Ford announces new funding guidelines as it admits to aiding anti-Israel groups



[***Originally posted on the antiracism mailing list "antiracism@icare.to", 
Mod.***]

Ford announces new funding guidelines as it admits to aiding anti-Israel groups
By Edwin Black

WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (JTA) ­ In a stunning reversal, the Ford Foundation has 
admitted it erred in funding anti-Israeli Palestinian groups and has vowed 
to establish tough new guidelines to stop its funds from being used for 
anti-Semitic activities anywhere in the world.

The group said it was "disgusted" by anti-Israel and anti-Semitic agitation 
action taken at the 2001 U.N. Conference Against Racism at Durban, South 
Africa, which the foundation helped finance.

"We now recognize that we did not have a clear picture of the activities, 
organizations and people involved," conceded Ford president Susan 
Berresford in a Nov. 17 letter to U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.).

In addition to establishing new funding guidelines, the foundationīs letter 
said the group promises to cease financing of pivotal anti-Israel groups 
and even recover funds where the grantīs intent was violated.

Fordīs wide-ranging announcement was detailed in a five-page, single-spaced 
letter to Nadler. Nadler had circulated a petition signed by 20 members of 
Congress demanding that Ford halt its funding of anti-Israel hate groups.

Nadlerīs petition and Fordīs letter came in the wake of a four-part JTA 
investigative series, "Funding Hate," which documented how Ford grantees 
were using the prestigious foundationīs money to foment virulent 
anti-Israel and anti-Semitic agitation in the Middle East and worldwide ­ 
and in some cases advocacy for armed revolution in Israel.

The series prompted immediate congressional calls for an investigation from 
Nadler, Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) and Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), the 
chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.

There were also indications from the IRS, State Department and Justice 
Department that officials would review Fordīs funding.

In her letter to Nadler, Berresford wrote, "Recent media stories have 
raised questions about the conduct of certain Palestinian grantees who 
participated in the 2001 U.N. World Conference Against Racism in Durban, 
and the adequacy of the Foundationīs oversight of grantees. In response, 
Foundation officers and trustees have discussed these stories with 
concerned individuals, making clear the numerous steps that the Foundation 
takes to ensure the proper use of its funds."

"Having reassessed our own information on the Durban Conference," the 
letter said, "and in continuing talks with others, we now recognize that we 
did not have a complete picture of the activities, organizations and people 
involved. Although some Ford-supported grantee organizations repudiated the 
bigotry they witnessed in Durban, questions remain about others. More 
troubling still is the fact that many organizations among the large number 
at the conference did not respond at all."

"We deeply regret that Foundation grantees may have taken part in 
unacceptable behavior in Durban," the Durban section of the letter concluded.

Nadler and representatives of Jewish groups with whom Ford officials had 
met after publication of the JTA series praised Fordīs response.

But Berresford promised more than just apologies. She pledged to take 
sweeping new preventive and monitoring measures to address revelations in 
the JTA investigation that Ford grantees were openly refusing to sign U.S. 
government funding guidelines designed to ensure that charitable donations 
in the Middle East donīt end up in terrorist hands.

Those guidelines are known as the USAIDīs Certification Regarding Terrorist 
Funding.

In a section of Berresfordīs letter titled, "Prevention of Funding for 
Terrorism," the Ford Foundation said it regularly checks approximately 
4,000 active grantees against a State Department list to identify any that 
might be on the State Departmentīs proscribed list.

"To date we have found no matches," the letter said.

But, the letter continued, new measures will help ensure that funds will 
not be passed through one organization to another, or that Ford grantees 
use other independent monies to promote violence or terrorism.

In addition, Berresford said, Ford will require additional measures "to 
make explicit our intolerance for unacceptable activity by any grantee 
organization."

She said that Fordīs standard grant-agreement letter, which grantees 
worldwide must sign to receive Ford funds, "will now include explicit 
language requiring the organization to agree that it will not promote 
violence or terrorism. This prohibition applies to all of the 
organizationīs funds, not just those provided through a grant from the Ford 
Foundation. Organizations unwilling to agree to these terms will not 
receive Foundation support."

The Berresford letter also contained a section titled, "Prevention of 
Funding for Bigotry and the Destruction of any State," which declared that 
organizations promoting the delegitimization or destruction of Israel would 
be ineligible for funding.

"Grantees refusing to sign this agreement will not receive Foundation 
support," the letter said. "We will never support groups that promote or 
condone bigotry or violence, or that challenge the very existence of 
legitimate, sovereign states like Israel."

Addressing questions raised in the JTA series about monitoring of funds to 
grantees, the Berresford letter included a section titled "Financial 
Oversight," in which Ford announced a major new auditing initiative.

"Ford will now reinforce its oversight with a new and expanded worldwide 
program of grantee audits. The Foundation has engaged the international 
accounting firm KPMG to create a risk matrix that Ford will use to 
determine which grantees it will audit in the new augmented oversight 
program."

The new system will go into effect within weeks.

"KPMG will develop and fully test this new oversight effort in our Middle 
East office, starting in early December," Berresford wrote, saying it 
ultimately would extend it to its other offices worldwide.

Berresfordīs letter also said that Ford is willing to commission a special 
organizational audit and if "concerns remain" will "recover funds, if that 
is appropriate."

