Daniel Ellsberg speaking into a microphone at a podium
University News

Remembering Daniel Ellsberg, Courageous Truth-Teller

Chancellor Kumble R. Subbaswamy sent the following message to the campus community on the death of Daniel Ellsberg

 

Dear Campus Community,

It is with great sadness that I share the news that Daniel Ellsberg, an historic and courageous figure dedicated to public service, has passed away. In his final years, Dan became a treasured part of our UMass Amherst community, passionately sharing his wisdom and commitment to truth-telling as one of our nation’s foremost political activists and whistleblowers.

Over the past four years, so many of us came to know Dan and his wife, Patricia Marx Ellsberg, admiring their commitment to social justice and their genuine interest and care for everyone they encountered. That was especially true of students who had the extraordinary opportunity of studying in a seminar with the man who distributed the top-secret Pentagon Papers in 1971, exposing decades of deceit by American policymakers during the Vietnam War. Earlier this year, we were delighted to award Dan an honorary degree. He truly demonstrated how dissent can be the highest form of patriotism and citizenship. Our deepest sympathies go out to Patricia and the entire Ellsberg family.

We are deeply fortunate that UMass Amherst will play a lead role in sharing Dan’s legacy with new generations of students and scholars. The Ellsberg papers, acquired in 2019 and housed at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library, provide a plethora of material to explore topics such as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Vietnam War, Watergate, the presidencies of Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon, the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, nuclear energy and policy, and antiwar and anti-nuclear activism.

In addition, led by historian Chris Appy, the university has launched the Ellsberg Initiative for Peace and Democracy. The mission is to promote public awareness, scholarship and activism on the overlapping causes that define Ellsberg’s life and legacy—peace, truth-telling, government accountability, First Amendment rights, nuclear disarmament, and social and environmental justice. The events of recent years highlight the need for universities to engage students and the public in serious learning and discussion about the historical roots of our most pressing problems and the actions we might take now to resolve them. I encourage you to learn more and participate in this most important undertaking.

Let us all remember the life of Dan Ellsberg today, and for generations to come, as an inspiration that illustrates the power of truth and the value of selfless public service.

 

Sincerely,

Chancellor Kumble Subbaswamy