Roth and HRW then turned to Richard, and, without telling him about this letter, asked him to resign because his UN position as Special Rapporteur2 conflicts with an HRW policy that members (of its “regional support committees”?) should not have any official position with an intergovernmental agency like the UN. Apparently, HRW had forgotten about this policy during the four years since 2008, when Richard was appointed, but just happened to remember it within 24 hours of receiving the UN Watch letter. Good and trusting person that he is, Richard agreed to comply with this newly-unearthed policy. Only when a commenter on his blog3 asked him about it, did Richard realize that there was “more to the issue” than what he had been told:
Ms.
Açelya Danoğlu
December
18, 2012 at 3:34 am #
Dear
Professor Dr. Falk,
I
heard that the Human Rights Watch removed you from their board of directors! Is
it true? Your name is no longer listed on the website: http://www.hrw.org/cities/santa_barbara/committee
Did
you resign because of the pressures from the UN Watch NGO which accused you of
“antisemitism”? Did the board remove you? I do not understand.
In
peace,
Açelya
REPLY
Richard
Falk
December
18, 2012 at 7:30 am #
I
was asked to resign, but supposedly because of my connection
with
the UN, which is contrary to HRW policy. Perhaps, there
is
more to the issue than what I have been told.
Look at the time stamps here. Remember that the UN Watch letter is dated
December 17. That’s some fast customer
service!
Having learned that there was “more to the issue” than he
had been led to believe, Richard, as I understand it, then went back to Roth, et. al., for clarification. Was HRW asking him to resign because of the
newly discovered policy conflict, or because they were accepting and endorsing
the UN Watch complaint? If not the
latter, then would HRW make a statement supportive of him, and give him some
assurance that he would be welcomed back once his mandate at the U.N. expired? Of course, no such statement of support or
respect was forthcoming from HRW. UN
Watch has no doubt about what happened, and why: “’You’re
Fired’: Richard Falk Expelled from Human Rights Watch.”
And neither should we. Everybody knows what HRW was responding to. Ardent Zionists, who
are increasingly isolated in the world, are desperate to shut up and shut off
anyone – especially anyone in the US, especially an impeccably articulate American
Jewish intellectual – who dares provide a voice for the rights and aspirations
of the Palestinian people. Richard Falk’s is precisely the kind of calm,
reasonable voice of critique that is most threatening to the Israeli colonial
(and the American imperial) project. HRW’s act is a capitulation to UN
Watch and all that it stands for. The weasly vision of Roth, et. al., rooting around in the HRW
by-laws for something to tell Richard that would make it seem as if they were
doing something other than capitulating to UN Watch should be called what it
is: a flimsy, pathetic excuse. Let them
at least have the courage to own what
they’ve actually done, and say: “Yes, Richard, despite how well we know you and
the work you’ve done with us, and throughout the world, for decades, we take
seriously the charge that you are a ‘racist and enemy of human rights,’ and,
for that reason, we are asking you to leave..”
Let HRW, and Richard Falk, be judged on that.
There is no question
who will be found wanting. That anyone would pay any heed to people who would
characterize Richard Falk in this way is ludicrous, and – to those who are less
inclined than Richard to a sense of calm and patience – infuriating.
It’s especially so for HRW, an organization which claims to be
independent and progressive. Anyone who
knows Richard – and there are just too many whom he has taught and touched for
this to go down any other way – knows that it is he who should be proud, and
HRW which should be ashamed. It is their credibility, which voices like Richard
Falk’s gave them, that has been undermined. It’s their loss, not his.
We have all watched
HRW’s struggle to be fair. On balance, I
think they’ve done good work and I’ve been a supporter. Given their donor base and their ties to the
US elite, they are under enormous pressure.
Nonetheless, given what is now the ever-more-blatant willingness of the US
and Israel to do anything they want with impunity, American-based human-rights
organizations like HRW are going to find it increasingly difficult to maintain
their credibility unless they are willing to clearly and unequivocally denounce
the outrageously illegal activities of the countries their donors are prone to
identify with. They know that, until and unless they call for American
and Israeli politicians in the dock at the ICC, their denunciations of African
and Third World dictators will ring increasingly hollow. If they cannot stand up for a man who’s been
one of the outstanding voices of peace and human rights of our age, in the face
of ludicrous charges from reactionary neocons who spend their lives promoting
war, then there is little chance they will do anything other than avoid the hard
judgments that are likely to be necessary in the face of the future actions by
the world’s worst aggressors.
I will certainly have
nothing more to do with HRW unless they make some statement abjuring the UN
Watch complaint, and assuring Richard Falk that he will be welcomed back once his
UN appointment is over. I urge everyone
to make their feelings known to HRW.
Notes
1Neuer condemns Richard for “anti-Semitic”
acts and remarks about eight times in the letter, which you can find here: http://blog.unwatch.org/index.php/2012/12/17/human-rights-watch-should-remove-antisemitic-u-n-official-richard-falk-from-its-board/.
The letter makes a mistake, that’s
repeated elsewhere, identifying Falk as a member of the HRW “Board.” He was, in fact, a member of the Santa
Barbara City Committee, a part of what HRW calls its “global network of
regional support committees.”
It is a fool’s
errand to try to respond to any of the specifics of the letter. Richard is a target because he has been a
fair and persuasive advocate of justice for Palestine and the Palestinian people. Period.
The rest is hogwash. And
everybody knows it.
2His official title is “Special Rapporteur on the
Situation of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories Occupied since 1967.”
3The discussion of the HRW flap is in the comment
section of this post on Falk’s blog: http://richardfalk.wordpress.com/2012/12/15/responding-to-the-unspeakable-killings-at-newtown-connecticut/
. You’ll also see what I mean about
Richard’s calm and patient voice in response to the incessant Zionist trolling
that’s in play.
Thanks for your cogent appraisal, but you don't actually talk about what Falk did that enraged UN Watch so that they decided to expend political capital to shame an obviously honorable man. Falk's real sin was to fail to delete certain posts on his blog that said forbidden things, taboo because they are probably true, and terrifying to think about. Is this venal behavior by shady robber barons the same thing that enraged the Europeans, so that they tried to actually extinguish them in WW2? There is obviously no genetic link among this group going back thousands of years, so it must be a product of culture, with the ancient scrolls as the vector of infection. If religion is not the cause, then it must be something else, and we continue to turn away at our peril.
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