*A
Glimpse at Evil in America
The Statement of Kani Xulam at Lucie Stern Community Center
Palo Alto, California
April 20, 2002
A Glimpse at Evil in America
Late last year, I got an e-mail from a person who said he had seen the
documentary, "Good Kurds, Bad Kurds: No Friends, But the Mountains"
on
PBS and wanted to know if I was safe from the threat of deportation
from the United States. I wrote him back thanking him for his interest
in my case and asked him to share with me his address to send him more
information on the Kurds. As it is my custom in situations like this,
I wanted to cultivate him as a friend of Kurdistan.
He shared with me his address. I sent him a package. About
a week later, he called our office and talked to my assistant in greater
detail about our work and expressed a desire to help. I then spoke
with him, and gently raised the issue of our acute need for financial support,
and urged him to make a tax-deductible donation. He said, he would
send us a check shortly. I thanked him for his generosity and returned
to my assistant saying, I think, we have a $100.00 check coming.
She said, she thought, it would be for $50.00.
Those were the post 9/11 days and the beginning of the Anthrax scare
that brought the Washington mail service to a grinding halt. Unknown
to the world, we were having our most difficult days in our eight-year
existence as a voice for the Kurds and Kurdistan. Our usual donors
had joined the national effort trying to heal a gushing wound in New York,
Washington and Pennsylvania. Like any organization that faces declining
revenues, we started reducing our costs. We stopped our water service.
We disconnected our satellite television. We started reading our
dailies online. And to date, we are still anxious about the predicament
of our office.
So when someone calls us, these days, to say that they appreciate our
work and are ready to give us a helping hand, our morale shoots up into
outer space. And if they say that they are going to send us a check,
we then engage in these silly predictions, wishing against our better judgements
sometimes, that the donor would contribute enough to put a smile on our
face. So, when the check from our new friend arrived, my assistant
and I were obviously curious about the amount and whether if it would meet
or better yet surpass our projections. The latter happened.
The good man had sent us a check for $ 250.00!
That good man who had signed the check is a friend of yours. His
name is well known to many of you in this room. Some of you have
crossed paths with him as a coach of your children. Others have known
him as a patron saint of some of the Palestinian soccer teams in the Occupied
territories. The newest thing about him is not a SUV, or a boat,
or a plane, but his association with us, the Kurds: dispossessed of their
lands, treated like orphans, and rejected all over the world. As
a Kurd, this discovery of being wanted, let me tell you, feels just great.
It is humanizing and I don't know if I should say the word, intoxicating
as well.
It takes courage to stand up for the silenced, abused and neglected
in our world. The path is a lonely one and inevitably crosses inhospitable
terrain. But your friend, and now our new friend, has what it takes,
perhaps from his coaching experience, a love of justice coupled with an
involuntary drive to help those who are on stranded roads such as ourselves,
to make it to the promised-land. I am touched by his unconditional
friendship for the Kurds. I am also pleased that so many of you have
responded to his call. As you may surmise by now, our friend needs
no introduction. He is Simon Ireland. Please join me in thanking
him with a round of heartfelt applause.
There are others in this room who have gone above and beyond the call
of duty to give Simon a helping hand to organize this wonderful gathering.
I promised Simon that I would recognize them as well, and I ask that you
join me in giving them a round of applause, as I call their names: Kim
Ireland, Carine Ireland, Gary Ireland, Peter Horvath and all the other
associates at World Soccer Inc.
There is one other group in this room that deserves your recognition.
The cornucopia of food that you see all around is a gift of Kurdish restaurant
owners in the Bay Area. They have, despite the collapse of the .com
economy, contributed generously from cheese and wine to Kurdish pizza and
Kurdish dewh. Please join me in giving them a round of applause as
I ask them to stand up for their service to the assembled crowd.
Ayten and Hamdi and their children, Meral and Ismail and their children
and Serpil and Mehmet and their children as well as Kemal, Ferit, Mahmut,
Aziz, Zubeyr and Bawer.
You have come here to hear of a story that doesn't enjoy prime time
attention on your window to the world, your television stations.
Kurds and Kurdistan are forgotten by the powerful, abused by the misguided
and divided from within. If you look at the maps of the world, you
will not find a homeland for our kind. If you listen to policy makers,
no one will talk of us as a people in need of a place under the sun.
Now and then, you may find a reference to us and it is usually accompanied
with a commentary that brings you face to face with man's inhumanity to
man.
Take for example the March 2, 1999 issue of the Washington Post that
had
a byline with the title of "Georgetown Magazine Taken From Stands".
A closer look revealed that copies of "Georgetown Voice", a student magazine
of the Georgetown University with a circulation of 8,400, were stolen from
the racks. Was it a prank or a serious first amendment violation?
