“Who knew the World Trade Center was gonna get bombed
Who told 4000 Israeli workers at the Twin Towers
To stay home that day”
– from “Somebody Blew up America” by Amiri
Baraka.
"Every
time we do something you tell me America will do this and will
do that . . . I want to tell you something very clear: Don't
worry about American pressure on Israel. We, the Jewish people,
control America, and the Americans know it."
– Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel
Sharon, October
3, 2001, to Shimon Peres, as reported on Kol Yisrael radio.
"I admired Hitler, for instance, because he came from being
a little man with almost no formal education, up to power. I admire
him for being such a good public speaker and for what he did with
it."
[I wanted to be] "…like Hitler in the
Nuremberg stadium. And have all those people scream at you and just
being total agreement whatever you say."
– California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, 1975.
"My friends don't want me to mention Kurt's name, because
of all the recent Nazi stuff and the U.N. controversy, but I love
him and Maria does too, and so thank you, Kurt."
– Arnold Schwarzenegger on his friend and fellow Austrian, Kurt
Waldheim, a Nazi war criminal.
Poet, essayist and playwright Amiri Baraka was stripped of the title
Poet Laureate of the State of New Jersey after his poem, “Somebody
Blew up America,” was made public in 2002. The poem acknowledged the
suffering of the Jewish people in the European holocaust and the injustices
resulting from the Reichstag fire, but the stanza alleging that Israel
had knowledge of the September 11th attacks made Baraka
a pariah. New Jersey Governor James McGreevey yielded to pressure to
abolish the poet laureate position. Baraka maintained his right to
freedom of speech and continued to insist there were 4,000 Israeli
employees at the World Trade Center and that none of them went to work
on that fateful day.
“To infer that I am accusing Israel of committing the atrocity is
disingenuous slander and character assassination. But I do believe,
as I stated about England, Germany, France, Russia, that the Israeli
government, certainly it’s security force, SHABAK knew about the attack
in advance.”
The Baraka saga is all too familiar. Black Americans who make remarks
offensive to white people are demonized, denounced, fired from their
jobs and are used as tools to keep other black people in line who are
also forced to denounce them.
Conversely, Arnold Schwarzenegger, muscleman turned actor, turned
Governor of California, once said that he admired Adolf Hitler. Unlike
Baraka, or Jesse Jackson – remember “Hymietown” – Schwarzenegger’s
sins have been forgiven. Zionist groups have recently said that anti-Zionist
opinions are inherently anti-Semitic. If that is the case then pro-Hitler
views must surely be considered anti-Semitic.
Schwarzenegger has apparently lived down his pro-Hitler days because
he recently visited Israel and received a celebrity hero’s welcome.
Not only was the Governor an admirer of Hitler, but his father was
a member of the Nazi party in his native Austria. At Schwarzenegger’s
wedding to Maria Shriver he raised a toast to Kurt Waldheim, former
Secretary General of the United Nations who was a member of the Nazi
SS.
None of these outrages hurt because Arnold is powerful and white.
Schwarzenegger was elected Governor of California despite having groped
and fondled women against their will, using the word nigger in public
and expressing views in support of South African apartheid. He is the
new Teflon political leader.
There isn’t enough Teflon in the world to help a black person or institution
accused of being anti-Semitic. The late Khalid Muhammad, one-time spokesman
of the Nation of Islam, was plucked from obscurity for the purpose
of being denounced from editorial pages and the halls of Congress when
in November 1993 he called Jews “blood suckers.” Muhammad also attacked New York City Mayor David Dinkins, South African President
Nelson Mandela and writer-scholar Cornel West.
Khalid Muhammad was made famous by people who wanted to use him as
an example of what happens to black people who upset any group of white
people. He was an unknown to most black Americans who watched transfixed
as this obscure person received his 15 minutes of fame because of vile
and foolish statements made against the powerful group, not for any
comments he made that were offensive to any black people.
It would all be easier if hate speech were treated consistently. It
is difficult to think of anything more offensive than expressing admiration
for Adolf Hitler. It is true that during his campaign Schwarzenegger
repudiated his previous pro-Hitler statement, but Jesse Jackson apologized
for his “Hymietown” remark in a synagogue and he did so immediately
after the remark was made public. Despite having made a gracious mea
culpa without the usual lame rejoinder “If I offended anyone I am sorry” he
was still asked to explain his words for many years afterward.
The calculus of the outrage industry is a simple one. It is acceptable
to offend the powerless and unacceptable to offend the powerful. Don
Imus and Howard Stern made racist remarks for years but their respective
radio programs were popular and remained obligatory stops for politicians
running for office.
All Americans have the right of free speech, or at least we did before
the Patriot Act came into being. Anyone who is offended as an individual
or as part of a group should certainly say so. Ariel Sharon’s comment
that Jews run America is offensive. Most Jews are at the very least
uncomfortable with such an assertion. The media should certainly have
disseminated the remarks more widely. Perhaps then Jews could have
expressed outrage that one of the most dangerous stereotypes expressed
about them had been given credence by the Israeli Prime Minister.
Amiri Baraka still maintains that he was wrongly terminated from his
$10,000 per year honorary position. He has sued Governor McGreevey
but he has received very little public support in his fight. Part of
the problem is Baraka’s refusal to concede that his statement was factually
incorrect. That doesn’t justify the disproportionate reaction to his
claim. It should have been sufficient for dissenting opinions to be
expressed. Baraka’s comments touched on the rawest of nerves and anyone
who felt compelled to speak should have been given very prominent opportunities
to respond, negating the demand to eliminate an honorary government
position.
Once again black people were forced to choose between defending someone
they may not want to defend or standing by and allowing a disproportionate
media pile-on to take place. Baraka is hardly alone in giving offense.
Drug addicted, right-wing, radio personality Rush Limbaugh is always
offensive. He manages to stay on the air and the President of the United
States even calls him “a great American.”
All Americans should be committed to healthy public discourse. That
cannot take place unless there is mutual respect and an acknowledgement
that no hurt is more or less worthy of empathy than another. If everyone
kept this thought in mind we would be less likely to express offensive
thoughts or hesitate to speak out because the offense was directed
at a group other than our own.
Margaret Kimberley’s
Freedom Rider column appears weekly in . Ms.
Kimberley is a freelance writer living in New York City. She
can be reached via e-Mail at [email protected]. You can read more
of Ms. Kimberley's writings at http://freedomrider.blogspot.com/