by Columbia Roosevelt Institution, Fri Nov 23, 2007 at 09:12:18 PM EST
By Brenden Cline
As a first year at Columbia University, I've grappled with deciding what message can be taken away from Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to our campus. Aware that I was unable to fully appreciate the spectacle at the time, I've struggled to discern what message can be drawn from his visit in hindsight. The overlooked significance of the invitation, I believe, lies not with the disparity in Americans' reactions to the speaker, but with the insight and support it lends Iran's perilously suppressed academia.
In a key moment of his speech, Ahmadinejad claimed (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con
tent/article/2007/09/24/AR2007092401042.
html), "Right now in our universities on a daily basis there are hundreds of meetings like this. They hear, they talk, they ask questions. They welcome it."Aside from his traditional repertoire of finagling words and dodging questions, this exaggeration was particularly difficult to digest. Like his insistence on the lack of homosexual Iranians, this outright misrepresentation of Iranian intellectual life was an instance of erroneous wishful thinking from a consistently self-justifying dictator. Ahmadinejad seeks to claim strength through parity with Western institutions, but his power relies instead on puppetry. Iran's government doesn't foster the dialogue Ahmadinejad takes credit for and utilizes as a guest abroad; on the contrary, it fears the effect this free flow of information will have and reacts by oppressing the curiosity of the Iranian academia.
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by Columbia Roosevelt Institution, Mon Nov 12, 2007 at 07:32:36 PM EST
Brandon Hammer is a sophomore at Columbia College in New York City and a junior fellow of the Roosevelt Institution.
On Monday, October 8, Iranian students protested a speech given by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Tehran University to open the new school year. This event came on the heels of a highly controversial appearance at Columbia University. Protestors from across the political spectrum denounced the decision of Columbia President Lee Bollinger to invite the Iranian leader for three main reasons. Firstly, they held that the invitation gave Ahmadinejad a platform from which he could spread his hateful ideology. Secondly, they argued that allowing him to speak here would give Iranian media the opportunity to legitimize their leader and his views among the populace. And thirdly, they held that, because there is no free speech in Iran, we need not extend to him that right when he is in the United States. Nevertheless, the protests and subsequent government action on October 8 once again show why these claims are inaccurate and underline why it was so important that Ahmadinejad come to Columbia.
Perhaps the most frequently repeated argument against Bollinger's invitation to President Ahmadinejad was that it would give him a soapbox from which he could disseminate his offensive views. Protesters felt that, if we allowed Ahmadinejad to speak, he would have the opportunity to deny the Holocaust, threaten Israel, and spread homophobic and misogynistic hatred. Nevertheless, the fact that various American newspapers covered this small speech serves to indicate that Ahmadinejad has no difficulty in getting the necessary media coverage in order to spread his controversial views. He did not need to come to Columbia to do that. By coming to Columbia, however, Ahmadinejad relinquished his immunity from dissent. Students had the opportunity to challenge his views and question him about Iran's suspicious and harmful activities in the Middle East.
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by Columbia Roosevelt Institution, Sun Nov 11, 2007 at 06:28:07 AM EST
By Chris Daniels and Adrian Haimovich
Chris Daniels is a junior majoring in religion and applied mathematics at Columbia University and is the Vice President of the Columbia University College Democrats. Adrian Haimovich is a sophomore majoring in biomedical engineering at Columbia University and is the President of the Roosevelt Institution at Columbia, a student-run progressive policy think tank.
Monday's appearance by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Columbia University's campus was a hallmark event in a new era of student activism. On a campus notorious for rushing stages and taking hostages, this day held the possibility for chaos. But we instead saw students coming together, championing two of our country's greatest ideals: the rights of free speech and free assembly.
After Columbia announced Ahmadinejad's acceptance last week, leaders from many campus organizations responded, working to ensure that students could both engage Ahmadinejad and voice opposition to his hateful policies. At the demand of undergraduates, Columbia allowed all students to submit questions and to watch a simulcast in various locations across campus; students also organized a peaceful forum in which every student group, regardless of creed or message, was able to voice their concerns about Ahmadinejad. The Columbia campus was not satisfied by any passive interaction. The students demanded a dialogue and an opportunity to challenge Ahmadinejad.
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by Hannes Artens, Tue Sep 25, 2007 at 10:11:55 AM EDT
The genuine truth in the old adage, "the pen is mightier than the sword", the cognition that the (written) word has had a greater influence on human history than warfare, coined in variations by titans of their times, such as Euripides, Thomas Jefferson, Napoleon, and Edward Bulwer-Lytton, would not have required Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or Caroline Glick for confirmation. Yet both, the Iranian President with his at times almost touching to watch, helpless efforts to clear himself against Columbia's unrelenting students, and the deputy managing editor of the Jerusalem Post with her completely overdone, all-out, short of calling Columbia's President Lee Bollinger one of Hitler's "willing executioners" tirade of hate, not only asserted that proverb, but involuntarily demonstrated the unmasking power of the freedom of speech and dialogue.
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by Columbia Roosevelt Institution, Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 07:59:03 PM EDT
Aaron Welt is a sophomore majoring in history at Columbia University. He hails from Chappaqua, New York. Aaron is the outreach coordinator for the Columbia University Roosevelt Institution and is an active member of the Columbia University College Democrats.
So he came. This afternoon President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad exercised his free speech rights on Columbia University's campus and the aura and enigma surrounding the Iranian leader quickly evaporated. It came as no surprise that Mr. Ahmadinejad is nothing more than a disingenuous politician. His opening words were a cryptic theological affirmation of science and truth while his question and answer session was a futile game of cat and mouse in which it appeared the mouse got away. In this sense, I do not think a serious analysis of Mr. Ahmadinejad's words are merited except for their implications regarding American policy, of which there is much to discuss.
I didn't come away with a new view of Ahmadinejad but rather with a new view of America. To me Ahmadinejad is still a tyrannical demagogue who employs half truths and lies to maintain his grip on power. But he did reveal much about the state of America's moral integrity in the Middle East and Muslim world today, which is clearly at a nadir.
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