The price of free speech
- Share via
We are Americans. As Americans, we all enjoy the same rights and
freedoms unparalleled in other parts of the world. (A terrorist is
guaranteed certain freedoms in the United States that we could not
have if we went to their country.)
Unfortunately, we have forgotten that those rights also include
responsibilities. Yes, a rock/sports star has the right to rant and
rage and disavow being a role model. However, as a part of the
American society, we all need to take responsibility for how our
choices influence others. We are a nation of neighbors. If I play my
stereo late on a Saturday night, it will keep my neighbors awake. I
like my neighbors, so I don’t do that. They reciprocate. Even if I
didn’t like them, I would still respect their rights. Sometimes that
means I have to ask my friends to tone down their voices because
there is a baby sleeping next door.
This is the every day version of the biblical imperative to love
our neighbors as we love ourselves. Remember the golden rule?
Bottom line: I respect the Muslim students’ need for an
affirmation of faith during the ceremonies. At the same time, I would
challenge them to live beyond their rights and look to the fear of
their American neighbors. Is it worth the fight to lose a neighbor?
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
Having taught at UC Irvine for 22 years, I noted that recently the
atmosphere has changed and become charged. Students have informed me
of numerous unpleasant and unwarranted actions initiated by a number
of Muslim students on campus, which left them shaken and disturbed.
This is not the venue to list them, but I was persuaded by the
frequency of their reports that many of my students experienced such
negative encounters.
The intention to wear the green sash and the words of the Shahada
at graduation was yet another in a series of incitements. I think
highly of expressions of ethnic pride, but in a time of relentless
suicide bombings of civilians, the killing of our troops, the
beheadings of the innocent, the threats of mass terror, the wearing
of a garment identified with the barbarians of Hamas is an affront.
In my mind’s eye, I see the female Hamas bomber who struck in Gaza
earlier this year. The suicide killer was the first to be a mother,
as 21-year-old Reem Raiyishi orphaned a 3-year-old son and a
1-year-old daughter.
In a traditional pre-suicide videotape testimonial, Raiyishi,
holding an AK-47 assault rifle and wearing the green Hamas sash, said
she long-wanted “the honor” of being a suicide bomber and was “proud
to be the first female Hamas martyr.”
“I have two children and love them very much. But my love to see
God was stronger than my love for my children, and I’m sure that God
will take care of them if I become a martyr,” the woman from a
middle-class Palestinian background said.
This woman became a hero to some, a “shahida.” She and her
comrades who wear the green sash seek not only Israel’s utter
destruction, but hate Jews and Americans. This is what the green sash
and “Shahada,” martyrdom, have come to stand for, owing to their
association with murderous groups.
Yes, the students’ right to wear such offensive garb is protected
under the freedom of symbolic speech. I imagine I could wear an
armband bearing the exclamation “God Wills It!” This was the battle
cry with which Pope Urban II launched the First Crusade in 1095. It
was followed by seven more Crusades over a period of 200 years. The
Crusades were wars waged against Islam for control of what Christians
called the Holy Land. The savagery of these wars remains unforgotten
and unforgiven in the Muslim consciousness. The Church defined
violence during the Crusades as a sacred act. Anyone “taking the
cross” to fight the infidel was offered indulgences, and, if killed,
assured a place in heaven. My wearing of such an armband, featuring
Crusader colors and its motto, may be interpreted as inoffensive.
After all, “God Wills It” is the theological belief of many people
today, and colors are just colors. But that expression, on a garment
that appropriates Crusader imagery, might well cause offense among
Muslim students.
One of the lessons I hope young people grow into is that just
because something is possible does not make it necessarily
permissible. Associating oneself with terrorists, who are the sworn
enemies of freedom, who are implacable enemies of the United States
itself, and who seek the destruction of our way of life, is worse
than sophomoric -- it is despicable.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
The Daily Pilot has given this controversy lots of print. Few have
simply celebrated with the June 19 UC Irvine graduates.
