Asking The Right Questions And Thinking Critically About "Slavery" In
The Sudan
By
exploiting a war and its prisoners, they are attempting to hurt the
relationship that Muslims and Christians have developed throughout the
world.
As many of you know, at the very least, we are not
satisfied with the manner in which members of the US Congress, White
conservatives, Black civil rights leaders and members of the
"mainstream" press have handled the issue of "slavery" in the Sudan.
Thus, we have not joined in with those who have jumped on the
"slavery" in the Sudan bandwagon. For the most part, we think those
who have been the most vocal on this issue have either only looked at
the issue superficially, or have embraced the cause because they have
hidden agendas. In order to explain exactly why we think as we do,
today we look at the words of
Minister Jabril Muhammad, Charles Carlson of
We Hold These Truths, and an open letter from The
European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council.
One of the most striking aspects of this issue is
the almost total lack of investigative reporting and the imbalanced
manner in which the facts have been weighed. In many cases, we have
noticed important pieces of information totally and we believe,
willfully omitted from news reports. Some of it stems from religious
bias, some from superficial or even stupid reporting and some, we think,
grows out of a deliberate effort to keep information from entering into
the public discourse - particularly in the West.
But regardless to what one may think of the
Sudanese government or the principals in this issue, how should this
issue or any subject, for that matter be approached? Again, regardless
to the subject, how can and should we approach anything that we wish to
learn the truth of?
We think that Minister Jabril Muhammad has
demonstrated some excellent thinking in this area. In his book This
Is The One, he provides an outline of how the research process works
and how crucial it is for all of us to consider how the research process
contributes to the news that we learn of as well as the development of
what is commonly referred to as "popular opinion". We think his words
are very instructive to any who may be interested in the recent
attention given to the Sudan.
He writes:
The aim and purpose of the research process is
to uncover truths by the means of the principles of scientific
investigation. The first step involves the determination of what
questions can or should be answered. Now the steps of the research
process are of such nature that they merge one into the other. The
interrelatedness of the steps in any effort of research are such that
the nature of the first step greatly fixes the nature of the last step.
Errors or mistakes in the beginning steps of investigation may produce
problems which result in the prevention of the successful conclusion of
the research effort. Worse, conclusions rooted in errors fallacies,
etc., can end in death and destruction, when they are applied to such
serious problems as the "race" issue. The more important the issue the
greater the care that must be exercised, from the formulation of the
theme to be studied, to the collection of data, to the final
presentation and use made of the conclusions. This does not mean that
care need not be used in small matters.
It is well known among scholars and students
that the seeker of truth must maintain thoughtful attention between his
studies, and their relation to the accessible knowledge that there is,
and to the emerging views and even to possibilities. Researchers also
know that the applications of the results must be anticipated from the
start of a study, if the research is intended to resolve an immediate
and practical problem.
What the investigator determines that can or
can't be measured or weighed will influence what elements he selects or
omits as he forms his approach to the problems he faces. This in turn
greatly influences the type of evidence seen as relevant to the answer
the researcher seeks. After the data has been gathered and the research
design or pattern has been fixed, several irreversible decisions are
built in, which substantially determines the type of analysis and
interpretation of the findings.
This brings us to the fact that an overemphasis
of certain factors, or omitted information, can result in the total
failure of the seekers of truth to realize their objective. The omission
of relevant facts must result in the same thing as deliberate discarding
of facts - something less than the truth or no truth at all. It goes
almost without saying that the purpose with which one approaches the
subject, influences the selection and use of material in any research
project.
The above outline from Minister Muhammad, in our
estimation, is essential for all parties who are looking for the truth
of what is going on in the Sudan. We especially think this applies to
opinion leaders and members of the press who are having their trips and
"investigations" in the Sudan paid for by Christian Solidarity
International (CSI), a group that has been foremost in circulating the
argument that slavery exists in the Sudan, with the full backing of the
Sudanese government.
One Black leader who had his trip to the Sudan paid
for by CSI was the Rev. Al Sharpton. According to the Nation Of Islam's
International Representative, Minister Abdul Akbar Muhammad, Nation Of
Islam Leader Minister Louis Farrakhan had given him advice to pass
along, in consultation, to Rev. Sharpton, prior to his trip to the
Sudan.
