JULY 2000, pages 3, 73-75
Letters To The Editor
Articles Demand a Rebuttal
The two articles by M.M. Ali in your April 2000 issue are so biased
against India and slanted in favor of Pakistan that they ask for
a rebuttal. According to Mr. Ali India is run by Hindu fanatics,
while Pakistan is a champion of human rights, especially in Kashmir.
Consider the two countries objectively. India has had numerous
peaceful transfers of power since independence whereas Pakistan
has had none. All it has had is rule by corrupt oligarchies punctuated
by military coups. Yet Pakistan claims it wants a plebiscite in
Kashmir which is more than the Pakistanis have ever had. It is to
be remembered that Jammu is Hindu and Ladakh is Buddhist. What is
there in Pakistan's history that would encourage one to believe
that these disparate groups would be tolerated?
If you watched the recent trip by President Clinton to the subcontinent
you must have been struck by the stark contrast between his visits
to the two countries. Clinton was mobbed by enthusiastic crowds
in India, while in Pakistan he had to use a decoy through empty
streets preceded by seven decoy limousines. This in a country Mr.
Ali claims is a long-time ally of the United States.
Is Pakistan the model of a society that the Kashmiris should aspire
to?
With regard to the case of the Babri Masjid that Hindu extremists
demolished, Mr. Ali would do well to recall the actions of Aurangzeb,
the last Mughal emperor, who systematically destroyed Hindu temples
and drove Buddhism out of India. Memories of such events die hard,
as one can see in Palestine and Serbia.
I would ask the editors of WRMEA a simple question. If
they were forced to choose between living in India and living in
Pakistan, which would they pick?
Thein Wah, Ph.D., San Antonio, TX
First, Pakistan has had several free elections. Regarding the
question to us, it would depend solely upon which country would
allow us the freedom to publish a totally honest magazine like this
one. Let's hope we won't ever have to find out. As for the Kashmiris,
we think the question is, "If you have a choice between living in
a state in India or in an independent Kashmir, which would you pick?"
The fact that up to 600,000 Indian troops and paramilitaries are
required to "keep order" in Kashmir, an occupied country of only
16 million people, makes the answer pretty clear. Continuance of
the illegal Indian occupation of Kashmir, in our opinion, provides
the greatest current danger of nuclear war in the world. The sooner
the people of Kashmir are allowed the self-determination promised
them more than half a century ago by the United Nations Security
Council (including the U.S.) the safer we all will be.
Beautiful Timerman Tribute
I've just finished reading Richard Curtiss's tribute to Jacobo
Timerman and had to drop everything to tell you how moved I was
and to thank you. I've always admired Timerman and knew he was a
critic of Israel's invasion of Lebanon, but your quotes from the
book, and from your interview with him, revealed how eloquently
he stated the case and how deeply he felt. Also the price he had
to pay. I now admire him more than ever. The articles you and Andrew
Killgore write about people you've known are one of my favorite
features of the magazine, but this was one of the very best. Beautiful
in fact!
Rachelle Marshall, Stanford, CA
Thank You for Book Review
I greatly appreciated your executive editor's review of my book,
A Continent Called Palestine. It is one of the best I have
read, because it pointed to the fact that there will be no more
Christians in Palestine due to the Israeli policy of oppression
and the aggressive violent assault of the Israeli religious right
on Palestinian life and property. I am very grateful to you and
I look forward to hearing if there were reactions to your review.
With my very best wishes.
Najwa Farah, Thornhill, Ontario, Canada
Unfortunately some of the reactions were defensive ones from
Christian ministers who obviously feel deeply conflicted about not
doing more to defend their vanishing Palestinian co-religionists.
Because we used the review to criticize the incredible passivity
among some Christian ministers in the face of horrendous injustice
in Palestine, we discovered that some find it easier to attack the
messenger than the Israeli oppressors.
Three Christian Candle Lighters
You have long urged your subscribers to action in support of their
beliefs. Here's a report on three Christians who believe "they made
a difference."
