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November
2, 2008
Tales From
The Inside
The Real
Problem With Obama's Khalidi
by Gerald A. Honigman
This
is the weekend when Americans set clocks back an
hour for daylight savings time.
Thus, I guess it's only fitting that, given all
the current fuss about the Los Angeles
Times's refusal to make public even a
transcript of Senator Obama's love fest with
Professor Rashid Khalidi and his ilk (no doubt,
Jews included), I'll turn the clock back as
well
but almost three decades.
You see, Fox News means well, and while
most of the mainstream media in general is either
ignoring the story or downplaying it, Fox--and even
the McCain people themselves--miss the real
problem.
It's not that Obama indeed has far too many
friends, advisors, admirers, and so forth who are
anti-Semites and/or anti-Zionists (not that there's
really a difference--one deliberately targets Jews
for "special treatment," the other, in a
post-Holocaust world, carefully revises the target
to the Jew of the Nations), it's that those
folks demand that all others see justice only
through their own eyes.
While I was a doctoral student decades ago, this
problem was already well under way.
Having to be employed full time for financial
reasons while doing my earlier, nicely progressing
doctoral work at the Kevorkian Center For Near
Eastern Studies, a consortium of Princeton,
Columbia, and New York Universities based at NYU in
the '70s, my bread and butter job later required a
move to the Midwest. As hindsight is always the
best sight, I realized later how huge a mistake
that was
especially in those days. The
Kevorkian has since gone the way of Khalidi's
Columbia and too many other Middle Eastern Studies
programs today.
Part of my Columbus-based job involved guest
lecturing at dozens of universities and colleges
across a multi-state region to try to minimally
balance resident anti-Israel professors. The Mid
East Studies Association was already hijacked by
Khalidi's buddies, and the only Jews that got/get
ahead were/are those who out-Arab the Arabs in
their hatred and vilification of Israel. In age
when budgets were tightening, all remembered who
buttered their own bread as well
and this
undoubtedly affected what was and wasn't presented
to students in the classroom. Mucho bucks have been
donated to such programs via the Arab
petro-spigot.
To simply get a somewhat fair--not
"pro-Zionist"--hearing about Israel, students are
usually forced to take courses offered by the
resident Jewish Studies Department. And, as
should be the case--but in stark contrast to
what will be described below--they will get an
honest appraisal of the imperfectly human quest of
a resurrected Jewish nationalism.
Let me present just a few personal
examples
Having been invited to be one of several
presenters at a Columbus
Citizen-Journal-sponsored event before hundreds
of people on the Middle East regarding American
foreign policy considerations in the region, I
prepared accordingly.
As I was slated to be the last to present, I
listened carefully to the others, but when I heard
an Ohio State University professor switch gears to
present about how those nasty Zionists stole poor
Arabs' land--Obama's friend Khalidi's same line--I
had no choice. I tore up my presentation, threw it
into the air, and unleashed both barrels in
response.
After the presentation, I was approached by
another professor who introduced himself as a
representative of OSU's Middle Eastern Studies
program. After a chat about where I did my earlier
studies, he asked me if I'd consider resurrecting
my doctoral work. I laughed and asked him if he had
heard what I heard coming out of the mouth of his
colleague. Why would I put my fate into such an
academic program's one-sided hands?
I was assured that there were others at OSU who
could serve as my Ph.D. dissertation advisor. On
that note, while still working full time, I
reentered academia.
Not wanting to drag this painful tale of woe
out, let me just say that my initial gut reaction
proved to be all-too-correct.
The tenured chief honcho who covered the modern
Middle East certainly knew who buttered his
bread
and into his hands I was placed.
While teaching advanced classes on Arab-Israel
themes, he never once mentioned such things as
Britain's Colonial Secretary Winston Churchill's
crucial Cairo Conference of 1921. It was that
Conference which led to gift of almost 80% of the
original 1920 territory of the Mandate of Palestine
to Arab nationalism in 1922 with the creation of
what would later be renamed Jordan. And the latter
fact was never mentioned as well
! This in a
graduate studies class.
While also--but a bit more subtlety than
Khalidi--promoting the theme of nasty Zionists and
the need to create Arab state # 22 (2nd, not first,
one in Palestine), Carter Findley never once
mentioned the plight of over thirty million Kurds
who remain stateless to date, who have been
gassed and slaughtered by Arabs (and others as
well), and who had their one best chance at
statehood aborted by a collusion of British
petroleum politics and Arab nationalism. My work on
this subject can be found on the recommended
reference list of Paris's acclaimed Institut
d'Etudes Politiques--Science Po.
