Dissident Arab Gets the Treatment
By Ahmad Al-Qloushi --FrontPageMagazine.com--01/06/05
I am a 17-year-old Kuwaiti Arab Muslim and a college freshman studying in
the USA. I was three years of age when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. My parents
still remember what it was like for us during the invasion. Waiting for long
hours in line for a few pieces of bread. We had darkness 24 hours a day from
the burning oil wells. My two uncles are still traumatized from being
kidnapped and tortured in Iraqi prisons. Most of all we remember our
one-week-old baby cousin who died while the Iraqi invaders were stealing
incubators from hospitals to sell them for profit. The Americans by contrast
came in to liberate us and asked for nothing in return. I love this country
for the freedom it provides and for rescuing Kuwait’s liberty in the first
Gulf War. 12 Years later, America once again has selflessly protected my
country and my people by removing Saddam Hussein.
I arrived in the United States for the first time 5 months ago with
tremendous enthusiasm to study the political institutions and history of this
extraordinary country.
I enrolled in Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, California and
immediately registered for “Introduction to American Government and Politics."
I was shocked by my Professor’s singularly one-sided presentation. Week after
week, I encountered a lack of intellectual and political diversity that I
would have more commonly expected to have heard on the streets of
pre-liberation Iraq. In this particular class I heard only one consistent
refrain: America is bad.
A week before thanksgiving Professor Woolcock assigned us a take home final
exam. The final exam consisted solely of one required essay: “Dye and Zeigler
contend that the Constitution of the United States was not ‘ordained and
established’ by ‘the people’ as we have so often been led to believe. They
contend instead that it was written by a small educated and wealthy elite in
America who were representative of powerful economic and political interests.
Analyze the US constitution (original document), and show how its formulation
excluded the majority of the people living in America at that time, and how it
was dominated by America's elite interest.”
When I read the assignment I remembered back to my high school in Kuwait.
Many of my teachers were Palestinian; they hated America, they hated my
worldview, and they did their best to brainwash me. I did not leave my country
and my family to come to the United States to receive further brainwashing. I
disagreed completely with Dye and Zeigler’s thesis. I wrote an essay defending
America’s Founding Fathers and upholding the US constitution as a pioneering
document, which has contributed to extraordinary freedoms in America and other
corners of the world - including my corner, the Middle East.
Professor Woolcock didn’t grade my essay. Instead he told me to come to see
him in his office the following morning. I was surprised the next morning when
instead of giving me a grade, Professor Woolcock verbally attacked me and my
essay. He told me, “Your views are irrational.” He called me naïve for
believing in the greatness of this country, and told me "America is not God's
gift to the world." Then he upped the stakes and said "You need regular
psychotherapy." Apparently, if you are an Arab Muslim who loves America you
must be deranged. Professor Woolcock went as far as to threaten me by stating
that he would visit the Dean of International Admissions (who has the power to
take away student visas) to make sure I received regular psychological
treatment.
This scared me. I didn’t want to be deported for having written a
pro-American essay, so as soon as I left his office I made an appointment with
the school psychologist. She let me go with a comment that I don’t need
regular therapy. As I left her office, I couldn’t help thinking that even my
Palestinian high school teachers had never tried to silence me or put me in
therapy.
I have since learned that mine is not an isolated case. Many students in
American universities are being indoctrinated and silenced by biased
professors who hate America. America saved my life and the lives of my family.
How can I not speak out?
The local media picked up the story of what happened to me. Professor
Woolcock then filed a school grievance accusing me, under section 5 of
Foothill’s grievance code, of an “act or threat of intimidation or general
harassment.” If you are confused by this, so was I. Foothill’s Dean of Student
Affairs, Don Dorsey, would not let me see the grievance as filed but he
summarized it for me by saying, "Professor Woolcock feels harassed by your
having mentioned his name to the media."
As a result of growing media attention I am told that Foothill’s Board of
Trustees has received hundreds of e-mails. I came to this country to study
American political institutions and I have certainly been getting a crash
course. I’ve discovered that, as a tax-payer funded college, Foothill has a 5
member publicly elected Board of Trustees who care passionately about
Education.
Ironically, as I was going through all of this I learned that California State Senator Bill Morrow was
introducing the Academic Bill of Rights to the State Legislature to
defend academic freedom and intellectual diversity on California’s campuses.
As a result of my own experience and the many stories I have heard from other
Foothill students, I am helping to form a chapter of Students for
Academic Freedom to get my college and my state to adopt this bill. You can
encourage Foothill’s Board of Trustees to pass the Academic Bill of Rights as
official school policy by emailing them at http://www.fhda.edu/about_us/board/.