Sat May 18 2013
Departments
International Issues

Seeking a Visa for Dr. Wee Teck Young
by Kathy Kelly
July 5, 2012

“We love you!”
“Stay Out!”
Yesterday, Americans sent two very important and very different communications to our friend Dr. Wee Teck Young, a Singaporean physician and activist who lives and works in Kabul, Afghanistan. The “We love you!” was a press release announcing that the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR) had awarded him their “International Pfeffer Peace Prize” in recognition of his contributions to peace working with dedicated young Afghans in Kabul. The “Stay out!” was from the American government, refusing him a visa to enter the United States with these young people, in the furtherance of this work. It seems all too likely that the actions and choices which have earned him his well-deserved award are the same factors that persuaded U.S. consular officials to deny him entry to the United States. The question is whether we can be a voice to affirm that his work, and the work of the young Afghans working with him, has value in the United States, where awareness of the costs of war, and of the lives of ordinary Afghans, is desperately needed.

U.S. consular officials considering a visa application want, perhaps above all, strong assurances that prospective travelers will have compelling interests calling them back home when their visa expires. They look for conventional signs of a family, an income, a job – all of which our friend Dr. Wee Teck Young has given up in the cause of peace.

Although a qualified physician fluent in several languages and educated in leading Singaporean schools, Dr. Wee Teck Young earns no income, has no more personal belongings (except his guitar) than will fill a duffel bag and his family, for all intents and purposes, has been the small community of young Afghan Peace Volunteers (APVs) with whom he has shared quarters nearly identical to those of Afghan villagers well below the poverty line. He shuns his official title, preferring “Hakim,” the name bestowed on him after he had served as a public health doctor among refugees on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. In the Dari language, “Hakim” means “learned one and local healer.”

In his work over the past decade he’s been guided by people such as Leo Tolstoy, Khalil Gibran, Mohandas Gandhi and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, studying and sharing their teachings on nonviolence. FOR’s 2012 press release says that award recipients are “change-makers” whose grassroots efforts have “inspired countless others to join the cause to end war and strengthen peace.” Hakim’s efforts with the Afghan Peace Volunteers have reached people around Afghanistan and around the world with courageous interethnic solidarity walks, a campaign of internet video messaging, monthly “Global Days of Listening” phone conferences conducted via skype and the hosting of scores of international visitors in Kabul.

Having built strong bonds with peace activists all over the world, including several of them making a 21 day trip to India in 2011 to visit Indian peace groups, the logical next step is for them to visit the United States. The APV’s aims are simple. They want other people to understand why they want to live without war. They don’t want their futures to be dictated by others, and they are tired of being defined as people dominated by a desire for revenge and retaliation. They prefer forgiveness and love.

Theirs is a message which U.S. people should hear. A first step toward bringing even a few of the APVs to the U.S. involves gaining the confidence of the U.S. consular officials that Hakim does not plan to abandon the APVs and his work and come chase a comfortable lifestyle in the U.S. We can be of signal use in easing U.S. authorities of any such concern, given Hakim’s history of consistent commitment to his values and work.

This is the community Hakim loves: When I last visited the dozen-strong APV family in Kabul, a small “school” was already flourishing in the yard of their four-room house. Children who the APVs have encouraged to stop working as street vendors are now enrolled in public schools and participating in an after-school tutoring program with the APVs as their tutors. Mothers of the children will soon be coming to the APV home for seamstress training. Meanwhile, the APVs themselves are attending secondary school and university courses, all the while working to encourage newcomers to nurture self-reliant inter-ethnic communities.

The APV Kabul community today stems from an experiment that Hakim worked out when he was teaching a workshop at the Bamiyan University in 2008. He had invited a multiethnic group of Pashtuns, Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks and Turkmen to live together for a semester. The experiment stirred up conversations in the community, but it was enough of a success to inspire Hakim to gather more young volunteers. The group that formed in 2008, originally called Our Journey to Smile, later became the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers, now the APVs. As the FOR award press release stresses, “Hakim humbly attributes the APVs’ creation and sustaining energy to the young people themselves. The compassionate message from their hearts, evident as they spoke to him of their wish to live without war, continues to be his inspiration.”