According to Minister Abdul Akbar Muhammad, in his recent "Africa and
the World" column:
"Before Rev. Al Sharpton left for his trip to
the Sudan, Minister Louis Farrakhan asked me to say two things in
consulting with Reverend Sharpton. Min. Farrakhan gave me the verse from
the Holy Qur'an that says: "When an unrighteous man brings you news,
look carefully into it-lest you harm a people in error and be sorry for
what you have done." In addition, he said, "When you go into a man's
house, try to go into the front door and not the back door."
Unfortunately, circumstances did not permit me
to give these words to Rev. Sharpton. However, I must give credit to
Rev. Sharpton on his trip to the Sudan. Although he did go in through
the back door, crossing the border from Kenya into the SPLA (Sudanese
Peoples Liberation Army) controlled area, he would not allow himself to
be engaged in the so-called public act of buying slaves back. This is a
big fraud perpetrated by entities that seek to pit Christians against
Muslims. By exploiting a war and its prisoners, they are attempting to
hurt the relationship that Muslims and Christians have developed
throughout the world.
Minister Farrakhan's advice for Rev. Sharpton, we
think, is important and exemplifies the spirit contained in what
Minister Jabril Muhammad wrote about the research process. We think that
it is incumbent upon all who are having their trips to the Sudan paid
for, and their tours guided by Christian Solidarity International to not
only consider what they learn on their trip but also what they may learn
about Christian Solidarity International.
To that end we provide below an open letter written
by The European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council to Anti-Slavery
International, in part regarding Christian Solidarity International as
well as a brief interview we conducted with Charles Carlson of We Hold
These Truths. Mr. Carlson is a White Christian who has been following
the situation in the Sudan and the activities of Christian missionaries
for many years.
TIME TO SPEAK OUT ON CHRISTIAN SOLIDARITY
INTERNATIONAL AND SUDAN:
AN OPEN LETTER TO ANTI-SLAVERY INTERNATIONAL
From The European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
We address this open letter to Anti-Slavery
International given its well-deserved reputation as one of the world's
premier human rights organisations, and its particular concern about
slavery and slavery-like practices. We call upon Anti-Slavery
International to once again publicly speak out with regard to the claims
of government-sponsored slavery and "slave redemption" in Sudan being
made by groups such as Christian Solidarity International.
A civil war has been fought in Sudan between the
Sudanese government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) since
1983. As Anti-Slavery International will be only too aware, while there
have been legitimate concerns about inter-tribal raiding and abduction
in the course of this conflict, several organisations and anti-Sudanese
activists have claimed there is a flourishing "slave trade" in Sudan in
which the Sudanese government and its northern forces raid southern
villages and "enslave" Dinka tribesmen, women and children. These claims
have been made by groups such as the Swiss-based Christian Solidarity
International (CSI). CSI further claim that in the course of visits to
parts of southern Sudan it has engaged in "slave redemptions" whereby
southern Sudanese tribesmen, women and children are supposedly "bought
back" from northern Sudanese tribesmen said to have abducted them.
Christian Solidarity International and other groups claim to have
"bought" back or "redeemed" thousands of slaves, often several hundred
at a time, from Arab traders. (1) These groups have also been active in
taking outsiders in with them on pre-arranged trips. Westerners, often
with no experience whatsoever of Africa, then come back believing what
they have been told they saw. Having taken these claims at face value,
several of these "political pilgrims" have taken somewhat opportunistic
positions with regard to "slavery" in Sudan.
This has degenerated into little more than a
propagandistic circus. African-American activists such as Rev Al
Sharpton and pop star Michael Jackson have now also been caught up in
this circus. (2) Even 'The New York Post' has described Al Sharpton as
"a crass opportunist". (3) We now also have further crass opportunism in
the form of anti-Sudanese activists deliberately getting themselves
arrested in front of the Sudanese embassy in Washington. Former District
of Columbia Congressional delegate Walter E. Fauntroy, radio talk show
host Joe Madison and the Hudson Institute's Michael Horowitz all chained
themselves to the fence in front of the Sudanese embassy in protest at
"slavery" in Sudan. When they appeared in court their lawyers were
Johnnie Cochran, of O.J. Simpson fame and former Monica Lewinsky scandal
independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr. (4) All these people claim to be
responding in large part to allegations about "slavery" and "slave
redemption" made by groups such as Christian Solidarity International.
