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Getting
at the Roots of Terrorism
The largest gathering of Nobel Peace Prize laureates
OSLO,
Norway, 10 Dec 01 (The Christian Science Monitor)--
By
Janet J. Jai
The largest
gathering of Nobel Peace Prize laureates ever was held in Oslo,
Norway this past weekend. The subject of Sept. 11th and terrorism
was seldom far from their lips during three days of discussions
among 30 past winners of the peace prize created by the Swedish
industrialist a century ago. Today, the United Nations and Secretary
General Kofi Annan are receiving the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize. While
the Nobel laureates agreed that terrorism was the gravest threat
to peace in the 21st century, they argued over the US military action
in Afghanistan and the longer-term solutions. The following are
some excerpts from their talks and from interviews with the Monitor.
Elie Wiesel
(1986 winner), a writer who supports the US action: "We must first
eliminate terrorism and then later organize a major international
conference to examine its cause." The roots of terrorism nest in
"fanaticism, hatred, and the will to live in ignorance.... What
is it that seduces some young people to terrorism? It simplifies
things. The fanatic has no questions, only answers. Education is
the way to eliminate terrorism."
Desmond Tutu
(1984 winner), a South African Anglican bishop, opposes the US military
response: "If the death of innocents is wrong in New York or Washington,
just give me one reason why it's not in Afghanistan." He also says
that "external circumstances such as poverty and a sense of grievance
and injustice can fill people with resentment and despair to the
point of desperation." Eliminating terrorism demands "believing
in the essential humanity of even the worst possible terrorist,
remembering that that person too is created in the image of God."
Kim Dae-jung
(2000 winner), President of South Korea: "At the bottom of terrorism
is poverty. That is the main cause. Then there are other religious,
national, and ideological differences."
An
Attack on Freedom
An Essay by Jody Williams, 1997 Nobel Peace
Prize winner for her coordination of the International Campaign
to Ban Landmines. Other links to recent peace and justice reactions
to the terrorism also included.
Click here. |
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Jody Williams
(1997 winner), founder of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines:
"I don't think poverty in and of itself causes terrorism. It is
a combination of factors: poverty, lack of education, despair, and
a profound sense of inequality that can be exploited by people whose
political agenda is to create terrorism." The solution lies in the
actions of ordinary people, she says. "I believe in this ability
of individuals in civil society to create the world we want. The
nation states are not doing it."
Oscar Arias
Sanchez (1987 winner), former President of Costa Rica: "The world's
priorities are wrong. With just a small amount of what the world
spends on defense, we could address poverty, inequality, illiteracy,
disease, environmental degradation, and drought. But that doesn't
mean that terrorism can be justified. There is no excuse for terrorism.
We need to bring those responsible for these terrorist crimes to
court, an international court. And we need to make it very clear
that justice doesn't mean revenge. We shouldn't let our hearts be
filled with hatred."
Dalai Lama (1989
winner), exiled Tibetan spiritual leader: "If the mind is more open,
that will automatically bring less fear. Education can narrow the
gap between appearances and reality. The reality is that we and
'they' are not different. 'They' are also part of me. Mentally and
emotionally we are all the same. We find that out by meetings between
individuals, scholars, and representatives of different religions
and organizations."
John Hume (1998
winner), Northern Ireland politician: "The vast majority of conflicts
are about differences - differences in religion, nationality, or
race.... I go around telling people [in Northern Ireland] that these
differences are due to accidents of birth, that they could just
as easily have been born in the other group. That's a powerful thing
to say in the streets of Northern Ireland."
Rigoberta Menchu
Tum, a human rights activist in Guatemala (1992 winner): "If we
want to have justice, we must look at terrorism in all its forms,
including state terrorism, in order to give the victims a place
and survivors a sense of justice. The deaths of all people have
the same value, whether they are the deaths of the innocents in
the United States or the genocide deaths of 200,000 in Guatemala,
83 percent of whom were the indigenous peoples. This is why we must
approach terrorism from an ethical platform. To eliminate terrorism,
we must create appropriate tribunals to judge those who are responsible,
regardless of who they are. In Guatemala, we have supported the
International Criminal Court."
(c)
Copyright 2001. The Christian Science Monitor
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