ZOA Protests College Campus Lectures By Bishop Tutu, Who Has Compared Israel To Nazi Germany
News
April 1, 2003


NEW YORK – The Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) is protesting the appearances by Archbishop Desmond Tutu on U.S. college campuses, in view of Tutu’s statements comparing Israel to Nazi Germany and complaining about what he called “Jewish arrogance.”


Tutu spoke this week at Yeshiva University’s Cardozo Law School in New York City, and is scheduled to speak soon at the University of Pennsylvania,


ZOA National President Morton A. Klein said “in view of Archbishop Tutu’s long record of anti-Jewish and anti-Israel remarks, it is appalling that Yeshiva University’s Cardozo Law School invited him as a speaker, and we urge other universities to refrain from inviting him.”


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The Israeli daily Ha’aretz (April 29, 2002), reporting Tutu’s remarks at a conference in Boston, quoted him as saying:


* “Israel is like Hitler and apartheid” “I’ve been deeply distressed in my visit to the Holy Land it reminded me so much of what happened to us black people in South Africa … I have seen the humiliation of the Palestinians at checkpoints and roadblocks, suffering like us when young white police officers prevented us from moving about… “I say why are our memories so short? Have our Jewish sisters and brothers forgotten their humiliation? Have they forgotten the collective punishment, the home demolitions, in their own history so soon? … The apartheid government was very powerful, but today it no longer exists. Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, Pinochet, Milosevic, and Idi Amin were all powerful, but in the end they bit the dust. Injustice and oppression will never prevail.”


* “The Jewish lobby is very powerful”: “People are scared in this country [the U.S.], to say wrong is wrong because the Jewish lobby is powerful—very powerful.”


“Critics of Israel are being smeared”: “You know as well as I do that, somehow, the Israeli government is placed on a pedestal [in the U.S.] and to criticize it is to be immediately dubbed anti-Semitic, as if Palestinians were not Semitic.”


“Jewish Arrogance” Tutu accused Jews of exhibiting “an arrogance—the arrogance of power because Jews are a powerful lobby in this land and all kinds of people woo their support,”(Jewish Telegraphic Agency Daily News Bulletin, Nov. 29, 1984)


“Jewish Monopoly of the Holocaust Tutu complained about the Jewish monopoly of the Holocaust.” (Jerusalem Post, July 26, 1985)


“Forgive the Nazis” During his 1989 visit to Israel, Tutu “urged Israelis to forgive the Nazis for the Holocaust” (Jerusalem Post, Dec. 31, 1989), a statement which the Simon Wiesenthal Center called “a gratuitous insult to Jews and victims of Nazism everywhere.” During the visit, Tutu remarked “If I’m accused of being antisemitic, tough luck,” and in response to questions about his anti-Jewish bias, Tutu replied, “My dentist’s name is Dr. Cohen.” (Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Response magazine, January 1990)


“Zionism Is Racism” Tutu has claimed that Zionism has “very many parallels with racism.” (American Jewish Year Book 1988, p.50)


“Jews Thought They Had a Monopoly on God” Speaking in a Connecticut church in 1984, Tutu said that “the Jews thought they had a monopoly on God; Jesus was angry that they could shut out other human beings.” In the same speech, he compared the features of the ancient Holy Temple in Jerusalem to the features of the apartheid system in South Africa. (Hartford Courant, Oct. 29, 1984)


“Palestine, Not Israel”: In conversations during the 1980s with the Israeli ambassador to South Africa, Eliahu Lankin, Tutu “refused to call Israel by its name, he kept referring to it as Palestine.” (Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Response magazine, January 1990)


“Jews Cause Refugees”: Asked about the Zionism-is-racism resolution, Tutu complained that “the Jewish people with their traditions, religion and long history of persecution sometimes appear to have caused a refugee problem among others.” (South African Zionist Record, July 26, 1985)




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