St. Thomas acknowledged he made the
wrong
decision and invited Archbishop Tutu to campus!
Your letters worked! Thanks to you, we generated over 2,700 letters of protest. Please support our work. Jewish Voice for Peace info@jewishvoiceforpeace.org