Donovan Johnson of Bloomington sent me and Dominique Najjar, a
Roman Catholic Palestinian-American born in Jerusalem, a photocopy
from the Roman Catholic diocesan weekly, The Catholic Spirit,
portraying an ugly Arab figure labeled OPEC, together with a letter
from a local Zionist questioning Palestinians' right to their name:
"A Roman name, only two thousand years old."
All three of us wrote to Archbishop Harry Flynn and I wrote to
my parish priest as well. I received almost immediately a sympathetic
note from my pastor. Both Donovan and I got similar letters from
the archbishop, and Dominique was phoned directly by the archbishop,
with whom he had a very empathetic 15-minute conversational exchange.
Is there a better example of how to "light a candle?"
C. Patrick Quinlan, Edina, MN
Caught in Between
Salaam and Grace in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ and blessed
greetings from Jerusalem.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for including
my book, Caught in Between, in the listing of books mentioned
in your magazine. It is encouraging to know that the Palestinian
struggle and the pains of my people are voiced through your very
fine publication.
I look forward to having the opportunity of meeting you, perhaps
one day in Jerusalem. Until then, know that this comes with my prayers
and continued good wishes.
Rt. Rev. Riah Abu El-Assal, The Episcopal Church in Jerusalem &
the Middle East, Jerusalem
To next year, or at least next decade, in Jerusalem, when Palestinian
Christians and all others can again travel there freely.
Skeptical on Farrakhan
I read with interest your article on Nation of Islam leader Louis
Farrakhan's acceptance of Sunni Islam. I hope this indicates a new
tolerance on Farrakhan's part for other races and religions as well.
However, when you say he has been unjustly "demonized" by the media
and imply that he is, in reality, a moral and socially responsible
individual you go too far. He has made statements far worse than
just criticizing Israel's well-documented human rights violations
and actions of its American Jewish supporters. While I am well aware
of the Nation of Islam's good work fighting crime and drugs in our
inner cities, it does not excuse his numerous anti-Semitic slurs
and his depiction of white people as a "subhuman species." These
remarks have been amply documented by our liberal mainstream media.
These are not the words of a tolerant, moral and socially responsible
individual. These are the words of a bigot. I am sure that the Washington
Report understands that bigots come from all races and all religions.
When Farrakhan apologizes for his numerous slurs, then I will believe
that he has become a more tolerant, moral and socially responsible
individual.
Larry Chilton, Cupertino, CA
We've made a point of asking people who know him personally
whether Louis Farrakhan's adoption of Sunni Islam, which forbids
racial discrimination, is genuine or not. The answers have ranged
from an unqualified yes to an unqualified no, with the shadings
providing the most interesting information. We're inclined to believe
he's sincere, but is having trouble bringing along some of the supporters
closest to him. Stay tuned.
My Reading Habits
I mainly read the Washington Report for two reasons: one,
to keep up with the issues. Two, to use the facts in my discussions
with mainstream Americans. I find any emphasis on religion to be
offensive. Too many religious topics and ads give the impression
that religious people with money have bought your magazine--thus,
a loss of credibility.
George Khoury, Huntington, MI
Unfortunately, it is mostly the Muslim and Eastern Christian
church groups who seem to have the moral fortitude to advertise
in a magazine that supports human rights. We know there are secular
people with businesses who have advertising funds, but many seem
to be afraid of the dozen hate-mail letters they get from Zionist
nutcases after each advertisement, and ignore the fact that hundreds
of our readers go out of their way to buy the products advertised
in our magazine. The long-distance phone companies that take inside
covers in each issue report great results, and in fact would be
crazy not to advertise in the Washington Report, since so
many of our readers are looking for cut-rate overseas telephone
rates.
Confusion About Addresses
I appreciate the pre-printed postcards that you include with each
issue of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs and
use them regularly. But there still seems to be some confusion about
the address on the cards. Please note that the zip code for the
U.S. House of Representatives is 20515. For the U.S. Senate: 20510.
Paul Thomas, Chicago, IL
Thanks for staying alert. The cards are printed separately from
the magazine, usually in a great hurry, and it's been one ##*&^
thing after another. But they certainly get results in terms of
responses since they are used by our readers for their own representatives
and senators, who do pay attention to what their own
constituents think.