It is also clear that there is concern amongst
better-informed sources much closer to the issue about this American
campaign. 'Africanews', a Nairobi-based newsletter closely identified
with the Roman Catholic Church in Kenya and in southern Sudan, has
observed that:
"Analysts, mainstream Church officials, and aid
workers are worried that the stance taken by the Christian Right might
jeopardize relief operations and precipitate a humanitarian crisis in
Sudan...Since last year, interest in Sudan by Americans has mushroomed
largely due to campaigns led by missionary groups and U.S. based
African-American churches, resulting in an unusual alliance of
right-wing politicians identified with the Republican Party and members
of the Democratic Congressional Black Caucus...Observers also note that
some leaders - particularly Rev. Al Sharpton - could be using the
Sudanese conflict to build political careers back home." (5)
Anti-Slavery International has itself spoken out in
the past challenging many of the claims made by Christian Solidarity
International. The official 1997 Anti-Slavery International report on
allegations of Sudanese slavery commented on claims of government
involvement in slavery: "[T]he charge that government troops engage in
raids for the purpose of seizing slaves is not backed by the evidence.
(6)
Anti-Slavery International's comments were
supported by the then co- director of African Rights, the human rights
expert, and Sudan specialist, Alex de Waal:
"(O)vereager or misinformed human rights advocates
in Europe and the US have played upon lazy assumptions to raise public
outrage. Christian Solidarity International, for instance, claims that
"Government troops and Government-backed Arab militias regularly raid
black African communities for slaves and other forms of booty". The
organization repeatedly uses the term "slave raids", implying that
taking captives is the aim of government policy. This despite the fact
that there is no evidence for centrally-organized, government-directed
slave raiding or slave trade." (7)
Anti-Slavery International has also articulated
deeper concerns about the sort of claims made by Christian Solidarity
International. In a submission to the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights in Geneva you publicly stated:
"There is a danger that wrangling over slavery can
distract us from abuses which are actually part of government policy -
which we do not believe slavery to be. Unless accurately reported, the
issue can become a tool for indiscriminate and wholly undeserved
prejudice against Arabs and Muslims. [We] are worried that some media
reports of "slave markets", stocked by Arab slave traders - which [we]
consider distort reality - fuel such prejudice." (8)
Anti-Slavery International has also questioned
other claims made by Christian Solidarity International, particularly
its claims that tens of thousands of people have been "enslaved" in
Sudan. In your 1999 submission to the Working Group on Contemporary
Forms of Slavery, for example, your organisation stated that
"A representative of Christian Solidarity
International spoke at the beginning of this year of "tens of thousands"
of people in slavery in Sudan, and of "concentration camps" for slaves.
At Anti-Slavery International, we know of no evidence to justify an
assertion that 20,000 people or more are currently held as captives and
slaves in these areas of Sudan."
Christian Solidarity International's Claims
Challenged by Other Independent Sources
As Anti-Slavery International will know, there have
since been further detailed criticisms of the claims made by Christian
Solidarity International. One credible source is the report by the
Canadian government's special envoy to Sudan, John Harker, into human
rights abuses in Sudan. The Harker report, 'Human Security in Sudan: The
Report of a Canadian Assessment Mission', was commissioned by the
Canadian government and published in February 2000. One of the two
missions with which John Harker was tasked was to: "independently
investigate human rights violations, specifically in reference to
allegations of slavery and slavery-like practices in Sudan. (9) While
Harker was critical of many human rights abuses in Sudan, he clearly
questioned the credibility of claims of large-scale "slave redemption"
made by Christian Solidarity International:
"[R]eports, especially from CSI, about very large
numbers were questioned, and frankly not accepted. Mention was also made
to us of evidence that the SPLA were involved in 'recycling'
abductees...Serious anti-abduction activists...cannot relate the claimed
redemptions to what they know of the reality. For example we were told
that it would be hard not to notice how passive these 'slave' children
are when they are liberated or to realize how implausible it is to
gather together so many people from so many locations so quickly - and
there were always just the right number to match redemption funds
available!"
The Harker Report also detailed how fraudulent
"slave redemptions" were being used to raise money for the SPLA, money
which he stated is used to purchase arms and ammunition:
"Several informants reported various scenarios
involving staged redemptions. In some cases, SPLM officials are
allegedly involved in arranging these exchanges, dressing up as Arab
slave traders, with profits being used to support the SPLM/A, buy
weapons and ammunition...We did speak with an eyewitness who can confirm
observing a staged redemption and this testimony conformed with other
reports we had from a variety of credible sources. The 'redeeming group'
knew they were buying back children who had not been abducted or
enslaved. The exchange was conducted in the presence of armed SPLA
guards. The 'Arab' middle man/trader delivering the children for
'redemption' was recognized as a member of the local community even
though he was dressed up in traditional Arab costume for the event."
