In January 2004, I was offered a double-tenured position at the University of Notre Dame. I was honoured and pleased to accept the position, and I very much looked forward to becoming part of the academic community in the United States. After the U.S. government granted me a work visa, I rented a house in South Bend, Indiana, I enrolled my children in school there, and I shipped all of my household belongings. Then, in July 2004, the U.S. government notified me that my visa had been revoked. It did not offer any specific explanation for the revocation, but it pointed to a provision of the Patriot Act that applies to people who have “endorsed or espoused” terrorist activity.
The revocation was a complete shock to me. I have consistently opposed terrorism in all of its forms. Moreover, before 2004 I visited the United States frequently to lecture, attend conferences, and meet with other scholars – indeed, I had been an invited speaker at conferences or lectures sponsored by, among others, Harvard University, Stanford University, and the William Jefferson Clinton Presidential Foundation. While I have criticized specific United States policies, I have always condemned terrorism and I continue to do so today.
The U.S. government invited me to apply for a new visa and, with the help of the University of Notre Dame, I did so in October 2004. After three months passed without response from the government, however, I felt I had no choice but to resign my position and resume my life in Europe.
Although I reluctantly resigned my position at Notre Dame, I did not abandon the effort to clear my name. At the urging of American civic groups and academic organizations whose members wanted to meet with me in the United States, I reapplied for a visa in September 2005 in the hope that the government would retract its baseless accusation that I had endorsed terrorism. But once again I confronted a deafening silence from the administration. Finally, in January 2006, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the American Academy of Religion (AAR), the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and PEN American Center filed a lawsuit challenging the government’s actions. In response to the lawsuit, the government ultimately abandoned its accusation that I had endorsed terrorism. However, the government still did not grant me a visa, and it said, unbelievably, that the process of considering my visa could take years. The federal court rejected the indefinite delay. In June 2006, it ordered the government to grant me a visa or explain why it would not do so.
On September 21, 2006, after two years of waiting, an explanation at last arrived. The letter I received from the American embassy, though it refuses my visa application, puts an end to the rumours and baseless allegations that have circulated since my original visa was revoked. After two years of investigation, the State Department cites no evidence of “suspicious relationships”, of meetings with terrorists, of encouraging or advocating terrorism, or of so-called “doublespeak”. Instead, the State Department cites my having donated about 600 Euros to two humanitarian organizations (in fact a French organisation and its Swiss chapter) serving the Palestinian people. I should note that this was not something that the State Department’s investigation revealed. To the contrary, as the State Department acknowledges, it was I myself who brought these donations to the State Department’s attention. The U.S. government apparently believes that the organizations to which I gave small amounts of money have in turn given money to Hamas. But the organizations to which I donated are not deemed suspect in Europe, where I live. I donated to these organizations for the same reason that countless Europeans – and Americans, for that matter – donate to Palestinian causes: not to provide funding for terrorism, but because I wanted to provide humanitarian aid to people who are desperately in need of it.
After two years of intense investigation, this is the explanation offered for the denial of my visa. I am of course disappointed in the government’s decision. At the same, time, however, I am glad that the State Department has abandoned its allegation that I endorse terrorism. While the State Department has found a new reason to deny my visa application, I think it clear from the history of this case that the U.S. government’s real fear is of my ideas. I am excluded not because the government truly believes me to be a national security threat but because of my criticisms of American foreign policies in the Middle East; because of my opposition to the invasion of Iraq; and because of my criticism of some of the Bush administration’s policies with respect to civil liberties. I am saddened to be excluded from the United States. I am saddened, too, however, that the United States government has become afraid of ideas and that it reacts to its critics not by engaging them but by suppressing, stigmatizing, and excluding them.
I remain hopeful that the government will one day reconsider its decision to exclude me from the country. But for now I would like to extend my heartfelt gratitude to the ACLU, AAUP, AAR, PEN and all the civic and academic institutions and the ordinary Americans whose unwavering support has made the challenges of the past two years more bearable. You truly exemplify what is best in America. You personify the spirit and dignity of America. Thank you.