Published Or Not?
I can never stop being grateful for your tremendous efforts to
present, against the powers of some misguided, organized Jewish
groups, the true facts about the Middle East and the sadly wrong
policies of our Congress and our administration. I hope that, in
the end, truth and justice will prevail.
I'm enclosing a copy of a short letter I sent to The Washington
Post last month. Since I am not a subscriber to that paper and
I read it about once every week, I cannot aver that it was not published
but I'll bet that it was not. I'm also enclosing a modest contribution
to the Washington Report.
René Espinosa, Sr., Falls Church, VA
No, as far as we can tell your letter was not published in The
Washington Post, but now it's in the queue for our "Other People's
Mail." We also appreciate your support, not only over the years
but also over the globe as our subscriptions have followed you to
Latin America and back again. Nor do we consider joining the tenors
in our Choir of Angels before the year's half over a "modest contribution."
Depressing and Too Long
Your magazine is depressing and too long, but I don't blame you
for that. It is just a fact. I use pieces of your articles in my
letters to editors and politicians. My top interests are the Arab
states, Kashmir, and Islam in the U.S.
Samira Soliman, Austin, TX
Compulsive Copier
I am a "compulsive copier" of articles that I know contain information
that the typical affluent and self-satisfied "coffee-klatcher' needs
to know, whether he thinks he is adequately informed or not. (And
he is usually not , no matter how many national publications
he subscribes to.) I can hear you saying, "He's telling us!"
I believe that "Other People's Mail" and "Letters to the Editor"
are both very effective conduits to the ill-informed when they can
be persuaded to read them.
A long time ago (too long) I had an urge to inquire whether George
Thompson, about whom you recently wrote an obituary, was from the
Louis Thompson family that I knew as a child in central Texas, whose
birthplace was Kansas City. If, by chance, your late associate was
the George Thompson I knew in childhood, I'd be sorry indeed that
I did not check it out because I lost contact with the Louis Thompson
family decades ago. Any personal leads for a follow-up?
Tell us more about the idiocies of Falwell and Robertson et al.
(Fellow Lubbockite Grace Halsell be praised!) I know two of Grace's
classmates very well and both hold her in high regard.
Anonymous, Lubbock, TX
We, too, hold Grace Halsell in the highest regard and are constantly
impressed at the steady stream of tributes to her personal courage,
writing skills and idealistic, selfless life that we receive. We
have never mentioned before that although she is very active, she
is suffering serious health problems. So if readers have messages
to convey, now would be a good time, c/o this magazine.
As for the late George Thompson, another writer and speaker of
phenomenal speed and professionalism, his roots were in New York.
Any letters to our dear friend and his widow, Dolly, and his surviving
son, Jordan (his son Glenn has died), can be passed on through Washington
Report executive editor Richard Curtiss, George Thompson's friend
and USIA colleague for many years.
Efforts Count
The Washington Report is an excellent magazine. Keep up
the good work. I am a U.S. citizen and a native of Guyana, South
America. My principal use for the magazine is to stay informed about
meetings and seminars, useful books and how to make my efforts count.
I will send my donation later. Thank you.
Azam Sakur, Queens, NY
Zionist Capture of U.S. Media
Tell us more about the history (1945-2000) of the Zionist capture
of the U.S. media. In 1948 I was 10, living in New Mexico. In September
the front page of our local paper carried a picture of an enormous
crowd greeting Harry S Truman's campaign train. There were four-
and five-story buildings in the background. The AP said this was
Albuquerque, but I had been there. The tallest height on the Albuquerque
skyline was a water tower. The AP was lying. I became interested
in wire service lying. For the next 50 years I found a flood of
lies, spreading over the entire media, as Israel's supporters gained
control of newspapers, radio, television and Congress. This is a
free country? No criticism of the Zionist conspiracy ever appears.
I know because I have written dozens of unpublished letters.
