Friday, October 30, 2009

Radical German publisher refused entry to US

US refuses entry to radical German publisher

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/sep/29/us-refuses-entry-wolff

The prestigious German publisher and former student activist
Karl-Dietrich Wolff has been denied entry to the US

Alison Flood
29 September 2009

PEN, the international writers' organisation, has condemned the news
that prestigious German publisher and former student activist
Karl-Dietrich Wolff has been denied entry to the US. He was due to
speak at Vassar College about African American civil rights and 20th
century Germany.

The 66-year-old Wolff, former head of the Socialist German Students'
Organisation (SDS), founder of Germany's Black Panther Solidarity
Committee in 1969 and founder of German publisher Stroemfeld, was
refused entry at JFK airport in New York this weekend.

"They filtered me out of the line right away," said Wolff this
morning. "They had a print-out which had my picture from my visa
[saying] in big spelling 'revoked, revoked, revoked'. They told me I
was trying to enter the country with an invalid visa."

He had been invited to speak at the academic conference at Vassar
College because he took part in the beginning of the civil rights
movement as a high school exchange student in the US in the early
1960s and founded the Black Panther Solidarity Committee. "He could
thus share his biographical experience with the international
academic community assembled at the conference, which features, among
others, such prominent speakers as Angela Davis," said the organisers
of the conference, Vassar president Dr Catharine Hill and German
Historical Institute director Dr Hartmut Berghoff.

They issued a statement expressing their disappointment at the denial
of entry and their hope that its circumstances would "be clarified
promptly by the appropriate authorities".

Wolff said he had understood his visa was valid until November 2010,
but was told it had been revoked in 2003. "They questioned me for six
hours, and fingerprinted me and photographed me, and put me on the
last plane back to Frankfurt," he said.

He had been barred from visiting the US between 1969 and 1987 after
he was subpoenaed to the Senate Committee on Internal Security and
told Senator Strom Thurmond that he and "his like" were "just a bunch
of criminal bandits". "No one ever told him that to his face, and
after that I had no American visa for 18 years," said Wolff today.

According to the book Americanisation and Anti-Americanism, the
hearing saw Wolff "indict America's ruling class as a reincarnation
of the Nazis: as the Jewish people in Germany, blacks were deprived
in the United States of their language and culture". "'This is not
only a private opinion of mine,' Wolff lectured. 'I'm here to
represent all mankind.'"

But since the bar was lifted in 1987 he has been back "more than
three times" to the US, he said. He was not told why he was denied
entry at the weekend, and said he would be talking to lawyers about
the issue, as well as to the American ambassador in Germany.

"The university is trying to get some video conferencing going so I
can speak at the conference after all," he said. "But I will not go
back to the US before I get a letter of apology ... Everyone who
knows me knows I am one of the relatively few leftist leaders in West
Germany who is really pro-America ... It's really very strange, the
whole thing."

Larry Siems, director of the Freedom to Write programme at PEN
America, called the denial of entry "pretty disturbing and
embarrassing". He said PEN America would be talking to its lawyers
about the issue. "The timing of the cancellation of the visa in
2003... suggests they went through an old list of the usual suspects
and cancelled visas wholesale," said Siems, adding that other PEN
members including Haluk Gerger, had experienced similar things.

"We have been working hard to challenge the resurgence of ideological
exclusion in the US since 9/11, which we consider to be a violation
of the right to freedom of expression and of the right of Americans
to meet with and engage with our foreign colleagues," he said.

The German branch of PEN ­ of which Wolff is a member - said the move
was "outrageous and must be interpreted as a curtailment of human rights".

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