Ahmadinejad's US Visit Was a Missed Opportunity for Us
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, president of Iran, part of President George Bush's "Evil Empire" came to town last week. The question is who knows and who cares and who knows enough to care anything rational about it anyway? Good questions.
According to the latest Pew Research Center Survey on Religion and Public Life, 58 percent of the more than 3,000 respondents said they knew little or nothing about Islamic practices, but 70 percent of non Muslims said they did know that Islam was very different from their own religious beliefs. (Los Angeles Times, Wed., Sept 26, 2007) At the same time, the numbers of U.S. citizens whose attitudes toward Muslims are unfavorable are rising. What's even more disconcerting is that few Americans even know a Muslim personally. Those who do, the survey found, were more likely to be positive about Islam than those who did not.
The problem is clear: If feelings between the two groups harden -- one fearing violence, the other fearing prejudice -- the mercury of animosity on both sides rises, too. And with it the potential for civic polarization and, eventually, global warfare.
Clearly, then, we each have a personal stake in peace, a responsibility to see that our governments are not permitted to choose our enemies for us. Clearly, prejudice is the foundation of war, the ground upon which warring governments stand for support, the strategy of national threat that governments use to seduce a people away from peace. And we have all heard it used. It is "the weapon of mass destruction" that was, according to President Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair, only "12 minutes away from our shores."
We know the strategy works. We've been there. And thousands are now paying the price of the subterfuge.
But all the while we talk about "freedom of speech." It is the banner under which we stand, the Americanism of which we are most proud.
For years, U.S. diplomats stayed in touch with Soviet officials during years of the worst threat the world had ever known. In the crosshairs of one another's nuclear weapons daily, a red phone sat on a desk in the Kremlin and in the Oval Office in the United States to make sure that no lower-level accident, miscalculation, over-reaction, prejudice, fear began the end of the world.
In our own time, we were told that a nation ravaged for a decade by sanctions was poised to destroy the West in one fell swoop. And we believed it despite the educated skepticism of most of the rest of the world. Now we are being told that another country, one other man, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad himself, has the power -- has the intention -- to destroy us, as well. Like cats sniffing around cheese in a trap, we are being prepared, some think, for another invasion. This time Iran.
At the center of the issue, surely, lies both understanding and freedom of speech. Understanding, survey participants say, we lack. Free speech we say we have. But one depends on the other. In which case, forget Iran's weaknesses, we may just have failed our own principles badly.
In Iran's present government structure, according to the Iran Chamber Society, a decision -- every decision -- is legal and effective only after the approval of the Supreme Leader, a cleric. In this case, that is Ayatollah Ali Khameini. Even national elections are lawful only when the Supreme Leader signs his approval.
The Supreme Leader also controls the armed forces and all intelligence and security operations. Only the Supreme Leader can declare either war or peace. He appoints the entire judiciary, the radio and TV networks and the Council of Guardians.
The President of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has a high public profile but is subordinate to the Supreme Leader in all things. According to the Iran Chamber Society, "Iran is the only state in which the executive branch does not control the armed forces." Point: If we have someone to fear in Iran, Ahmadinejad is not the one. No matter how bizarre, unpredictable, erratic or threatening he may seem to the Western mind, he can't push any buttons, send any troops, or build any bombs. We have made him out to be a great deal more than he is.
That may be the first thing we ought to understand.
Then, maybe we ought to look at our own past history and present use of "freedom of speech." This is a country that greeted Nikita Khrushchev in 1960 with a 21-gun salute at Andrews Air Force Base in Washington, drove him and President Eisenhower by presidential cavalcade 13 miles through Washington to his residence, treated him to conversations with a host of the highest officials in the country, toured him through Manhattan, San Francisco and Los Angeles and ended his stay with a visit to Camp David. This is the country that met its counterparts with courtesy and, after almost 30 years, finally talked and listened its way, one Soviet leader at a time, to the end of the Cold War.
That was freedom of speech. For us and for them.
In this era, our administration will not talk to those they call our enemies. A president of one of our most illustrious universities, President Lee Bollinger of Columbia, introduces Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a foreign dignitary, on camera with a rant of insulting diatribes, and the city police refuse to allow him, a foreign figurehead -- someone, it is said, who has less power than the Prince of Wales -- to visit Ground Zero with a wreath.
