Why I'm Banned in the USA
By Tariq Ramadan
10/01/06 "Washington
Post" -- - -For more than two years now,
the U.S. government has barred me from entering the United
States to pursue an academic career. The reasons have changed
over time, and have evolved from defamatory to absurd, but the
effect has remained the same: I've been kept out.
First, I was told that I could not enter the country because I
had endorsed terrorism and violated the USA Patriot Act. It took
a lawsuit for the government eventually to abandon this baseless
accusation. Later, I reapplied for a visa, twice, only to hear
nothing for more than a year. Finally, just 10 days ago, after a
federal judge forced the State Department to reconsider my
application, U.S. authorities offered a new rationale for
turning me away: Between 1998 and 2002, I had contributed small
sums of money to a French charity supporting humanitarian work
in the Palestinian territories.
I am increasingly convinced that the Bush administration has
barred me for a much simpler reason: It doesn't care for my
political views. In recent years, I have publicly criticized
U.S. policy in the Middle East, the war in Iraq, the use of
torture, secret CIA prisons and other government actions that
undermine fundamental civil liberties. And for many years,
through my research and writing and speeches, I have called upon
Muslims to better understand the principles of their own faith,
and have sought to show that one can be Muslim and Western at
the same time.
My experience reveals how U.S. authorities seek to suppress
dissenting voices and -- by excluding people such as me from
their country -- manipulate political debate in America.
Unfortunately, the U.S. government's paranoia has evolved far
beyond a fear of particular individuals and taken on a much more
insidious form: the fear of ideas.
In January 2004, I was offered a job at the University of Notre
Dame, as a professor of Islamic studies and as Luce professor of
religion, conflict and peace-building. I accepted the tenured
position enthusiastically and looked forward to joining the
academic community in the United States. After the government
granted me a work visa, I rented a home in South Bend, Ind.,
enrolled my children in school there and shipped all of my
household belongings. Then, in July, the government notified me
that my visa had been revoked. It did not offer a specific
explanation, but pointed to a provision of the Patriot Act that
applies to people who have "endorsed or espoused" terrorist
activity.
The revocation shocked me. I had consistently opposed terrorism
in all of its forms, and still do. And, before 2004, I had
visited the United States frequently to lecture, attend
conferences and meet with other scholars. I had been an invited
speaker at conferences or lectures sponsored by Harvard
University, Stanford, Princeton and the William Jefferson
Clinton Presidential Foundation. None of these institutions
seemed to consider me a threat to national security.
The U.S. government invited me to apply for a new visa and, with
Notre Dame's help, I did so in October 2004. But after three
months passed without a response, I felt I had little choice but
to give up my new position and resume my life in Europe. Even
so, I never abandoned the effort to clear my name. At the urging
of American academic and civic groups, I reapplied for a visa
one last time in September 2005, hoping that the government
would retract its accusation. Once again, I encountered only
silence.
Finally, in January, the American Civil Liberties Union, the
American Academy of Religion, the American Association of
University Professors and PEN American Center filed a lawsuit on
my behalf, challenging the government's actions. In court, the
government's lawyers admitted that they could establish no
connection between me and any terrorist group; the government
had merely taken a "prudential" measure by revoking my visa.
Even then, the government maintained that the process of
reconsidering my visa could take years. The federal court --
which issued a ruling recognizing that I have been a vocal
critic of terrorism -- rejected the indefinite delay. In June,
it ordered the government to grant me a visa or explain why it
would not do so.
On Sept. 21, the long-awaited explanation arrived. The letter
from the U.S. Embassy informed me that my visa application had
been denied, and it put an end to the rumors that had circulated
since my original visa was revoked. After a lengthy
investigation, the State Department cited no evidence of
suspicious relationships, no meetings with terrorists, no
encouraging or advocacy of terrorism. Instead, the department
cited my donation of $940 to two humanitarian organizations (a
French group and its Swiss chapter) serving the Palestinian
people. I should note that the investigation did not reveal
these contributions. As the department acknowledges, I had
brought this information to their attention myself, two years
earlier, when I had reapplied for a visa.
In its letter, the U.S. Embassy claims that I "reasonably should
have known" that the charities in question provided money to
Hamas. But my donations were made between December 1998 and July
2002, and the United States did not blacklist the charities
until 2003. How should I reasonably have known of their
activities before the U.S. government itself knew? I donated to
these organizations for the same reason that countless Europeans
-- and Americans, for that matter -- donate to Palestinian
causes: not to help fund terrorism, but because I wanted to
provide humanitarian aid to people who desperately need it. Yet
after two years of investigation, this was the only explanation
offered for the denial of my visa. I still find it hard to
believe.
What words do I utter and what views do I hold that are
dangerous to American ears, so dangerous, in fact, that I should
not be allowed to express them on U.S. soil?
I have called upon Western societies to be more open toward
Muslims and to regard them as a source of richness, not just of
violence or conflict. I have called upon Muslims in the West to
reconcile and embrace both their Islamic and Western identities.
I have called for the creation of a "New We" based on common
citizenship within which Buddhists, Jews, Christians, Muslims
and people with no religion can build a pluralistic society. And
yes, I believe we all have a right to dissent, to criticize
governments and protest undemocratic decisions. It is certainly
legitimate for European Muslims and American Muslims to
criticize their governments if they find them unjust -- and I
will continue to do so.
At the same time, I do not stop short of criticizing regimes
from Muslim countries. Indeed, the United States is not the only
country that rejects me; I am also barred from Tunisia, Saudi
Arabia and even my native Egypt. Last month, after a few
sentences in a speech by Pope Benedict XVI elicited protests and
violence, I published an article noting how some governments in
the Muslim world manipulate these imagined crises to suit their
political agendas. "When the people are deprived of their basic
rights and of their freedom of expression," I argued, "it costs
nothing to allow them to vent their anger over Danish cartoons
or the words of the Pontiff." I was immediately accused of
appeasing the enemies of Islam, of being more Western than
Muslim.
Today, I live and work in London. From my posts at Oxford
University and the Lokahi Foundation, I try to promote cultural
understanding and to prevent radicalization within Muslim
communities here. Along with many British citizens, I have
criticized the country's new security laws and its support for
the war in Iraq. Yet I have never been asked to remain silent as
a condition to live or work here. I can express myself freely.
I fear that the United States has grown fearful of ideas. I have
learned firsthand that the Bush administration reacts to its
critics not by engaging them, but by stigmatizing and excluding
them. Will foreign scholars be permitted to enter the United
States only if they promise to mute their criticisms of U.S.
policy? It saddens me to think of the effect this will have on
the free exchange of ideas, on political debate within America,
and on our ability to bridge differences across cultures.
Tariq Ramadan, <web@tariqramadan.com>
a fellow at Oxford University, is author of "Western Muslims and
the Future of Islam."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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