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Radical Islam vs. Academic Freedom: A UW Saga
The University of Washington Daily ^ | May 7, 2002 | Professor Edward Alexander

Posted on 09/18/2002 10:30:49 AM PDT by az4vlad

As featured on IntellectualConservative.com

It appears that according to the "Hate Free Zone Campaign" of Washington, if only the people who worked in the World Trade Center had placed "hate free" signs in their windows they would be alive today. Professor Edward Alexander analyzes the hate from the "Hate Free Zone Campaign" and other militants protesting the UW's hosting of a lecture by Daniel Pipes on Terrorism and Militant Islam.

In late March, about two hours after I had sent the announcement of Daniel Pipes’ forthcoming (April 10) lecture at the University of Washington on “The War on Terrorism and Militant Islam” to its academic sponsors for distribution on their “lists,” I was besieged by e-mail messages from self-identified Muslims. These exhorted me to cancel the lecture or—failing that-to do penance for having organized it or to allow designated Muslims to “answer” it.

The most heated of these fiery blasts of indignation and intimidation came from one Jeff Siddiqui, representing a group called American Muslims of Puget Sound. He wondered whether I knew Pipes’ “area of specialty,” and-without waiting for an answer-proceeded to delineate it: “he is a rabid Muslim/Arab hater” who “has...suggested getting rid of Muslims in America” and who, “if he goes any further he will be in the same company as Hitler when he told Mussolini the the [sic] Jews were like ‘TB baccillii [sic]’ and must be eradicated.”

Although Mr. Siddiqui declared he was “not at all suggesting censorship,” he urged me to “withdraw your sponsorship or at the very least, publish a letter expressing regret over this sponsorship. You can also invite a member of the Muslim Community to speak for about ten minutes after Pipes has had his day bashing us.”

Other letter-writers soon affirmed their support for “Mr. Jeff” or told me that they were “discouraged and ashamed [by] the departmental support this lecture has received” because “Daniel Pipes works for the Israeli Lobby.” One letter denouncing Pipes as a “hate-monger” scandalously “given this type of venue” by the university came from the Associate Director of an organization called Hate Free Zone Campaign of Washington, whose HATE FREE ZONE signs festoon the campus, apparently conveying the message that if only the people who worked in the World Trade Center had placed such signs in their windows they would be alive today.

In response to Siddiqui’s specific requests (copies of which he had sent to all the academic sponsors of Pipes’ lecture as well as to the student paper), and after consultation with both the (non- student) advisors to the Associated Students of the University of Washington and the campus police, who instructed me to forward to them every letter of this sort that I received, I wrote the following: “I hope you won’t be shocked to learn that I can’t comply with your request that I cancel Mr. Pipes’ lecture or that I express public contrition for arranging it or that I allow you or one of your acolytes to preside as grand inquisitor and judge of his remarks. Apparently you are not aware of the age-old conventions regarding public lectures (and free speech) in this part of the country. There is no requirement that a lecture touching on radical Islam must be ‘answered’ by an Islamic radical, any more than a lecturer on fundamentalist Christianity must submit to a harangue at the end of his talk by a Christian fundamentalist....After the lecture, Mr. Pipes will respond to concise questions from audience members, who have the right to ask them not as members of a group but as individuals. (There will be no speeches from the floor, and in the unlikely event that persons in attendance cannot curb their eloquence, they will be ejected and subject to prosecution.)”

My last sentence brought a new batch of letters, especially from those who now fancied themselves victims of discrimination or even prospective martyrs for their cause. One Khadija Anderson, for example, wrote that “I am assuming from the hostile nature of your response [to Siddiqui] that I will be targeted for exclusion (expulsion?) as although I appear obviously of caucasion [sic] descent, I wear a traditional Muslim headscarf.”

Faced with my stony intransigence, Siddiqui then sought out the support of local print and radio journalists, whom he plied with quotations licentiously wrenched out of context to “prove” that Pipes wakes up every morning thinking of new ways to defame Muslims. The publicity, especially in the Seattle Times, had the (presumably) unintended effect of giving huge publicity to the event —the hall accommodated 440 people, and hundreds more could not get in—but also alerting the local authorities (as well as the Department of Justice, which was frequently in touch with me) to the possibility of disruption and violence.