You have to wonder what we might have learned by allowing him to present himself without our labeling him first. You have to think about whether or not he might really have been trying to reach out a bit and what happened when we refused the handshake. You have to contemplate what might have happened if we had taken the opportunity to talk with him decently. What if we could both have come to see the human in one another? And more than all of that, what if we had been true to ourselves?
You have to question what we really mean by "freedom of speech." And for whom?
There was one bright spot in the debacle, however. One group of U.S. citizens trusted that the process of freedom of speech was still worth risking. In a chapel across the street from the United Nations, in a meeting conducted without advance publicity, a panel of Christian leaders from the U.S. and Canada -- a Quaker, a Catholic, an Anglican, a Baptist and a representative from the World Council of Churches -- before an audience of 140 other religious leaders held a two hour question and answer period with President Ahmadinejad that was low-key, respectful, and honest. No topics were ruled out. No questions were denied. No insults were traded. (The New York Times, Goodstein, "Ahmadinejad Meets Clerics," September 27, 2007 )*
Did it do anything? In the realm of immediate political postures, probably not. But it did signal to both sides that it was possible to step back from the brink -- if you really believe in freedom of speech. And it may have signaled to the world that there is such a thing as "being Christian."
From where I stand, the moment was a call to both spiritual and political maturity. We missed on one. Thanks to the courage of a few, we may have managed to salvage the other.
A Benedictine Sister of Erie, Joan Chittister is a best-selling author and well-known international lecturer on topics of justice, peace, human rights, women's issues, and contemporary spirituality in the Church and in society. She presently serves as the co-chair of the Global Peace Initiative of Women, a partner organization of the United Nations, facilitating a worldwide network of women peace builders, especially in the Middle East. Sister Joan's most recent books include The Way We Were (Orbis) and Called to Question (Sheed & Ward), a First Place CPA 2005 award winner. She is founder and executive director of Benetvision, a resource for contemporary spirituality.
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25 Comments so far
Show Allthe university president was probably handed the script..the face of the angry rude american...is the face bush wants the rest of the world to see....because he does not want the world to have any sympathy for america...hence his odd behavior after 9/11 and the rush to sqaunder any sympathy the world held for us............
Bollinger may have indulged in his diatribe to please funders or AIPAC or who knows. For whatever reason, common courtesy required that he greet a guest with politeness. Instead, his behavior abets very nicely the Bush/Cheney/Lieberman demonization campaign now in process. We are seeing the Iraq invasion all over again, but even the US Senate still listens to people like Lieberman and signs his poison Sense of the Senate resolutions that Bush will use as his "justification" to bomb Iran.
(Note: Some Dems voted for the resolution because the two most offense provisions had been deleted, the two recommending military action. Not deleted, however, was the designation of the Kud force of Iran's armed forces as a terrorist group. That makes Iran a "state sponsor of terror," you see, and George believes himself authorized to follow and destroy terror wherever he finds it.)
saila....exactly..it revealed the 'beast'(as to be lacking in social graces)an oppinion much of the world believes about americans,anyway.we made mr.iran look rather graceful in the face of such agressive rudeness.and you echoed all the reasons..why..i was curious and wanted to hear what he had to say about the holocaust..the more input,the bigger the picture...
I agree Jan, it is refreshing to have a interactive site where half the posts aren't all off topic juvenile attacks on each other. I think one reason is (and I do not include myself in this) these people are really smart. I think I just went off topic.
"Of course, they'll mute me now".
This person is trying to get muted so that he can abuse people for it...a provocateur. Someone probably sent it here.
"I think perhaps you should remove your head. It is firmly lodged up your ignorant and illogical ass."
This is a deliberate attempt to inflame people with abusive language. Someone sent it here to disrupt our "nice" discussions.
"Put that in your pipe and smoke it."
Wow! It really has a problem.
And then the it says we're all "Nazis"! Well I'm no Nazi because firstly I am not a "Nationalist", which is more than I can say for those here who seem to claim that Israel and the US are special.
Nor am I a Fascist or any kind of authoritarian in practice or in theory, nor a militarist. But the abusive one here sounds like the SA storm troopers that were sent to break up someone elses meeting.
I am not against any Jews as such but I am really against Israel taking Palestinian land and continually increasing Israeli land through their illegal settlements and then claiming that Israel has the moral high ground even after they killed five times more Palestinians than Palestinians killed the Israelis.
