By Saswat Pattanayak
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to
Columbia University was arguably the most important
step taken by a world leader to initiate the global
peace that is so much needed in the clearly
terrorized world we live in.
Ahmadinejad is a leader of significant
importance—chief of a major country and
representative of a major world religion-- who was
humble enough to accept a university invitation, and
tolerant enough to appear in front of the most
hostile audience that any academic institute in the
world could feel ashamed of. And despite the odds, he
was clearly on a mission: to promote the spirit of
peace and open the road to desirable dialogue.
So, how was he received at the Land of the Free?
First, the New York City Mayor displayed his level of
arrogance by refusing Ahmadinejad a visit to 9/11
memorial site. Second, the Columbia University
President exhibited unparalleled level of ignorance
by verbally abusing the Iranian President. Third, the
American President bathed in his self glory by
refusing to entertain any possibility of any urgent
dialogue.
Columbia: Elite University, Elitist
Mindsets:
Columbia University characterized the drama usually
associated with the great American Hypocrisy that has
led to several wars and ideological confrontations
during past many decades. One important way in which
the First World countries have justified their
position as regards to Freedom of Speech is by
boasting about it. To prove that America allows
freedom of speech, American administration needs to
allow a certain amount of dissent to take place. Both
the dissent and the freedom then have to be televised
appropriately. Finally, the melodramatic
confrontations are then needed to be compared with
the economically subjugated world so as to prove an
innate superiority in the methods of the free world.
In Ahmadinejad’s visit, all the above aspects were
clearly evident. First, he was invited by Columbia
University as the speaker. He was invited despite
vehement protests from various student groups. This
proved the spirit of tolerance that American
democracy boasts of. However, critically
deconstructing such an obvious reflection, one would
fathom that the real reason why he was invited was
not so much as “despite”, as was “because” of the
protests from various groups of people. He was
invited to speak on campus, because of the amount of
controversy it would generate. And clearly, Columbia
University did not do anything to stop the protests.
Indeed, it advertised on its website additional
permissions to student groups to create the noise and
requested the community to bear with the protests
which would continue for the entire day. Such
vehement noisy protests where anyone could attribute
any ghastly name to another country’s chief showcased
a circus that was well planned and organized.
Students and other social groups were not protesting
against Columbia University (which they could have
legitimately done by asking people to boycott a visit
to the campus), rather they were enjoying the
centrestage of press attention by using placards that
could allow them to equate Ahmadinejad with Hitler
and use any amount of vulgar slangs to denounce
Iranian politics. In a country where peace marchers
including octogenarian peacenik grandmothers are
imprisoned because of silent protests, the rowdy
behaviors from various “free speech” and student
groups in front of a university was in fact
encouraged.
Why was Ahmadinejad invited to the campus if the
university was well aware that there would be
thousands of people on the streets to protest? It was
because the university was not afraid that they will
lose reputation. It was not because the university
was going to be boycotted. Not because students who
resent Ahmadinejad were going to dissuade potential
applicants from joining the campus. After all, a
university which invites a “Hitler” naturally was
going to be branded as anti-semite and was going to
get bad press, and was going to be mocked at. The
university was going to lose its own face by inviting
someone whom many people on campus considered or even
studied as a dictator.
Then why did the Columbia University invite someone
as a chief guest who was so deeply hated by many in
the campus community? In fact, Ahmadinejad was unique
because he was (and continues to be) hated by both
conservatives and liberals alike. Even several Free
Speech coalitions did not have kind words for him.
None of the politically correct historians had good
thoughts about him. None of the civil rights
organizations thought Ahmadinejad should be
tolerated.
Lee Bollinger’s speech answered why: Calling the
Iranian President “brazenly provocative or
astonishingly uneducated”, even before allowing him
an audience, the Columbia University professor proved
the invitation was premeditated to be insulting. “You
exhibit all the signs of a petty and cruel dictator,”
Bollinger called Ahmadinejad. It was with the sole
purpose of insulting the Iranian head that
Ahmadinejad was invited to speak. The spirit of sheer
hatred continued as stealth mockery found resonance
throughout Bollinger’s long introduction.
Lee Bollinger who in the mask of being a free speech
advocate (Michigan Affirmative Action champion) went
all the way to demonstrate how utterly vulgar and
autocratic he could be. A proclaimed “free-speech”
advocate, Bollinger not only did not feel sorry about
Ahmadinejad not being granted the freedom to visit
9/11 site, but he went one step further. Even before
Ahmadinejad could speak on his “defense”, the
Columbian professor went on verbally attacking the
Iranian head as befitting a liar, idiot, rogue and
conman.
Bollinger said a number of Columbian graduates were
the brave fighters serving the American troop in
Iraq. That was spoken in order to praise the American
war against the Iraqi people! He asked Iranian
President on their behalf why “Iran is fighting a
proxy war in Iraq killing US troops”. Whether it is a
proxy war that Iran is fighting in Iraq is a matter
of dispute. What, however has been true is that the
US fought an unjust war in Iraq and American troops
caused much military misconduct that have been quite
extensively recorded in recent past. What the
Columbia University President should have done was to
apologize on behalf of the infamous troop that has
caused much distress to the world citizenry by its
brazen inhuman treatment of peaceful civilians. Even
after prison tortures, and civilian rapes committed
by American troops (yes the same “brave” Columbian
graduates as cohorts), the highly educated and
informed professor proved his agenda of falsehoods
and pretensions time and again.
Bollinger continued with his series of malicious
attacks that were not evidenced nor called for. He
brought to the fore the issue of Iran’s nuclear deal,
which suggested his lack of awareness about the
matter. Contrary to his accusations against Iran as a
country working to create an unsafe world, the UN’s
agency (International Atomic Energy Agency) has been
in close collaboration with Iran and has found no
such threats as being decried by the professor.
Inviting a guest, and accusing him and the country he
leads in highly derogatory terms and verbally abusing
him as insane and unintelligent without even having
evidence or knowledge to back up marked the genius of
Bollinger. Who does Bollinger quote to support his
opinions? French president Sarkozy – a right wing
conservative—who apparently has lost patience
(according to Bollinger) with Iran. Did such trivial
information make sense in an introductory speech
provided to “welcome” an international guest?
Bollinger then asked Ahmadinejad, “Why have you made
the people of your country vulnerable to sanctions?”
If Bollinger had any sense of empathy or
understanding, he could have instead asked why do the
first world powers foster vulnerable conditions for
Iranian civilians. In an unsurpassed level of
academic elitism that should ideally call for much
loath and disgrace, Professor Bollinger outdid his
sense of self-glorification by finally challenging
the head of state of Iran to respond to his speech:
“Let me close with a comment. Frankly and in all
candor, Mr President, I doubt you have the
intellectual courage to answer these questions but
your avoiding them will in itself be meaningful to
us. I do expect you to exhibit the fanatical mindset
that characterizes so much of what you say and do…I
am only a professor who is also a university
president, but today I feel all the weight of the
modern civilized world yearning to express the
revulsion of what you stand for. I only wish I could
do better.”
A huge section of Columbia University audience
cheered and clapped to their president’s hate speech
and waited gleefully for Ahmadinejad to fail the
test. In contrast to the obviously arrogant speech of
Bollinger, Ahmadinejad’s talk was pensive,
thoughtful, full of insights. Ahmadinejad asserted
that he was still an instructor at a university and
as an instructor he strived for the whole truth.
Apart from the questionable religious wisdom and
denial of homosexuality in Iran, Ahmadinejad’s speech
was more than an answer to Bollinger’s outlandish
accusations. Yes, he did not answer anything
“straight”, despite pleading from the university for
him to answer in “yes” or “no”. But that was more due
to the fact that Islam logic is not necessarily as
vertically dismissive as Christian expectations. In
every sentence that Ahmadinejad spoke, there was
humility, a touch of candor and empathetic
understanding. In every sentiment of Ahmadinejad,
there was a prayer for collaboration, a hope for
global peace, a step towards mutual dialogue. In
every answer of Ahmadinejad to the Q/A session, there
was an assertion of a world leader who was humble
enough to raise historical lessons, and of an
educated non-elite who was unafraid to research.
Ahmadinejad was forced to revisit his stance on
Holocaust. Clearly he had not come to the US to speak
about his views on historical revisionism, but to
extend a hand of friendship for future peace pacts.
Even at that stage he said he was not a Holocaust
denier, what he wanted instead was further research
into the area of history that has led the world to
prepare for the largest unrest in recent times.
Palestine did not fight World War II. Europe did. And
why are the Palestinians facing the crisis still? Not
an easy answer to this question, and Ahmadinejad
sought for further research into this aspect. Talking
about the halt in Iranian progress, he dwelt on the
root cause of the unrest and insecurity. Why was Iran
under sanction? Why did the first world powers
withdraw unilaterally after assuring nuclear energy
support to Iran? Why should there be limitations
imposed on Iran’s scientific endeavors especially
when IAEA has not found any problem with Iran’s
peaceful nuclear program?
Moreover, Ahmadinejad did not just ask questions that
were uncalled for. He offered agreements. Despite the
insults and abuses and threats outside the campus
building that were encouraged by the university
officials, he invited American students to visit
Iran, attend the universities and speak with
civilians. Whether he would agree to hold a dialogue
with the White House regarding resolution of US-Iran
disputes? Of course, anytime! Ahmadinejad requested
for a peaceful dialogue. “Everything can be resolved
over talks. We need to talk”.
White House ignored Ahmadinejad during the rest of
his stay. Ahmadinejad even called for a meeting of
religious leaders to initiate global peace talks and
succeeded. Around 140 religious leaders attended the
meeting in New York, with the sole exception of any
Jewish leader who refused to attend.
On the Homosexuality Question:
I waited for a few days to study media response to
such an uncivilized treatment meted out to a state’s
head. The American corporate media of course bathing
in its biased glories preferred to maintain the line
adopted by Columbia University and at their best,
tried to provide a “balanced” perspective to the
issue that clearly called for critical intellectual
intervention.
Most reports mocked at the ignorance of Ahmadinejad
when it came to issue of homosexuality. They chose to
play moral pundits while not mentioning how America
treats its own LGBT community. The fact that the US
has consistently failed to provide for basic human
rights to homosexual population even after
acknowledging their presence in every sphere in
social life here is clearly amiss from all reports
that attacked Iran’s condition. “Mr President, in
your country, homosexuals are treated in this and
that way” has been a standard line of both the
Columbia University president and our enlightened
western press. Not for once did the educated pause
awhile to review the fact that not so long ago
American Psychology Association (APA), the famed
master of all things research, used to consider
homosexuality as an abnormality. And even to this
date, the major state religion whose dictums appear
on the courtroom walls and classroom prayers has been
the single biggest enemy to the cause of the LGBT
community.
On the Holocaust Question:
Most amount of time devoted by the university
professor in his speech and later on by the
university during Q/A session, and by media reports
before, during and after the visit of Ahmadinejad
focused on the alleged “holocaust denial” of the
Iranian head. It has been accused severally that he
is an Anti-Semite, like most of anyone we know in the
recent history who has challenged the Holocaust issue
from different perspectives.
Even as we have succeeded in challenging the legacy
of Columbus and George Washington, the only and
perhaps the largest event of significance has
remained beyond recent review. Bollinger, the
academician said there was absolutely no need to do
any further research on Holocaust while Ahmadinejad
said to presume that research on a topic is already
exhausted is to underestimate the power of knowledge
itself.
The wisdom which Ahmadinejad brought to the
conference hall of the New York based university was
clearly demolished to pieces with overriding
imposition that calling for research into Holocaust
amounts to challenging the truth itself.
The fallacious logic applied by the dominant
historical thread about Holocaust is clearly evident
in the manner in which they are unwilling to
entertain any slightest of suggestions that can be
introduced to enrich our collective historical
knowledge.
If the leading academicians of the western world are
so vehement in their resistance to any further
research into one specific historical event, then
commonsense implies there is something wrong
somewhere. Personally, for me, to deny Holocaust is a
crime by itself, and I am sure Ahmadinejad has not
committed that crime. However it is equally a crime
if we refuse to allow any more research on a
historical process that changed the geographical face
of the planet. Like Ahmadinejad said, we need to
conduct research into every possible field in the
world. We do not know whether our beliefs will be
restored or quashed. The motive behind conducting a
research is not to prove one or the other side. The
motive of conducting a research has been to excavate
further truths that may or may not unsettle
previously known knowledge. On the day of his speech,
Professor Ahmadinejad had not forgotten the basics of
research methods. Professor Bollinger, had clearly
forgotten that. And in all earnest observation,
Bollinger behaved every bit unlike a student, unlike
a teacher. Where is the zeal to conceal truth coming
from? What legacy does Holocaust hold?
This is a crucial question of our times. Let me state
that each human being of this planet has a stake in
this question and each of us have a moral
responsibility to respect the multiple truths that
emerge from the researches done, and researches
awaiting to be done. Neither the professor at
Columbia holds the key to a sole truth, nor the head
of Israel, Iran or United States.
If fact be told as has been chronicled by every
historian of our age, the truth is the people who are
steadfastly holding onto the Holocaust theory are
probably the ones to have distorted the truth. That
is why we need further research into the field. If
truth be told, the truth is the mainstream history by
denouncing Stalin and Soviet Communism and trumpeting
the capitalistic cause of the age have in fact
automatically joined the world of holocaust deniers.
The fact is it was the Red Army which for the first
time in the world discovered the Auschwitz camps that
led to an understanding of the Holocaust. The fact is
when Stalin’s administration tried to send out this
message to the first world for it to react, none of
the western countries came forward either to help the
Red Army or the victims of Hitler’s camps as was
required. Quite the contrary, as has been
well-evidenced, the truth is Western Europe and
America were foremost in denying access to the
victims of the Nazi camps.
The truth is when the Vatican learned of the secret
chambers, it refused to act against the Nazi powers
because the Communists had helped release the victims
and for the church, communism as a political theory
was more dangerous than Nazism was. The truth is
Hitler’s army was heavily funded and in fact
sustained by most of the leading business empires of
America and Europe that continue to amass wealth and
do great businesses worldwide. The capitalists during
that time were aiding Hitler because for them
badmouthing communism was more important than saving
the lives of people who were victims of Hitler’s
camps. The truth is those corporations today own most
of the media business, most automobile industries.
Both Ford and General Motors were aiding the Nazis
then, and they are as household names in American
families even now.
The truth is that the actual Holocaust deniers are
those that have been hesitating to give due credits
to Stalin and Red Army for their role in letting the
world know about the secret chambers, by saving the
lives of the remaining survivors, and by revealing
the actual number of Nazi massacres to the world.
The truth is the Red Army, the only brave people who
fought Hitler to his death, had put the number of
dead as 4 million. This is the statistics that
remained the only official figure for more than four
decades. There was no question of anyone denying
Hitler’s concentration camps. Of these 4 million,
overwhelming majority of people were communists and
communist sympathizers and fellow travelers. Hitler’s
main ire—aided by his western capitalistic sponsors
and the church—was against the consolidation of
communism in the world. The world embracing
communistic philosophy that aimed at redistributing
private properties for social good was the biggest
threat to the Fascist and Nazi forces that ruled the
minds and hearts of rulers of every western imperial
power then. Recently the formerly classified British
intelligence reports have proven how the UK was a
partner in crime with the Nazi forces in imprisoning,
torturing and murdering communists during the WW II
period. Countless American reports have suggested
that the apparent threats of McCarthy seemed like a
joke when compared to the actual CIA interventions in
the lives of the progressives in the world.
Anti-communism was the biggest single weapon that was
used by Hitler then and continued till Reagan later.
Interestingly, between the both, the fact is the same
companies financed their respective empires
wholeheartedly for them to rise and shine in power
ladders.
However, to erase the fact that Communists were the
actual victims of Nazi camps, the attempts on part of
conservative religious groups finally led to the
revision of the 4 million figure. The revisionist
conservative historians conveniently “denied” the
camps and its death toll and revised the number from
4 million to a little over 1 million. And the
revisionists claimed that the number was much less
that 4 million because 1 million of them were the
Jews that were killed.
Much before Ahmadinejad proposed for a revision, it
was Dr. Franciszek Piper who did revisionist research
into the number of prison camps, and his research
erased more than 3 million people from the total
number. And the Poland’s museum which for four
decades mentioned 4 million as the number of people
killed by the Nazis was forced to revise the number
to 1.1 million because of the revisionist historians.
The sole purpose of reducing the number was to
discredit the Soviet role in combating Hitler, and to
erase the historical truth about the majority of
those who were killed. The majority from 4 million
were actually murdered because of political reasons,
and if research is led in this direction to actually
demonstrate the way the Nazi-Capitalism-Church
combine led their ugly war against the communists of
that era, much academic curiosities will end up
perhaps in suggesting the need for further research
into this area of history.
Israel was built on the legacy of Holocaust. Soviet
Union was disintegrated on the legacy of Communism,
and the Third World was ravaged on the legacy of
anti-imperialism. This is our history. We must demand
to know why the 3 million victims of Nazi Capitalism
were forgotten from the history. We must demand to
know why the millions of Red Army soldiers were
eminently discredited because they fought the Hitler
to his death. We must demand to know why the Vatican
and the America and the Europe did not admit the
Communists to their countries even after aiding the
perpetrators of the biggest genocide in recent world
history. We must demand to know why the corporate
houses and banks that materialized Hitler’s army and
funded it to wipe off millions off the face of earth
still continue to dominate businesses. We must demand
to know why the inhabitants of the land, the
Palestinians still continue to remain dispossessed in
their own lands while the plans laid out by the
perpetrators have been allowed to succeed to decide
on their fates. We must demand to know why
intellectually dishonest academicians and historians
on their own sweet will decide what constitutes apt
to be called a history despite their revising it, and
why something will be rejected as history simply
because they do not approve of it. We must demand to
know. We must demand. History is about us.
Helpful Links:
Ahmadinejad Meets Clerics, and Decibels Drop a
Notch
Iranian President Ahmadinejad speaks at Columbia
University
Film:
America and the Holocaust
Film:
Amen
Tags: Saswat, Academic, Activism, Iran, USA, Capitalism, History, Cold War, Israel, Islam