A few months ago, I was honored to join two
As I, a small-time writer, was franticly searching for material to make me sound halfway intelligent, I came across numerous articles, essays, and reviews that offered little or no refutation of the content of the book and instead focused on the author’s alleged “anti-Semitic” motive.
Leading that ad hominem campaign was none other than Professor Alan Dershowitz of Harvard. No surprise there, as the longtime “civil libertarian” has lately turned into a blatant advocate of legalizing torture, executing collective punishment, and sustaining the brutal subjugation of the Palestinian people.
As I continued my search, I was distracted by a profoundly more caustic campaign of character assassination by Dershowitz and company aimed at Assistant Professor Norman Finkelstein of DePaul.
I must confess I became more intrigued when I discovered that the latter, albeit being attacked for “anti-Semitic” and “bigoted” views, happens to be the son of two holocaust survivors.
Dershowitz has been on this case for several years. And according to the New York Times, in recent years he has lobbied professors, alumni, and the administration of DePaul, a Roman Catholic university in
So what is the impetus of this ferocious animosity?
Apparently Finkelstein simply did the unthinkable -- he dared to set the truth in motion. And, in a time of universal deceit, as George Orwell said, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
Like Carter, Finkelstein surrendered to his conscience and decided to swim against the political tides. He criticized
Anyone who has read his books or perhaps saw Finkelstein recently on the Doha Debates -- one of the premiere debate forums moderated by Tim Sebastian, former host of the BBC’s HardTalk -- as he lucidly argued in favor of the motion “This house believes the pro-Israel lobby has successfully stifled Western debate about Israel’s actions” could see why Dershowitz and company would go down as low as defaming Finkelstein’s mother.
In that debate, Finkelstein came across as someone who has reconciled with the fact that he will have to sacrifice a great deal as he fights this lonely and fateful battle. He was hardly uncomfortable referring to himself as the oldest untenured assistant professor.
And though those who campaigned to block his tenure accuse him of academic deficiency, a great number of his peers express other views. They scream foul and argue that Finkelstein is being politically persecuted for his intellectual views.
Professor Avi Shlaim of
He said Finkelstein has made “…an important contribution to the study of Zionism, to the study of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and, in particular, to the study of American attitudes towards
To Shlaim it is important to separate “questions of anti-Semitism from critique of
Echoing a similar sentiment, a letter of support signed by hundreds of Finkelstein’s peers had this to say: “To challenge the status quo of Zionist historiography in the U.S., as Finkelstein has done in his scholarship, most certainly ignites controversy; but his ability to address the subject with thorough documented evidence that encourages readers to see the subject of Palestine and Israel anew is precisely why scholars around the world value his work.”
In response to the news of his denial of tenure, he unapologetically reiterated his principled, indeed inspirational stand by saying: “They can deny me tenure, deny me the right to teach. But they will never stop me from saying what I believe.”
In an era when intellectual freedom is routinely suppressed, and at a time when people of good character and moral integrity have become the unprotected endangered species, here comes Finkelstein walking self-assuredly like a mammoth of moral rectitude.
MS/HG
END
MNA
Your Comment