After learning that FOR had chosen to honor them, Hakim and the APVs graciously declined to participate in a public award ceremony. They feel grateful for the affirmation of their work, but they want all Afghan workers for peace to be celebrated for their common struggle.

Here are some links to videos and articles about the APVs:
Huffington Post

Peace and Justice

You Tube

Waging Nonviolence

Dandelion Salad

Kathy Kelly Tour

The APVs’ interest in coming to the U.S. stems from an invitation they’ve received to accompany the U.S.-Mexico “Caravan of Peace” which is traveling across Mexico and the U.S. later this summer, campaigning for an end to drug wars and the violence they entail. Hakim and the APVs have been in contact with internationally renowned poet-activist Dr. Javier Sicilia who is leading the caravan after losing his son to Mexico’s drug war. Sicilia’s son, who was near completion of his studies to be a public health care professional, was found smothered to death in the trunk of a car after a murder attributed to drug war violence. Sicilia wrote a poem in homage to his son and then declared that it was the last poem he would ever write. Instead, he vowed to dedicate himself to nonviolently resisting drug wars and drug related violence.

We want the APVs to be able to work with him, and speak to Americans on this issue. Hakim has known since his past volunteer work with Singapore’s Anti-Narcotics Association and Teen Challenge (a drug rehabilitation center), that criminalizing drug use and building even more prisons around the addicted only exacerbates what is a medical and not a judicial (or military) problem. Now we have an opportunity to bring Hakim for a ten-day stretch of the Caravan through Midwestern and northeastern U.S. cities, ending in Washington, D.C. Singaporeans are not required to obtain a visa for entry to the U.S. However, Hakim had previously chosen to forego the waiver right, in 2010, and applied for a visa along with two Afghan Peace Volunteers, Abdulhai and Faiz, hoping that if he accompanied them, they would be less intimidated by the application process and the interview which is held inside a labyrinthine U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. In retrospect, it might have been an unfortunate choice. The U.S. consular official in Kabul rejected all three of their applications, and once you’ve been rejected, it’s quite difficult to obtain a visa the next time you apply. Hakim reflects, “I remember the three of us walking out of the Embassy onto the guarded streets feeling dejected. I noticed 13 year old Abdulhai’s despondence and heavy feet; it hurt me that young Afghan students who were trying to figure out a non-violent way of life were quickly getting discouraged. Reconciliation work isn’t easy.”

On Friday, June 29, 2012, Hakim’s visa application in Singapore was again refused. Now, with two rejections, the likelihood of Hakim arriving in the U. S. on time to be part of the Peace Caravan seems slim.

And yet, the State Department or a U.S. consular office does listen and, with sufficient appeals, has been known to grant subsequent visas upon reapplication. And so we urge readers hopeful for Hakim’s work, and any of their contacts that they feel will be supportive of and inspired by it, to immediately email the following, asking that Dr. Wee Teck Young be issued a non-immigrant U.S. visa. A suggested letter is below. Send your correspondence to:

Assistant Chief of Mission Hugo Llorens Embassy of Afghanistan American Citizen Services
email: Email

Dear Mr. Llorens,

I urge you to review the recent consular decision regarding the visa application of Dr. Wee TeckYoung, a Singaporean doctor working in Kabul, to travel to the United States. Dr. Young is an internationally respected peace activist and commentator on issues of importance to myself and my community, and should be allowed to enrich the civil society conversations in the United States by participating in this summer’s multistate speaking tour of the U.S.-Mexico “Movement for Peace with Justice and Dignity.” Having become familiar with his history of consistently sacrificing comfort and wealth for his work in Afghanistan, I’m confident that Dr. Young would return to his passion and work in Afghanistan at the end of the Caravan. Please facilitate my own first amendment rights and the diversity of the American public debate, by allowing a spokesperson I celebrate and admire to speak on my behalf in the United States this summer.
and to
Deputy Chief of Mission Louis Mazel
email: Email cc: American Citizens Service: singaporeacs@state.gov

