10-26-11 Letter to New York Historical Society Board |
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Please use the below as a template to send a letter to the members of the Board of Trustees at the following address: New-York Historical Society Dear Sirs and Madams: We write to request that you withdraw the name of Henry Kissinger as an honoree of the New York Historical Society at the event on November 7, 2011 at the Waldorf Astoria. He is the United States’ most notorious living war criminal, whose many crimes include the following:
While this list can be considerably lengthened, the conclusion is inescapable: Dr. Kissinger is one of the worst war criminals of the 20th century. It is difficult to understand how the New York Historical Society can consider honoring such a man. This action on the part of the Society makes a statement that these crimes are of no importance to us as 21st-century New Yorkers, as Americans, as human beings. We raise these thirty-five-year-old crimes to your attention because as William Faulkner said, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” The failure to hold Dr. Kissinger to account for his myriad of crimes has allowed him to continue dispensing recommendations for new wars and foreign interventions. The failure to confront and rectify this record has facilitated the invasion of Iraq, the use of torture at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, the policy of rendition and the detentions at Guantanamo, and other the illegal actions of the “war on terror.” As historians you are no doubt aware that Henry Kissinger is wanted for questioning in England, France, Spain, Chile and Argentina. Our culture is being poisoned by the failure to remember Kissinger’s and others’ crimes and to hold them to account. It is a terrible thing to participate in this process of enforced forgetting and impunity and also reflects very poorly on the United States in the international sphere. Sincerely,
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