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Posts Tagged ‘tariq-ramadan’

Justice Department: Ramadan’s a ‘Security Threat’ But We Won’t Tell You Why

Saturday, April 15th, 2006
tariq ramadanTariq Ramadan (photo: Laurent Gillieron/European Pressphoto Agency)

Tariq Ramadan’s endless, Kafkaesque danse macabre with the Justice Department continued yesterday in a case brought by the ACLU on his behalf protesting the denial of a U.S. visa on grounds that he is a national security threat. I should correct that…the government has refused to say why they denied him entry, but implied that it was because he was a threat.

The NY Times reports that at the hearing the government said:

…That Mr. Ramadan’s case had been and remained a national security matter, and that statements he made in recent interviews with American consular officials in Switzerland had raised new “serious questions” about whether he should be allowed to come to the United States.

What were those statements and why did they raise such questions? Ah, we’re the Justice Department and under the new Alice in Wonderland rules embraced by the Bush Administration things mean precisely what we want them to mean. And we’re under no obligation to say anything at all if we don’t want to–even if a man’s freedom to travel and lecture in the U.S. about his field of expertise is denied.

But Ramadan has given us some idea of what Justice is so hot and bothered about. Hold onto your galoshes everyone, the Bern interviewers questioned him about the Iraq war and you know what they found? That Ramadan’s agin’ it:

In a recent interview, Mr. Ramadan said he had spoken openly [to the consular officials] about his opposition to the American occupation of Iraq.

Whoa, big news. Radical news! Stop the presses! If you prevented every foreigner who opposed the war from entering the country you wouldn’t have ANY such visitors here. How can they justify this idiocy??!

ACLU Sues to Allow Tariq Ramadan to Address U.S. Writer’s Conference

Thursday, March 16th, 2006

The NY Times reports that the ACLU is suing to enable Tariq Ramadan to enter the U.S. in order to participate in academic conferences here:

The ACLU asked a federal court in New York for a preliminary order to stop the administration from banning a prominent Swiss Muslim scholar from speaking in the United States. The scholar, Tariq Ramadan, has been barred from this country since his visa was revoked in July 2004, a week before he was scheduled to begin a job at the University of Notre Dame. Administration officials explained the action by citing a USA Patriot Act ban of foreigners who “espouse terrorist activity.”

The ACLU site says this about the injunction motion:

The ACLU asked a federal court to prevent the Departments of State and Homeland Security from barring a prominent Swiss scholar from entering the country to speak to American audiences.

In legal papers filed today, the ACLU said the government wrongfully used a section of the Patriot Act known as the “ideological exclusion” provision to deny a nonimmigrant visa to Tariq Ramadan, a Swiss citizen who now teaches at the University of Oxford. As a result, Ramadan will be unable to speak at events organized by the ACLU’s clients, the American Academy of Religion, the American Association of University Professors and PEN American Center.

“The government does not have the authority to exclude foreign scholars at the border simply because it disagrees with their political views,” said ACLU staff attorney Jameel Jaffer, who is lead counsel in this case. “To invest the government with that authority would be to invest it with sweeping power to manipulate and censor debate inside the United States:…

The groups say that there is no evidence – and the government has never pointed to any – that Ramadan approves of terrorism. In fact, they say, Ramadan has repeatedly condemned terrorism…

The ACLU said Ramadan is not being excluded because of any alleged support of terrorism, but because he is a vocal critic of American policy in the Middle East…

The ACLU is asking the court to issue a preliminary ruling to allow Ramadan to attend PEN American Center’s “World Voices” Festival in New York, from April 25 to 30.

PEN Center World Voices festival

Read here the full text of the motion and Ramadan’s affidavit supporting it.

I hope that the federal judge handling this case sees the merit of the ACLU’s position and allows Ramadan to speak to U.S. audiences. I certainly don’t believe that they will be subjected to pro-terror propaganda in the process. And can we get the Department of Homeland Security out of the political nanny business? Aren’t we adult enough to hear a broad range of ideas and decide which ones are credible ourselves without our government, like the nanny it can sometimes be, covering our ears so we don’t hear the ‘naughty bits?’

‘The Closing of the American Mind:’ Denying Visas to Foreign Intellectuals

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

I’d like to turn Allan Bloom’s neoconservative rant against multi-culturalism, The Closing of the American Mind, on its head in this post about the Bush Administration’s war on foreign intellectuals who wish to teach or speak at American universities.

Many of us know about Tariq Ramadan’s horror story in being denied a visa to teach at Notre Dame University. He and the ACLU are suing the Department of Homeland Security over that one. But recent news stories note that DHS and the State Department are waging a worldwide campaign to rid this country’s campuses of foreign intellectuals who may expose our tender young minds to ideas too dangerous for them to absorb. Not to mention those foreign scientists who may be coming here to “steal” our secrets in order to foment terror against us (see below).

