Columbia’s Catastrophic “Nakba” Conference

comment by Jerry Gordon

columbia-low-library-picture.jpgThe new Palestinian ploy is to trash Israel on the 60th Anniversary by trying to focus the media’s attention on ‘Nakba’- the Disaster referring to the Arab defeat during Israel’s War for Independence in 1948-1949 and the flight of refugees. Of course there were several more ‘nakbas’ meaning the Wars that Israel fought successfully in 1946, 1967 and 1973, 1982 and even 2006. In Israel, yesterday, you had disloyal Arab Citizens, who are Islamist supporters of Hamas engage in riots in the Galilee region, attacking Jewish picnic group for hoisting the Israel flag as an affront to the commemoration of their “nakba”.

My alma mater, Columbia held a faculty panel recently at the infamous School of International and Public Affairs headed by Dean John Coastworth, a fellow traveler of Mahdist President Ahmadinejad, as we have posted.

The panel consisted of the usual crazies from the MEALAC faculty, Assistant professor Joseph Massad, Lila Abu Lughod, Noha Radwan, Gil Anidjar. Massad, you may recall was given a prestigious Lionel Trilling Award by Columbia Students. As a Christian, he ought to be concerned about the existential threat raised by Hamas against his own correligionists, but not Massad.

Given the disciplines of history, language, sociology, comparative literature, the Columbia panel was engaged in classic ‘deconstructionism’.

As the author of the FrontPage report indicates, the panel congratulated themselves on grafting the Orwellian speak of the fictional Palestinian meta narrative of victimhoood to mainstream media news reports. Witness these comments:

    According to Massad, the Israelis have won military victories, but the “Palestinian resistance” has successfully rebranded them. Through 60 years of tireless propaganda efforts, the Palestinian term, “Nakba,” has replaced “Israel’s war of independence”; “apartheid” has replaced “Jewish sovereignty”; the “plight of the Palestinians” has replaced “the return of the Jews to their ancestral homeland”; the “Palestinians” has replaced “the non-Jewish community of Palestine.” And even in the culinary world, Massad claimed, “Palestinian Maftool” has replaced “Israeli couscous.”

    So what’s “in” this season? Using the “renaming” strategy to make the destruction of Israel more palatable to the West was the faculty panel’s primary theme. Portraying the only democratic state in the Middle East as a brutal, non-democratic “Jewish supremacist and racist state,” as Massad once put it, was the secondary theme.

    The word “Hamas” went unspoken until the question and answer period, when a student wearing a kippah brought up the Palestinian terrorist group/government. When the student asked the panelists if they saw a possibility for long term co-existence for Israelis and Palestinians despite calls for Israel’s destruction in the Hamas charter, they looked confused, as if he were speaking gibberish. Radwan said that she didn’t understand what he was asking. When the student repeated the question, Radwan, seemingly unaware of the hadith that concludes article 7 of the Hamas charter calling specifically for the elimination of Jews, claimed that the Palestinians’ goal was only to eliminate the discrimination she alleged exists in the Jewish state, not the Jews themselves. Massad claimed that Israel has already destroyed Palestine and the Palestinians and then added, “whatever the Hamas charter may have said, it is something of a future that has not yet come.”

What is most troubling is that there is no honest discourse from this panel and many in related disciplines at Columbia and many elite universities. Nor is there likely to be when certifiable crazies like Massad and absent panel member, Nadia Abu el Jah, another Christian apologist for the Palestinian meta-narrative because the faculty controls who gets tenure. Massad and Abu el Haj got theirs, despite earnest scholarly criticism of their bona fides and bodies of work. Columbia’s President Bollinger who put on a bravado show against President Ahmadinejad got neutered by the tenure and appointments process and signed off on Massad, Abu el-Haj and Coastworth’s appointments, when they should have all been given the boot. That is why a number of Columbia alumni give nothing to the institution when solicited. But that’s what you get when academic standards of truth and scholarship are overridden by untruth and no scholarship in a premier American university, my alma mater.

by Mary Madigan, FrontPageMagazine, May 8, 2008

As Israelis look towards the future in their celebration of the nation’s 60th birthday, some Palestinians cling to the past by commemorating what they call the “Nakba” or “the catastrophe.” A faculty panel discussion held at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) last month and titled, “60 Years of Nakba—The Catastrophe of Palestine 1948-2008,” was one of many similar lamentations held worldwide.

The tone from the outset was grim. Speakers acknowledged that another “Nakba” anniversary was confirmation that combined Palestinian and Arab attempts to eliminate the Jewish state have not succeeded.

