---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Steve Kellerman <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 10:57 PM
Subject: Fwd: HONORING NOAM CHOMSKY AS HE IS HOSPITALIZED WITH A SERIOUS
STROKE
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---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Joseph Gerson, The Campaign for Peace, Disarmament & Common Security <
[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 6:59 PM
Subject: HONORING NOAM CHOMSKY AS HE IS HOSPITALIZED WITH A SERIOUS STROKE
To: <[email protected]>



Friends,


     At the request of Noam’s family who did not want to alert the press
and create chaos as Noam was in his initial care for a very serious stroke,
for the past year I’ve not shared what I have known. Like so many others, I
have certainly missed his voice, wisdom and insights since the worst round
of the Israel-Gaza war and genocide began.


    As you will see in yesterday’s Portside article
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePEhrjPXEZpVJGX4hgSIyTL2q2kGLfcOC02Dg9HEfxfZtwizR52Qeagt_rhpZk61C-qb3u7qKGUkYlQZqYsv3sJ8hLhxSzgAn-mvOXCtvzTfHYKJj2lXKIR0wndfqWfLUyr5NzI3pa4JVpFcJxxQDUvdK7yvREiuokfM0iwWJyjCDOT9DiEv6vg9I8jso8kf54kZgQr10BK1kthDyYwHAFssM0cIER98TUWsAYcNBgB6qbI2rrrVL38w74DCLps2Dn&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
last June Noam suffered a major stroke at his home in Tucson. After months
of care there, his wife brought him to Brazil, her home nation, for further
care. His current situation is described in the article.


    Two years ago, with Reiner Braun of the International Peace Bureau I
recorded an interview with Noam in advance of IPB’s world conference in
Barcelona. In just a very few moments, backed later with compelling
visuals, Noam described the existential challenges we face and how to
address them. See the Chomsky on Sources of Hope video in the right hand
column of our CPDCS home page: https://cpdcs.org/
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rPwWk5S79OacxeHdzgMHzaH4_G-qAVCBGjzvR_ZI33kcGLkWeh8NOg_Ft089ZWnObdENEI9fMR-PFG8wcUTPb8hQ1k_rVAZMSA==&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>


      Finally, in December, 2019, I had the honor of introducing Noam at
IPB’s Sean McBride Prize ceremony in New York. I spoke from my heart and
mind, and the text follows below



     Joseph
December 2019 McBride Prize Introduction


Friends,



Irene Gendzier, Noam’s long-time friend and collaborator, will be giving a
more formal introduction and overview of his many contributions.



It has been my privilege to have worked on and off with Noam, among my most
important teachers, models and inspirations, off and on for the last four
decades. And it will also be my pleasure and privilege in a few moments to
present him with his more than well-earned Sean McBride peace prize on
behalf of the International Peace Bureau.



