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PHILANTHROPIC LIABILITY: Teresa, Tides and CAIR |
Teresa Heinz-Kerry's philanthropy as chairwoman for the Heinz Family
Endowment came under scrutiny when her Fund was alleged to have distant
links, through the Tides Center and Tides Foundation grantees, to
anti-Israel and anti-Jewish sentiment. Heinz-Kerry, heiress of the late
Senator John Heinz's estate, is the second wife of Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry. A few short months before Kerry tossed his hat in to
the Democratic National Convention ring, and nine years after her second
marriage, Mrs. Kerry ceased being a hyphenate, Heinz-Kerry, and became a
Democrat, too.
Factcheck.org, a non partisan fact checking service affiliated with the
Annenberg Political Policy Institute of University of Pennsylvania, says
it was asked to debunk allegations circulating in a "internet campaign"
intended to hurt Kerry's presidential candidacy by attacking his wife with
"whispers" the Heinz Endowment donated funds to Tides Center and
Foundation of San Francisco which allegedly funded "a variety of "radical"
groups including some that the message suggests are supportive of
terrorists." Tides Foundation, distributing grants for over thirty years,
established Tides Center to administer payrolls, disbursing, legal and
administrative work of grant funds for recipients not incorporated as non
profits. Factcheck.org confirmed 1998 to 2002 Heinz's 990's were
accurately filed. Factcheck.org did not look into recipients activities
2003 to present date nor how recipient used the grant. Factcheck.org
explained Heinz.org's 2003 taxes were not filed until August 15th 2003.
Heinz Endowments, www.heinz.org and Tides Foundation
www.tidesfoundation.org denied on their individual websites any role in
funding radical groups. They addressed the "growing number of misleading
articles, opinion pieces and viral emails" attacking Teresa Heinz Kerry
married to presidential candidate John Kerry.
Chris Herrera, Tides Foundation's Director of Communications, posted a
letter on Tides internet home site entitled "Tides Foundation, Tides
Center and the Relationship with Heinz Endowments." Herrera explains
"apart from that institutional grantmaking relationship, neither Tides
Foundation nor Tides Center has any relationship with Teresa Heinz
Kerry..." Herrera continues on listing disclaimers for several groups
Tides provides grants to including United For Justice and Peace, UFJP,
and CAIR. UFJP has over 800 member groups including A.N.S.W.E.R. and
others who carried anti-Israel and anti-American posters up NYC's 7th
Avenue the Sunday before the Republican Convention.
Herrera confirms in 2002 Tides Foundation granted money to CAIR, the
Council on American Islamic Relations. Herrera says "there have been many
hateful claims about Tides Foundation and CAIR who received their one time
$5000 grant as part of Tides 9/11 fund. Herrera writes "CAIR has
explicitly stated that they have no ties whatsoever to any violent or
discriminatory organizations." Then Herrera directed readers to CAIR's
website. Their 9/11 project, called the "Interfaith Coalition Against Hate
Crimes," was created to mitigate hate crimes against Muslims and promote
relationships between Muslims and non-Muslims.
CAIR's website links to other projects and groups interested in
relationships between Muslims and Americans. It appears excluding Jewish
or Israeli Americans. One effort CAIR participated in was signing a joint
Muslim/Arab-America statement against Israel. The other signators include
American-Arab Anti Discrimination Committee, American Muslims for
Jerusalem, American Task Force for Lebanon, American Task Force on
Palestine, Arab American Institute and Muslim Public Affairs Council. The
letter accused Israel of ""indiscriminately killing innocent Palestinians,
including many children" along with "the demolition of Palestinian homes
in Gaza's Rafah refugee camp." The letter CAIR signed continues to say
that "Some of these acts of destruction amount to grave breaches of the
Fourth Geneva Convention and are war crimes." The letter did not address
the actions of terrorists murdering innocent Israeli fathers and mothers
and children.
One site connected to by CAIR quoted Dr. Talat Sultan, elected Ameer,
president, of ICNA, the Islamic Circle of North America 2003-2004.
Sultan, an Education Ph.D from UCLA in 1970, is known internationally for
contributing towards to Islamization of educational system. He taught at
the University of North Carolina, before joining Ummul Qurra University in
Saudi Arabia. At present, Sultan is a principal of the Islamic Foundation
School in Villa Park, Ill.
Dr. Talat Sultan said "As Muslims it is our duty to help the victims and
contribute positively in the society we live in" then stating "Our beloved
prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, has said." Sultan, spokesman for
ICNA, condemned the recent slaughter of the Russian School children saying
"The abduction of innocent children is a terrorist act not permitted by
Islam. Those who commit acts of terror, murder and cruelty in the name of
Islam are betraying the values of the faith they claim to represent." Then
Sultan called upon the American administration "to condemn the Israeli
government's illegal behaviour and demand that they cease and desist."
Sultan did not condemn bomb murderers climbing aboard buses in West
Jerusalem, murdering innocent civilians.
