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Speakers Take Center Stage
Paul Rusesabagina, the Rwandan hotel manager
whose story was the basis for the film Hotel Rwanda, captivated
a packed Page Auditorium in February with personal reflections
on the country’s 1994 genocide. He explained the background for
the conflict, saying, “Why do people hate each other? Simply because
they have been taught to hate each other by leaders who always
divide in order to rule,” and described his experience in the hotel
whose residents he protected almost single-handedly.
Rusesabagina was one of several prominent speakers at Duke earlier
this year, who spoke on a wide variety of issues now in the national
spotlight, ranging from religious tolerance to the global reach
of art museums.
In delivering the 2007 Kenan Distinguished Lecture in Ethics in
January, Jonathan Sacks, the United Kingdom’s chief rabbi, discussed
the ways in which extremist religious views are threatening global
society. At the center of conflicts between groups like the Sunnis
and Shiites and Christians and Muslims, he said, is a lack of appreciation
for shared values—values that could be explored and explicated
through scrutiny of the narratives that are at the basis of the
various faith traditions.
A week and a half later, retired Marine General Anthony Zinni shared
his highly critical view of the Iraq war and stressed the need
for more creative thinking about the future of the Middle East
during the Terry Sanford Distinguished Lecture. “This argument
over 23,000 troops is absurd,” Zinni said of President George W.
Bush’s recent proposal for an escalation of troop numbers. “Either
you fix it, you contain it, or you leave it, and none of those
is going to be easy,” he added, referring to the continuing violence
in Iraq. “But make up your damn mind.”
The following day, Joseph Wilson, the husband of outed CIA agent
Valerie Plame, made his first public appearance since the beginning
of the perjury trial of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, former chief
of staff for Vice President Dick Cheney. In 2003, Wilson wrote
an op-ed column in The New York Times saying that Iraq had no intentions
of buying uranium “yellowcake” from Niger. Shortly after, his wife’s
identity as a CIA operative was revealed to the press.
“You have the right and the individual responsibility to stand
up to your government,” Wilson told the audience in Page Auditorium.
“The essence of good citizenship is participation.”
In February’s annual Semans Lecture at the Nasher Museum of Art,
Thomas Krens, director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation,
outlined his vision for a global art museum. The Guggenheim, he
said, is avidly “building a brand.” The Guggenheim brand, which
began when a former auto showroom in midtown Manhattan became a
gallery for modern art, has stretched to Venice, Beijing, and Bilbao,
where the Frank Gehry building has provided a great boost for economic
development even as it’s helped alleviate political tensions in
Spain’s Basque region.
In the near future, the Guggenheim has plans to expand to Abu Dhabi
in the Middle East. The ambitious project, which will involve internationally
acclaimed architects, will comprise several museums that will be
granted extraordinary resources for building collections. Art museums,
Krens told the crowd, should be unabashedly “a force for change.”
Other prominent speakers featured on campus this semester have
included Andrew Young, a top aide to the Reverend Martin Luther
King Jr. and a former mayor of Atlanta, who spoke in Duke Chapel
in honor of King’s birthday, and Lord Carey of Clifton, who as
Archbishop of Canterbury from 1991 to 2002 advocated for resolutions
for the ordination of women in the Church of England and against
practicing homosexuality or blessing same-sex unions throughout
the Anglican Communion.
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