(10)
Christian Solidarity International's claims of mass
"slavery" in the Nuba mountains have also been firmly questioned by
human rights experts. Alex de Waal, for example, states that CSI has
"also alleged that there is mass enslavement in the Nuba mountains,
which is contested by Nuba human rights activists". De Waal states that
"African Rights' monitors in the Nuba Mountains have come across two
incidents of possible - but unconfirmed - enslavement in two and a half
years". (11)
The Reuters news agency has also reported
deliberate misrepresentations with regard to "slave redemptions": "Local
aid workers...say that they have seen children who they have known for
months passed off as slaves...And Reuters interviewed one boy in Yargot
who told a completely implausible story of life in the north, a story
which he changed in every respect when translators were swapped." (12)
In May 1999, the 'Christian Science Monitor' also
clearly stated: "There are increasingly numerous reports that
significant numbers of those 'redeemed' were never slaves in the first
place. Rather, they were simply elements of the local populations, often
children, available to be herded together when cash-bearing redeemers
appeared." (13)
It is clear that several independent sources have
questioned fundamentally the claims made by Christian Solidarity
International. The Canadian government's special envoy has dismissed
CSI's claims of "slave redemption" as unbelievable. Anti-Slavery
International has itself questioned several of CSI's claims. It is now
clear that many "slave redemptions" are staged. Independent sources have
stated that while some of those outside groups involved in these
"redemptions" may have been innocently misled, other outside groups may
be purposefully using "slave redemptions" in order to raise money for
the SPLA.
As Anti-Slavery International will know, these
"slave redemptions" fuel the Sudanese conflict in at least two ways.
They echo inaccurate and stereotyped propaganda images of Sudan and the
Sudanese conflict which serve only to misinform the international
community, which in turn can distort positions taken by countries such
as the United States. And, if what credible outside commentators have
said is true, the money raised through fraudulent "slave redemptions" is
actually used to procure weapons for the SPLA which are then used to
prolong the war.
Anti-Slavery International has previously
articulated concerns that claims made by Christian Solidarity
International "distort reality" and that fuel "indiscriminate and wholly
undeserved prejudice against Arabs and Muslims". It is clear that
Christian Solidarity International continues to make these claims, that
they have gained even more prominence within the United States and that
such claims are fuelling an ill-informed anti-Sudanese frenzy in that
country. Anti-Slavery International must have the courage to once again
urge the international community to exercise the utmost caution in
assessing claims made by groups such as Christian Solidarity
International. (See references at bottom)
BlackElectorate.com's Interview With
Charles Carlson of We Hold These Truths
Cedric Muhammad: What do you make of the sudden
attention being given to the Sudan in the Western media?
Mr. Carlson: The attention given to Sudan by the
American news media is not new, but it is accelerating. Its purpose is
to discredit Sudan's government as repressive slave traders. The
significance is that it shows that this large but poor country is much
more important than most people think, for two reasons: The first and
most obvious is a valuable, but little known, oil resource in Southern
Sudan at a time when oil is dear. WHTT believes Sudan has a lot more oil
than is generally acknowledged. This subject was covered in detail in
our three-part series, "Oil For The Taking"
(http://www.whtt.org/000914hu.htm). We find reason to believe the
State of Israel may have designs on the Sudanese oil and is seeking to
destroy the present government and divide off the oil-rich southern part
of the country. The second and more significant reason Sudan is
important is that its leadership seems to be accepted as a stabilizing
influence by a growing number of its neighbors. We note that the African
member of the UN General Assembly recently voted Sudan the
representative of the African States as a member of the Security
Council. In an unprecedented act, the will of the African States was
vetoed by the USA. The members then voted Sudan on to the UN Human
Rights Commission on May 3 of this year, and voted the USA off. This was
a rare, secret protest vote where the members could show their
sentiments without risking their foreign aid. Notwithstanding, the U.S.
finances and controls all important decisions made in the UN, and do not
like independent nations that show any sign of nationalism, as Sudan has
done.
Cedric Muhammad: Do you believe that there is
any credibility to the charges of slavery in the Sudan?