CAIR participates in Project MAPS. MAPS is an anacronym for "Muslims In
The American Public Square" headquartered at CMCU, The Center for
Muslim-Christian Understanding, Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service,
located within Georgetown University, blocks from the Heinz-Kerry
Georgetown residence. The Center, established in 1992, was created to
facilitate dialogue between the Muslim world, the West, Islam and
Christianity. MAPS website says "The last decade of the twentieth century
has witnessed a thriving, vibrant and expanding Muslim community on the
American civic horizon. The Muslim community in America, six million in
number, is a replica of the more than one billion Muslims of the world,"
continuing "The only other parallel is the Hajj in Makkah, Saudi Arabia,
where millions of Muslims of all colors, races, ethnic origins and
countries assemble annually to perform the religious rites." Several of
the 911 WTC and Pentagon pilot murderers are alleged to be passported from
Saudi Arabia.
MAPS is affiliated with the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service,
SFS, a school within Georgetown University. The Foreign Service School was
founded in 1919, six years before the US Foreign Service was established.
Its first Dean was Edmund A. Walsh, S.J., Society of Jesuits. Walsh
founded the school because he believed the U.S. diplomats he observed at
the Versailles Conference were inadequately trained.
Vincent Cornell, a professor in the Department of Religious Studies at
Duke University in Durham North Carolina sits on MAPS advisory board. Duke
hosted the fourth annual PSM, Palestinian Solidarity Movement, conference.
Dr. Zahid H Bukhari, listed as one of MAPS principle investigators,
acknowledged Pew Charitable Trusts providing MAPS with a $1.25 million
over three years to fund a project assisting "the American Muslim
community going through a transitional period as it comes out of its
initial phase of hesitation, isolation, identity crisis and anxiety."
Bukhari said, "More than half the world's population is Muslim or
Christian." "Regrettably, it continues to be imperative to counter the
misunderstanding and ignorance of Islam."
Heinz Endowment president Maxwell King posted a statement on www.heinz.org
in defence of Heinz-Kerry, chair of the Howard Heinz Endowment and the
Vira I. Heinz Endowment, "Neither she nor her foundations has ever funded
any of the extremist organizations or unpatriotic causes listed in the
email you forwarded. Period." "The Tides Foundation also says that no
Heinz funds have gone to any of the groups named in the e-mail. Further,
it says Tides itself gives little or no money to several of them."
King went further to state the Heinz Endowment complies 100% with its
mandate, limiting funds to use within Pennsylvania. King did not address
the Endowment funding a RAND Corporation project , "Population Health and
Health Disparities report examined "how built environments affected health
outcomes" focused on Santa Monica, California, the Washington, D.C. area,
and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Heinz Endowments website listing of 2003
endowments stated RAND received $100,000 to "review and analyse universal
pre-kindergarten efforts across the U.S., benefiting "children, youth and
families."
Heinz Endowment released this statement, "If you disagree with our work
and our values, we respect that. And if you want to let us know you
disagree with our values, we respect that as well. Tides Center and Tides
Foundation have been strong supporters of the freedom of expression over
the years and firmly believe that all voices should be heard-as long as
those voices are not intentionally spreading false and misleading
information." CAIR and UFJP may be guilty of doing just that. Misleading.
With the Pew Research Centers poll indicating "70% of regular Fox viewers
are supporting the President while 67% of CNN watchers are Kerry backers,"
and Georgetown/Zogby poll of American Muslim support for the Presidential
candidates, commissioned by MAPS, reporting an overwhelming 81% support
for John Kerry, as November begins, it might be cogent to let Maxwell King
and Teresa Heinz-Kerry and the Heinz Endowments know there are details
about Tides, CAIR and UFJP, factchecker.org overlooked.
The recent decade of corporate heads rolling should have brought home to
Mrs. Kerry and her team, the liability of being a leader. Being a leader
of an Endowment makes her solely responsible for affiliations done on her
behalf, not necessarily, personally. Enron is a prime example of a CEO
being held legally and supervisorially responsible with control person
liability for actions taken by his company. Of course, a leader can say
they didn't know. A judge and jail time will tell them differently.
Mother Teresa, as Mrs. Kerry says her friends call her, is a candid, brash
and outspoken woman running to become America's first African-American
Presidential wife. In the same CNN interview in which she confessed her
deceased husband remains her love; her second husband provides
companionship, she announced if her current husband told her ten years
ago, he intended to run for president she would have answered "not with
me." That sounds "like a plan."
One day, she might make a wonderful First Lady. At this time, while she
denies accountability for actions done on her endowments behalf and does
not appear to be relating to "you are judged by who you are associated
with," America isn't ready for her. And may never be.
BIO: Carrie Devorah is a DC based investigative photojournalist. Trained
as a PI, mediator, crime analyst and profiler, she writes on themes
related to faith, homeland security and terrorism.
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