  | 
      | 
  
    Open Letter in Response to the University of Chicago Board of Trustees’ Rejection of  Divestment 
       
            February 5, 2007  
       
      To the University of Chicago  community:
        President Zimmer’s office  released a memorandum Friday afternoon announcing the Board of Trustees’  decision to reject the proposal calling upon the University to divest its  assets from companies currently financing the Sudanese government’s  perpetuation of the ongoing genocide in Darfur.  The proposal was signed by over 1,500 students, 110 faculty, and the eminent  historian and last surviving member of the Kalven committee, John Hope  Franklin. 
         
        STAND is extremely  disappointed by the Board of Trustees’ decision to remain complicit in  genocide. If President Zimmer and the Board of Trustees have sought to set the  University apart, they have succeeded. In their rejection of divestment they  have set the University apart not as as a leader, but as dangerously far behind  and out of touch with widespread acceptance of corporate social responsibility  and the role of the modern university in world affairs. While our peer  institutions, including Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and Columbia, answered calls for divestment from  the genocide in Sudan  and Apartheid in South    Africa, the University rejected both,  demonstrating time and time again that it does not feel beholden to the same  moral standards that all other responsible academic institutions accept. 
         
        By invoking the Kalven Report  in their justification to reject divestment, the Board of Trustees has  demonstrated their indifference towards the report’s core values and has  surrendered the moral authority to interpret it. We firmly believe in the core  values of academic freedom of expression espoused in the the Report, and  believe that divestment from genocide is consistent with them. Genocide seeks  to destroy and silence a people, a culture, or a society. John Hope Franklin,  the last surviving drafter of the Kalven Report, agreed that the genocide in Darfur qualifies as an “exceptional instance” under its  terms. The genocide is incompatible with “paramount social values” mentioned in  the Report, and Franklin  “had no difficulty concluding that divestment is consistent with the core  values of our report and the mission of the University.” Reaching the threshold  of an exceptional instance under the Kalven Report does not merely give the  University the option to act, but creates a moral imperative to do so. 
         
        The Zimmer Memorandum  expressed concern that by deciding to divest from Darfur,  the University would be “venturing down a slippery slope of taking  institutional stands on political or social issues.” The slippery slope  argument is a fallacy, appropriate perhaps for sophists, but not for a  world-class academic institution. The University takes positions on social and  political issues on a daily basis, but chooses to consider the “slippery slope”  argument only when it suits its needs. During our conversation with Board  Chairman James Crown, we pointed out that there were many bright lines the  University might draw if they sought to avoid precedent for taking positions on  all political and social issues. They could have set that line at crimes  against humanity, or more narrowly at genocides in progress as defined by UN  Convention Against Genocide. If the University felt those too broad and that  some genocides were perhaps more permissible than others, they could have  defined the threshold more narrowly still to apply only to genocides in  progress as declared by the United Nations and the President and Congress of  the United States of America.  The genocide in Darfur meets all of the  criteria above. In truth, it is difficult to imagine an instance with a greater  degree of moral clarity. If the genocide in Darfur  does not qualify as the exceptional instance that violates our paramount social  values, then we challenge the President Zimmer and the Board of Trustees to  define what does. 
         
        As if the Board of Trustees’  decision was not injurious in and of itself, the language used in the  Memorandum was belittling to all of those affected by the genocide in Sudan. The  University’s statement fails to term the situation in Darfur  as a genocide, a fact the United States Congress, President Bush, and the  United Nations have all acknowledged. The Memorandum’s language of  “atrocities,” “violence,” and “genocidal behavior” echo Former Secretary of  State Madeline Albright’s characterization of the 1994 Rwandan genocide as  “acts of genocide,” a terminology the United States used to excuse their  inaction in the face of crimes against humanity. The University’s failure to  acknowledge the truth of Darfur is a similar  attempt to whitewash the horrific state of affairs to which the University is  now decidedly a party. It is a mechanism deployed to justify their tolerance of  the intolerable. By once again distinguishing itself as a leader in denial, the  University has set a precedent for other institutions to remain deliberately  indifferent towards the slaughter of 400,000 innocent people in Darfur. 
         
        Instead of divesting, the  University has proposed to set up a fund that is, at one point, proposed to  “contribute to greater understanding of the conflict in Sudan” and at another  point is suggested to address a much more broadly defined goal, to “encourage  creative and entrepreneurial thinking about University-based activities that  will broaden knowledge and help prepare students…to advance human rights and  the well-being of people around the world.” While we appreciate the  university’s generosity in setting up a fund which may or may not go to  Sudan-related projects, this is not what we asked for. The academic sector has  been approached nationwide to do one thing – and one thing only – to help stop  the genocide by divesting from the corporations funding it. Committees,  conferences, and papers will do nothing to stop a genocide that is ongoing.  Future research will have no effect on a tragedy that the world agrees is  happening today. 
          The University’s choice of  investments speaks not only to its values, but in actuality, affects the lives  of people around the world. President Zimmer and the Board of Trustees,  although not state actors, find themselves in the rare position of possessing  the power and the ability to make a profound moral statement in the ongoing  discourse surrounding Darfur. They have the  obligation to use this power to influence other universities and corporations  to alter their investment policies. In this increasingly globalized world it is  essential for the University to consider their role as a moral actor beyond the  Midway. By choosing not to divest, the University is as culpable as those  corporations that directly fund genocide. 
         