On the Internet, we can read that Noam has been an outstanding linguist, an
academic, an anti-war activist and – this surprised me – a “journalist.”
The Encyclopedia Britannica reports that Noam is an “American theoretical
linguist whose work from the 1950s revolutionized the field of linguistics
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePJAeD50FjCRpthMlqPkCKkeTZrlYWOJpYY7OwhNfpdhmrrCM4buPFj3mG3jrey1-WBSdWWAPgqpk3dqSDLCWga-UnK--CGa1xn8Y0RNqLgCjiyt5IFjxWjA==&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
by treating language
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePHb7kLNFEQH0yoL_jOcmGDwkdPhAj7QctKBsrN27aIZnnNXfz2qfASLCm5WZYAUjLmKbyGIJFu3Cw_VoJyogKz2rulzYWP54R8-lXL5RrQglfjdzEx34ZjA==&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
as a uniquely human, biologically based cognitive
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePPOsMdgiFic83zG7FWTJkwuj4bJRLMSQ1CMjAD5YyARP28jqnEhLG4NYxqe6RpbR5KMnbKY8D6oMrQebM12VCR0SAxfqPTtOInVtyr7MH9waKNweSISfr88m6i4lHpWRp&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
capacity.” It continues that “Through his contributions to linguistics and
related fields, including cognitive psychology
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePqO1O-p3L77b6-JlLw3J9CGVIw8fbCkQfqC6jeh2hRVvj9yLx30vYFkhaq9QDvbdoDS-gD7uYrfxpSpz0EUnQ0P_8q3mgj4cezuIZQ21Xmu5WiBLEg1qvh5idcFHSbtLw&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
and the philosophies of mind
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePIWZL75tv4sfU1Y_mRv5TJpm-DfaV_g8AHvZRYT39dJe0bFvJc9cUS6cg0vA-OZDSNvBn9y_cw0i--JPHVUcd61Iug-UQwkmhqUc1xejfi6URFLuJEG9baxspynhJ0dnC&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
and language
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePWyl6pmnmeFqobqj0qD1aRxKdGyIOPasSiYPV2s0Z-E3Mr4B79XYJZoTX0VBpS47lnwbfRpHvPvvmGcoIYNxqJs6ob1gfXBk2HkU1i6xhhglGrTyAkQODht_LkPNkb4AE&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>,”
Noam “helped to initiate and sustain what came to be known as the
“cognitive revolution.” It also tells us that “Chomsky also gained a
worldwide following as a political dissident for his analyses of the
pernicious
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePn9KzbOyDwqtE8TX0hXqDP3LA6e4rx9dc4u_MPTZGgR-GqMYCu09DOIjqLTMcbqeQTK9idYck7PrrV-jtswUTxtqggERA7sJ-l-gO41vySS9fbIZudV_3MKLEwy-7lyCZ&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
influence of economic elites on U.S. domestic politics, foreign policy
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHeP9bece8xf1FniAnhTJQ4D7bmCvM6cKg2kgi92uER4gBqB-nq3zMzTwTeDXnT61TadC_nvhEfn5tpBkrDMXLQjaJobwfeCdJTwrDX2JWsimBV_sLulSI8XWw==&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>,
and intellectual
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePF-uEXTSq9BQFt1MEbSdNTrV1rtcA6n-JwcuYzC0s1YWAWFnMug9Bm-i96-uNb3WSYG1SIf-ejYVbLumsjnvnqEcCPSSataGciSX0UFKBga-p0Z3Av_w17JWbvIoGIBbJ&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
culture
<https://8pb4f8bbb.cc.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001ARAQfUvVFz9PClVT-l4tBAvvTFQKjsWhJFwt-K1WzArSlmrr7B15rKmhR-QjrHePqjjIKEfSuZ04s_6QjBiWyHo_iGZdk312VrzkkBhFI38NlyEwO05FQW-gHp2wsBTouKtDjop5vNF48oiTBtNDJVHxfuUe12ABmgcP9KGxPHirzpVaug8k0pEvTI5KnAWM&c=WKxd6njV5LOKYUnR_oexn9j0YGkwia-Dq3xZ-UX8FO4DBEcb5x3KCg==&ch=lv_SgiYuR19CiAk0RA0wC1kgn-fpsVRUObUzUG8jyPBQpcJb7I_5fg==>
.”



Let me add to this encyclopedic knowledge.


I think that for all of us here who are not linguists, cognitive scientists
or journalists, that Noam is a man who has had profound impacts on who we
have become, how we see the world, and the actions we have taken for peace,
justice and environmental sustainability. It goes without saying that over
the past half century with Noam’s indefatigable thinking, writing and
speaking that he has nourished movements across the country and around the
world.



We are not giving him the Right Livelihood Award, but he certainly deserves
that too.



The pop singer Rod Stewart sang that “the first cut is the deepest”, and as
I introduce Noam, I want to highlight what for me and many others was
Noam’s “first cut”, his most important contribution. I also want to share
something more personal that Fred Branfman wrote that tells us who Noam
really is.



In 1967 Noam published an essay titled “The Responsibility of
Intellectuals” in the New York Review of Books. I want to quote from its
opening paragraphs, because I think that in a profound way it illuminates
Noam’s commitments, his way of being, and the model and challenge that has
been among his greatest gifts to us:



The article began with reference to Dwight Macdonald who, a generation
earlier had asked: “To what extent were the German or Japanese people
responsible for the atrocities committed by their governments? …To what
extent are the British or American people responsible for the vicious
terror bombings of civilians, perfected as a technique of warfare by the
Western democracies and reaching their culmination in Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, surely among the most unspeakable crimes in history…to anyone
whose political and moral consciousness had been formed by the horrors of
the 1930s, by the war in Ethiopia, the Russian purge, the “China Incident,”
the Spanish Civil War, the Nazi atrocities, the Western reaction to these
events and, in part, complicity in them—these questions had particular
significance and poignancy.



Noam continued: “With respect to the responsibility of intellectuals, there
are still other, equally disturbing questions. Intellectuals are in a
position to expose the lies of governments, to analyze actions according to
their causes and motives and often hidden intentions. In the Western world,
at least, they have the power that comes from political liberty, from
access to information and freedom of expression. For a privileged minority,
Western democracy provides the leisure, the facilities, and the training to
seek the truth lying hidden behind the veil of distortion and
misrepresentation, ideology and class interest, through which the events of
current history are presented to us. The responsibilities of intellectuals,
then, are much deeper than what Macdonald calls the ‘responsibility of
people,’ given the unique privileges that intellectuals enjoy.