I congratulate all graduates, as the value of education is
unquestionable, and college degrees are precious. I applaud all who
went through the commencement celebrations; doing so was a gift to
themselves and to their beloveds. One of my own deepest regrets is
that I did not participate in a similar ceremony when I received my
bachelors in l968 because my Dad died before the next transition rite
in my life, and he would have appreciated seeing me graduate from the
University of California.
I did not participate in my graduation because my senior year job
was in the caps-and-gowns department, and I was paid triple time for
working on our busiest day. Some of those gowns and caps were
returned with evidence of having been used to make statements similar
to those made in Irvine on June 19. Signs were still attached to
some; others were painted to express 1968 perspectives. I remember
one gown being returned with military honors pinned to it. Many had
that image which is either the master’s logo or the symbol of peace.
Having witnessed dozens of commencements as the campus minister of
the Episcopal Church at UC Berkeley, I have seen graduates make
statements that I’ve considered to be outrageous and offensive, from
streakers to banners castigating particular persons. In context, the
Muslim students’ green stoles clearly are protected by the First
Amendment to our Constitution. I applaud the integrity with which
they made their statement, and I applaud the dignity Jewish students,
and others, showed by celebrating in their own graduation ceremonies.
I am not sure of the meaning of the stoles with the Arabic word,
and I do not want to criticize what I do not understand. If “shahada”
supports suicide bombers and their ilk, I certainly am opposed; our
Anglican Church in the Middle East has clearly condemned such heinous
actions. But if, as I suspect, the students’ intent was to witness
that “there is no god but God ...”, then I stand with children of God
rather than with those who embrace hedonistic materialism as god.
Tensions between Jews and Muslims and Christians are far from
confined to UC campuses, of course. UC Irvine has a wonderful
resource in its Interfaith Center on campus. Jewish and Islamic
groups meet there; our Episcopal campus ministry is centered there.
Interfaith dialogue is good, period! More is better! I wonder if, and
hope that, there are new ways Christians can be helpful in enabling
such communication.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
The American Nazi party more than 20 years ago won the right to
march in Skokie, Ill., a town well known for its large number of
Jewish residents and concentration camp survivors. The American Civil
Liberties Union’s stand for free speech was nowhere more
uncompromising than in their support of the Nazi Party’s First
Amendment rights, to the outrage of many. I agree with the principle
that you may say what you wish, even if I don’t like it or agree, or
if I am not even exactly sure what you mean by it. (There are, of
course, exceptions, such as the classic example that you may not
shout “fire” in a crowded theater if there is not one.)
When I was in high school, three Unitarian students in the Des
Moines public schools won a Supreme Court case affirming their right
to wear black armbands to protest government policy in Vietnam.
(Vietnam War protesters in 1965 Iowa were considered traitors.) The
court found the wearing of armbands to be “symbolic acts,” included
within the meaning of free speech and thus protected by the First
Amendment. The case firmly established that students do not “shed
their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate.”
Concerning the risk of disturbance, Justas Fortas pointed out that
“apprehension of disturbance is not enough to overcome the right to
freedom of expression.” When the actions of those expressing their
views do not impinge upon the rights of others and are not in
themselves disruptive, the possibility that others may respond by
causing disruption should not be used as a reason to ban free speech.
I attended commencement at UC San Diego this month, and I was
amazed by the variety of apparel worn under and on the gowns, not to
mention the decorations, signs and messages written on caps and
stoles.
The provost was handed a paper by each student with his or her
name written on it, and then dutifully announced, “Jane I love you
Mom and Dad Smith,” “Jim Magnificent Bastard Brown” and several
controversial political statements in lieu of middle names.
The universities should continue to offer courses, public forums
and every educational opportunity to help students to develop the
values and skills needed to live together in a diverse community.
Preventing freedom of speech is not the solution. Students are the
hope of the future, but school is a microcosm of the global
community. We should not be surprised that these serious problems
have not yet been solved at UCI any more than at other places around
the world.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.