The new auditing system could impact donors everywhere.

"Because the new methodology may be useful to other philanthropic donors, 
we will make it available to other donors who request it," the Berresford 
letter stated.

Meanwhile, in a special section specifically addressing the Durban 
conference, the Berresford letter completely reversed the earlier position 
of its vice president, Alexander Wilde.

In statements and letters to the editor, Wilde had insisted, "We do not 
believe" that the events at Durban "can be described as 'agitation.ī "

In her letter, Berresford said, "Ford trustees, officers and staff were 
disgusted by the vicious anti-Semitic activity seen at Durban, and we were 
disappointed that it undermined the vital issues on the meetingīs agenda."

"The Foundation has reviewed its own information to establish whether Ford 
grantees took part in unacceptable, ugly and provocative behavior," she added.

"To ensure that we receive a complete picture of grantees involved in the 
Durban conference, Foundation officers and outside advisors will seek out 
attendees whom we, American Jewish leaders and others concerned about 
anti-Semitism and hate speech think should be heard on these matters."

Promising action, Berresfordīs letter said, "If the Foundation finds 
allegations of bigotry and incitement of hatred by particular grantees to 
be true, in conformance with normal Foundation policy, we will cease funding."

In that vein, Berresfordīs letter announced that the Foundation "has 
decided to cease funding LAW, a grantee that has been the subject of 
criticism."

LAW, whose full name is the Palestinian Committee for the Protection of 
Human Rights and the Environment, was a special focus of the JTA series. 
The group was a principal player in the anti-Israel agitation in Durban. An 
audit concluded it misappropriated millions in philanthropic funds.

"LAW had over 30 donors in all, including European and Scandinavian 
governments, and an audit commissioned by Ford and other donors revealed 
that it had misused funds," Berresford said.

The Ford Foundation president also said that Ford is disturbed by the 
conduct of LAWīs past leadership at the Durban conference.

Although a newly constituted board and executive leadership have made the 
organization smaller and more focused, she said, LAW has "not taken 
adequate steps to demonstrate financial control to warrant continued support."

Berresfordīs letter ended by acknowledging the "new Anti-Semitism" ­ which 
has been the subject of numerous magazines articles and a newly released 
book by Abraham Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation 
League, called"Never Again."

On Monday, Berresford had an hour-long meeting in her office with Foxman, 
who has been active in the effort to address Fordīs funding. It was one of 
several meetings Berresford had with Jewish organizational leaders since 
the publication of the JTA series.

The Berresford letter said the "process will also help deepen the 
Foundationīs knowledge of the 'new anti-Semitismī around the world and 
yield lessons about measures that we and others can take to avoid 
repetition of the negative dynamics of Durban."

Berresford added, "Ford shares the concern of many about the alarming rise 
of anti-Semitism around the world and is committed to addressing this 
disturbing trend. Leaders of American Jewish organizations and others with 
whom we have consulted urged the Foundation to further explore ways to 
respond, and Ford welcomes the opportunity to do so."

Nadler, who released the Ford letter Tuesday, praised Fordīs response to 
the revelations, saying the foundationīs "leadership outlines a set of 
important and concrete steps they are voluntarily taking to strengthen 
oversight of grantees and to utilize the Foundationīs considerable 
international reach and standing to assist in combating global anti-Semitism."

Nadler said it is "highly commendable" that the organization "is willing to 
take serious and transparent steps to admit and correct past wrongs and to 
create mechanisms to prevent bigoted or violent groups from becoming 
beneficiaries of the Ford Foundationīs goodwill in the future."

He also said he has made it clear to Ford Foundation officials that they 
must follow through with their commitments. "As we know, actions, not 
words, will be what count in the end," Nadler said.

For her part, Berresford, through a spokesman, told JTA on Tuesday, "We 
appreciate the congressmanīs leadership in working with us to resolve these 
issues and in helping us to reach out to those who have expressed concerns. 
We believe these actions are clear steps toward building common ground and 
a common understanding." Jewish community leaders applauded Fordīs dramatic 
turnabout.

Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents 
of Major American Jewish Organizations, said, "We welcome the statement by 
Ford that they will stop funding groups that have been promoting hatred of 
Israel and the delegitimization of Israel. We look forward to seeing these 
changes implemented and hope that other foundations that may have engaged 
in similar conduct will also make the necessary corrections."

Foxman said he welcomed the "the sincere effort by the current leadership 
of the Ford Foundation to deal responsibly with the past and to put into 
place safeguards so that these things do not recur."

Foxman also spoke of a new long-term relationship to "not only implement 
the new guidelines but to help them develop programs which will serve the 
welfare of people of goodwill who sincerely want to better the world."

Edwin Black is the author of JTAīs "Funding Hate" series. He also is the 
author of the newly released "War Against the Weak: Eugenics and Americaīs 
Campaign to Create a Master Race," which investigates corporate 
philanthropic involvement in American and Nazi eugenics. In May 2003, he 
won the American Society of Journalists and Authorsī award for best book of 
the year for "IBM and the Holocaust" (Crown Publishing, 2001). The entire 
JTA investigative series on Ford Foundation funding can be read at 
www.jta.org/ford.asp.

JTA News    http://www.jta.org/index.asp




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