Monday, May 9, 2011

UW lecturer on the move for change in Libya

Originally published Monday, May 9, 2011 at 10:04 PM
By Hal Bernton
Seattle Times staff reporter


Ali Tarhouni handles the finances for Libyan rebels.


Since returning to his hometown of Benghazi in early March to join the Libyan uprising, University of Washington lecturer Ali Tarhouni has had no place to call home. As the rebel government's finance and oil minister, security requires him to stay on the move.

"I usually don't sleep in the same place for more than one night," Tarhouni said Monday from Washington, D.C. "I make sure to stop in and see my mother, but even she complains that she sees me more on television than in real life."

Since arriving in Libya, Tarhouni, a popular UW senior lecturer who teaches microeconomics, has emerged as one of the most high-profile members of the rebel government.

He has the crucial role of arranging for the cash infusions required to keep the rebel movement solvent enough to purchase food, fuel and medicine and other vital supplies.

Tarhouni currently is seeking a line of credit for the rebel government, which would be backed by Libyan assets now frozen by the U.S. and other governments.

He discussed the matter last week in Rome with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, and is scheduled to meet this week with members of Congress and Treasury officials.

The return trip to the U.S. also provided the opportunity for Tarhouni to reunite with his wife and four children, ages 16 to 28, who joined him over the weekend in Washington, D.C.

"It was brief. Less than 24 hours," said Tarhouni's wife, Mary Li. "We wished it could have been longer."

Tarhouni, 60, grew up in Benghazi. A vocal critic of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, he left in 1973 and by the 1980s had been put on a government hit list.

He never lost touch with the Libyan dissident movement during his years in Seattle, but by the dawn of the new century he admits to doubting whether he would see Gadhafi's overthrow.

"My family knew I would join the revolution," Tarhouni said. "But the fact of the matter is, as time accumulated, I started losing hope. I didn't think the revolution would take place."

Libyans, inspired by uprisings that unseated leaders in Tunisia and Egypt, took to the streets in February in demonstrations against Ghadafi.

As efforts to quash those protests sparked a wider rebellion, there was no more dreaming about the future for Tarhouni.

He returned to Libya, where he quickly was consumed by the urgency of the moment. In a whirlwind of weeks marked by too little sleep and too many cigarettes, Tarhouni helped transform the rebel movement into a government.

Benghazi, in eastern Libya, is now the headquarters of the rebels' National Transitional Council.

In April, Tarhouni also ventured farther west to the beleaguered city of Misrata, which has been under brutal siege by Gadhafi's forces.

Tarhouni boarded a small fishing boat, and in a risky voyage made his way to that city to show his support for the citizens. He said he kept his plan secret even from other rebel leaders, worried they would try to stop him because of the risks.

"This is a city that has suffered and is still suffering greatly, and I wanted to go there and raise morale," Tarhouni said. "The truth is they raised my morale. Just amazing courage."

Since his return to Libya, the fighting has morphed into a civil war with air support for the rebels from U.S. and NATO forces.

Asked what his message is to Americans, many of whom are wary of a new military involvement, Tarhouni says Libya is not Iraq or Afghanistan.

"We have made a clear decision," he said. "We don't want any armies from the United States or Europe to go to Libya. What we are asking for is the no-fly zone, and for the no-fly zone to intensify to protect the citizens from this dictator."

Despite rebel setbacks, he said he is certain Gadhafi will be forced from government or be killed.

"It is very hard to make the case that Gadhafi will survive," Tarhouni said. "He has lost his legitimacy both internally, in the Arab and Muslim world and other countries in the world. But how many innocent lives will he take before he goes?"

If Gadhafi is deposed, what about Tarhouni's future? Would he return to Seattle or take a long-term role in the Libyan government? "When this task is done, and it will be done, I will have time to contemplate what I'm going to do," he said.


http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2015009885_tarhouni10m.html

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Being Mormon: Does it matter in public eye?

Originally published Saturday, May 7, 2011 at 10:04 PM

While two likely candidates for the U.S. presidency are Mormon, indicating how widely accepted Mormons have become, some of the anti-Mormon responses to Michael Young's appointment as University of Washington president suggest a continuing wariness. That these two contradictory phenomena are occurring at the same time is likely a consequence of the church's incredible growth.

By Janet I. Tu
Seattle Times staff reporter

Consider this: On the one hand, two names that keep coming up as serious candidates for the U.S. presidency are former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., who last week created a federal political-action committee to raise money for a possible campaign. Both happen to be Mormon.

On the other hand, many comments posted by readers in response to Seattle Times articles about new University of Washington President Michael Young — who is also Mormon — were so against that faith that a TV station and newspaper in Salt Lake City took note.

"Michael Young is now the target of vicious anti-Mormon slurs in the state of Washington," said a newscast from the ABC affiliate in Salt Lake City, where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is headquartered.

The first example would seem to indicate how mainstream and widely accepted Mormons have become in America, while the second suggests a continuing wariness — even hostility — toward Latter-day Saints.

That these two contradictory phenomena are occurring at the same time is likely a consequence of the church's incredible growth.