Mr. Carlson: We have found no convincing evidence
of any traditional slavery in Sudan. There is a hostage-taking tradition
among some tribes in the south, but there is no evidence the government
of Sudan is involved. We have been looking since 1997, when we first
learned the Clinton Administration was planning sanctions and was using
as "slavery" as its big excuse. Slavery claims had been around during
the first Bush administration and had the look of character
assassination. We have evidence that the same charges were made against
South Africa over 20 years ago in a brazen and false attempt to
discredit it. We have examined allegations of slavery by interviewing
people who claim to be slave buyers, and they are their own worst
enemy�their stories do not hold water. We have also interviewed several
respected Christian missionaries in Sudan who refute the slave buyers'
tales, and their logic does hold water. Several of these interviews are
detailed in Missionaries, Mercenaries, Missiles & Money The Untold Story
of the War on the Children of Sudan (http://www.whtt.org/990927cc.htm).
Cedric Muhammad: How do these slave purchases
work? How are they arranged?
Mr. Carlson: The procedure described to us by
"slave" buyers invariably involve illegal entry into Sudan via air from
a staging center in northern Kenya known as Lokichokio, where there is
now a hard surface airport and storage facility. Mailorder Missionaries
usually make their way to Lokichokio from Nairobi via a tramp airline
that is transporting war material to the SPLA (Sudanese People's
Liberation Army). From Lokichokio the MM's usually fly across the border
in small chartered planes. Important groups involving public figures and
US Congressman are often flown in by Christian Solidarity International
in their executive plane. The so-called "slave" purchases are without
exception reported to be made in remote villages in SPLA-held territory.
Most of those who are ushered into Sudan to view slave purchases have no
real idea where they are, or from whence the "Arab slave trader" come,
or how they know there are buyers. We have been told time and time again
that the "Arabs" seem to appear from nowhere with trains of tethered
slaves in tow as soon as the money plane arrives. Onlookers state the
"slaves are immediately released, and the "Arab" then disappears into
the bush with the money. This leaves some obvious questions that are
never answered: How does the slaver (the seller) know where he should be
and when; how does he find so many slaves so fast; why is the price so
low (a recent purchase of 1400 slaves was reported by one large
fundraising group for the amazing price of $35.00 per head); and how
does the "Arab" get out of the SPLA territory with all this money, and
his life? A fifth obvious question any sensible person might ask is,
could the "Arab" possibly be an SPLA agent dressed in a white turban? Is
it possible the transactions are arranged by the SPLA with the knowledge
of the kingpin slave buyer, Christian Solidarity International? Only
this conclusion makes any sense.
Cedric Muhammad:. What is the involvement of
Christian Missionaries in the Sudan controversy?
Mr. Carlson: There are two answers to this
question, because there are two distinctly different Christian missions
in Sudan. Not all are slave-trading opportunists. We Hold These Truths
has discovered hard-working traditional Christians carrying out their
work all over Sudan with great dedication and sacrifice. These
traditional Christians operate legally all over the country as
respectful guests of the government (GOS) and never the rebel SPLA. Even
though they have told us they are not always comfortable with the host
government, they still follow the Apostle Paul's admonition to make
themselves a part of the society they hope to evangelize. They also
follow Jesus' admonition to "render unto Caesar what is Caesars' and
unto God what is Gods." These legitimate missionaries operate churches
and seminaries, translate and distribute Bibles and live with the
Sudanese. Some, but not all, have testified to surprising cooperation
and sympathy from the GOS. None have reported the atrocities or slavery
the Western media and the Celebrity Christians tell us of. We refer to
these traditionalists as Jesus-Christians, as opposed to
Judeo-Christians. With their permission, WHTT plans to post a list of
those we have met, but the list is a short one. One can quickly tell the
difference between the Jesus-Christian missionaries and the Mailorder-Missioners
by asking this question: "Do you have a visa and a stamped passport from
the GOS?" This question separates the peacemakers from the Warmakers. In
every case, the Jesus-Christians hold valid visas, enter Sudan legally
and work in both the populated North and the sparse South. In contrast,
those we call the Mailorder Missionaries and Celebrity Christians have,
without exception, entered and operated in Sudan illegally. They do not
apply for or obtain visas or passports there. They sneak into the
country in the company of its warring enemies, and they often represent
themselves as enemies of the GOS in their fundraising literature, and
they lie about the Government. Most important from a Christian
standpoint, they ignore all of the Biblical admonitions that Christ left
behind to guide his disciples, such as those contained in the 10th
Chapter of Romans, having to do with civil authority. The Mailorder
Missionaries are in every conceivable way "ugly Americans." Knowingly or
unknowingly, they are a part of the SPLA war against the people of
Sudan. Even though some do not seem to realize it, they are Warmakers,
funding a revolution with the money given by unsuspecting church goers.