Scott Nicholson, Bradenton, FL
A young guy like you may not remember, as we do, a story handed
down in the John F. Kennedy family and published by Gore Vidal,
a cousin of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis. It happened aboard that
1948 Truman campaign train, after Truman had twisted arms in November
1947 to get the U.N. to partition Palestine (unfairly with 53 percent
going to the Jewish one-third of the population and 47 percent going
to the Muslim and Christian Palestinian two-thirds of the population),
and Truman's insistence in May 1948 on recognizing Israel before
it defined its borders over the strong objections of his secretary
of state, Gen. George C. Marshall. According to Gore Vidal, a couple
of mysterious gentlemen came aboard the train, spoke with Truman
and then got off, leaving behind a suitcase containing $2 million
in cash. Thus the tradition began of presidential candidates backing
Israel, right or wrong, not only to get the money, but to keep their
opponents from getting it. And suitcases full of greenbacks are
so easy to deal with compared to legal donations that involve all
that cumbersome paperwork with the Federal Election Commission.
It seems that you can buy a candidate and his country pretty cheaply
if you know the mainstream media aren't going to blow a whistle
on you.
Gift Subscriptions
I'm a reader who tries to read the Report from cover-to-cover
as soon as it arrives. I am enclosing payment for subscriptions
for Sen. Jim Bunning (R-KY) and Rep. Ernest L. Fletcher (R-KY).
Never mind gift books for me. I do not need any more.
Anonymous, KY
Okay. But we'll send copies of our book, Stealth PACs,
to the two congressmembers.
You're Almost Unique
As an Izmir-born son of U.S. citizens who were teaching abroad,
I find that you provide an almost unique service of news analysis
on the Mideast, notably Israel-Palestinian affairs, human rights
and justice. Please keep up the singularly useful work you do.
Howard A. Reed, West Palm Beach, FL
Vulnerable U.S. Democracy
Reading your highly informative magazine for the past eight years
has brought me to conclude that the unwillingness of the American
administration to deal impartially with the Arab-Israeli debacle
proves how dangerously vulnerable American democracy has become
to the exertions of a politically as well as intellectually powerful
Zionist minority. I am sure many people will arrive at the same
conclusion as I did if they keep on reading your magazine and seriously
analyze its contents.
Dorothy Bartman, Chicago, IL
We, too, are sure of this and that certainty (plus support from
our friends) is what keeps us going.
FLAME, CAMERA Queries
As in previous issues of the WRMEA, your readers are expressing
shock and anger over two of the most hard-line Zionist organizations,
FLAME (Facts and Logic About the Middle East) and CAMERA (Committee
for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America).
In the summer of 1993, I wrote an in-depth article in the WRMEA
about CAMERA, and mentioned that I had tried to investigate FLAME.
At that time a friend took it upon himself to query the Internal
Revenue Service about the flagrant misuse of the educational not-for-profit
status for propaganda purposes. The IRS replied that since these
organizations had been incorporated under state laws, enforcement
was the responsibility of state tax authorities.
So far as could be learned at the time, neither FLAME nor CAMERA
had ever filed annual reports with any state tax authorities disclosing
their financing. This may still be true today.
For years, FLAME advertised exclusively in right-wing or pro-Zionist
publications such as Commentary, Harpers and the Atlantic
Monthly. Then, a few years ago, its coffers apparently swelled,
and it began running ads in the left-wing Nation, to the
horror of many subscribers. What those readers didn't know is that
at the same time the hard-line propaganda appeared, the Nation
began accepting commercial ads from the same source. A few reader
protests about FLAME'S bigotry made it into the publication, but
the Nation condemned them as a form of censorship. I wrote
at least two of those protests, which the Nation refused
to publish, inquiring about the possible connection between the
appearance of commercial advertising with the FLAME ads.
That commercial advertising, as my research in 1993 had disclosed,
derived from the mail-order company Haverhills of San Francisco.
In fact, the same man, Fernando Joffe, who in May 2000 wrote the
letter you published inviting WRMEA to publish FLAME's bigoted
lies, heads both FLAME and Haverhills.
His letter in WRMEA boasts that his ads currently appear
"in scores of other publications" besides U.S. News and World
Reports, raising the question of where FLAME gets the funding
to promote its proud bigotry? I believe the funding may come, directly
or indirectly, from Israel. One of the letters sent to me years
ago about FLAME's funding was written by Binyamin Netanyahu, then
the Israeli ambassador to the U.S.!
