Crosscurrents into the mainstream
As the
Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee acts to fortify its
presence in the US mainstream, some members are crying capitulation to
the establishment. Amira Howeidy reviews the debate
Arab-American organisations are stuck between the proverbial rock and
a hard place. In the post 11 September world, the foremost Arab-
American advocacy group, the Arab- American Anti-Discrimination
Committee (ADC), continues to suffer from the attack and its
aftermath.
As prominent members of ADC express
concerns about the "crisis" within the organisation, the
leadership continues to deny that there are any problems at all.
Prominent Arab-Americans have accused the ADC of becoming an autocracy
that capitulates to the demands of the Bush administration to the
detriment of the interests of the Arab-American community. The
divisions within the ADC are particularly alarming given the post 11
September climate towards Arabs in the US. The ADC is the largest
secular and grass-roots level organisation in the US dealing with Arab
issues. And given the post 11 September hysteria, the role of groups
concerned with the Arab community in the US has become more essential
than ever before.
The ADC's internal troubles were
brought to light more than a month ago when Al-Jazeera
devoted its "Opposite Directions" show to the issue of Arab
and Muslim organisations in the US and whether they truly represent
their communities. The ADC leadership was criticised for supporting
Bush's war on Afghanistan while there was no consensus on the issue in
the organisation. "The leaders of these groups would do anything
to go to the White House, have their pictures taken with the
president, and then pretend they achieved something, when in fact they
didn't" stated Faisal Al-Qassem, the host of the show. For over
two decades, the ADC has been particularly effective in addressing
issues of discrimination against Arab- Americans and promoting the
interests of the three-million strong Arab community in the US.
The organisation's policy of
"loyal opposition" under the leadership of its former
president Hala Maqsoud, who died March 2001, won it respect within US
government circles and credibility in the Arab-American community.
Before her death, Maqsoud resigned from ADC to be replaced by Dr Ziad
Asali, a retired physician who had recently joined ADC.
Until the Al-Jazeera programme,
the ADC, for those who knew about it in this part of the world, had
been viewed as "our" representative in the US. But as
frustrated members speak out on the ADC's support for Bush, a
disturbing series of events is beginning to take shape.
A former Iraqi general, from an
opposition group which supports a US war against Iraq, was invited to
speak at the ADC's convention last June. Moreover, the FBI was present
at the same convention. To many, this was a visible manifestation of
the ADC's capitulation to the Bush administration. Moreover, Asali
condemned suicide operations in Occupied Palestine on TV. In a
statement issued by ADC, the organisation would only go as far as
discouraging an "unprovoked" attack on Iraq. And although
discrimination against Arab and Muslim Americans has reached record
highs, the ADC leadership is being accused of trying to
"dilute" this by saying that such discrimination amounts to
a "subtle but insidious" reintroduction of ethnic
discrimination into America's immigration procedures and law
enforcement.
More importantly, critics within the
ADC complain of the leadership's efforts to quash any criticism of the
Bush administration.
"People were upset that the
founder of ADC, Senator Jim Abourezk's talk at the convention did not
appear on the ADC Web site with other main talks," says Dr Elaine
Hagopian, a prominent ADC member -- "his talk was strongly
critical of American leaders and American foreign policy." In
addition, the talk of Clovis Maqsoud which called for Arab unity and
action on Palestine appeared with a disclaimer on the Web site saying
that his ideas don't represent ADC policy.
"People found this
offensive" explains Hagopian, "especially since Dr Maqsoud
is a highly respected pillar in the Arab-American community." In
an effort to reorganise the ADC, the leadership decided to eliminate
the position of West Coast director. Many believe that eliminating the
position was simply a cover for removing the man who occupied the
position: Michael Shehadeh, a well respected Arab- American activist.
Not only was Shehadeh critical of the
US government and vocal about democratising the ADC, he is a long time
activist and one of the well- known members of the Los Angeles Eight
(LA8), a group of eight dissidents who have been harassed by the
government since 1987. Their case is about to be re-opened under the
new US Patriot Act.