The names of many of these Mailorder Missionaries can be found in
articles on our site by doing name searches; one such article is "Using
Christians To Make War" (http://www.whtt.org/970825cc.htm).
Cedric Muhammad: What is the relationship
between the SPLA and Christian Missionaries:
Mr. Carlson: We are told Mailorder Missionaries and
their guests commonly share charter flights to Lokichokio with SPLA
personnel and supplies. The "slave" buyers, photographers and witnesses
always enter Sudan by sneaking across the border from Kenya without visa
or custom approval from the GOS, instead obtaining passes from the
SPLA's appointed provisional governor, who rules the captured land much
as Israel rules the Golan Heights and occupied Palestine. His authority
comes from the barrel of a gun. It is impossible to imagine that the
SPLA is not involved in the transactions; there are many reports that
suggest they are.
Cedric Muhammad: What is the role of Christian
Solidarity International in all of this? How have they worked with media
outlets and opinion leaders in America?
Mr. Carlson: Mailorder Missionaries appear to
follow the aggressive lead of Christian Solidarity International, which
appears to be the originator of the idea of 20th century slavery in
Sudan. CSI provides wholesale, turnkey, buy and release slave purchases
for many Celebrity Christians. It recently arranged a slave "redemption"
for Coral Ridge Ministries involving a reported 1400 "slaves" for the
puny sum of $50,000.00--only $35.00 each. One wonders where the 1400
slaves-the entire population of a dozen villages--came from. A picture
of the transaction is shown on Coral Ridge's website, but We Hold These
Truths has the same picture on a CSI letterhead that is several year
old. CSI, which is a secretive Swiss-based corporation, gets amazing and
unquestioned support from Israeli Patriots in the US press, such as A.M.
Rosenthal of the New York Times, and in England. Many key(news)
articles have been planted by CSI. It has also ushered tours of
journalists and even Congressmen into Sudan to view slaves. Even
visiting Congressmen, including Frank Wolf, have entered Sudan
illegally, the practice being winked at by the US government. We believe
Christian Solidarity International is "Christian" in name only. We are
still waiting to meet a Jesus-Christian in the organization�in fact, its
curious name ("Solidarity") seems more Bolshevik than Christian. Unlike
the Mailorder Missionaries, CSI's motive does not appear to be money,
and it never has appeared to worry about fundraising. Rather, it appears
to be bent upon control of Sudan, probably for its well-healed client.
You can bet American taxpayer money is indirectly financing CSI.
Suggested reading: One Nation Under Israel (http://www.whtt.org/onui.htm)
It appears CSI's first report condemning slavery in Sudan was ghost
written for them by Yusen Bodansky, a former Israeli government arms
salesman. In January 1994, while Director of the House Republican
Research Committee Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare,
he wrote "Islam Against The Church". Amazingly, it was circulated
exclusively by CSI, and though it was published on official US
Congressional stationary over Bodansky's name. Even some members of
Congress were denied access to this report. It is our studied belief
that CSI runs the anti-Sudan campaign worldwide as an agent for some
world power, and that would be either the USA or Israel, or both.
Several reports detailing Bodansky can be found by searching our site
for his name.
Cedric Muhammad What would be Israel's interest
in Sudan?
Mr. Carlson: Israel's logical interest is Sudan's
is to eliminate another competitor in the Middle East and harvest its
oil reserves. It wants Sudan destroyed for the same reason it wanted
Iraq destroyed. Israel refuses to tell us this directly, but its body
language is a dead give away. Ever since the Clinton Administration went
public with its war on Sudan, staring with the sanctions and followed up
by the bombing of the El Shifa plant, Israel has feigned indifference to
Sudan. It even removed it from it official enemy list. To understand
this technique one must consider Israel as an illegal 51st state, or a
nuclear armed extension of the CIA. So Israeli is carrying out US Policy
in the Middle East, not the other way around. The Clinton Administration
helped Israel expand by attacking its enemy with missiles and economic
sanctions. It all started in1993, if not before, and now it is reaching
the crucial, survival stage. The proof that this is not just idle
"conspiracy theory", as in the recent Mel Gibson TV movie by that name,
is that George W. Bush has confirmed his involvement in the war on Sudan
by announcing he is siding with the SPLA insurgents. He is committed to
forcing Mr. Clinton's war in Sudan. Mr. Bush stated this to none other
than the American Jewish Committee at a May 3 meeting. Now I ask you,
who would expect the AJC and the President to talk about Sudan at such
an important meeting? Why on earth would the American Jewish committee
care about supposed Christian persecution in Sudan? Because Israel
cares! This makes it important enough to be a main topic of a big time
speech. Bush clearly promised this Israeli advocacy group he would go
for the throat of Sudan. He appointed an Israeli patriot, Elliot Abrams,
to head up the International Commission on Religious Freedom, an
organization created around the idea of destroying Sudan. (Religious
Freedom, http://www.whtt.org/97! 0825cc.htm)
Now there is a payoff in all of this for Israel. It
gets rid of an enemy if they can help force Sudan under the US
guillotine. Israel gets rid of another nationalistic, pro Palestinian
neighbor. And don't forget all that oil. If southern Sudan is petitioned
into north and south, as was Korea, Vietnam and Palestine, who will get
dibs on those new, producing oil fields? If you think gas prices are
high now, just wait until Israel gets control of the oil Middle East
oil.