Mitchell Kaidy, Rochester, NY
(Editor's Note: Mitch Kaidy's initial article entitled "CAMERA
and FLAME: Pressuring U.S. Media" appeared in the July/Aug. 1993
Washington Report. His second article, "CAMERA Targets New
York Times to Expose Anti-Israel 'Bias,'"appeared in the Jan./Feb.
1997 issue. In answer to our query, he says he has no proof of any
direct or indirect funding to FLAME from a foreign government, nor
does the Washington Report.)
Moskowitz's Rip-Off of Hawaiian Gardens
I was going through some old newspapers and found a letter to
the editor of the Long Beach Press-Telegram (Hawaiian Gardens,
CA is next door) from Feb. 2000 concerning the costs to local taxpayers
of Dr. Irving Moskowitz's casino and the existence of a more favorable
draft of the development agreement (i.e., $2.75 million subsidy
on the purchase of the land and now $4.8 million for relocation
of the prior businesses). As you know, Moskowitz sends the money
from his casino to Israeli extremists.
Anyway, the Haim Dov Beliak Coalition, which is against Mr. Moskowitz's
actions, has a Web site where more information may be found: <www.stop.moskowitz.org>
Thanks again for a great publication.
Jane E., Long Beach, CA
Senatorial Race in California
California voters who are concerned about events in the Middle
East have two candidates challenging Dianne Feinstein for the Senate
who may become more sympathetic to our concerns than Senator Feinstein.
Both Tom Campbell, the Republican candidate, and Medea Benjamin
of the Green Party have public records of advocacy for human rights
in the Middle East. Perhaps you might ask Rachelle Marshall, who
is familiar with both candidates, to interview them for the benefit
of your readers.
Kathleen C. Nimr, Martinez, CA
Good idea. We have to add, however, that incumbent member of
the House of Representatives Tom Campbell has a much better shot
at winning. Our own credo is that even if the Republican or Democrat
isn't the perfect candidate, perhaps it's best to choose the better
candidate from one of the two major parties than a third-party candidate
who isn't going to win. (Unless, perhaps, she's a professional wrestler
who coincidentally is gifted with a talent for expressing common
sense in great sound bites and the state in question is as iconoclastic
as Minnesota.) And, by the way, if human rights for all, including
Palestinians, is your cause, Tom Campbell is your candidate. (We
like Dianne Feinstein for other things, including her environmental
record, but not at all on the Middle East.)
Dwelling on Present and Future
With great pleasure I received your magazine, which was provided
to me by Marianne Nusseibeh. I am going to take this opportunity
to write to you on the question of peace in the Middle East. Today
is May 15 and that means it is the day in 1948 when we lost our
homes and homeland, Palestine. But the question of Palestine and
the struggle between Palestinians and Arabs, Jews and Zionism goes
back to long before that. But I don't necessarily want to talk about
the past. I want to talk about today and the future we all dream
of--full of goodwill, cooperation, dignity and mutual understanding.
A future of real peace for our children, grandchildren and to everyone
who lives in the region.
I want everyone to understand a very important point. We, the Palestinians,
and only we, are the victims. We are the victims of 400 years
of Ottoman rule, of the infamous Balfour Declaration, then the aim
of the British Mandate over Palestine to secure a National Home
for the Jews in Palestine as a fulfillment of the Balfour Declaration.
Then comes the weakness of our resistance due to illiteracy, and
the lack of real understanding of the meaning of leadership, which
puts the interest of the people in the first place. And then, above
all, not understanding with whom we are dealing.
We lost in 1948 because we did not prepare ourselves--as we did
more talking than planning and acting. We lost in 1956 because we
did not take the matter seriously. And we lost in 1967 because we
did not take lessons from what had happened in the previous two
wars and did not try to understand with whom we were dealing.