Both the ADC leadership "and US
officials do not want conflict in the relationship between ADC and the
government", Shehadeh told Al-Ahram Weekly.
"This is a time when Shehadeh
and the LA8 need the ADC to defend their rights vis-a-vis the Justice
Department and the FBI... instead of firing him and inviting the FBI
to have a desk at the national convention," says Dr Nasser Aruri,
chancellor and professor emeritus of Political Science at the
University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, who is close to the ADC.
Shehadeh blames the situation in the
ADC on Asali's 'vision'. "The manifestation of this 'vision' is
to push the organisation towards a path of transformation in a
direction of capitulation to the Bush administration's policies of war
abroad, curtailment of civil liberties at home, and the elimination of
the Palestinian cause and the destruction of Iraq." He says this
acceptance of American policy is done in a strategy of pleasing the US
power elite in order to "empower" the Arab American
community. "The ADC leadership believes that pleasing the
powerful will empower them... they don't recognise the big difference
between enslavement and empowerment."
Following Shehadeh's dismissal, a
number of ADC chapters formed "The National Democratic Reform
Committee" which is an ad-hoc union with a mandate of
"democratising" the ADC. Its mission statement asserts that
"it's not a parallel leadership body to the existing ADC
decision-making structure." People outside of the organisation
say the new group represents a fissure within the ADC. Shehadeh does
not agree saying "it is the membership trying to push the ADC to
stay true to its original mission."
Today, observers are wondering about
ADC's mission. Critics and supporters are wondering why the most well-
established and powerful Arab lobbying group lacks the unity and drive
to successfully push its agenda. Ironically, the lobbying role of such
advocacy groups has only recently drawn the attention of major
organisations in the Arab world. The Arab League has paid attention to
the ADC only after 11 September, and last week, Arab League sources
said that it will establish an expatriate Arab commission.
Even the issue of lobbying is in need
of thorough examination, says Dr Nasser Aruri, "lobbying does not
constitute trying to convince a Congressman or his assistants of the
justice of your case, but presenting them with your voting
power." But the Washington based ADC seems to have developed what
Hagopian calls "Washingtonitis -- a belief that one can convince
government officials by being moderate." This kind of approach
applies to basically powerless groups, she says, "however nothing
is really gained by limiting the role of criticism... in fact,
criticism serves to alert the government about the possible
consequences of its policies and to educate the public as well. The
Arab-American community does not have the clout of an AIPAC, which is
very powerful."
"American media culture is
hostile and what we (do not) need is an organisation that wants to
align itself with established government policies, [policies] which do
not advance the cause," argues Aruri. For example, what did the
briefing of the ADC board by Colin Powell accomplish for the
community, he asked. "Not even a paragraph was released by the
State Department to the media. If the ADC wants to play a role in the
vital American political centre and become a mainstream organisation
it needs to mobilise the community at the grass-roots level and to
seek coalitions with progressive organisations opposing US hegemony in
the world and [who are] standing up to Ashcroft's trashing of civil
liberties."
Asali, however, believes that the
message of working within the system towards the empowerment of the
community, "with the clear objective of impacting the national
decision-making, has less appeal to some than revolutionary and tired
rhetoric that has so far yielded so much misery and defeat", he
told the Weekly. "The Arab world, and issues of crucial
concern to us and to our community, can only be met by us if we
ourselves are empowered and effective."
Members of the Arab-American
community, Asali said, are joining the ADC in droves. "Never in
its history has the ADC been more effective or sorely needed, and
never has it been so vociferously criticised by a fringe ideological
minority. Criticism leveled at the policy, dictated by the National
Board, is personalised and trivial. Measured criticism of the
administration, filing suits against the government (and winning them
as we just have with the detention list issue), filing suits against
three multi-billion dollar airline companies for profiling, and
forging real alliances of the top leaders of Black, Latino, and Asian
Americans are all dismissed as surrendering to the administration and
selling out."
To Asali, all this criticism
"means that ADC counts and the 10 million hits a year that visit
our web page confirm that".
However, Aruri argues that the real
challenge facing the ADC is establishing itself in mainstream politics
and grass-roots mobilisation.