But although the university police took very seriously the danger of disruption and of violation of the lecturer’s First Amendment rights, the university administration had very different priorities. When I asked the Vice-President for university relations, Norman Arkans, for his impressions of the situation on the day of the lecture and also whether he would represent the president of the university at this potentially stormy event, he wrote back as follows: “I have followed things, and it looks to me as if preparations are about as good as they can be. I expect there will be demonstrations, both inside and outside Kane [Hall], and people need to feel comfortable with noise and attempts at noisy disruptions. If it stays at the noise level, it’s tolerable and can be managed. Obviously, we don’t want to have to carry someone out. That gets pretty ugly.” It was left uncertain as to whether this need to “feel comfortable” with verbal violence that prevents a lecturer from speaking would also apply to hecklers of abortion rights advocates or of gay marriage.

What was certain was that the university administration was— whether knowingly or not—at odds with its own police force, which instructed me to warn the audience for Pipes’ lecture loudly and clearly that “anyone who disrupts the lecture will be escorted from the auditorium.” And the warning worked: Pipes delivered his lecture (to tremendous popular acclaim) without disruption (unless one counts the exit during the question period of one or two Thespians shouting “Arafat is my hero”).

Having failed in their efforts to shut down Pipes’ lecture, efforts made even as they kept insisting that they were devout adherents of the principle of free speech, the Muslim radicals tried to conciliate public sympathy by other means.

One Ahmed Amr, an editor of Nilemedia.com, said he was planning to sue the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies for bringing Pipes to the university. “They shouldn’t have let him speak. He’s the Farrakhan of the Jewish Taliban.” The president of the UW Muslim Association, Humza Chaudhry, managed-with considerable effort--to get himself ejected from the building’s lobby when he (alone) refused to follow instructions that the police issued to the overflow crowd to leave the lobby. This gave him the opportunity to allege that he was the victim of “racial profiling,” indeed that he had been “harassed by law enforcement all my adult life because of the way I look.” He also revealed--as evidence of the toll that police brutality was taking on his life—that he had just dropped his chemistry class in order “to analyze the policies of the UWPD.”

At the outset of his lecture, Pipes took note of the various attempts made by Radical Muslims in the Seattle area to prevent him from speaking and thanked his sponsors for persevering in their sponsorship. Militant Islam, he observed, “is not only my subject but it is also my context. The debate over this lecture is a textbook example of militant Islamic methods: an attempt to close down discussion of issues; intimidation; scurrilous attacks; fabrication.” Thus was Pipes, with characteristic elegance of mind, able to to use the very campaign against his lecture as a perfect existential realization of one of its central ideas: namely, that Radical Islam is not merely a dangerous phenomenon but it is here, in our midst.

Edward Alexander is a professor of English at the University of Washington. Reprinted with permission by Edward Alexander.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Free Republic; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: danielpipes; edwardalexander; islam; israel; jewish; muslims; palestinians; university; uw; washington

1 posted on 09/18/2002 10:30:49 AM PDT by az4vlad
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To: az4vlad
Good article. Wish more English professors were like this.
2 posted on 09/18/2002 10:41:10 AM PDT by EternalHope
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To: az4vlad
THanks for a great post.
3 posted on 09/18/2002 10:57:53 AM PDT by TopQuark
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To: az4vlad
Bump!
4 posted on 09/18/2002 11:02:27 AM PDT by Pentagram
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To: az4vlad
It is good to see posts like this one now and again. It shows that not all universities have become marxist/leninist freak shows.

Someday, a while from now, when I retire I think I will go back to school and become some kind of professor - just to annoy the marxists. They can deny me tenure and I won't care!

5 posted on 09/18/2002 11:29:32 AM PDT by dark_lord
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To: az4vlad
Good article ! What a shame there aren't MORE colleges with the courage and convictions to support free speech.
6 posted on 09/18/2002 11:35:55 AM PDT by genefromjersey
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To: az4vlad
Excellent report.

I'm scheduled to attend a dinner meeting Saturday in Seattle where DemonRat congresswimp Jay Inslee has invited local Muslims to come and "share their concerns." My friend from Palestine invited me and says her Jewish friends are attending too. (She's been here 25 years.) Should be a great food fight! I'll report here after the event.
7 posted on 09/18/2002 11:36:03 AM PDT by PoisedWoman
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To: az4vlad
An acedmic with guts and integrity?