I was face to face with one of my sickening experiences as a Kurdish activist
in Washington, DC.
That spring morning, for a change, I did not need coffee to awaken me
to the ugliness that was staring me in the face. The cause of darkness,
in the city that claims to be a beacon of hope for the silenced masses
and nations, had scored an impressive victory. 5000 copies of "Georgetown
Voice" had met a mysterious end prompting the Washington Post to cover
the incident. The problem with the Post was that -- as
it is with the other sources of the mainstream media -- it
knew how to cover the event, but did not belabor on the root causes of
the problem and their implications not just for the Kurds but also Americans
whose magazines were now stolen by people who dared to infringe on their
freedom of speech.
Nicole Gesualdo, the Editor in Chief of the magazine, to be sure, did
not know who had stolen her magazines from the racks. But she had
told the Washington Post reporter enough to alarm the Kurdish Americans
as well as their friends all over the world. "The issue," she said,
"contained an editorial criticizing the Turkish government for capturing
Abdullah Ocalan, the leader of Kurdish [sic] Workers' Party." Anti-Kurdish
foreign students furious with the expose had gone for something they had
learnt from their fathers in the Middle East, cover up the issue, and in
this case, steal the magazines.
Sick to my stomach, I didn't have to guess the real perpetrators of
this heinous crime. Three years before, I had gone to the same Georgetown
University to protest that school's decision to honor the Turkish president
Suleyman Demirel for an honorary degree, and are you ready for this, in
humanities. God bless their hearts over 50 Amnesty International
students had joined us, a handful of Kurdish activists, for the same purpose.
We shouted our lungs out, "Turkey out of Kurdistan", "No Honors for Murderers",
and "Demirel Go Home".
Over 100 Turkish students confronted us. Many held signs that
expressed
support for the university's decision to honor their president.
One of them had the audacity to walk towards us, pointing to an infamous
picture that a Kurdish activist was holding -- depicting the
decapitated heads of the Kurds with the triumphant Turkish soldiers smirking
and posing for the camera -- and said, "I am going to do the
same to you." Unbeknown to us, we later found out, a friend had actually
filmed this foul and premeditated attack on us.
Here was a beast or pure evil masquerading itself as a student of higher
learning in an American university that was honoring his president whose
rule towards the Kurds would be termed by one American writer as slow motion
genocide. I didn't know if I should weep or smile at the lot of the
Kurds in Turkey who would one day be ruled by the likes of this brute that
was now facing us. I did neither; fuming with anger, I found solace
in the words of the Kurdish poet Xani, who 300 hundred years earlier had
said, "I question God's Wisdom in an age of Nation States." Today,
he would have expanded on the phrase nation states and perhaps said stateless
nations.
So, when I read of the disappearance of the "Georgetown Voice" magazine,
I wondered if the student, who had threatened us three years earlier
with beheading, had spearheaded the event. I thought of my poor mother
who had burned my Kurdish books in Turkey lest the old man might be sent
to prison for her son's love of learning. I was reminded of a quote
by a German writer whose name now escapes me, who had said, "When people
start burning books in a society, the burning of the people follows suit."
If this is the nature of freedom that Kurdish Americans enjoy in America,
can you imagine what our loved ones endure in the old country? 40
million Kurds are illegal or slaves -- choose your pick
-- in the world, a place you and I share as a home. In that
home, on your watch, an abominable and blasphemous crime is being committed
against the Kurds. We are overpowered. Brutes walk on our dignity
the way you walk on your streets. The Kurdish language is banned,
-- a nation's only claim to its heart pulse -- condemning
a people as old as the dawn of history to live perhaps its last years.
Unless something is done and done quickly, our adversaries are intent on
eradicating the very name of Kurds and Kurdistan not only from the future
of humanity but also its history.
There are things you could do from the comfort of your home to stop
this slow motion genocide of a nation. It was one of you, the number
one freedom fighter of your country, George Washington, who coined the
maxim, "There can be no greater error than to expect or calculate, upon
real favors from Nation to Nations." After seven years of studying
the United States government and eight years of knocking on its doors,
I have come to the same conclusion as your first president.
But I have learned something else in the process. Not nations
but individuals such as you can make a difference in the lot of the Kurds.
Simon, just one man, guided by the better angels of his nature reached
out to you, in his words, "to do his democratic duty", to give us a forum
to expand the boundaries of freedom and liberty to include the Kurds.
I beseech you to do the same, so that, this crime against humanity comes
to an immediate halt. It would be my sincerest hope to see written
in the annals of our times that the children of these lands who once inflicted
genocide on a defenseless people now rose to rescue
another one from the brink of extinction because it was the reaffirmation
of God's will and the right thing to do besides.
Thank you and I look forward to your questions. |