Many more doors will be closed- this is only the beginning, and you have only youselves to blame!
Sunday, September 24, 2006
Fortress Switzerland
The people of Switzerland seem to have taken an object lesson from the Swedes and the British, and have decided to step back from the brink of the immigration cliff. According to AFP, Swiss voters have strongly approved a tightening of asylum laws:
According to early poll projections, Switzerland has voted heavily in favour of making it harder for asylum-seekers to gain entry to the rich Alpine state.
Despite warnings of damage to Switzerland’s humanitarian reputation, some two-thirds of voters appeared to have said yes’ in referendums on laws limiting access for non-European job-seekers and making the country’s asylum rules amongst the West’s toughest.
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Ah, yes, “warnings” – a nice impersonal construct. Who was “warning” the Swiss? Kofi Annan? Human Rights Watch? The International Socialist Alliance? Or maybe the Arab League?
And it seems that voters are expected to pay more attention to Switzerland’s reputation than to their own physical and economic well-being. “Dietrich! Don’t vote yes’ on that referendum! How could we hold our heads up in polite company if we passed such a racist law?”
Switzerland must have organizations analogous to the ACLU, left-wing spoilers that have the time, the money, and the know-how to put a spanner in the works of the democratic process:
The measures have already been passed by both parliament and the government, but opponents raised enough signatures to force a national vote.
AFP, being a good buddy of Reuters, knows how to frame the story, and makes sure to include the opinion of an “opponent”. Needless to say, it’s the only voter that they quote:
“I have voted no’,” said 35-year-old Raphael Engel after casting his ballot in Geneva. “Europe is more and more becoming a fortress and Switzerland should set a humanitarian example.”
This reminds me of NPR back in 1984, covering Ronald Reagan’s landslide victory. The reporter stood outside a polling place, sticking a microphone into the face of voter after voter, but somehow only the clips of Mondale voters ever made it onto the air for “All Things Considered”.
The Swiss, instead of setting a humanitarian example, have decided to be a beacon of backwardness for the racists, bigots, and Islamophobes among us. More power to Switzerland!
Do you think Europe is starting to wake up? First the Swedish election, and now the referendum in Switzerland…
One by one the nations of Old Europe open their bleary eyes, clutch their aching heads, look at all the garbage and empty wine bottles around the room from last night’s wild socialism party, and moan, “What the hell was I thinking of?”
I am an American citizen who voted for George W. Bush, supported our war against the Taliban government in Afghanistan, and opposed our current war in Iraq. I support the state of Israel’s right to exist. I opposed the Patriot Act.
I am appalled that Dr. Ramadan is being denied entry into the U.S.A. The same people who support keeping him out are frequently heard lamenting, “Why do we not hear more of the moderate voices within Islam?”
Apparently the answer to their question is that they use the term “moderate” to mean “a person does not support Islam on any single point where it differs with the western consensus.”
I do not believe that my country is “the great Satan”, and I do believe that we have been grievously wronged by some Islamists. However, I also believe that my government in recent years has increasingly acted in a ways that justifies those who see it as intolerably arrogant.
I look forward to the day when students in the U.S.A. can challenge and be challenged by a Professor like Dr. Ramadan – may it come soon.
If Dr. Ramadan does not fit the definition of “Islamic moderate”, I would like to know, “Who could?”
I too voted for George Bush and I am glad to see that the State Dept. finally has done something right.
I am a registered Democrat who loathes President Bush, but who also supported the war against the Taliban and oppose the war in Iraq. I also believe in the right of Israel to exist and strongly oppose the so-called Patriot Act (more like the Expatriate Act). I likewise strongly believe the President and his entire Party are gravely wrong to spy on American citizens. I do, however, agree with the Republicans in tightening our borders. However, I believe that we should be watching our closest neighbors – Canada & Mexico – the closest. For them to deny professor Ramadan’s visa based solely on political ideology is very anti-American and goes against everything our forefathers believed in when they wrote our Constitution. Shame on you, G. W. Bush and shame on the Republican party of this time.
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