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Harry Belafonte at Riverside
Church
Opens 2nd Commission of Inquiry on War Crimes in
Iraq
On January 20-22, 2006, the International Commission
of Inquiry on Crimes Against Humanity committed by the Bush Administration (www.bushcommission.org)
convened at the Riverside Church in NYC. Several journalists, scientists, and
victims of the violence wrought by the Bush administration in Iraq bore witness
to the ongoing commission of war crimes by the American State. Opening the
initial session was the activist Harry Belafonte, these were his remarks:
Thank you very much. I would like to first express my
great sense of privilege, and opportunity to be part of this evening’s tribunal
and what we will be seeing and hearing. I would like to also extend my
respects to the panel and to the tasks you have before you, and what we will be
hearing.
It is most gratuitous that this should be taking place at the
end of a week of celebration of the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This
nation has never, ever produced a greater citizen, who stood and still stands
for the principles for why we are all gathered here: the pursuit of justice, the
pursuit of human rights, the pursuit of human dignity.
Theodore Roosevelt once said that when the powers of state, that
having been mandated to reach out and to protect the interest of the people,
begin to usurp the Constitution and undermine our laws, that it is the
responsibility of the citizens to rise up and to speak against this
process. And to in fact insist upon the changing of the guard, the
changing of regime. (Applause) And those, those citizens who fail to hear that
call, in fact should be charged with patriotic treason. (Applause)
I think none gathered here this evening can be so charged.
It is important when all the instruments of government collapse,
we go in the final hour, to the most important line of battle: the people
themselves. The people of this nation, I think, and I know it, are awake, and
are being more awakened every day. They are hearing and sensing the danger that
sits on the horizon. Looking at the international oppressions that we are a part
of, looking at how we have violated international humanity and law, one day this
tribunal I hope, will reach out, and in its investigation look at the oppression
and illegal experiences people in this nation are experiencing
themselves.
On 9/11, we were all stunned by the tragic events that took
place when the Twin Towers collapsed, and this terrorism was put upon our
people. Two thousand lost their lives. Two thousand who were innocent, two
thousand who did not cause war. And we said they were terrorists and we
should hunt them down and bring them to justice. Tell me, where for you
does the line blur?
When a nation as powerful as this, the most powerful in the
history of human existence, and those who have dubiously come to power and who
are reigning over the will of this nation, when they lie and mislead the
citizens of this country, when they put before us fear and then govern by
terrorism—where does the line blur for you? When our sons and daughters
are sent to die in foreign battlefields, each day we claim the lives of tens and
thousands of innocent men, women, and children, in other places—where for you
does terrorism end and where does it begin, and who are the terrorists?
(Applause).
Those who would choose to detract [from] the real meaning of
this tribunal, the real meaning of this people’s moment, would suggest to you
that we are somehow perhaps irrelevant. Well, I guess Paul Revere was considered
at one point irrelevant, when he called for the alarm against the red
coats.
I know very well that at the beginning, Dr. Martin Luther King
was considered irrelevant. I know that there are so many that have called for
the awakening of our citizens to look at what is happening to us and to seize
our rights to put us back into democratic governance. Always in the beginning,
we are minimalized, marginalized and relegated to the dustbins of history.
We have prevailed before and we will prevail again.
I am honored to be a part of this process, and anything I can do
to help broaden its base, to help broaden its inquiry, and to help save the soul
of our nation, I welcome the opportunity and I will so serve.
Thank you.
This speech is herein published as a public domain
document.
Posted February 19,
2006
URL:
www.thecitizenfsr.org
SM 2000-2011
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