Indeed, the only time Findley ever mentioned
Kurds at all was when he mocked their plight in
Turkey.
To his credit, the other professor ( I was his
T.A.) invited me to do a presentation to
students on the Kurds. Notice, however, that he too
wouldn't touch this subject himself with a ten-foot
pole. Afterwards, the Arabs in class caused such a
commotion that I caught hell for merely presenting
the plight of another non-Arab people--besides
Jews--who were seeking a tiny slice of justice in a
region proclaimed by Arabs to be purely Arab
patrimony. The Arab genocide against blacks in
the Sudan, subjugation and murder of Copts,
Assyrians, Berbers, and so forth were going on back
then as well
and, again, not a peep out the
Findleys, Khalidis, and their brother Hebrew
derriere-kissers and hypocrites over any of
this.
As just one last personal example of the problem
Obama's Khalidi-type friends and advisors present,
let me return to Findley's graduate seminars.
I'll never forget one Greek Orthodox woman who
I'm sure has a great position at some university
today. I can't think of her name, but I do remember
her well.
Her idol was Hajj Amin al-Husseini, the Grand
Mufti of Jerusalem, who spent World War II in
Berlin at Hitler's side and organized a division of
Muslim Nazis, 'the Hanzar.' He also played a
first-hand role in instigating the genocide of
Europe's Jews, Serbs and Gypsies. After World War
II, he actively recruited Nazi officers into Arab
governments of the Middle East.
When she presented her research on the Mufti at
our doctoral seminar, all the above was either
white-washed or mostly ignored altogether
and
Findley, of course--her mentor and featured guest
at her wedding--sat through it all approvingly.
Now, contrast this with my own research about
Ze'ev Vladimir Jabotinsky
the man most
responsible in the early Mandate era for Jewish
defense against Arab slaughter. Findley had no
problem emphasizing his alleged "fascist
connections."
When it came time for me to prepare for the last
leg of my doctoral work, guess who was denied a
dissertation advisor? So much for that other
professor's earlier assurance that not all teachers
were of the same "persuasion" of the one whom I
shared a stage with that night in Columbus. Wasted
time, thousands of dollars, etc
Left hanging
in the wind, we moved to Florida not long
afterwards.
The above is too often the story on campus these
days as well.
A little bit of good news is that
now there are at least some watch dog
organizations and endeavors like Professor Daniel
Pipes's Campus Watch and David Horowitz's
Academic Bill of Rights. Still, academia
largely proceeds full speed ahead, intimidating all
who dare to disagree and dismissing critics simply
as right wing fanatics.
Israel continues to thus be placed under the
high power lens of moral scrutiny by academic
practitioners of the double standard, and woe unto
all who beg to differ.
So, my friends, the above is the real
problem with Osama's Khalidi-type friends and
associates.
Being "pro-Arab" is not the concern--as
Fox, meaning well, has nevertheless
presented the case. At least they have made an
issue of this...
The problem has always been that for
Arabs, anyone who claims that scores of millions of
non-Arabs (whom Arabs once conquered during
their own imperialist expansions) also deserve a
slice of the justice pie in the region is by
definition anti-Arab. There is no justice other
than Arab justice. To be pro-Arab one must demonize
and deny any others any justice at all.
Whether Obama's alleged statement about Israel's
"genocide" against Palestinians (Arabs by
another name--most of whom came from elsewhere) and
other gems reported to be on that unreleased LA
Times video tape are true or not, Obama's
admiration, association, and so forth of,
by, or with the likes of Farrakhan,
Rezko, Khalidi, Wright, Jackson, Brzezinski, Mr.
Apartheid Israel Peanut, Malley, Soros,
McPeak, Khalid Al Mansour, etc. and so forth have
to be beyond coincidental.
And this should be the cause of real
concern--even for those all-too-many let's jump
onto the cattle cars for relocation again
Jews.
Honigman
Archive
Gerald
A. Honigman is a Florida educator who has done
extensive doctoral studies in Middle Eastern
Affairs. He has created and conducted counter-Arab
propaganda programs for college youth, has lectured
on numerous campuses and other platforms, and has
publicly debated many Arab spokesmen. His articles
and op-eds have been published in dozens of
newspapers, magazines, academic journals and
websites all around the world. Visit his website at
http://geraldahonigman.com/.
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