The Chronicle of Higher Education (paid subscription required or read it here) reports that an indigenous Bolivian professor has been denied a visa to teach at the University of Nebraska:

Waskar AriWaskar Ari, Aymaran professor refused U.S. visa (photo: Aymaranet.org)

Waskar T. Ari, a member of Bolivia’s largest indigenous group, earned a Ph.D. in history from Georgetown University in 2005 and was hired by Nebraska as an assistant professor of history and ethnic studies. His job was to have begun last August.

Barbara S. Weinstein, a history professor at the University of Maryland at College Park, called the situation “very disturbing.” Ms. Weinstein is president-elect of the American Historical Association, which has spoken out in behalf of Mr. Ari.

The government’s reason for not issuing the visa, she speculated, seems related to his ethnicity. “He has certainly never been a member of any movement that would be of a security concern to the U.S. government,” she said.

Mr. Ari, a member of the Aymara people of Bolivia, is a scholar of the religious beliefs and political activism among indigenous Bolivians. He has served as a consultant on social and economic issues facing the Aymara with the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, and other organizations.

The circumstances under which the U.S. denied his visa are murky at best:

Last June, shortly after it hired Mr. Ari, the University of Nebraska paid $1,000 for an expedited application to the U.S. immigration service to have him declared eligible to apply for a visa for a professional job in the United States. Today, eight months later, the service’s Web site shows the application as “pending.”

The university says it has not received any explanation from the immigration service, which is part of the Department of Homeland Security.

But it appears that the government has classified Mr. Ari as a threat to American security. Mr. Ari had been living in the Washington area when he was hired by Nebraska, and returned home to Bolivia for what he expected would be a short stay to settle his affairs and pick up a new visa. But when he visited the U.S. Consulate last summer in the Bolivian capital, La Paz, U.S. officials took his passport and stamped “canceled” over his student visa, which was about to expire anyway.

Asked about the situation, a spokeswoman at the State Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs checked Mr. Ari’s file and said the cancellation of his old visa was done under a terrorism-related section of U.S. legislation on the granting of visas. “We have derogatory information that renders him ineligible,” she said, but declined to add any further information.

This incident illustrates perfectly the distortion introduced into U.S. intellectual life by 9/11 and the terror obsession that prevailed. Terror trumps all–it trumps thought, ideas, knowledge. Even worse, raising the terror specter renders any dissent useless. And the government doesn’t even have to provide a reason for turning foreign academics away. Is this democracy? Is this freedom? Is this what this nation really stands for? What are we afraid of? That an Aymara professor will introduce the “poisonous” ideas of Evo Morales to young college students and bring the spirit of the ‘coca revolution’ here?

I’m embarrassed to say that an Aymara Indian has more faith in my country than I do:

Mr. Ari is one of very few members of the Aymara to have attained a Ph.D.

…Mr. Ari said that he considers the United States like his second “fatherland,” adding that “many indigenous people think I’m too pro-American.”

“It must be some big mistake,” he said of his situation, adding, “I believe in justice. The truth will win out.”

I only hope it is so. But given the closeted minds of this Administration I’m afraid he may be waiting for justice a long time. I hope the ACLU is listening and will take this case on as well as Ramadan’s.

Goverdhan MehtaGoverdhan Mehta, chemist as terrorist? (photo: Orgchem.iisc.ernet.in)

And for the final academic visa outrage of the day, we have the Washington Post to thank. It reported that An Indian academic chemist, Goverdhan Mehta, who is the president of the International Council for Science, was denied a visa by the U.S. consulate in Madras because officials viewed his research as somehow tied to chemical warfare:

The consulate told Mehta “you have been denied a visa” and invited him to submit additional information, according to an official at the National Academy of Sciences who saw a copy of the document. Mehta said in a written account obtained by The Washington Post…hat he was humiliated, accused of “hiding things” and being dishonest, and told that his work is dangerous because of its potential applications in chemical warfare.

Mehta denied that his work has anything to do with weapons…

The scientist told Indian newspapers that his dealing with the U.S. consulate was “the most degrading experience of my life.”

…Mehta’s case has especially angered Indians because he was a director of the Indian Institute of Science and is a science adviser to India’s prime minister. He has visited the United States “dozens of times,” he said, and the University of Florida in Gainesville had invited him to lecture at an international conference.

In his written account, the scientist said that after traveling 200 miles, waiting three hours with his wife for an interview and being accused of deception, he was outraged when his accounts of his research were questioned and he was told he needed to fill out a detailed questionnaire.

“I indicated that I have no desire to subject myself to any further humiliation and asked that our passports be returned forthwith,” he wrote. The consular official, Mehta added, “stamped the passports to indicate visa refusal and returned them.”

