At one time American libraries
stood at the heart of community education, forming in a positive way the minds
and character of our youth, changing lives for the better. But sadly, the
traditional mission of these august institutions of learning for generations of
Americans is disappearing as they gradually turn into indoctrination centers
against the
United States and Israel.
One of the main reasons for this tragic and
disturbing turn of events is the American Library
Association, where a
clique of leftists has taken over, dedicating itself to padding libraries across
America with anti-Israel books, videos and other materials, excluding both sides
in the Israel/Palestine dispute.
The American
Library Association is the oldest and biggest professional society of librarians
in the world with over 60,000 members. When college majors in Library Science
graduate, they must have attended ALA accredited schools accredited if they hope to find the
best jobs in their field. Starting in the 1980's, hard-core leftists and
pro-Palestinian activists have steadily been working to take control of the ALA
much in the same manner as has occurred with Middle East Studies Centers on
college campuses nationwide. These people decide what will you and your children
will read and see at the local library.
Dr. Stephen
Karetzky, a noted librarian, wrote more than 20 years ago about the
ALA's embracing,
Soviet-style totalitarianism in the American library system in his book, Not Seeing Red: American Librarianship and the
Soviet Union, 1917-1960. He contends that the ALA has always advanced radical socialist doctrine as being
positive while not presenting in a fair manner views concerning the benefits of
the American capitalist system. Adding to that background, with the advent of
the Vietnam War, college radicals, as they moved into mainstream jobs in all
areas of academia, continued to promote their ideas of radical change in
American government and society. Library Science is closely tied in with today's
university atmosphere where Marxism now thrives along with a resurrected policy
of anti-Semitism.
But the growth of
the Palestinian and Saudi propaganda movements on
U.S. campuses created a new cause celebre in the
library system after the fall of the Soviet Union. As communist groups
such as International
Answer and the International
Socialist Organization
sprang up advocating the overthrow of the American capitalist system, their
adherents, who had frequently allied themselves with the Palestinian
"revolution" against the Jews (euphemistically called "Zionists") on US college
campuses, moved into leadership positions within the
ALA.
Karetzky
experienced this first hand. A Columbia
University graduate, he taught Library Science at
San
Jose
State
University and then went to work at
Haifa
University in Israel. When he returned to
the United
States to
find work, Karetzky found himself frequently ostracized from jobs because of the
political indoctrination found in his field. He said: "I was asked, 'What did
you think of censorship in the Gulf War?' or 'Why did you live in
Israel?' If I told them I believed in a Jewish state, I was
refused a job."
Every job
interview centered on politics rather than his experience as an academic and
library professional. Whenever Karetzky would try to teach his students both
sides of an issue, he was chastised for not adhering to the "progressive" point
of view. Despite ALA policy that says library materials should show all sides
of an issue, Karetzky explained how the actual game plan is to admit only
progressive points of view to the exclusion of conservative ideas. "When errors
in information were called to library officials' attention, their response was
that the library system is allowed to teach opinion," he
said.
The ALA "Bill of
Rights" has been twisted to the
point that "anything goes" in Library Science as long as it is deemed
progressive. The ALA proved its adherence to this philosophy when it spent 1.5
million dollars in lawsuits that reached the Supreme Court to oppose the Child
Online Protection Act, H.R. 3783, passed by Congress; an
ALA victory would have
allowed pornography for
children in public libraries.
When extremist positions like that thrive within the ALA, it creates an atmosphere conducive to promoting any
one-sided propaganda exported from totalitarian regimes abroad as part of the
"progressive agenda".
It is therefore
not surprising that American libraries, those on college campuses as well as in
neighborhood communities, include a disproportionate number of anti-Israel
books. Works by Edward Said and Noam Chomsky condemning "American imperialism"
or that call Israel a "colony" of America are commonly found with other similar materials available
regardless of the speciousness of their content. Solid scholarly research with
factual information about Israel is difficult to find, if at
all.
As well, the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), an organization that bills itself as an Arab
civil rights group but was shown to have links to Hamas, has utilized American
libraries' budgetary problems to provide
books "free of charge" to
advance the "Arab point of view". CAIR has given books to more than 7,000
American libraries so far.
To librarians
uninformed about Middle Eastern history, or to those who intentionally wish to
attack America and Israel, the chance to stack the racks with free books is
certainly enticing. But while donating books to our library system should be a
laudatory thing, CAIR's agenda is to persuade readers that
Israel must be dismantled, an idea that conforms to Hamas
doctrine. And such donations are not limited to just books; today's public and
college libraries feature DVDs, videotapes, symposiums, and educational outreach
to public schools and community groups using such one-sided resource materials.