        The University stated that  they would maintain their “longstanding practice of not taking explicit positions  on social and political issues that do not have a direct bearing on the  University.” What the University fails to state is that they have taken a  position on the genocide in Darfur; it would  be impossible not to do so. Investment is support, and divestment is  condemnation. There is no morally neutral ground. 
          The University nonetheless  defends its investment choices, not for any pragmatic or economic reasons, nor  because it is obligated to do so by the requirements laid out in the Kalven  Report. We know this decision is not motivated by economic considerations  because they tell us, explicitly, that “the University’s holdings in targeted  companies may on any day be nonexistent or de minimis.” We know this decision  is not compelled by a formal policy requiring silence in the face of genocide,  because the University admits that the Kalven Report allows for divestment in  exceptional circumstances. The University could easily have concluded that the  mass extermination of 400,000 innocents qualifies as exceptional. But they  chose not to. They chose, instead, to make a moral argument in defense of their  decision to remain complicit in genocide. 
         
        One hundred and fifty years  ago, here in Illinois,  Abraham Lincoln faced Stephen Douglas in the debates over slavery. When Douglas refused to take a moral stand on the issue of  slavery, instead appealing to the democratic process to solve the crisis, Lincoln saw the argument  for what it was. It “is perfectly logical” to remain morally neutral on a  question like slavery, Lincoln said, “if there is nothing wrong in the  institution; but if you admit that it is wrong, [one] cannot logically say that  anyone has a right to do wrong.” As Lincoln  knew then, so we know now, that devotion to neutrality and “utter indifference”  is the equivalent of complicity with injustice and “unqualified evil.” 
          The Board of Trustees’  decision is symptomatic of their disregard for the wants and aspirations of the  community they claim to serve, and their lack of accountability to its members.  The Memorandum’s intimation that “those in favor [of divestment] comprise a  clear minority of those involved in discussion” speaks not to the lack of  popular support for divestment, but to the lack of diversity of those allowed  to participate in those discussions. 
         
        Though only a few parties were  involved in discussion, the student support for divestment was widespread  throughout the undergraduate and graduate student populations, especially the Law School,  Medical School, and Humanities and Social  Sciences divisions. Some of the 110 faculty members who have officially lent  their support to the campaign include such prominent professors as Drs. James  Bowman, Mary Mahowald and Eugene Goldwasser of the Medical School, Saskia  Sassen, Dipesh Chakrabarty and Moishe Postone of the Division of Social  Sciences, Wendy Doniger of the Humanities Division, as well as the four  department chairs and one dean. The movement for divestment from Darfur has been the broadest and most vocal expression of  student opinion since the University dealt with the question of divestment from  Apartheid. 
          Although the University  decided not to divest from South    Africa in 1987, the Board of Trustees  allowed a student-faculty delegation to address them at their meeting, and  President Gray even publicly debated students and faculty about the merits and  demerits of adopting a divestment policy. Since that time, the University has  demonstrated an even greater disregard for community concerns. In the movement  for divestment from Darfur, our request to send  a joint faculty-student delegation to a board meeting to answer questions about  the targeted divestment model was summarily dismissed. After repeated requests,  administrators refused even to release to us the dates of trustee meetings. 
         
        As President Zimmer  acknowledged, this campaign successfully accomplished the University’s core  value of “engaging the broadest range of perspectives” on divestment. But we  must ask ourselves, what is the value of this free discourse held so sacred by  the University, if it does not lead us to adopt a humane and moral view of the  world? What is the purpose of engaging this broad range of perspectives if the  decision-making body of the University, the 49 members of the Board of  Trustees, is not accountable to anyone? 
         
        The reality of genocide in our  time is as tragic as it is undeniable. The horror of these crimes against  humanity is only compounded and exacerbated by the fact that our University is  complicit in genocide. Free inquiry and diversity of opinion are certainly laudable  goals, but these principles neither imply nor demand that institutions of  higher education profess neutrality in the face of atrocity. It is truly a rare  moment when we are presented with the opportunity to make a powerful moral  statement against injustice in the world. With their decision to reject  divestment in Darfur, the University has  squandered that opportunity. Their deliberate indifference to the massacre of  400,000 innocents amounts to a policy of tacit approval, and their choice to  justify that policy in moral terms makes the decision all the more  reprehensible. 
         
          Sincerely, 
          University of Chicago STAND 
    A Student Anti-Genocide  Coalition       	 | 
     |