This has to be a con! <G>

8 posted on 09/19/2002 3:13:24 PM PDT by JAWs
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To: az4vlad
The militant Islamists hate Pipes because he is exposing them as the vermin they are. In his last book, Militant Islam Reaches America, he clearly explains that Islamism is more of a political idealogy, like marxism and communism wishing to snuff out democracy, than it is a personal religion. Support Pipes - Read his book!
9 posted on 09/21/2002 10:52:21 PM PDT by patriot5186
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To: az4vlad
Also, aren't they violating their own "Hate Free Zone"?
They should more accurately call it "Truth Censorship Zone".
10 posted on 09/21/2002 10:53:50 PM PDT by patriot5186
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To: az4vlad; patriot5186
This seems to be more typical of American "academics":

AN OPEN LETTER FROM THE ACADEMIC COMMUNITY OPPOSING A U.S. INVASION OF IRAQ
This Open Letter was originally written by faculty members at the University of Minnesota. It subsequently spread to other universities, and was placed on the web by faculty at MIT.


Sign Petition View Signatures Search Signatures Contact Congress Related Sites





We the undersigned members of the academic community are opposed to an invasion of Iraq by the United States. The decision to start a war is perhaps the most significant decision the leaders of a democracy can make. It requires ordering fellow citizens to kill and be killed in the name of the entire nation, in our names and in yours. For this decision to be just and legitimate, the reasons offered for war must be principled and arrived at through public debate. To date, the justifications offered by President Bush, Vice President Cheney, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, National Security Advisor Rice, their subordinates, or an array of commentators in the media do not justify a U.S. invasion of Iraq.

We oppose a U.S. invasion of Iraq for these reasons:

Invasion to replace the Hussein regime is not in the best interests of the United States, the region, or the world. An invasion of Iraq and destruction of the Hussein regime may lead to prolonged instability in Iraq; destabilization of the wider Middle East including the possibility of a prolonged and heightened conflict between Israel and the Palestinians; increased popular appeal of radical Islamic movements and increased anti-Americanism worldwide; and increased terrorism in the U.S. and abroad. Invading Iraq therefore will probably make both the region and the world less secure, not more secure.

Key U.S. allies do not support an invasion of Iraq. Many governments allied with the U.S. are urging restraint, demanding more evidence of an Iraqi threat, or opposing a U.S. invasion of Iraq. Governmental and popular support in Great Britain, the most stalwart U.S. ally, is weak at best. Any military action against Iraq should have the moral force of international consensus behind it.

The U.S. Government is not unified in support of invasion. Some senior elected officials, including members of President Bush's own Republican Party such as Rep. Dick Armey (TX) and Sen. Chuck Hagel (NE), do not support a U.S. invasion of Iraq. Secretary of State Colin Powell, a retired four star General with 35 years of military service who was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War, is known to oppose a U.S. invasion without broad international support. Major media outlets have been reporting for several months on widespread opposition to an invasion of Iraq among senior officers in the Pentagon, including several or all of the Chiefs of Staff. The decision to go to war should have the clear support of the U.S. Congress, the Secretary of State, and the commanding officers of the armed forces.

The Iraqi threat is not credible. The opposition to an invasion among senior U.S. government and military leaders as well as most U.S. allies in the Middle East suggests that the Iraqi threat is not credible. The Bush Administration has presented no credible evidence of Iraqi progress toward making nuclear weapons. If they have such evidence, they should have presented it by now in the face of mounting international and domestic opposition to an invasion of Iraq.

An invasion of Iraq would be illegal under the Charter of the United Nations, to which the U.S. is a signatory. According to the Charter, only the Security Council has legal authority to start wars, with the single exception of national self-defense against armed attack. If the U.S. is indeed a land of laws, then our government should adhere to the basic principles of the Charter, which are intended to govern the relationships between nations for the collective security of all people.

For these reasons, we oppose a U.S. invasion of Iraq and urge others to do so also. Although we recognize the Hussein regime is reprehensible, the war being planned will not decrease and MAY increase the suffering of the Iraqi people for many years to come. The likelihood of a high cost in lives of both combatants and non-combatants is too great given the weak justifications that have been offered for an invasion and the limited considerations for post-war Iraq. If pursued, war should be the last resort, undertaken collectively by a U.N. sponsored international coalition only after renewal of weapons inspections and diplomacy have utterly failed to bring Iraq into compliance with all Security Council Resolutions.

As educators and scholars we hope our message sparks informed discussion on and off campus that reaches to Washington D.C. Furthermore, we intend this statement to provide support for those who are also opposed to an imminent U.S. invasion of Iraq on moral, ethical, and humanitarian grounds originating from any political or religious view point.


Sign the Open Letter.

Since Sept 24 2002, 18368 (9488 faculty) people have signed this Open Letter.
http://www.noiraqattack.org/
11 posted on 10/07/2002 1:00:58 PM PDT by mountaineer
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