What makes this outrage all the more embarrassing for Bush is that he’s scheduled to visit India in a few days. This will, I’m sure sit well with his Indian hosts. How do you plan to visit one of the world’s most important nations and yet manage to insult some of its most well-connected and distinguished scientists? It boggles the mind. But we should keep in mind that if they do this to the cream of the intellectual crop imagine what they do to the average Indian. This all sends a terrific message to Indians about our openness to them and their ideas. What a way to make friends and influence people.

The State Department spokesperson Adam Ereli’s statement of regret is amusing:

“We try to treat everybody fairly. We certainly think we did so in this case, frankly. And we look forward to him having a good trip to the United States. Because the United States wants to be open and welcoming to all those who wish to come here and we’ve made every effort in this case to be open, to be welcoming and to deal with Professor Mehta in a respectful and cordial way.”

When you consider this statement by the ‘victim:’

Mehta said that he had already canceled his travel plans and declined a visiting professorship at the University of Florida in Gainesville. He said the issuance of a visa will not change his decision.

The NY Times version of the story further notes:

Dr. Mehta said he had visited the United States about 20 times but would never again apply for an American visa.

Perhaps Adam Ereli should’ve sung instead “we’ll be missing you in all the old familar places.”

The NY Times notes that two other distinguished Indian academics have also been denied visas from the same U.S. consulate:

…Placid Rodriguez, said he was called by the consulate on Feb. 16. A nuclear metallurgist who helped develop India’s fast-breeder reactor in the 1990′s, he had sought a visa in November to speak at a minerals and metals conference starting March 12 in San Antonio. He said he was told [on Feb. 16] it would take about eight weeks to review his answers to a new questionnaire.

…Dr. Rodriguez said that when he was told that, he saw no point in completing the questionnaire because he would have missed the conference. Besides, he wondered aloud, why hadn’t consular officials asked for the questionnaire in November?

The final case, reported Thursday by an English-language daily, The Indian Express, involved a biologist, P. C. Kesavan, who said he had been told his visa application would be delayed. A scientist affiliated with the M. S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, Dr. Kesavan told the newspaper he had been asked for his “entire biographical sketch” by the consulate in Chennai. The paper quoted him as calling it a “most demeaning and humiliating experience.”

ACLU Sues on Behalf of Ramadan to Strike Down Patriot Act Statute

Thursday, January 26th, 2006
Tariq RamadanA Muslim who Homeland Security says is “mad, bad, and dangerous to know.” (photo: Graham Morrison)

Noted European Islamic scholar, Tariq Ramadan, has been persona non grata in this country since 2004, when the Department of Homeland Security cancelled a visa it had issued allowing him to teach at Notre Dame. DHS never gave any specific reason for the cancellation other than this vague explanation reported by the NY Times:

Speaking to reporters in August 2004, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security, Russ Knocke, cited the Patriot Act clause as the reason that Mr. Ramadan’s visa was canceled. The clause, adopted when the act was passed in 2001 and amended last May, bars foreigners who “endorse or espouse terrorist activity or persuade others” to support terrorism.

No evidence was ever evinced that Ramadan actually does support terror (and none could be produced because he doesn’t–contrary to the prattling of anti-Muslim ideologues like Daniel Pipes). Ramadan revealed that DHS agents have interviewed him at his Swiss home about his views of the Iraq War:

Interviewed in December in Bern, Switzerland, by agents of the Homeland Security and State Departments, Mr. Ramadan said he was mainly questioned about his views of the war in Iraq.

“I told them what I have said many times publicly, that I think the war was a mistake and illegal,” he said. “Even the United Nations has said that. I think the resistance is legitimate but the means they are using are not.”

And in case any anti-Muslim zealots wish to misconstrue this quotation…it means he’s opposed to the use of terror and violence against the U.S. occupation but he is in favor of other forms of resistance to it. That’s a position that is far too nuanced for this Administration and the Arab haters to understand. To them, any Arab who opposes the war, especially articulate ones like Ramadan, are enemies or potential enemies.

The same DHS spokesperson quoted above from 2004 made a new statement to the Times about possible reasons for Ramadan’s banishment:

Mr. Knocke of the Department of Homeland Security also declined comment on the suit or Mr. Ramadan’s status. But he noted that the criteria for revoking visas included “public safety and national security risks,” among others.

“We have a strong commitment and clear responsibility to restore integrity to our immigration system, which includes preventing people who might present risks from entering the country,” Mr. Knocke said.

The idea that Tariq Ramadan is a “public safety” or “national security risk” is absolutely laughable. He doesn’t belong to Hamas. He doesn’t advocate on behalf of Al Qaeda or militant Islam and he doesn’t support their version of jihad. He’s a professor who teaches religion for God’s sake. Let the guy give his lectures, teach his students and publish a few Opinion pieces while he’s here. Maybe we can learn something from him about Islam. Maybe we can learn not to be as suspicious and even hateful toward its tenets.

