The ADL Motto: If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it!



I list more than the current article regarding the ADL's stand against Bishop Desmond Tutu. For Abe Foxman, it is either or. Either people of conscience pretend the bestiality and cruelty inflicted upon people of color by did not happen or else say it like it is. Bishop Desmond Tutu dares to speak out and as would be expected, he gets noticed by Abe Foxman fast and quick. Abe Foxman cannot possibly defend the indefensible, hence he must smear the messenger.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu 'Poor Choice' for Commencement Ceremonies

New York, NY, April 6, 2009 … Citing his long history as a strident critic of Israel and his vocal support for anti-Israel boycotts, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) today said that Archbishop Desmond Tutu was a "poor choice" to deliver the commencement addresses at Michigan State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

"Desmond Tutu is a poor choice for commencement speaker," said Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director. "His statements about Israel have time and again conveyed outright bigotry against the Jewish homeland and the Jewish people, and his deepening involvement in the anti-Israel boycott effort should have raised a red flag. This is not someone to be held up as a model or awarded an honorary degree, given his history of bombastic rhetoric and unceasing support for the anti-Israel boycott effort.

"It is one thing to give him a platform to speak on campus; it is quite another to confer an honorary degree on an individual who actively promotes academic boycotts," Mr. Foxman added.

In a letter to Dr. Lou Anna K. Simon, President of Michigan State University, the League called on the university to reconsider the invitation extended to Archbishop Tutu unless he "publicly repudiates" his support for an academic and cultural boycott of Israel.

"Archbishop Tutu has unequivocally endorsed an academic boycott based on ideas that are anti-Semitic and should be anathema to any institution of higher learning truly committed to academic freedom," the League said it its letter to MSU. ADL sent a similar letter to Dr. Holden Thorp, Chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The League noted that MSU's president and UNC's chancellor were among more than 200 U.S. college and university presidents who issued, in July 2007, an unequivocal statement against university-led boycotts.

Archbishop Tutu is a participant in the U.S. Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (USACBI). The campaign prominently includes Bishop Tutu as a member of its Advisory Board, whose formation was announced on March 30. The USACBI refers to Israel's "illegal occupation of Palestine and its apartheid system" and calls for the "complete academic and cultural boycott of Israeli academic institutions."

Archbishop Tutu's Report On Gaza Shelling 'Nonsensical And Outrageous'

New York, NY, September 19, 2008 … The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) today condemned Archbishop Desmond Tutu's report on the 2006 shelling of a Palestinian village, calling his conclusion that Palestinians are paying the price for the West's guilt over the Holocaust, "nonsensical and outrageous."

"Archbishop Tutu's judgment must be so impaired by his bias that he cannot think clearly, for his conclusions are so nonsensical and outrageous as to border on the absurd," said Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director. "Once again, the United Nations Human Rights Council has made a mockery of itself by choosing an outspoken critic of Israel to reach a predetermined outcome, rather than selecting an impartial observer. It is clear that the Archbishop's observations on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were really just forgone conclusions all along."

Archbishop Tutu was mandated by the U.N. Human Rights Council to investigate Israel's November 2006 shelling of Beit Hanoun, which killed 19 civilians. In his report Archbishop Tutu stated that "the West … is feeling contrite, penitent for its awful compliance with the Holocaust … the penance is being paid by the Palestinians." His report concluded that "there is a possibility that the shelling of Beit Hanoun constituted a war crime."

"Archbishop Tutu's comments will only serve to deflect attention from the more complex reasons why Palestinians continue to live under an embargo in Gaza, including the inability of Hamas to reject terrorism, to stop the shelling of Israeli towns or to accept Israel's existence," Mr. Foxman added. "In blaming the West, Archbishop Tutu takes the onus off of the Palestinians to consider the effect of their actions and to start to reform their society."

Following an internal investigation, Israel concluded that "a rare and grave technical error" of an artillery radar system led to the inadvertent shelling of civilian homes.

ADL Troubled By Implications Of Cancellation Of Tutu Speech

Update: (October 10, 2007) The president of the University of St. Thomas announced he made a mistake in disinviting Tutu, and said he would re-extend the invitation. "I have wrestled with what is the right thing to do in this situation, and I have concluded that I made the wrong decision earlier this year not to invite the archbishop," the Rev. Dennis Dease said. "Although well intentioned, I did not have all of the facts and points of view, but now I do."

