In the 1960s,
most of America reviled Malcolm X as a villain. America
now celebrates the May 19 birthday of this “shining prince.”
History
repeats itself. On April 22, 2004, an American football star named Pat Tillman was killed in action in Afghanistan. After September
11, Tillman had eschewed a $3.6 million sports contract to volunteer for the
Army Rangers. Selfless and ruggedly handsome, he could have played
himself in the Hollywood movie about his life - had he not been shot by his own troops.
On April 28, Rene Gonzalez, a political science graduate student
at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, objected to calling
Tillman a war hero, pointing out in an essay that this “anti-hero” had not died defending his own
country from invasion but had instead volunteered to kill other
men in theirs.
Within two days, death threats
forced Gonzalez to go into hiding. Websites went up with his personal details - e-mail accounts,
telephone numbers, his home address. Even Paul Begala, the supposedly liberal former advisor to U.S.
President Bill Clinton, urged
CNN viewers to send letters critical of Gonzalez to The Daily
Collegian, the student newspaper that had published the essay.
Instead of defending one of his students from terrorist threats,
university president, Jack Wilson, called Gonzalez’s essay “a disgusting,
arrogant and intellectually immature attack on a human being who
died in service to his country.” Without a trace of irony, Wilson
added, “We are fortunate that so many people like Pat Tillman have made
the sacrifices necessary to protect the free speech rights of Mr.
Gonzalez.”
Performing last rites on the
First Amendment, that part of the Bill of Rights that protects free
speech, the Massachusetts legislature officially condemned Gonzalez in a resolution. Gonzalez
soon apologized.
All that Gonzalez should have
apologized for was confusing Pat Tillman with “Pat Tillman,” the
creature constructed by the U.S. Army out of dead men’s flesh like
Frankenstein’s monster. “Pat Tillman” was a “caricature,” as Tillman’s
mother Mary put it, as unfamiliar to her as the square-jawed photograph
broadcast to the nation by the military after Tillman’s death, a
portrait that Mary had never seen before and that Pat said he did
not like.
“Pat Tillman” was a God-fearing
überpatriot. But Pat Tillman, the long-haired atheist, wanted to
meet Noam
Chomsky, the distinguished MIT professor and anti-war writer,
a “favorite author” of Pat’s, according to his mother. Pat
Tillman considered as his “hero” Rachel Corrie, a peace activist
crushed to death when she placed herself - living Mario Savio’s
words - between a bulldozer and a home. And, according to Tillman’s
friend, Army Spec. Russell Baer, “Pat said, ‘You know, this war is so f***ing illegal.’… He totally
was against Bush.”
The irony is that, despite
the outrage expressed ostensibly on the Tillman family’s behalf,
Tillman’s mother told me she had never read Gonzalez’s essay. Tillman’s
brother, Kevin, also an Army Ranger, unknowingly echoed Gonzalez
when he wrote, in 2006, “Somehow
American leadership, whose only credit is lying to its people and
illegally invading a nation, has been allowed to steal the courage,
virtue, and honor of its soldiers on the ground.”
The part of the American leadership
in Massachusetts should now apologize. Not just to Rene Gonzalez, but
to all Americans: those who fell on the battlefield - their coffins hidden
from view like someone’s mad aunt in the attic - and those who
fell victim to right-wing hate-mongering.
America’s
“digital brownshirts” (a term coined by former U.S. Vice President
Al Gore) have “Dixie Chicked” many. But with 62 percent of Americans thinking the Iraq War was a mistake in
2006, and George W. Bush’s popularity at the close of his presidency only
22 percent, it now appears that Rene Gonzalez was ahead of his
time. While many still morally distinguish Iraq
and Afghanistan,
Gonzalez’s majority of one in 2004 became the Democratic majority
in 2009.
Five years and zero weapons
of mass destruction later, one could view Gonzalez as an anti-war
hero. Maybe even Pat Tillman would have agreed.
[This commentary was originally
published in The Harvard
Crimson.]
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator,
Dr. Jonathan David Farley, is the 2004 Harvard Foundation Distinguished
Scientist of the Year. He is currently Teaching and Research
Fellow teaching mathematics at the Institut für Algebra Johannes
Kepler Universität Linz, Linz Österreich Click here
to contact Dr. Farley. |