PERSPECTIVES Friday, August 15, 1986 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Culturalfreedom By Manning Marable condemned a story about a boy who cooked at home as a negative sex role IA RON ? The New Right and many religious reversal, and termed a simple picture fundamentalists distinguish them- of "Jack and Jill" dancing as a selves from an earlier generation of possible depiction of "Satanic rites." American conservatives by their Frost also refused to accept the zealous advocacy of anti-intellec- presentation of non-Christian tualism and educational intolerance "religious views" in class textbooks, of cultural and ideological diversity. on an "equal (basis) to our own" Rightwing leader Phyllis Schlafly, for religion. Finally, she echoed Schlafly instance, has condemned what she and Falwell, in spirit if not in words: terms "descriptive classroom "Our children's imaginations have to discussions of fornication, be bounded." homosexuality, contraceptives and There is no guaranteeta abortion as though they were normal academic freedom and intellectual in- and acceptable practices." The New tegrity will prevail in this controver- Right demands that social history sial case. Testifying on behalf of the reverse itself - that any discussion of local school board, Professor Robert contemporary social problems and Farr of Indiana University stated that issues should be banned, especially in he did not "believe there are any of - jD'i, the public schools - and that the the public school readers which would sterile, white male dominated culture be acceptable to the plaintiffs." The of the early twentieth century should textbooks are being defended by \ ;4epAN be firmly restored. several prominent lawyers, including In the Moral Majority Report, Tnes' H FAdvocae eGeneral o Schlafly has called for a restoration of William H. Farmer. However, the I the male-dominated workplace: "It fundamentalist parents have the legal should certainly not our social support of "Concerned Women of poiy amvewve no h lbrAmrca"aWahngoD.-asdferu ights bac4 plctomvwieinitthlao AmrcaWahntn C.bsdforce... Who is then going to raise the organization established by Beverly fil children?" The Reverend Jerry LeHaye, wife of right wing television Faiwell, founder of the Moral evangelist Tim LeHaye. Majority, extends this traditional If Frost and other plaintiffs win, By Roberto Frisancho sexist logic to embrace a reactionary what next? It is only a short step to social policy which looks backward in widescale book bannings and bur- Despite a recently expressed opinion to the contrary all educational economic and nings, and perhaps the attempted (Daily, 7/18/86), the Peruvian rebel group "Sendero political areas. "It is easy for people purge from public schools and univer- Luminoso" is undoubtedly a terrorist organization. The today who are violating God's law and sities of faculty and administrators fanatical group of Maoists known as the Shining Path, man's law to ridicule those who op- who do not adhere to narrow, fun- "Sendero Luminoso," have been trying to overthrow the pose them by simply saying. 'That damentalist beliefs. Throughout the democratically elected government of Peru. They have so fellow's repressive; he is suggesting a country, Waldenbooks stores recently far been virtually unsuccessful, on June 18, 1986, about 250 return to where America was fifty laid out displays of books which have of them died in a prison riot at Lurigancho, El Fronton years ago, morally'," Falwell states, been censored or banned during and Santa Barbara prisons in Lima, wounding nine police "That is exactly whatIeamp sins. the past few years. Among the books officers and guards and taking nine hostages. The rebels aproposing, are "Uncle Tom's Cabin", "Brave also planted bombs and killed several police officers in the The logical culmination of this in- New World", and believe it or not, the streets. tellecta rigidity and social back- "Living Bible." The new Bible tran- The prison rebellions were a well-coordinated mutiny, wardness was on display several slation was burned in Gastonia, North and the inmates were equipped with submachine guns, weeks ago in a federal district court in Carolina, in 1981 because it was automatic rifles, and explosives. For the time being, the Greenville, Tennessee, where seven allegedly a "perverted commentary onrebels, who had constructed a maze of tunnels, were in families sued a local school board for the King James version." control of El Fronton. The Peruvian troops had to use anti- teaching "disrespect" for parents, the The intellectual poverty of the tank missiles to destroy the concrete barricades there "theory of evolution", "magic" and radical and religious Right is only and at Lurigancho prison, naval helicopters also had to other "un-Christian" themesOne surpassed by its intolerance of attack the guerrilla strongholds with rockets to make self-proclaimed, "Born-Again pluralism. The debate over