Dangerous Trend: FBI Detains and Investigates Peace Activists
The FBI has detained the editor of Middle East News Online and he now faces deportation. The FBI is also investigating Women in Black and is threatening the group with a Grand Jury Invesitagtion. The two messages below give information about both cases. This is a dangerous trend, indicating that no person and no group is immune.
Middle East News Online:
I. Fadi Chahine, editor of Middle East News Online (message received from a friend on October 6, 2001):
Fadi Chahine is a young man who was very active in his community in North Carolina. He actively lobbied through his business (Middle East News Online) to influence congressmen in his area to support the cause of Palestine. He is Lebanese and came to this country when he was 13, 20 years ago. He is married and has two children, one is 4 months old. He is a permanent resident and his wife is an American.
After the attack on the US he was detained by the FBI, asked what did he know about the terrorists. The FBI sent his case to the INS to start deportation procedure.
His family asked to spread the news yet, for they are still hoping to have a "prive bill" passed in the Congress to free him. They are also worried about being abused by angry people in their community. They asked to contact organizations (Arabs and Muslims) here in the US so that these organizations may call a few congressmen and congresswomen to urge them to
support the private bill.
II. Ronnie Gilbert on the FBI's investigation of Women in Black:
For the second time in my life - at least - a group that I belong to is being investigated by the FBI. The first was the Weavers. The Weavers were a recording industry phenomenon. In 1950 we recorded a couple of songs from our American/ World folk music repertoire, Leadbelly¹s ³Goodnight Irene² and (ironically) the Israeli ³Tzena, Tzena, Tzena² and sold millions of records for the almost-defunct record label. Folk music entered the mainstream, and the Weavers were stars.
By 1952 it was over. The record company dropped us, eager television producers stopped knocking on our door. The Weavers were on a private yet well-publicized roster of suspected entertainment industry reds. The FBI came a-calling.
This week, I just found out that Women in Black, another group of peace activists I belong to, is the subject of an FBI investigation. Women in Black is a loosely knit international network of women who vigil against violence, often silently, each group autonomous, each group focused on the particular problems of personal and state violence in its part of the world. Because my group is composed mostly of Jewish women, we focus on the Middle East, protesting the cycle of violence and revenge in Israel and the Palestinian Territories.
The FBI is threatening my group with a Grand Jury investigation. Of what? That we publicly call the Israeli military¹s occupation of the mandated Palestine lands illegal? So does the World Court and the United Nations. That destroying hundreds of thousands of the Palestinians¹ olive and fruit trees, blocking roads and demolishing homes promotes hatred
and terrorism in the Middle East? Even President Bush and Colin Powell have gotten around to saying so.
So what is to investigate? That some of us are in contact with activist Palestinian peace groups? This is bad? The Jewish Women in Black of Jerusalem have stood vigil every Friday for 13 years in protest against the Occupation; Muslim women from Palestinian peace groups stand with them at every opportunity. We praise and honour them, these Jewish and Arab women who endure hatred and frequent abuse from extremists on both sides for what they do.
We are not alone in our admiration. Jerusalem Women in Black is a nominee for the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize, along with the Bosnia Women in Black, now ten years old.
If the FBI cannot or will not distinguish between groups who collude in hatred and terrorism, and peace activists who struggle in the full light of day against all forms of terrorism, we are in serious trouble. I have seen such trouble before in my lifetime. It was called McCarthyism. In the hysterical atmosphere of the early Cold War, anyone who had
signed a peace petition, who had joined an organization opposing violence or racism or had tried to raise money for the refugee children of the Spanish Civil War, in other words who had openly advocated what was not popular at the time, was fair game.
In my case, the FBI visited The Weavers¹ booking agent, the recording company, my neighbors, my dentist husband¹s patients, my friends. In the waning of our career, the Weavers were followed down the street, accosted onstage by drunken ³patriots,² warned by friendly hotel employees to keep the door open if we rehearsed in anyone¹s room so as not to become targets for the vice squad.
It was nasty. Every two-bit local wannabe G-man joined the dragnet searching out and identifying ³communist spies.² In all those self-debasing years how many spies were pulled in by that dragnet? Nary a one. Instead it pulled down thousands of teachers, union members, scientists, journalists, actors, entertainers like us, who saw our lives disrupted, our jobs, careers go down the drain, our standing in the community lost, even our children harrassed.
A scared population soon shut their mouths up tight. Thus came the silence of the 1950s and early 60s, when no notable voice of reason was heard to say, "Hey, wait a minute. Look what we're doing ourselves, to the land of the free and the home of the brave," when not one dissenting intelligence was allowed a public voice to warn against zealous foreign policies we¹d later come to regret, would be regretting now, if our leaders were honest.
Today, in the wake of the worst hate crime of the millenium, a dragnet is out for terroriststs² and we are told that certain civil liberties may have to be curtailed for our own security. Which ones? I¹m curious to know. The First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech or of the press? The right of people peaceably to assemble? Suddenly, deja vu - haven¹t I been here before?
Hysterical neo-McCarthyism does not equal security, never will. The bitter lesson September 11's horrific tragedy should have taught us and our government is that only an honest re- evaluation of our foreign policies and careful, focused and intelligent intelligence work can hope to combat operations like the one that robbed all of us and their families of 6,000 decent working people. We owe the dead that, at least. As for Women in Black, we intend to keep on keeping on.
Ronnie Gilbert
received from Canpalnet News, Oct 6, 2001.
Jim Terral South Slocan, BC