Correspondence
Exchange
of Correspondence with Charles Clayton, Director, World Vision Jerusalem, in
response to NGO Monitor's analysis of 15 August, 2004
Reply to Charles Clayton
Director, World Vision Jerusalem
September 23, 2004
Dear Mr. Clayton,
In your letter of 3 September 2004, responding to the NGO Monitor
analysis of World Vision's activities related to the Arab-Israeli conflict,
you assert that "World Vision is in fact entirely different from this
portrayal..."
We understand the desire to emphasize the good works of your organization,
but the facts speak for themselves - NGO Monitor did not invent any of the
highly politicized and biased statements made by World Vision and its
officials. You also fail to address the systematic demonization of Israel's
defense of its citizens against Palestinian terror, such as those made by your
Australian Chief Executive Tim Costello, who described Israel's security barrier
as "part of the problem, not part of the solution", and claiming
incongruously that it "is reminiscent of the Cold War and Eastern Bloc
oppression." This and other biased statements and misrepresentations of
Israeli policy are entirely outside of World Vision's claim to be a
humanitarian organization.
Furthermore, you claim that "We are not interested in the wellbeing of
one group at the expense of another, …and we grieve for the families of any
victims of violence, whether they are Israelis or Palestinians." Again,
these noble sentiments must be measured against World Vision's activities.
Showing some sympathy for Israeli victims does not in any way offset or
validate anti-Israel political claims and prejudices in other dimensions of
World Vision's activities. As detailed in NGO Monitor's analysis, your
organization repeats many standard Palestinian historical myths and distortions
surrounding the conflict and removes the context of Israeli security measures
designed to protect innocent civilians from Palestinian terrorism, deceptively
classifying such actions as "collective punishment".
Based on these and other examples, we strongly urge you and the other
branches of World Vision to stop contributing to the political and ideological
war against Israel that is being conducted by many self-proclaimed
"humanitarian NGOs". This cynical exploitation of the rhetoric of
good works to promote and even justify Palestinian hatred, and the terror that
results, is fundamentally immoral.
We look forward to your response,
Gerald M. Steinberg
Editor, NGO Monitor
Letter from Charles Clayton, Director, World Vision Jerusalem
3 September 2004
Professor Gerald Steinberg,
Editor, The NGO Monitor
Beit Milken
13 Tel Hai St.
Jerusalem 92107
Dear Professor Steinberg,
It was with surprise that I read your article about World Vision on the NGO
Monitor website, claiming that we are giving "tacit support for
terror" and have "a highly politicized agenda reflecting anti-Israel
rhetoric and biased history, under the guise of development assistance and
justice". We were especially disappointed that you did not contact us
directly to discuss such concerns or request clarification beforehand.
World Vision is in fact entirely different from this portrayal; children and
families are at the heart of our programmes. We work with communities, for
example to help deaf children learn, poor children to remain in school, and
traumatised children to regain a sense of well-being. We are not interested in
the wellbeing of one group at the expense of another, but focus rather on the
places where there is greatest need; and we grieve for the families of any
victims of violence, whether they are Israelis or Palestinians.
In our publication Who Will Wipe Away Their Tears?, we gave the names of
every child - Jew, Christian and Muslim - who died a violent death in this
conflict from 2000 to 2003 and we called for an end to violence against
children. As Dr. Nurit Peled-Elhanan of The Bereaved Families' Forum notes,
"It takes so little to kill a child and so much to keep it alive."
She is the mother of a 14-year-old Jewish girl, Smadar, killed by a suicide
bomber in 1997.
We are conscious of the complex history that has shaped the modern context
for both Israelis and Palestinians, and we affirm the right of all people,
whether they are Jews, Christians, Muslims or of any other faith, to live in
security and with dignity.
Yours sincerely,
Charles Clayton,
Director, World Vision Jerusalem