We are dealing with a very well-organized enemy, i.e., the Zionist
organizations that since the end of the 19th century have been preparing
for the takeover by all means while we were dreaming of this leader
or that leader to come and return our stolen land to us and kick
out the occupiers. We trust more than we should and run after fine
words and promises which in fact are only mirages. In Madrid and
in Oslo we gave all our backing and support to the peace process
thinking we were dealing with people who respect their words and
signatures. We forgot with whom we are dealing and with whom we
are talking.
Nothing would satisfy the Israelis, even if we gave them not 100
percent but 200 percent or even 1,000 percent of what they are demanding.
Always there is something new that is not good for Israel's interest
and security. Israel thinks that peace can be achieved by force
and by bombing, killing and slaughtering innocents. Israel, the
United States of America and the whole world should know and understand
that real peace and security for the Middle East in general,
and for Israel in particular, is in the hands of the Palestinians,
and only the Palestinians. As long as the Palestinians do not regain
our stolen rights, self-determination and dignity there shall never,
ever be peace in the region.
Israel should understand that it cannot go on forever as it is
now. Israel and only Israel should change its attitude toward
the Palestinians and must recognize the legitimate rights
of the Palestinian people and give peace a chance to work by proving
its goodwill toward us, not us toward Israel. When we feel Israel
is honest and wants real peace, then we shall be the real
and only partner, not anyone else.
The kind of peace I dream of is not only for Palestinians and Israelis.
No, I want a peace that allows me or anyone from the region to travel
freely without borders, passports, visas, false security or any
other matter. A peace that allows all of us to live together as
friends, neighbors and partners, and not anything else.
Ali Shawwa, Wabamun, Alberta, Canada
Wrong Photo Credit
In the April 2000 issue of the Washington Report, you erroneously
credited the photo taken on Manger Square in Bethlehem (p. 3) to
S. Olewine. The photo was, in fact, by me, Douglas Dicks. The photo
that appears on p. 11 with the article entitled "Snow in Jerusalem"
was taken by Sandra Olewine, as you have correctly indicated. Best
regards,
Douglas Dicks, Catholic Relief Services, Jerusalem
Sorry. To err is human, but dumb nevertheless.
Making State Do Its Job
On p. 45 of your May issue there is a series of letters from a
constituent (James C. Nance III) to Sen. Charles Robb, from him
to Barbara Larkin at the State Department, then back to Robb and
Nance. In the letter from Larkin to Robb, she writes:
"We are unaware of any recent specific cases where Israeli authorities
have destroyed Palestinian cisterns or reservoirs." The letter goes
on to talk about the constructive things the U.S. is contributing:
two wells in the West Bank, sewage treatment facilities in Gaza.
Here's a follow-up idea: this letter suggests that State never
heard about the cisterns demolished last year in the Baka'a. I'd
like to use this to get the embassy/consular staff in Israel to
make a field visit to the Baka'a Valley to see the demolished cisterns
for themselves, and to watch the BBC video of the demolition.
It would help me if I could talk with James Nance III to find out
if/how he followed up with State on this, and possibly to involve
him in the process. Would you please forward this message to him
and ask him to contact me?
Rich H. Meyer, Christian Peacemaker Teams Campaign for Secure Dwellings,
13416 CR 44, Millersburg, IN 46543-9726. Phone/fax (219) 642-3920
or <cptcsd@npcc.net>
All good ideas but of course it's State's job to do this and
anyone concerned with the West Bank in State who tells you they
never heard of the destroyed cisterns is a liar or an idiot since,
based on reports even in the mainstream press, we enclosed a postcard
in every copy of this magazine protesting the Israeli destruction
of cisterns for mailing to Congress. We know our readers
sent those postcards to members of Congress and we know that members
of Congress sent them on to the appropriate agencies as Senator
Robb did. To deny it happened when the postcard not only describes
the actions but shows a photo of the results seems like lunacy.
The executive editor of this magazine used to answer mail for both
the White House and the State Department from the countries to which
he was assigned as public affairs counselor or press attaché. If
he'd ever written such a dumb letter to anyone, especially a congressmember,
he would have been fired out of hand. It seems that those were the
good old days when foreign service officers were expected to stay
informed and tell the truth. |