Dear Mr. Mazel,

I urge you to review the recent consular decision regarding the visa application of Dr. Wee TeckYoung, a Singaporean doctor working in Kabul, to travel to the United States. Dr. Young is an internationally respected peace activist and commentator on issues of importance to myself and my community, and should be allowed to enrich the civil society conversations in the United States by participating in this summer’s multistate speaking tour of the U.S.-Mexico “Movement for Peace with Justice and Dignity.” Having become familiar with his history of consistently sacrificing comfort and wealth for his work in Afghanistan, I’m confident that Dr. Young would return to his passion and work in Afghanistan at the end of the Caravan. Please facilitate my own first amendment rights and the diversity of the American public debate, by allowing a spokesperson I celebrate and admire to speak on my behalf in the United States this summer.
and to
Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Janice L. Jacobs
email: Email

Dear Ms. Jacobs,

I urge you to review the recent consular decision regarding the visa application of Dr. Wee TeckYoung, a Singaporean doctor working in Kabul, to travel to the United States. Dr. Young is an internationally respected peace activist and commentator on issues of importance to myself and my community, and should be allowed to enrich the civil society conversations in the United States by participating in this summer’s multistate speaking tour of the U.S.-Mexico “Movement for Peace with Justice and Dignity.” Having become familiar with his history of consistently sacrificing comfort and wealth for his work in Afghanistan, I’m confident that Dr. Young would return to his passion and work in Afghanistan at the end of the Caravan. Please facilitate my own first amendment rights and the diversity of the American public debate, by allowing a spokesperson I celebrate and admire to speak on my behalf in the United States this summer.

-----

Kathy Kelly (Kathy Kelly) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence.




Recent International Issues Articles

Ten of my favorite things about 2012
  December 28, 2012
  Medea Benjamin

Universal Declaration of Human Responsibilities
  December 10, 2012
  David Swanson

Pile of Skulls
  December 7, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Internal Security Act clamped on Bangkok to stifle coup demand
  December 4, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Brand Names and Mass Graves
  November 30, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Internal Security Act clamped on Bangkok to stifle coup demand
  November 30, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Panetta expects Taliban won't turn Petraeus's adultery into propaganda
  November 26, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Obama following his grandfather to Burma
  November 19, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Two Members of Pussy Riot Sent to Russian Penal Colonies
  November 9, 2012
  Hacker/Activist News

New demands for an immediate coup in Thailand
  November 1, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

China mourns Sihanouk's death & continues advancing in Cambodia
  October 17, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Empire and its Consequences
  October 12, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

13 Murders on the Mekong River
  September 28, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

International Peace Day from Kabul, Afghanistan
  September 24, 2012
  Johnny Barber

The Innocence of U.S. Foreign Policy
  September 20, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Funding teachers doesn't get embassies attacked
  September 17, 2012
  David Swanson

Love, Hate and Indifference: singer/songwriter/activist David Rovics
  September 14, 2012
  Tom Over

The Hidden Agenda of Green Party VP Candidate Cheri Honkala
  September 14, 2012
  Tom Over

A Black, Green and White Talk with Shamako Noble of Hip Hop Congress
  September 14, 2012
  Tom Over

New American judge may help bring five more Khmer Rouge to trial
  September 10, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Julian Assange, International Intrigue and What’s Going On With Ecuador
  September 3, 2012
   Sergio Di Cori Modigliani

Yes We Camp
  August 30, 2012
  Tom Over

Beyond Money
  August 23, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Love is the key ingredient for successful social movements, not religion, per se.
  August 20, 2012
  Tom Over

1,500 fake "Bomb Detectors" fail to stop explosions in Thailand
  August 17, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

SPECIAL REPORT -- EXPOSING U.S. AGENTS OF LOW-INTENSITY WARFARE IN AFRICA: The
  August 15, 2012
  keith harmon snow, Conscious Being Alliance

Neocons vs. the ‘Arab Spring’: Back on the Warpath
  August 10, 2012
  Ramzy Baroud