Research becomes tainted when the information is not objective, but rather a
subtle form of indoctrination.
The film Jenin,
Jenin is a good example of such propaganda with its staged
scenes that falsely claim a
massacre by Israelis; it is screened at "events" or "lectures" designed to
misinform the same way as in any totalitarian, Middle Eastern, educational
system. Hamas, Islamic Jihad or Hizbollah are no longer
perceived as terrorist groups but
political, and even human rights organizations, as was done on
Duke
University's library website.
Major players within
the ALA, who have made the ALA into a vehicle for their anti-American and
anti-Israel views, include past ALA president Maurice J. "Mitch" Freedman;
University of Pittsburgh librarian Thomas Twiss; California librarian Rory
Litwin (who also produces a leftist-socialist oriented library newsletter, Library Juice, that condemns
U.S. foreign policy and Israel); Chicago public librarian David L. Williams;
avowed Marxist Mark Rosenzweig; Zoia Horn; Al Kagan; and Ghada El Turk, among
others.
Freedman has scheduled
events at past ALA Conferences that set the tone for the political climate
within the ALA. For example, at the Midwestern ALA
Convention he offered a special
treat by screening "The Trials of Henry Kissinger" and "Power and Terror: Noam
Chomsky In Our Times". Both films attacked
U.S. foreign policy,
blaming the United
States for terrorism, and the
Chomsky film, as usual, attacked
Israel. Freedman also chose
as a guest speaker Amy Goodman, a pro-Palestinian writer and host on Pacifica
Radio. The media watchdog group
CAMERA once condemned Pacifica for "repeatedly providing a forum for racists,
anti-Semites and other critics of Israel." In 1992, Khalide Hamide, a fundraiser for the terrorist
organization the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, was also invited
to attend an ALA convention.
Thomas Twiss took
the ALA into the international arena by presenting resolutions
against Israel, which were then sent to the UN, the US State Department
and Yasser Arafat. But he wasn't alone. Since the early 1990's
ALA members have joined Twiss by passing resolutions and
writing articles that condemn the Jewish state. Rory Litwin allowed
Library Juice to be used by Al Kagan, a Library Administration
professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana, where he is active in the anti-Israel divestment
campaign. David L. Williams, who works in the public library system out of
Chicago, organized an ALA Committee On Israeli Censorship. He
published a bibliography at taxpayer expense listing books biased against
Israel. This is housed in Chicago's Public Library. Zoia Horn, now an octogenarian and
lifelong San Francisco Bay Area Marxist, published an article bashing
Israel in the main ALA journal, American Libraries.
Mark Rosenzweig, an
avowed Marxist
librarian, and the other
activists within the ALA, continually put forth resolutions that openly portray
Israel as a villain that destroys Palestinian libraries. To date,
there is no evidence of the IDF ever having destroyed a Palestinian library
despite PLO accusations. Meanwhile, when a Palestinian suicide bomber at
Hebrew
University in Jerusalem murdered an American librarian,
ALA leaders made no comment. Nor did the
ALA take exception to what
Palestinian
libraries teach children about Jews and Israel, instilling and inciting hatred and
war.
In most professional
associations, the positions of those who organize and run things are usually
non-paying and manned by volunteers. This system attracts only the most
dedicated people in their professions—or those with an agenda who appreciate a
bully pulpit, which, in the case of libraries, is at taxpayers' expense. And the
latter reason explains why those people mentioned above got together and formed
an even more powerful cabal within the ALA to further their mutual goals of
demonizing Israel and advancing Marxist ideology. Called the Social Responsibilities Roundtable (SRRT), this subgroup has played an aggressive
role within the ALA that affects every library in the country.
The SRRT has run
wild. In 1992 its members passed a resolution, backed by the
ALA, which protested "the deportation of Omar al-Safi, a
librarian at Bir
Zeit
University ... in the West
Bank." Al-Safi was a terrorist with a long criminal
record in the Democratic Front
for the Liberation of Palestine
(DFLP), a terrorist group that unequivocally calls for the murder of all
Israelis. The DFLP's pinnacle achievement was the murder of 22 children and
adults taken hostage at a high school in Israel in 1974, afterwards known as the Ma'alot Massacre.
