
Four
Meetings
What
really goes on at the Pacifica Forum
BY
EVA SYLWESTER
In a Nov. 27 letter to the editor of The Register-Guard,
Orval Etter, leader of the Pacifica Forum discussion group, and
15 co-signers denied accusations that the group is anti-Semitic
and promoting bigotry. They concluded the letter with the following
statement: "All who wish accurate information about what goes on
at the forum are urged to attend rather than depend on letters to
the editor or on hearsay, gossip or rumor."
With that in mind, here is what I experienced when
I attended the last four meetings of Pacifica Forum.
Etter is a retired UO associate professor, an expert
in municipal law and policy and a cellist known for organizing concert
series. The meetings described each had about 15 to 25 atendees.
November 9
Etter spent the first 15 minutes discussing a symposium
on Holocaust denial that UO professors had put on the previous night
in response to Pacifica Forum is bringing revisionist historian
Mark Weber to campus on Nov. 4. Etter claimed Weber's speech was
about Israel policy, not Holocaust denial, and that the symposium
constituted an ad hominem attack on Weber.
The meeting took place on the 69th anniversary of
Kristallnacht, an event where Jewish property was destroyed in the
early years of Nazi Germany. In recognition of that, Etter discussed
a book that he didn't give the name of until the end of his presentation
— Flashpoint by Ingrid Weckert, who has been convicted
and fined in Germany for denying the Holocaust. The point of the
book, as Etter described it, was that Kristallnacht was perpetrated
on Jews by Jews to make the Nazis look bad.
Numerous meeting attendees spent a question and
answer period yelling at Michael Williams, a member of the Community
Alliance of Lane County's (CALC) Anti-Hate Task Force who has been
monitoring Pacifica Forum meetings since 2003, accusing him of having
driven away previous forum sponsors such as the Wesley Center and
the UO Survival Center. Williams denied the accusations, saying
that someone else had given the Wesley Center a document he had
written and that the Survival Center had asked to talk to him. Another
meeting attendee burst into shouting about Zionist control of the
media.
November 16
Pacifica Forum attendees spent the first 15 minutes
of this meeting, titled "Elie Wiesel's Hate," complaining about
a Nov. 13 letter to the editor in the R-G by Judy Dellar
that criticized the group. Etter also circulated the letter that
ran in the R-G on Nov. 27.
Etter distributed photocopied pages from some of
Wiesel's books and focused his lecture on a paragraph from Wiesel's
1968 Legends of our Time in which Wiesel said it was healthy
for Jews to hate the perpetrators of the Holocaust. Etter argued
that this statement negated Wiesel's later writings about peace.
Valdas Anelauskas, a controversial Lithuanian immigrant
and writer, presented a slide show during which he said the editing
process that produced the English translation of Wiesel's famous
Night removed hostility toward Germans that had existed in
the original Yiddish version.
At the end of the meeting, Etter told Williams he
would be glad to have the Anti-Hate Task Force and local Jewish
leaders make a presentation refuting Wiesel's "doctrine of hate."
Williams told Etter to make an offer in writing and that he would
consider it.
"There hasn't been anything presented about a doctrine
of hate," Williams said. "There's been a lot of ranting and a lot
of rambling."
(As of Dec. 17, Williams said he still had not received
such an offer from Pacifica Forum. He added in an e-mail, "From
past experience, I think this is something they like to say in order
to show how open they are, but it is not something they have ever
followed through on.")
November 30
This meeting, which was the first of a two-part
series on Pearl Harbor, consisted of viewing a videotaped lecture
by Gregory Douglas. Etter noted while introducing the video that
while he sees Douglas' views as similar to those of revisionist
historians David Irving and Mark Weber, even Weber and Irving dislike
Douglas. (Weber described Douglas' work as an "elaborate hoax" on
the Institute of Historical Review website.)
Douglas claims Winston Churchill had warned Franklin
Roosevelt about Japanese ships approaching Pearl Harbor in advance
of the attack on Dec. 7, 1941, but that Roosevelt chose to ignore
the warning in order to get the U.S. involved in WWII. The bulk
of the lecture focused on a book Douglas had written about Nazi
Gestapo chief Heinrich Müller, who he claimed moved to Washington,
D.C., after the war and advised the U.S. government on how to handle
communists.
(The CIA file on Müller, now declassified and
available through the National Archives online, says the CIA didn't
know Müller's whereabouts after he disappeared in May 1945.)
Later, after denying that he was a conspiracy theorist,
Douglas described how the burning of the Branch Davidians' compound
in Waco, Texas, and the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building
were perpetrated by the U.S. government, and he said that the U.S.
government was capable of using cable TV boxes as receivers to eavesdrop
on people in their homes.
December 7
Etter circulated a Bob Herbert syndicated column,
stating that the Democratic Party lacked vision, to be signed by
those in agreement and sent to Oregon's congressional delegation.
"This forum is more than an information forum,"
he said. "It's an action forum."
Etter said he had recently been complimented by
two people, neither of whom had attended a forum, for his role in
carrying on Pacifica Forum.
"If we sometimes think we're a voice crying in the
wilderness," he said, "we're not."
Etter said that during the 1930s, he was apprehensive
about the coming world war, and that Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor
silenced isolationists and pacifists like him. He read an article
entitled "The First Casualty" that he had written for the magazine
Fellowship in 1951. In the article, he wrote that myths about
WWII were peddled to the American people and that some Axis attacks
on the U.S. were secretly provoked by the U.S. in order to increase
support for the war.
Jimmy Marr discussed the book Pearl Harbor: The
Story of the Secret War by George Morgenstern, which Weber had
given the group. He said the U.S. provoked Japan to war through
diplomatic demands, trade sanctions and embargoes.
Etter went on to say that the commonly accepted
story of Pearl Harbor is more unbelievable than any novel and that
the truth might come out if Americans were more accepting of accounts
such as that of Douglas.
The meetings described in this article all took
place in McKenzie Hall on the UO campus. The next meeting on Jan.
11 will take place in the Erb Memorial Union's Walnut Room; Etter
said the EMU director requested the group move to a more supervised
area because of controversy over Mark Weber.
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