Cedric Muhammad : What do you think of the
effort to link "slavery " in Sudan, with the slave experience in this
country?
Mr. Carlson: It is a clever and devious image
creator to bend the mind of every American who has ever studied the sin
of slavery. One such promoter is the American Anti-Slavery Group, an
apparent opportunistic spin off from Christian Solidarity International,
run by a non-christian named Charles Jacobs. He has just started a new
program called iAbolish in which Johnny Cochran and Ken Starr are
fronting for an upcoming march led by "Escaped Slaves." Not only is this
a flagrant distortion of fact in Sudan, it is designed to further divide
Americans along racial lines by dredging up150 year old buried hatchets.
Israeli Patriots are experts at this. They would like to create distrust
and anger between the Black and White Americans in order to conquer
both. Sadly, many well-intentioned Christians will be drawn by emotion
into this fraud.
End of Interview With Mr. Carlson
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In our estimation, not only is the research being
conducted into the issue poor, sometimes deliberately so, but we also
recognize the manner in which emotional arguments, backed by little
reasoning, have prevailed. It is as if all one has to do is forcefully
repeat the talking point phrase: "There is slavery in the Sudan" in
order to be considered right. We have literally seen people mentally
"bullied" into accepting that phrase as fact, in public and private
forums. We have observed Black civil rights leaders shout down others
who do not wish to disagree with them, but whom only seek to question
the basis of those Black opinion leaders' point of view. At times it
seems as if one is expected to accept the popular argument and ask
questions later, or to not even ask at all. And even more cleverly, we
have seen White conservatives boldly confront Blacks and question their
commitment to their own people if they dared to question the truth of
the allegations made regarding Sudan. Some have even made an attempt to
use the controversy over "slavery" in the Sudan against Blacks who
openly support the call for reparations for the slave experience in
America..
But throughout all of this arguing little to no
facts are generated that shed light on what is really going on in the
Sudan.
We conclude with a look at what Minister Jabril
Muhammad wrote in This Is The One about the type of arguing and
fallacious reasoning that we are witnessing over the Sudan debate.
He wrote:
Fallacies in our thinking make our conclusions
wrong. When we try to walk in the false light cast by incorrectness in
our thinking, our line of reasoning, our beliefs, we can get ourselves
into big trouble. Fallacies are dangerous. Why? Because they often
appear as truth. They may seem reasonable when they are senseless. They
frequently look right when they are wrong. They resemble sound thinking
but are really unsound. Sometimes a speaker makes a point in such a way
that one may be led to think he has supported his point with evidence,
when he has not. Sometimes he will give a few examples, and from that
speak of other things as though the few are typical of the rest.
Sometimes he will make comparisons between things of which there are
critical differences. Giving the impression that a minor relation
between two things is bigger than it really is, and that this caused
that, when it hasn't, are two often used fallacies. Taking what seems to
be the sign of one thing to be the sign of something different is
another instance of a fallacy. Another example involves being vague or
using a word in a vital area that hides the true meaning. Using loaded
language - emotional language - to establish a point for which the
speaker has no proof, is another fallacious device. Name calling is an
example of this. Some speakers simply avoid facts that have a direct
bearing on a subject. On the other hand, he may bring in things that
have no bearing on the issue. The reader may have seen speakers -
especially preachers - repeat a thing over and over to try to win his
point. But repetition is not proof of truth. Sheer noise is used by
some. Personal attacks rather than attacks on what the other has to say,
is still another device. Agreeing with another's conclusion while
denying the base of that conclusion, even though it necessarily flows
from the premise put forth by the other, is a fallacy. Playing on the
imagination and feeling of the listeners by appealing to what may be
popular is fallacious. Or, he may knock down an argument that the other
has not put forth. Or, again, he may ask the other a loaded question:
Have you stopped stealing yet? Have you stopped beating your wife?