“IT IS”, Noam repeated, “THE RESPONSIBILITY of intellectuals to speak the
truth and to expose lies.”



>From the corridors of power in Washington and Wall Street, to corruptions
within academia’s ivory towers, Indochina, the Middle East, Latin America
and beyond, Noam has lifted the veils of distortion and lies, serving as a
liberating, democratic and very human force.



Six years ago, Fred Branfman, who exposed the covert bombing of Laos by the
U.S. and served as the Director of Project Air War wrote an article titled When
I Saw Noam Chomsky Cry. It was about Noam’s visit to Laos in 1970. Fred was
an extraordinary figure, who lived among Laotians and documented the
unprecedented and criminal six years of secret bombings of the people of
the Plain of Jars in Laos. Fred heard the stories of “countless
grandmothers burned alive by napalm, countless children buried alive by
500-pound bombs, parents shredded by anti-personnel bombs” in a land that
was transformed into a moonscape. Tens of thousands of peaceful villagers
were killed or driven underground and into caves or into Vientiane, the
Laotian capital city. Before Noam showed up bound for Hanoi, Fred had
escorted and briefed journalists from CBS, ABC, the New York Times and
other media outlets with the hope that they’d expose these horrendous
bombings to the world.



           The delegation’s flight from Vientiane to Hanoi was cancelled,
but Noam accepted Fred’s invitation to say on to meet with U.S. Embassy and
Lao Cabinet officials, the Prime minister, the Pathet Lao representative
and a former guerilla soldier. But what stood out in Fred’s memory was a
meeting with Plain of Jars refugees. The journalists Fred had introduced to
them had listened politely, and then returned to their hotels to write
their stories without showing any emotion. But Fred was stunned and when,
while translating Noam’s questions and the refugees’ heart-rending answers,
he saw Noam “break down and begin weeping.” As he wrote, he saw into Noam’s
soul.



Beyond, or maybe related to, Noam’s intellect and his moral compass are his
humility, his generosity of spirit and his common decency, to which I would
add his intellectual and physical courage. Few people have driven
themselves to publish as many books in any field, let alone as many fields
as Noam has. Yet, Noam has consistently made the time to speak at
community-based movement building and fund raising events, and he has found
the energy and will to work into the early morning hours answering
inquiries sent to him from graduate students and others across the country
and around the world who he has yet to meet.



And yet, in that place where his humility meets his vision of what then
must be done, Noam has too often thought that he hasn’t done enough to stop
the killing, prevent the unjust imprisonments, and to work for human
freedom.



Among the areas where Noam has provided us with path breaking history and
analysis, has been his work as a leading critic of Israeli and U.S. Middle
East policies. In the tradition of no good deed going unpunished, Noam’s
mitzvah has been the subject of vile attacks by people and organizations
for whom the truth is too painful and threatening. In 1969, two years after
the Six-Day Middle East War, Noam wrote and published Peace in the Middle
East? and co-founded the Committee on New Alternatives in the Middle East
with a statement designed to break the silence. That book, whose
introduction was written by Irene Gendzier, and the statement paved the way
for thousands who have since worked for Palestinian rights, for a just
resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and who are now resisting
the campaign to silence the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.



Noam was an outstanding critic of Ronald Reagan’s Central American wars,
and among the memories I cherish is being arrested with Noam and Howard
Zinn when hundreds of us closed the Federal Building in Boston to protest
the Contra War.



And, in 1983 and 84, Noam was there for us when we held our first
conference and made a film about the Deadly Connection, the roles that U.S.
nuclear weapons and first-strike threats of nuclear attacks have served as
the ultimate enforcer of empire. In December 1991, Noam was the featured
speaker in the country’s first major peace movement conference following
the 9-11 attacks and the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. As with today’s
conference, there were waiting lists to get on the waiting list. And Noam’s
talk helped to break the fearful silence that many here will remember
prevailed in the months following those terrorist attacks. Noam has been
kind enough to tolerate my requests to film interviews that we have shown
at IPB conferences in Europe.



Friends, I’ve gone on quite long enough. In presenting Noam IPB’s Sean
McBride Peace Prize, let me invoke Einstein’s observation that genius is 1%
inspiration and 99% perspiration. I don’t know if he got those proportions
right, they reflect just how hard and courageously Noam has worked to stop
the killing, for peace, justice and human survival. He has never stopped
becoming and giving.

Campaign for Peace Disarmament and Common Security | 4 Washburn Street
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