Iran and everything else
  August 7, 2012
  Michael Parenti

Beyond the two-state solution
  August 6, 2012
  David Swanson

Thailand's robots can save your life or kill you, but not yet love you
  July 22, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

War and Climate Change
  July 13, 2012
  Robert C Koehler

Flesh-eating fish are feeding on tourists' feet
  July 12, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Veterans For Peace supports U.N. committee in questioning U.S. recruitment, killing of children
  July 11, 2012
  

Seeking a Visa for Dr. Wee Teck Young
  July 5, 2012
  Kathy Kelly

NASA's atmosphere probe is grounded by Thailand's squabbling
  June 29, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

For Love or Money
  June 29, 2012
  By Robert C. Koehler

Julian Assange's Artful Dodge
  June 22, 2012
  Ray McGovern

Turkish court indicts Senior Israeli Military Officials in murders on Gaza flotilla: On the Second Anniversary of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla
  June 5, 2012
  Ann Wright

Aung San Suu Kyi leaves Burma after 24 years
  June 2, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

No one hears the poor
  May 28, 2012
  Kathy Kelly

Millions of Illegal Methamphetamines Made From Medicine in Thailand's Hospitals
  May 23, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

FBI seizes server from progressive internet service provider
  May 15, 2012
  Jamie McClelland, May First/People Link

Thaksin wants to avoid assassination and prison in Thailand
  April 30, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Via campesina and allies call for global solidarity in fight against land grabs
  April 26, 2012
  Tom Over

Proud to wear a forbidden burqa in France
  April 19, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

A message of peace and friendship from Iran
  April 10, 2012
  David Swanson

Aung San Suu Kyi stoops to conquer Burma
  March 30, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Universal Declaration of Human Responsibilities
  March 19, 2012
  David Swanson

Why Israel attacked Gaza: Bibi stirring trouble
  March 16, 2012
  Ramzy Baroud

Columbus Activists Look South to help build Global Justice Movement
  March 14, 2012
  Tom Over

Alcohol & politics: A volatile mix in Thailand
  March 11, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Activists Call for Kroger's Support of Migrant Farm Worker Rights
  March 9, 2012
  Tom Over

Large coalition asks for Obama's Nobel Peace Prize to be rescinded
  March 2, 2012
  War is a Crime

Iranians allegedly posted "Baked Clay" signs to attack Bangkok
  February 26, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Alleged Iranian bombers cavorted with Thai women in beach resort
  February 24, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Cold war in warm waters: US-China's dangerous contest for Asia-Pacific
  February 23, 2012
  Ramzy Baroud

Three alleged Iranian bomb-makers arrested after bungling the plot
  February 20, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Happy savages
  February 20, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Food Sovereignty Activist Calls for Alliances between Progressives and ' Radicals '
  February 15, 2012
  Tom Over

Alleged Iranian bomb-maker blows off his own leg
  February 15, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Obama's Super-Bowl Fumble on Iran
  February 8, 2012
  Ray McGovern

A Banquet Feasts on Yingluck's Troubles in Thailand
  February 7, 2012
   Richard S. Ehrlich

Thai government promotes Red Shirt leader & pro-Mugabe supporter
  January 28, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Terror suspect says ammonia in his "Cool Packs" not for bombs
  January 23, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Alleged terrorist reveals stockpile of bomb-making chemicals in Bangkok
  January 21, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Church of the Dude, inspired by The Big Lebowski, sets up in Thailand
  January 18, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

A tale of 2 countries
  January 12, 2012
  Saul Landau and Nelson P. Valdés

Aljazeera coverage: The revolution will be televised, and also manipulated
  January 12, 2012
  Ramzy Baroud




Read International Issues Articles by Year:
2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000



FREE PRESS EMAIL UPDATE


Donate to the Free Press Election Protection Fund to help us investigate and monitor election fraud in this year's election.


Donate to The Free Press The Free Press Store

FOLLOW US ON
twitter
facebook


SEARCH THE FREEPRESS




1021 E. Broad St. Columbus, OH 43205 | 614.253.2571 | truth@freepress.org
All content © 1970-2012 The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer