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TANER AKCAM CANCELS VISIT TO UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS BECAUSE OF SALAITA


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#1 Yervant1

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Posted 07 October 2014 - 09:12 AM

TANER AKCAM CANCELS VISIT TO UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS BECAUSE OF SALAITA BOYCOTT

10/5/2014
http://hgmsblog.weeb...salaita-boycott

Earlier this year, I invited Professor Taner Akcam to speak to
students and faculty at the University of Illinois about the Armenian
Genocide and the Turkish state's denial of that genocide. Professor
Akcam, the Robert Aram and Marianne Kaloosdian and Stephen and Marian
Mugar Professor of Armenian Genocide Studies at the Strassler Center
for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University, is one of
the world's leading genocide scholars and one of the first Turkish
intellectuals to acknowledge and openly discuss the Armenian Genocide.

Last week he informed me that he is cancelling his visit to Illinois
to honor the boycott that has arisen in the wake of the university's
decision to revoke a job offer to Dr. Steven Salaita because of
comments Dr. Salaita made on twitter about the recent bombing of Gaza.

As Professor Akcam makes clear in the statement below, his personal
experience with censorship, imprisonment, harassment, and violence
makes it impossible for him to visit our campus until a just resolution
to the Salaita case is found. While I deeply regret that our students
and faculty will not have the opportunity to meet and hear from
Professor Akcam this fall, I understand and respect his decision. His
own story demonstrates all too clearly what happens when those in
power attempt to cut off debate about matters of public concern,
including controversial political conflicts. The recent controversy
on our own campus concerns the hot-button issue of Israel-Palestine,
but Professor Akcam's experience illustrates the all too real risks
to academic freedom and freedom of speech that can emerge in any
field of research once political expression is limited.

--Michael Rothberg, Director of the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide,
and Memory Studies at the University of Illinois

I personally know the value of freedom of expression and I have paid a
heavy price for it in my life. I was thrown in prison in 1976 simply
because Turkish authorities did not like what I wrote and said about
democratic rights and the rights of Kurdish people. The government,
the judicial system and law enforcement authorities held tremendous
power in Turkey, while I was a mere citizen, a young student at the
time; next to them, I was a nobody and freedom of expression was just
some words written on paper.

Later, I became the target of a hate campaign here in the US organized
by extreme nationalists from Turkey because they did not like my
scholarly work on the Armenian Genocide. I was not only threatened with
death but I was also physically assaulted in New York in 2006 and had
to be protected by campus police. I was detained at the Canadian border
in February 2007 because those who did not like what I had to say on
the Armenian genocide vandalized my Wikipedia web-page and portrayed
me as an "enemy of Turkey and a terrorist." Letters have been sent
to universities to cancel my lectures when I have been invited to
speak and in some of those cases university officials were intimidated.

I was also on the hit-list of a covert organization in Turkey known as
"Ergenekon" which consists of some members of both the armed forces
and civil bureaucrats. These circles arranged the assassination of
my dear friend, the Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, in Istanbul in
January 2007 because they did not like what he said and wrote.

So, I know the value of freedom of speech and the weight of it resides
deep inside my flesh and bones.

It is indeed very sad for me to experience practices here in
American universities where certain power centers can hold sway
over an individual's right to express their opinion. This is doubly
saddening to me because when I was the target of attacks it was
American universities that came to my defense and who always had my
back. They ignored the threats and intimidation and were stalwart
defenders of freedom of speech. America is indeed that safe haven
for so many of us who have escaped persecution in our home countries.

For that reason, perhaps out of gratitude, we are willing to give
the benefit of the doubt when we see injustices played out here,
believing that the US has a just system of governance and law and,
even more importantly, a strong democratic moral center. But when
you learn that someone can lose a job opportunity simply because of
something they expressed about a political issue, you suddenly feel
quite naked, as if a warm cozy blanket had been pulled off you. Naked,
because you realize that the "powers that be" reside here too and you
are just as vulnerable as you were before when "they" could decide they
don't like what you have to say and make your life hell because of it.

The job offer to Professor Steven Salaita was withdrawn based solely
on his strongly worded expressions via Twitter on Gaza and Palestine.

Whether or not Professor Salaita's utterances were appropriate is not
the point here! Let's even accept that they are inappropriate! This
has nothing to do with my argument. His statements may have disturbed
a university president, someone with a sensitive temperament, but
then that president might be equally disturbed by the violence of
bombs falling on innocent children and the utterances of the cheerful
supporters of those bombs.

Persecution, intimidation, harassment and abuse of power against
those whose thoughts and views do not suit the "powers that be" is
nothing new. This has been a problem since the origins of humanity. We
should never let power be abused in this reckless way. The boundaries
of freedom of speech cannot be determined arbitrarily, but must be
determined by the rule of law, which is the product of the fight
of humanity against any kind of ideology and practice based on
discrimination, hate and racism!

I am canceling my lecture at the University of Illinois to show my
solidarity with Professor Steven Salaita and to protest the decision
of the Chancellor, the President, and the Board of Trustees of the
University.
 






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