We've seen speakers in debates take advantage of
the fact that an audience, or most in the audience, may not have enough
knowledge to see that one speaker may be taking advantage of the other,
because of the lack of knowledge on the part of the audience on that
subject. One man may say such and such can not be true because, "We have
never heard of that before." For instance, uninformed people at one time
said that the telephone was impractical because "we all know you can't
talk over wires." Another example that used to cause those in the know a
hard time was that knowledge of the atom was not widespread. So when
talk of cracking the atom came up, people who were not in the know said,
"Of course you can't crack an atom; how can you possibly crack something
that you can't see?"
It is hard enough when the audience, or most of
it, are not in the know on a subject. One of the speakers may have a
hard time, though he may be very much in the know. This means he will
have to work harder than the other. But when the other is also not in
the know, then, we really have a problem.
Virtually all of what Minister Jabril Muhammad has
written applies to the debate on the Sudan.
The question that we are asking is: when will those
in Black leadership and those in the press corps, the supposed fourth
estate, begin to take a critical look at what is happening in the
Sudan and the motives of all parties involved?
And when will some in the American public and the
Black electorate, in particular, stop accepting the arguments of those
in the "anti-slavery in the Sudan" movement on face value?
It was so interesting to us, to learn on Friday
that it has now been revealed that the US government, through some in
the military industrial complex, is in fact, backing the SPLA in the
Sudan.
We guess it should come as no surprise that the
information was buried at the bottom of the mainstream media's news
coverage and totally ignored by the Black press, Black opinion leaders
and talk show hosts.
Notes for "AN OPEN LETTER TO ANTI-SLAVERY
INTERNATIONAL"
1 See, for example, 'Five Thousand Sudanese Slaves
"Freed"', News Article by BBC World Africa Online on 22 December 1999 at
18:24 GMT and 'Swiss NGO Buys Freedom for 4,000 Sudanese Slaves', News
Article by Agence France Presse on 1 February 2000.
2 See, for example, 'Jackson to Tackle Child
Slavery', News Article by BBC News Online on 20 April 2001, at 10:57
GMT.
3 'Rev. Al Has No Bravery on Slavery', 'The New
York Times', 24 April 2001.
4 'Sudan Protest Makes Odd Bedfellows', 'The
Washington Post', 30 April 2001.
5 'Christian Right Might Inflame War, Observers
Fear', Africanews, Issue 62, May 2001. It should be noted that
Africanews describes itself as "the initiative of a group of lay
Christians...AFRICANEWS editorial staff wants to prove that the media
can be used to promote peace and solidarity. In particular, AFRICANEWS
expresses its preferential option for the poor. All news and their
analysis will be given from the perspective of the African grassroot
people, their struggle for freedom, dignity and justice." 'AFRICANEWS:
News and Views From Africa' at http://www.peacelink.it/amani/afrinews_eng.html
6 Peter Verney, 'Slavery in Sudan', Sudan Update
and Anti-Slavery International, London, May 1997.
7 Alex de Waal, 'Sudan: Social Engineering, Slavery
and War', 'Covert Action Quarterly', Spring 1997.
8 The reference number of this submission to the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights is TS/S/4/97, and is available
to view on the Anti-Slavery International web-site at http://www.charitynet.org/asi/sub
mit5.htm
9 John Harker, 'Human Security in Sudan: The Report
of a Canadian Assessment Mission', Prepared for the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Ottawa, January 2000, p. 1.
10 Ibid., pp.39-40.
11 Alex de Waal, 'Exploiting Slavery: Human Rights
and Political Agendas in Sudan', 'New Left Review', (London), Number
227, 1998, p.145.
12 'Aid group tries to break Sudan slavery chain',
News Article by Reuters on July 11, 1999 at 23:40:58.
13 "Slave 'Redemption' won't save Sudan",
'Christian Science Monitor', 26 May 1999.
(Cedric Muhammad is the Publisher of
BlackElectorate.com,
a publication that focuses on the dynamics of Black culture,
economics and politics.)
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