Despite this, Columbia’s controversial associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history, Joseph Massad, was upbeat. According to Massad, the Israelis have won military victories, but the “Palestinian resistance” has successfully rebranded them. Through 60 years of tireless propaganda efforts, the Palestinian term, “Nakba,” has replaced “Israel’s war of independence”; “apartheid” has replaced “Jewish sovereignty”; the “plight of the Palestinians” has replaced “the return of the Jews to their ancestral homeland”; the “Palestinians” has replaced “the non-Jewish community of Palestine.” And even in the culinary world, Massad claimed, “Palestinian Maftool” has replaced “Israeli couscous.” (Like many of Massad’s claims, the couscous issue is debatable. A recent visit to Whole Foods Market proved that Israeli couscous is still the preferred nomenclature.)

Massad’s concept of victory reframed the event. It was no longer a dirge-like recitation of perpetual victimization, but rather a showcase—a preview of new trends in “resistance” propagandizing.

So what’s “in” this season? Using the “renaming” strategy to make the destruction of Israel more palatable to the West was the faculty panel’s primary theme. Portraying the only democratic state in the Middle East as a brutal, non-democratic “Jewish supremacist and racist state,” as Massad once put it, was the secondary theme.

Sociology professor Lila Abu Lughod described a homeland that was “buried, erased, and rewritten by Israel.” She told the audience about her father’s return to Israel and how he kept “getting lost because he couldn’t read Hebrew, and was afraid to ask.” It wasn’t clear why, since Hebrew and Arabic are the official languages of Israel and it is legally required for all road signs to be in Hebrew, English, and Arabic. But why let facts stand in the way of a good story?

Given the audience’s reaction, comparative literature professor Gil Anidjar seemed to be on hand for comic relief. Anidjar’s proclamations, such as “the separation between Jew and Arab, uh, Muslim is indicative of the way we think, and the way we don’t think,” evoked puzzled looks. But he won laughter and cheers when he concluded a disconnected string of philosophizing with, “but anyway, I digress, uh, I digress….”

Both Massad and assistant professor of Arabic literature Noha Radwan portrayed Palestinian resistance as an artistic, pro-democracy movement seeking only equality with Jews. Massad spoke about challenging Israeli military might “with art, poetry and dance.” Radwan claimed that “destroying Israel has never been a part of the Palestinian itinerary.” Neither mentioned the most commonly-used weapons of this “resistance”: the suicide bombers and the thousands of Kassam rockets relentlessly targeting Israeli civilians.

The word “Hamas” went unspoken until the question and answer period, when a student wearing a kippah brought up the Palestinian terrorist group/government. When the student asked the panelists if they saw a possibility for long term co-existence for Israelis and Palestinians despite calls for Israel’s destruction in the Hamas charter, they looked confused, as if he were speaking gibberish. Radwan said that she didn’t understand what he was asking. When the student repeated the question, Radwan, seemingly unaware of the hadith that concludes article 7 of the Hamas charter calling specifically for the elimination of Jews, claimed that the Palestinians’ goal was only to eliminate the discrimination she alleged exists in the Jewish state, not the Jews themselves. Massad claimed that Israel has already destroyed Palestine and the Palestinians and then added, “whatever the Hamas charter may have said, it is something of a future that has not yet come.”

Another student asked the panelists why they were accepting what he called the “Faustian bargain of a two-state solution?” Massad responded that a two-state solution was a “non-starter” because it wouldn’t change what he called Israel’s “twenty racist laws” and that Palestinians do not have the right of return. He called the Palestinian Authority a “collaborationist authority.” The student asked the panel if they were unanimous on this condemnation of a two-state solution. They appeared to be.

Incredibly, while walking out of Schermerhorn auditorium, a student remarked that this was the most polite talk he ever heard Massad give.

So now we know what’s “in” this season: old hate wrapped up in a new package. But what’s “out?” Apparently, mentioning Sharia law in the Palestinian constitution, Hamas’s use of children’s shows to recruit toddler-martyrs, the significant Palestinian suffering caused by Hamas’s mismanagement and Palestinian infighting, and the massive ethnic cleansing of Jews from Arab/Muslim areas of the Middle East. In short, this spring season offers little that’s new.

Mary Madigan, publisher of the Exit Zero blog, wrote this article for Campus Watch, a project of the Middle East Forum.

May 9th, 2008 at 5:36 • opinionFrontPageMagazineJoseph MassadColumbia faculty panel on "Nakba" - the disater of IsraNoha RadwanGil AnidjarLila Abu Lughod 0 Comments

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