In less than 70 years, the number of Mormons has grown from less than a million to more than 6 million in the U.S. and 14 million worldwide. Their visibility and influence at all levels and walks of life have increased accordingly.

At the same time, many Americans remain unfamiliar with the basic tenets of this relatively new religious tradition and don't personally know any Mormons.

This combination seems to "make many people uncomfortable with the Latter-day Saints," said Jan Shipps, a history professor and leading expert on the LDS church.

History of persecution

The church was founded in the early 1800s by Joseph Smith, who said an angel revealed a set of golden plates containing a record of ancient inhabitants of the Americas who had come from Jerusalem, and with whom the resurrected Christ visited.

In the 19th century, Mormons were persecuted for their beliefs and were regarded by most Americans as a fringe group, especially for their practice of polygamy. They fled to Utah to practice their faith in peace.

But beginning about 1890, when the church banned polygamy, attitudes toward Mormons began to soften. During the Great Depression, many Americans saw Mormons as self-sufficient, and in the 1960s, many liked their clean-cut image, said Shipps, professor emeritus of history and religious studies at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

In the late 1970s and into the 1990s, as "Mormons were making converts hand over fist," competition began with evangelical Christians, who also were making converts, Shipps said. Evangelical Christians raised a question that lingers to this day about whether Mormons are Christian.

Mormons say they are, but many Christians disagree, saying Latter-day Saints essentially tagged on a new book to the Bible, the Book of Mormon. Mormons also hold a different view of the Trinity than that taught in Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant churches.

Attitudes swung again toward the positive with the successful 2002 Winter Olympics, hosted in Salt Lake City. It made "a Mormon venue look like the perfect American venue: mama and apple pie," Shipps said.

Still, church spokespeople acknowledge stereotypes about Mormons persist, including that they're secretive, uniformly conservative, live in Utah and are all white — the latter perception stemming in part from the fact that blacks were barred from the Mormon priesthood until 1978.

In reality, more than half the church's members these days live outside the U.S., including millions of members in Latin America. The church is growing fastest in Africa.

Faith and politics

In recent years, the church's support of Proposition 8, banning gay marriage in California, has angered many on the left. So did the rise to prominence of provocateur Glenn Beck, a conservative commentator and a Mormon.

At the same time, many of the religious right still regard Mormons with suspicion.

Some say that perhaps there will be less questioning of Romney's — and Huntsman's — faith in this presidential campaign.

During Romney's last campaign, news commentators brought up his faith as his biggest challenge, said Shipps, the history professor. But this time they think he's most vulnerable on his record of health care in Massachusetts.

Certainly, it's not unusual for Mormons to hold high offices. There are more than a dozen Mormons — Republicans and Democrats — serving in Congress, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. A number of Washington state's lawmakers are Mormons.

Toby Nixon, a former state legislator, said the only time his religion came up during a campaign was when a former opponent made the incorrect assumption Nixon would be able to mobilize support from "armies of Mormon elders."

In reality, the church has a long-standing policy of neutrality on party politics (if not on political issues) and prohibits the use of church resources for or against any candidate.

Several local political consultants said being Mormon isn't an issue for political candidates here — and one consultant refused to even discuss the matter, saying, "It's the 21st century, woman!"

For University of Washington's Board of Regents, which named Young to the presidency April 25, his faith was of no concern.

"We had a candidate that was right for the job," Chairman Herb Simon said.

Polls show wariness

Still, church members expect the subject of faith to come up again in the U.S. presidential campaigns.

Polls show a fair number of Americans still are wary of Mormons.

Twenty-nine percent of those surveyed in an August 2010 Time magazine poll had a somewhat or very unfavorable view of Mormons. That's far higher than the 13 percent unfavorable ratings for Jews and Protestants, and 17 percent for Catholics.

Some Seattle Times commenters expressed that negative view in response to stories on Young's appointment.

"All Mormons support bigotry. Michael Young is a Mormon. So, Michael Young supports bigotry," one commenter said.

Church spokespeople said the comments were no more vitriolic than those responding to articles on, say, Muslims, Catholics, race or immigration.

"You do not get an accurate perception of anything by reading comments," said Michael Otterson, managing director of public affairs at the church's Salt Lake City headquarters. "I put those in the category of 'alien abductions' — they're so far out there."

He sees the increasing volume of such comments — as well as satires such as the Tony Award-nominated Broadway musical "The Book of Mormon" by the creators of "South Park" — as stemming in part from the growth in numbers of Latter-day Saints.

The church acknowledges there are many stereotypes or misperceptions about Mormons.

And while those views are generally fading, some Americans seem unsure exactly what to make of Mormons.

Church research shows only one of four Americans has met a Mormon.

That's why the church launched an ad campaign in nine test cities last year that likely will expand this year. Called "I am a Mormon," the TV, newspaper, billboard and social-media ads feature everyday Mormons, and they direct viewers to a website where people can get answers to frequently asked questions and connect directly with a Mormon.

The church is seizing on a moment when its growth and the public spotlight seem to be converging.

"A lot of people believe that it's all working together to create a sort of condition where conversations about Mormons are likely to happen," Otterson said. "In that sense, maybe we have arrived at a 'Mormon moment.' "

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2014994784_mormon08m.html