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New York, NY, October 9, 2007 … The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) today said it was troubled by the implications of the decision of the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota, to cancel a visit by Archbishop Desmond Tutu because of his past statements about Israel.

The following is the text of a letter from Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director, to Father Dennis Dease, President of the University of St. Thomas:

Dear Father Dease:

According to your letter to the students, faculty and staff of the University of St. Thomas, you have canceled a visit by Archbishop Desmond Tutu to your campus because of Tutu's "widely publicized statements that have been hurtful to members of the Jewish community."

We appreciate your sensitivity and your willingness to take a stand and refuse to let your institution give a platform to someone you believe has been hurtful to members of the University community.

While Archbishop Tutu is not a friend of Israel, we do not believe he is an anti-Semite. As you rightly point out in your letter, his words have often stung the Jewish community. However, while he may at times have crossed the line, we believe that he should have been permitted to speak on your campus.

I welcome the opportunity to discuss this matter further with you.

ADL Troubled By Implications Of Cancellation Of Tutu Speech

Update: (October 10, 2007) The president of the University of St. Thomas announced he made a mistake in disinviting Tutu, and said he would re-extend the invitation. "I have wrestled with what is the right thing to do in this situation, and I have concluded that I made the wrong decision earlier this year not to invite the archbishop," the Rev. Dennis Dease said. "Although well intentioned, I did not have all of the facts and points of view, but now I do."

________________

New York, NY, October 9, 2007 … The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) today said it was troubled by the implications of the decision of the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota, to cancel a visit by Archbishop Desmond Tutu because of his past statements about Israel.

The following is the text of a letter from Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director, to Father Dennis Dease, President of the University of St. Thomas:

Dear Father Dease:

According to your letter to the students, faculty and staff of the University of St. Thomas, you have canceled a visit by Archbishop Desmond Tutu to your campus because of Tutu's "widely publicized statements that have been hurtful to members of the Jewish community."

We appreciate your sensitivity and your willingness to take a stand and refuse to let your institution give a platform to someone you believe has been hurtful to members of the University community.

While Archbishop Tutu is not a friend of Israel, we do not believe he is an anti-Semite. As you rightly point out in your letter, his words have often stung the Jewish community. However, while he may at times have crossed the line, we believe that he should have been permitted to speak on your campus.

I welcome the opportunity to discuss this matter further with you.

Backgrounder: Muslim American Society

Posted: January 5, 2009

The Muslim American Society (MAS), based in Falls Church, Virginia, claims to be “America’s largest grassroots Muslim organization with over 50 chapters nationwide.”  While MAS portrays itself as a mainstream organization that attempts to serve the social, educational and religious needs of American Muslims, the organization has a troubling history of associations with radical organizations and individuals that promote terrorism and anti-Semitism, and reject Israel's right to exist.


In response to Israel's military action in Gaza to staunch the barrage of Hamas rockets hurled at Israeli towns and cities, MAS helped organized a “National Day of Action” on December 30, 2008, in more than 30 locations around the country. Many of the demonstrations, which were held in front of Israeli embassies and consulates, U.S. Federal buildings and elsewhere, were marked by offensive Holocaust imagery likening Jews and Israelis to Nazis, anti-Zionist and anti-Semitic rhetoric, as well as expressions in support of terror.

The organization’s ties to extremism are apparent in several ways:

Ties to Muslim Brotherhood


Leaders of the Muslim American Society remain vague about their formal relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamic extremist movement founded in Egypt that has spawned and inspired several terrorist groups, including the Palestinian terrorist group, Hamas.  However, MAS members openly acknowledge the Brotherhood’s ideological influence on their organization, and at least one member of the MAS, former Secretary General Shaker Elsayed, said in an interview that MAS was founded by members of the Muslim Brotherhood.


Sheik Yusuf Qaradawi, a leading Muslim Brotherhood ideologue based in Qatar, is the chairman (in absentia) of the Islamic American University (IAU), a Michigan-based MAS subsidiary, according to information on the MAS Website. He is also listed by IAU as a faculty. Qaradawi, barred from entering the U.S., is known for his support for terrorism, most notably in his edicts condoning suicide bombings.  He openly supports such groups as Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah and others that target U.S. soldiers in Iraq.