In 2002, the SRRT
was still openly passing resolutions against Israel and sending them to the UN, the U.S. State Department and
Yasser Arafat. This ALA cabal has sent
personal representatives to support and meet Yasser Arafat and had anti-Israel
literature distributed in
children's sections of American
public libraries. And with the recent creation of another ALA subgroup, the International Responsibilities Task Force,
the taxpayer's dollar can now be tapped to purchase "alternative literature"
calling for Israel's annihilation.
Front Page
Magazine has featured articles showing how Saudi money is used to fund
Palestinian goals and add to the climate of indoctrination against the
United
States and
Israel on our college
campuses, in high schools and in public school textbooks. Being the main
accreditation authority for librarians, the ALA's prominence has also lent
credence to similar activities at college libraries and programs nationwide, such as at Duke University where a library
website featured a Jewish Star of David made out of barbed wire to imply
Palestinian suffering at the hands of Jews.
For a local
example of this, one need look no further than Ghada Elturk, who works out of
the Boulder Public Library in Colorado. An active SRRT member, Ms. Elturk, Lebanese by birth, is
responsible for acquisitions and books for a program designed to appeal to
minorities. Her series on Readings On Racism have outreached as far as
New England libraries. Ms. Elturk extends her job to promoting film
festivals, reading material and events that are all designed to present
Israel as oppressing Palestinian Arabs. Elturk's acquisitions of
library materials are heavily skewed against
Israel in her library's
online
catalog.
Elturk also joins
fellow ALA members in accusing
Israel of destroying
Palestinian libraries but never extends her Reading Against Racism program to
pointing out how Palestinian libraries have books that compare Jews and
Christians as the children of monkeys and pigs, or that deny the Jews' right to
have their own country in the Muslim world. Ms. Elturk recently held a symposium
at the Boulder Public Library where she screened no less than six pro-PLO films.
The main feature, a film called "The Bombing," contained content blaming
Israel for suicide bombers that kill
Israelis.
A Boulder
community member, Michael Wolin, who objected to the bias of Ms. Elturk's
screenings, particularly after they were advertised for free in conjunction with
a yearly international conference at the nearby University of Colorado, said his
complaints to the head of the library to allow the showing of pro-Israel films
to provide balance only got him referred to Ms. Elturk. Needless to say, she
refused.
Some
Israel activists then went to Boulder's Library Commission. Ms. Elturk showed up for the meeting
to explain how her program somehow advanced social justice. The Commission
deferred to the professional librarian. After all, the thinking went: she is a
member of the ALA, so she must know what she is doing. The community members
demanding balance on the side of Israel were virtually shut out of their own library system by a
propagandist for the PLO. Her Palestinian propaganda films, some with completely
fabricated content like Jenin, Jenin, are in the permanent
collection for loan at taxpayers' expense. Ms. Elturk uses
her bully pulpit well. Her outreach efforts extend to the materials high school
students read in World History.
The boulder
librarian's activities provide a template for libraries across
America to follow as Palestinian film
festivals demonizing Israel are scheduled from
Ames, Iowa, to
Flint, Michigan, to
Berkeley, California. They all present one-sided
films with "recommended reading" as follow-up that is neither objective nor free
of a political agenda against Israel and
US policy.
For example, the Ames
Public Library screened "Jenin, Jenin" as part of
their series on "Palestine Unabridged." Tributes were made to Rachel Corrie, the
International Solidarity Movement radical who was reportedly killed for
protecting a doctor's house from demolition by the Israeli army but who was
actually killed by accident when she tried to block a tractor from demolishing a
weapons smuggling tunnel that was no where near the
doctor's house. The myth of the innocent victim killed by the Israeli army
was perpetuated to the Ames community, as Corrie's relatives were invited to speak
against Israel. Like in Boulder, complaints to Ames Library administrators from the
pro-Israel community for some type of program to lend balance fell on deaf ears.
Similar one-sided presentations are popping up in libraries all over
America.
There are
ALA members opposed to what is happening but who are afraid to speak out for
fear they will lose their jobs. However, there are workers in the library trade
who have had enough of this lack of balance. Librarians For
Fairness, a group of
library professionals, has sprung up to monitor the situation and to recommend
balanced reading materials in our public libraries in order to stop them being
turned into propaganda ministries.
But the fact
remains: Those who support the actions and goals of terrorists and oppose
Israel's existence and
America's War on Terror have infiltrated
America's knowledge distribution centers – our libraries. As a
result, all of us
should take a good, hard look at what is going on at our local libraries and get
involved.
Source URL