However I am FOR DIALOGUE WITH THE IRANIAN REGIME and TOTALLY AGAINST ANY MILITARY ATTACKS AGAINST IRAN, EVEN COVERT OR "PIN PRICK".
TO INVADE OTHER NATIONS IS TRULY NAZI BEHAVIOUR.
"Sieg heil US/Israel"
(PS Commondreams has been remarkably free of name calling. Let's try to keep it that way despite it's attempt to suck us in)
.
Aafka,
"Just as a side note, I wonder how many rights Iranian citizens have. The right to remain alive in the street if you are not wearing your burka? The right to remain alive in the street if you are gay? I bet it has a whole lot of freedom of speech for it's own citizens."
By your principle that the US doesn't have to extend freedom of speech to foreigners, the Iranian government could make the same claim to limit rights on the basis of sovereignty.
The reason the Declaration is called UNIVERSAL is to assure that claims of sovereignty are not permitted to trump fundamental rights. The issue to raise with Ahmadinejad was exactly this -- the failure to comply with the Universal Declaration. But that has to be applied evenly, and would apply to the US as well.
God you freepers and foxshits give me a horselaugh.
Aafke,
"Not quite, Dichterfreund. The US is a sovereign nation. It doesn't need the UN to tell it what it's laws are while people are on US soil.
Nice, try."
The US is not only a signatory to the Universal Declaration, it's one of the founders of the UN.
Nice try fascist shit.
Dmia: "If people - especially uneducated people - hear it enough, they will eventually begin to believe it."
Well done, you are the proof of your statement. Then quit listening so much to Faux News.
Jonno & Aafke Janssen & dima
Be careful. Your posts reveal your identity.
Whitewatersally said: " still I was curious to know how he arrived at the conclusion that there was no holocaust…"
Unfortunately being curious is insufficient if not followed by research. The fact is he's never said that. He said he wants to conduct a research to see how and why it happened, probably with a view to forestall similar future incident happening to any group of people. Obviously, there are some people who think holocaust is hyped, and it didn't really happen that way. These were the same people who jumped on Ahmadinejad and called him a denier, and stopped him. Do these people know something we don't? Were they scared that the truth may come out?
Mr Bullying-Jerk's treatment of his guest did not detract Ahmadinejad's dignity, but revealed the bestiality of his host.
janssen...you miss the point completely..this isnt about the bill of rights...its about common etiquette..they INVITED him to speak.
First of all - the Julius Cesar quote is fictitious - a google search will bear this out.
Second of all -
The truthseeker link does make the point that there are SERIOUS questions about the Holocaust - for example - "The most documented event in modern history" apparntly doesn't have any german documents proving there actually was an intentional genocide -called the holocaust - sort of ironic no? There are others as well - but as far as I see it - and I am American - so guess what I CAN have freedom of speech : Here goes -
Agreed it was a terrible event and a few million people died - how s this different from the American Indians, African Americans, Armenians etc? I mean really -there is an article regarding American Exceptionalsim on this site and perhaps there should be one on Jewish/Israeli Exceptionalism.
Finally, name calling is the refuge of scoundrels and twits - so I won't name names - it is OBVIOUS who they are!! be that as it may - the point is that refusing to keep civility when resorting to reductionism (eg. well they are not THAT free in their country, they are all terrorists, they are all evil, such and such source is a rag) - shows that you have been poorly equipped by your own laziness in a battle of wits much less adult discussion.
It is becoming increasingly obvious where and from whom sources of pollution emanate from and for what agenda. Please respect the individuals on this site and stop resorting to name calling as first line of defense.
"Beware the leader who bangs the drum of war,
In order to whip the citizenry into a patriotic fervor,
for patriotism is indeed a double edged sword.
It both emboldens the blood, just as it narrows the mind.
And when the drums of war have reached a fever pitch
And the blood boils with hate
And the mind has closed, the leader will have no need of seizing
the rights of the citizenry.
Rather, the citizenry, infused with fear and blinded by patriotism,
will offer up all of their rights unto the leader, and gladly so.
How do I know?
For this is what I have done.
And I am Caesar."
