UC Davis to Host Ward Churchill
I’m not sure what the fascination between Muslim Students at UC Davis and fired professors is but, they’re bringing yet another fired professor to campus. Last quarter, they brought over Norman Finkelstein, this quarter, they’re bringing Ward Churchill. Perhaps the fascination lies in the fact that both of them hate America, Israel, and Zionism (among other things). The event is hosted by Students for Justice and Peace which is basically the same as Students for Justice in Palestine (same leadership) which is basically a political movement of the Muslim Student Association.
Here are the event details as described on the facebook group:
No tags for this post.Ward Churchill Speaks at UC-Davis!
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Information
Event InfoName:
Ward Churchill Speaks at UC-Davis!
Host:
Students for Peace & Justice
Type:
Education - Lecture
Time and PlaceDate:
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Time:
8:00pm - 11:00pm
Location:
UC Davis - Chem 194
Street:
Hutchinson st
City/Town:
Davis, CAView Map
Contact InfoEmail:
justice.ucdavis@gmail.com
Description
The official title of the speech is:“Zionism, Manifest Destiny, and Nazi
Lebensraumpolitik: Three Variations on a Common
Theme”Ward Churchill (Keetoowah Band Cherokee) is one of the most outspoken of Native American activists and scholars in North America and a leading analyst of indigenous issues. He is former tenured Professor of Ethnic Studies and Coordinator of American Indian Studies at the University of Colorado, fired in retaliation for the exercise of his First Amendment-protected speech and in violation of the doctrine of Academic Freedom.He is also co-director of the Colorado chapter of the American Indian Movement and vice chair of the American Indian Anti-Defamation Council.
Churchill’s many books include Fantasies of the Master Race, Struggle for the Land, On the Justice of Roosting Chickens, From A Native Son, Critical Issues in Native North America, The COINTELPRO Papers, Indians R Us?, Agents of Repression, Since Predator Came, and A Little Matter of Genocide: Holocaust and Denial in the Americas.
In his lectures and numerous published works, Churchill explores the themes of genocide in the Americas, racism, historical and legal (re)interpretation of conquest and colonization, environmental destruction of Indian lands, government repression of political movements, literary and cinematic criticism, and indigenist alternatives to the status quo.
Churchill is also a past national spokesperson for the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, has served as a delegate to the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations (as a Justice/Rapporteur for the for the 1993 International People’s Tribunal on the Rights of Indigenous Hawaiians), and as an advocate/prosecutor of the First Nations International Tribunal for the Chiefs of Ontario.
“I have found [Churchill’s writings on native American history] to be assiduously researched, making important contributions to a much-neglected part of this nation’s history.”
— Howard Zinn, author of A People’s History of the United States“Ward [Churchill]’s scholarship is very serious, measured, non-hyperbolic and uses primary sources extensively - in measured and honest ways.”
— James Craven (Blackfoot Nation), Professor of Economics, Clark College, Vancouver, Washington“Ward Churchill…defends the rights of oppressed people, and exposes the dark side of past and current history…These are achievements of inestimable value.”
— Noam Chomsky, author and activist“Without reservations, I support Churchill’s right to free speech and academic freedom, and regard the attack on him as scurrilous - and by now craven cowardice as well, as the state authorities and other critics pretend that the issue is (suddenly) his academic credentials and ethnic origins. That’s a real disgrace.” - Noam Chomsky







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