MAS Web sites have included the works of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hasan Al Banna, and the group’s leading intellectual, Syed Qutb. These writings advocate for Jihad and martyrdom, for total obedience to “the Islamic Movement” and for supporting a global multi-front war against non-Muslims.


Support for Terrorism


Several members of the MAS have had prior relationships with groups supporting terrorism against the state of Israel.  MAS founder Salah Sultan, consultant Raed Tayeh, and religious advisor Sheik Mohamad al-Hanooti previously held positions in the Islamic Association for Palestine (IAP), a group that has been described by the U.S. government as part of “Hamas’ propaganda apparatus.”  Al-Hanooti raised money for Hamas and helped coordinate its activities in the U.S., according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.



MAS joined with the antiwar ANSWER Coalition and the National Council of Arab Americans, an organization that opposes any peace with Israel, to organize several anti-Israel rallies across the U.S. in response to Israel’s summer 2006 war with Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. Many of the rallies were marked by expressions of support for Hezbollah and other terrorist groups, and a proliferation of anti-Jewish messages.  Speaking during the central event, which took place on August 12, 2006 in Washington D.C., MAS President Esam Omeish said that Israel controlled the U.S. Congress. He also called for Israel to release terrorists held in Israeli prisons.



Mahdi Bray, head of the MAS Freedom Foundation, which is based in Washington, D.C. and serves as the group’s “public affairs arm” in charge of advocacy, has taken part in several rallies over the years featuring support for terrorism and anti-Semitism.


MAS’s magazine, the American Muslim, featured in a 2002 online edition, a fatwa justifying suicide bombings by Fawsal Mawlawi, the radical Lebanese associate of Sheik Yusuf Qaradawi.


Other Alliances


MAS is closely allied with the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), a religious community organization based in Jamaica, New York. Its annual conventions, which it holds together with MAS, draw thousands of participants.


At an MAS-ICNA meeting in Chicago in June 2001, Zulfiqar Ali Shah, ICNA’s president at the time, stated: “If we are unable to stop the Jews now, their next stop is Yathrib [Saudi Arabia], where the Jews used to live until their expulsion by Prophet Muhammad.  That’s the pinnacle of their motives,” according to Islam Online, a Web-based publication connected to Sheik Yusuf Qaradawi.



During MAS-ICNA’s first joint convention in Baltimore in 2002, Shaker Elsayed, then the MAS Secretary General, said about suicide bombing: “The Islamic scholars said whenever there is an attack on an Islamic state or occupation, or the honor of the Muslims has been violated, the Jihad is a must for everyone, a child, a lady and a man. They have to make Jihad with every tool that they can get in their hand.”  Elsayed’s statement echoes a fatwa published by The American Muslim online edition in March 2002.  In the fatwa, Fawsal Mawlawi, a close associate of Qaradawi, explained that “in martyr operations, the Muslim sacrifices his own life for the sake of performing a religious duty, which is Jihad against the enemy.”



MAS and ICNA have also drawn closer to the North American branch of a radical anti-Semitic and anti-American Pakistani organization, Tanzeem-e-Islami, which operates in the U.S. under the name Islamic Organization of North America (IONA). MAS and ICNA leaders have attended IONA events and IONA endorsed an MAS event in California in February 2007. At IONA’s official launching event in June 2004, Dr. Souheil Ghannouchi, MAS executive director and former president, said “I don’t think there is any difference” between IONA and MAS ideology.



The Islamic Organization of North America has also distributed anti-Semitic literature, including a book that blames the Jews for spreading usury in order to advance various conspiracies against humanity.  The book, The Prohibition of Riba, reads: “Allah revealed the wickedness of those Jews who changed the Torah to modify the prohibition against usury.”



Promoting Anti-Semitic Literature



MAS publishes The American Muslims, a magazine that has featured anti-Semitic articles.  For example, the cover story in the January 2004 issue featured an article arguing that “the bible is a distorted document” and that “Zionism began with the Old Testament…Unknown authors willingly distorted the word of God to suit their own self-interest…The Middle East conflict today still harkens back to Jews’ erroneous claim that God…gave the ‘Promised Land’ exclusively to Jews…,” the article stated.



The May 2003 issue featured a fictional story depicting Israeli soldiers killing Palestinian civilians, describing the soldiers laughing, their hands covered with blood, as they eat their victims’ bread - evoking the anti-Semitic canard of a blood-libel.

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