Julius Caesar
Aafke keep yer dark glasses on, there is a Santa Claus it must be so.and faeries in the bottom of the garden, Even I question the great book the Bible.Oh yes I'm a believer of anything I'm told by any authority.I'm pleased you recognize that Americans as well are the chosen people no one has any rights except the good ole USA and whatever yer told you better believe or we will have a rendition.Oh i forgot to bow down and kiss my massa's boots there, I promise massa I will not ever try and question what you say ever again, please don't Iraq me massa Sir(goes off singing "I'm a believer"
He also has no control over the Iranian military.
i was embarrassed ,no wonder the world thinks americans are rude and vulgar !i think the iranian president is more than a little nutty,still i was curious to know how he arrived at the conclusion that there was no holocaust,amid a mountain of evidence and i was angry about missing the opportunity.the university president represented faithfully,all that is WRONG with americans..
"Freedom of speech is a right in America FOR AMERICANS. Ahmadinejad has no right to speak here. Let's understand that first of all."
Yeah, the only people deserving of freedom of speech and other civil rights are Americans, because we're special.
"Freedom of speech is a right in America FOR AMERICANS. Ahmadinejad has no right to speak here. Let's understand that first of all."
Freedom of speech is a universal human right guaranteed in the UN's Declaration.
"Article 19.
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."
http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html
It isn't a monopoly or privilege that applies only to american citizens on american soil.
winners write history is why a lot is factually incorrect, no matter, so when Bushco gets together with other heads in the West, thats a think tank,no denial there at all.thats why we have all these wonderful lobby groups etc. Denial the way to either or find the truths or bury them deeper.Like this person I to have questions regarding the Holocaust but which one are we able to research all but the Nazi one,access denied to all revelant info except the official lines http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?ID=7260
ho hum *yawn*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahmoud_Ahmadinejad_and_Israel must be all wrong Oh well so much for freedom of speech I'll go back to watching Nascar and Idol *yawns*
I wonder how a speech by Bush at Columbia would be received? at Ferdowsi University in Teheran?
As we witnessed with the CASE BEING FIXED to attack Iraq, the same M.O is now underway, so US media, still under thrall to the military industrial complex and/or those industries that profit from marketing war (as product) in the "right season," must demonize this leader as part of the already preconceived campaign to wage war on yet another sovereign land that had nothing to do with 911, nor has it anything to do with the failures of US leadership to guide this nation's intellectual and fiscal (what's left of it) treasure towards renewable energy systems. Instead, the oil men hasten the collapse of the dollar, the oil-based world economy, reason and justice in their gambit to "rule" the world. It's a tragedy of many acts in excruciatingly slow motion...
Speaking of uneducated people......
Right I see it all clearer now.........Bu$hitt does not spew hate and propaganda....what a load of crap....you deny some other race the right to speak....get you're head outta your own butt....narrow minded people like you are a stain on the USA... and read what he really said about Israel.......get yer facts correct before going off on some line of Faux news crap The Nazi era is here.......Blackwater coming to a town near you soon...Wake up sheep
Freedom of speech is a right in America FOR AMERICANS. Ahmadinejad has no right to speak here. Let's understand that first of all.
The fact that he did speak here is fine, except that we have already heard the lies and hate that comes from his mouth, so as far as I'm concerned there is no reason to listen to him spew the same filth over and over again. In the Nazi era they called that propaganda. If people - especially uneducated people - hear it enough, they will eventually begin to believe it.
Before the posts start coming in that he is "misunderstood" and "mistranslated", go do a little internet research and read what he has said about Israel as quoted by his own Iranian news service. I presume that the Iranian news service would take the time and care to quote President Ahmadinejad correctly.
I do agree that since Ahmadinejad was invited to speak at Columbia by Columbia, that Bollinger would have not conducted himself as he did. I suspect Bollinger decided at the last minute to do a little back pedaling in order to try to protect Columbia's government funding.
I have nothing against the Iranian people. The problem is that Ahmadinejad is as much of a whack job as Bush. They deserve each other.
Nice article Joan but it ask questions that have already been answered. "Freedom of speech", at least at the GW/DC level is NOT tolerated amongst the cabinet members or the so called "MSM". Dismissal and character assassination are swift to follow upon the heads of those who try to speak the truth and not the party line. Mr Bush has allowed this war in Iraq to become a religious war to cover his real reason for war-the unspoken word in the Administration-oil. He fosters hate, but of course this is true of all wars since is hard to convince people to support killing people that have not been dehumanized. This is part of the reason the U.S. public looks the other way as thousands of Iraqis are killed, humiliated and made homeless.
So Mr. Ahmadinejad was allowed to be here only to be insulted and used as a propaganda pawn for the Administration, they never had any intent to be diplomatic as it would not serve their purpose.