cultural holes in the defenses which allowed Peruvian marines in. Christian" plaintiff, Vicki Frost, freedom in our public schools and in- At that time, downtown Lima had been under tight specifically criticized a textbook deed, in society as a whole, security to prepare for a meeting of leaders of the which discussed Renaissance art. The distinguishes those of us who are Socialist International. Streets were blocked off, and the objectionablesentence it he text was committed to real democracy from police had to patrol with submachine guns and bombsnif- the following: "a central idea of the those social forces which wish to fing dogs. Renaissance was a belief in the return to the Dark Ages. President Alan Garcia, of the American Popular dignityand worth of human beings." Revolutionary Alliance (APRA) Party, had ordered 159 Frost claimed that this passage was a accused guerillas freed last year. One of them tried to fire form of un-Christian "humanism" a homemade mortar at a convention center where Garcia which "specifically denies God as the Dr. Manning Marable is professor had just arrived to open the congress of the Socialist In- reor Frost then attackedtexts of political science and sociology ternational. Fearing for their safety, the prime ministers for thr descition of the global oat Purdue University. Along the of Italy and Norway had to cancel plans to attend. nateir es ner a afo Color Line" appears in over 140 Afterwards, it was revealed that some of the deaths nature o airnaiat r as a orm o newspapers internationally, were not due to the fighting; President Garcia blamed the angerous_inernaionaism." She Republican Guard, Peru's third-biggest police force, for executing at least 100 Sendero inmates after they surren- dered in the revolt. Soon after Gen. Maximo Andres Mar- tinez was dismissed by being sent into early retirement. We encourage our readers to use this space to discuss and In his speech, Garcia accused the guards of "horrific respond to issues of their concern. Whether those topics cover crime" and vowed to punish all those responsible. He University, Ann Arbor community, state, national, or inter- lived up to that by having 20 officers and 80 rank-and-file members arrested. national issues in a straightforward or unconventional man- President Garcia's swift actions brought about the ner, we feel such a dialogue is a crucial function of the Daily. rumor of an impending military coup. Garcia failed to reduce his dependence on the armed forced by offering D. LI P k against rebels to negotiate with the rebels. The Shining Path despises discussion and aims to destroy democracy. An avowed human rights advocate, Garcia fired two generals when an army patrol killed Sendero Luminoso suspects in an Andean village. That incident diminished enthusiasm for fighting the guerrillas among the military which ruled Peru from 1968 to 1980 and has a historic disliking to the APRA Party. . What brought the guerrillas to El Fronton, as well as to the other prisons involved in the June 18 violence, was a series of jailbreaks that the Senderos made in the Ayacucho area in early 1982. The government of former President Fernando Belaunde Terry sought more secure places, where guards and the judicial authorities would feel safer. Gradually, through a combination of hostage- taking, riots and appeals on human rights grounds, the prisoners won control of the main cell block. They created a system in which they received visitors of their choice, did their own cooking, set up a library of revolutionary books, made simple weapons and built a network of tunnels and reinforcements to protect them- selves from attack. The uprising began because the Senderos wanted the government to stop moving them to a new maximum- security prison which would hamper their political and military planning for their terrorist activities. Unlike most Latin American guerrillas, the Shining Path scorns international opinion. For example, there was the attempt to fire a mortar at the hotel where Willy Brandy, the former West German Chancellor who opened ties to the East was staying. The rebels bombed a train bound for the Inca ruins of Machu Picchu; a Texas woman and six others were killed, and 39 people were injured. A peace commission, former by Garcia, for a year now has been trying to open talks. While Garcia punishes the excesses of the military the Senderos takes no respon- sibility for its atrocities. Although claiming roots in the Communist Party, the Shining Path rejects Moscow, Havana, Hanoi, and Managua as well as the Peking of Deng Xiaoping as models. They're enraged that Mao Zedong's sickening Cultural Revolution has been disman- tled. (For more information on Maoism, see The Nation, July 5/12, 1986, pages 20-22.) To put it bluntly, the Sen- deros have no regard for human life and will stop at nothing. They must never win. Roberto Frisancho is an engineering freshman and a MSA representative on the peace and justice com- mittee.