Professor
Resigns Post Over 9/11 Writing
A Colorado academic quits a
chairmanship after his views of 'little Eichmanns' at the Twin Towers
are publicized.
By David Kelly
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 1, 2005
DENVER — A professor who has
compared the Sept. 11 victims to the Nazi who helped plan the Holocaust
abruptly resigned his administrative position Monday, saying the
controversy made it impossible to do his job.
Ward L. Churchill, who headed
the ethnic studies department at the University of Colorado at Boulder,
said he was stepping down as chairman because "the present political
climate has rendered me a liability" to the department and the college.
He will remain a professor.
The furor erupted last week
over an invitation for Churchill to speak about Native American issues
at Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y. A group of professors there raised
concerns after discovering some of his writings, including one done
shortly after the 9/11 attacks.
In an essay entitled "Some
People Push Back: On the Justice of Roosting Chickens," Churchill
called the workers killed in the World Trade Center "little Eichmanns"
— after the Nazi Adolf Eichmann, who helped mastermind the murder of
European Jews during World War II. He said trade center employees were
"technocrats of empire" working for the "engines of profit" and as such
were inevitable targets.
"They were civilians of a
sort," he said. "But innocent, gimme a break."
The reaction in Colorado was
immediate. Local citizens, state representatives and congressmen called
for Churchill's job.
"He can say what he wants,
but when you go over the line as far as he goes, then it ought to
affect your employment," said Rep. Bob Beauprez (R-Colo.). "If in the
name of political correctness and tolerance we don't stand up and say
this is wrong and evil, then we are complicit in it. We need to be
tolerant and forgiving people, but we don't need to be stupid, and what
he said was stupid, and actions have consequences."
Beauprez has contacted
university officials demanding Churchill's ouster. The board of regents
plans to meet Thursday to discuss the issue.
Todd T. Gleeson, dean of CU's
College of Arts and Sciences, said Churchill had not been forced to
resign his chairmanship.
"This was his offer, and I
think it's in his interest and in the interest of the university that
he step down," Gleeson said. "I don't think this will put the
controversy to bed. It has raised some issues of freedom of political
expression that I think the university will want to explore."
The interim chancellor of the
university, Phil DiStefano, said Churchill's views "outraged and
appalled us."
Churchill, a Vietnam veteran,
is a longtime activist in Denver. Last week he and seven others were
acquitted in court of trying to block last year's Columbus Day parade
in Denver, which they saw as a celebration of the "genocide" of Native
Americans.
Churchill has been on the
faculty since 1991 and chairman of the ethnic studies department for
two years, Gleeson said. His term was to expire in June.
"Tenure means never having to
say you're sorry," said David Lane, a civil rights attorney who
defended Churchill in the Columbus Day case. "The 1st Amendment
protects faculty members like anyone else. Ward Churchill can say
basically whatever he wants, and if everyone in society is outraged,
then it's too bad for everyone in society. The importance of what he
said got lost in the words he chose to use in putting his message out."
Churchill did not return
calls seeking comment but issued a lengthy press release defending his
writings.
He said his views had been
distorted but didn't deny using inflammatory rhetoric to make his
larger point — namely that if the U.S. government didn't comply with
the rule of law, it couldn't be surprised if it were attacked.
"I have never characterized
all the Sept. 11 victims as 'Nazis.' What I said was that the
'technocrats of empire' working in the World Trade Center were the
equivalent of 'little Eichmanns,' " he said. "Adolf Eichmann was not
charged with direct killing but with ensuring the smooth running of the
infrastructure that enabled the Nazi genocide. Similarly, German
industrialists were legitimately targeted by the allies."
He said the children,
janitors, food service workers and firefighters killed in the trade
center were not "little Eichmanns."
"According to Pentagon logic,
[they] were simply part of the collateral damage," he said. "Ugly? Yes.
Hurtful? Yes. And that's my point. It's no less ugly, painful or
dehumanizing a description when applied to Iraqis, Palestinians or
anyone else."
It's unknown whether
Churchill will continue with his plans to speak Thursday at Hamilton
College, a liberal arts institution with 1,750 students. Vige Barrie,
spokeswoman for the college, said it wouldn't withdraw its invitation
but has asked Churchill to change the subject.
"The subject is now
discussing the limits of dissent," she said.
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