I am delighted to read that the ACLU has filed a federal suit to strike down the provision of the Patriot Act used against Ramadan:

The American Civil Liberties Union and the New York Civil Liberties Union today filed a lawsuit challenging a provision of the Patriot Act…being used to deny visas to foreign scholars whose political views the government disfavors. The lawsuit charges that the “ideological exclusion” provision is being used to prevent United States citizens and residents from hearing speech that is protected by the First Amendment.

“Barring people from the country because of their ideas skews and impoverishes political debate inside the United States,” said ACLU staff attorney Jameel Jaffer. “The government should not be using the immigration laws as instruments of censorship.”

Good on ya, ACLU. I hope that sometime in the not too distant future, I will have the opportunity to hear Professor Ramadan lecture here in Seattle.

Ramadan Haters and Other Anti-Semites

Sunday, January 30th, 2005

I wrestle constantly with how to respond to the various haters who post comments here. The majority of them find my embrace of Israeli-Palestinian peace based on principles of a two state solution detestable, especially as I am Jewish. But I’ve also received hate comments from a Lieutenant in the armed forces who thought that my opposition to the Iraq war “aided and abetted Al Qaeda.” Recently, I had a ‘delightful’ correspondence with James King–what was his problem? My posts about the politics of the tsunami and relief efforts in which I was highly sympathetic to victims and highly unsympathetic to governments like those of Indonesia and the U.S. King is so twisted with hate that he believes the victims (all of which he maintains are Muslim) ‘got what they deserved.’ Too bad the tsunami didn’t get them all, etc. You get the picture.

Sometimes I argue with these folk in the comment threads. Sometimes I ignore them. But what I’ve decided to do here as a test case is to put the words of the most egregious haters right up front in my blog–in a post of their own. Hate doesn’t much like the light of day. Bigots love to taunt and harass others via the internet in the anonymity of their own homes (or dens or warrens or wherever people like this live). But they don’t much like to reveal the extent of their racism to the general public. So I say if they’ve got balls enough to spew this filth, then I’m going to let the world see them for what they are.

Today, a new hater has creeped out of the cesspool. Mel Birnstein took umbrage with my sympathetic (but critical) posts about Tariq Ramadan in which I explored his views of Israel and anti-Semitism and also covered the bizarre case in which his visa to teach at Notre Dame University was revoked by DHS at the last minute and with next to no reason provided. Mel reminds me that I’m a total idiot if I think I understand Ramadan’s true philosophy since I don’t speak French and have never lived in France (as good old Mel has done). And make no mistake, Ramadan (for anti-Semite Mel) is like all those perfidious, but clever figures who speak well publicly, but conceal a detestable hidden agenda that they only reveal to their closest adherents. Apparently, no one has the right to comment on Tariq Ramadan unless you speak French and live there. Well, there goes much of the world’s arts and cultural criticism.

Here are some of his more memorable lines:

Ramadan is part of the arcane ways of anti-semitism, which in it’s contemporary form is that the eternal “Jewish Secret Control of the World” is now Israel controlling the United States.

Ramadan’s [is] clearly on the side of the terrorists. And your comments put you clearly on the side of the apologists for the terrorists.

You are truly an idiot and a Jewish anti-semite!

I know the difference between a Muslim and an Islamic fascist … Do you?

I know people out in those French suburbs who would still slice that Jew throat of yours open in spite of your kind thoughts on Islam

“Islamism” in the French context basically means, Islamic fascism … You know, Sharia law, lapidation … Hatred of Jews …

Obviously, as far as France and Islam goes, you’re just talking plain, uninformed, ignorant shit … Really, Richard, people like you are pathetic …

Don’t ever want to get caught out there with some real “Islamists” … They won’t buy your liberal hogwash … You [sic] just another kike …

You know, I’m certainly afraid of any Muslims who might wish me ill, but haters from within my own people worry me no less. The bullet can come from anywhere even from within–witness Yitzchak Rabin and Emil Grunzweig’s assassinations (at the hands of fellow Israelis).

The word anti-Semite is very interesting because it not only alludes to Jew hatred, but also to hatred of the other Semitic people–the Arabs. So Mel is a Jew who is an anti-Semite! Also interesting that he calls me a Jewish anti-Semite because to his mind I hate my own people. Anyone who reads this blog knows of my commitment and devotion to my people. What people like Mel really hate is someone from within their own tribe who disagrees with their views. Dissent is impermissible in Mel’s rather stunted version of Judaism. We all walk in lock step or not at all. I am so proud that I belong to a religion which categorically rejects Mel’s certitude, arrogance and hate. Judaism encourages a thousand flowers to bloom. Though not every flower is as worthy as another, the search for the true Jewish path is the most important part of the journey. People like Mel hate that. How did we ever get to be members of the same religion?