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Posts Tagged ‘daniel-pipes’

New Yorker Magazine’s Kramer Takes On Abu El-Haj’s Pro-Israel Defamers

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

It’s not often one gets mentioned in The New Yorker as my blog did today, so I’m wearing a small intellectual glow. I used to read the magazine religiously back when I was a literature major in college and grad school. I read it from cover to cover. I can still remember vividly profiles by John McPhee and Pauline Kael’s remarkable film reviews. I’m trippin’.

Jane Kramer writes a long article, The Petition: Israel, Palestine, and a Tenure Battle at Barnard, about Nadia Abu El Haj’s ultimately successful battle for tenure at Barnard College. It profiles her anthropological research and the pro-Israel detractors who made her tenure process a cause celebre for the Israel-First crowd. Many of you know that I devoted considerable time, energy and words to this subject before she earned tenure. I thought a gross injustice was being perpetrated by the Campus Watch-Frontpagemagazine crowd and that the Barnard anthropologist deserved someone monitoring the campaign against her, which was what I did.

Kramer notes that this blog was one of the first to take up the cause, something of which I’m very proud:

Stern’s facts were wrong. Within a few months, she was exposed in the progressive Zionist blog Tikun Olam and in the Jewish press–most notably in the Jewish Week…

She goes on to credit Larry Cohler-Esses’ work there in unmasking Stern’s vilification and falsehoods. I’m also proud of the teamwork between myself and Cohler-Esses which advanced this story, though I want to make clear that Larry did all his own research and drew his own conclusions. Hell, he even spent 10 days wading through Facts on the Ground for which he deserves a medal since it is a VERY DENSE text. Even I didn’t do that.

Kramer doesn’t note the critical role played by Jesse Walker of Reason Magazine. While I was already interested in Abu El Haj’s battle, Jesse first brought to my attention the deliberate misquotations of the academic’s work by her opponents. This in turn opened up the subject in a way it might not have otherwise done. Jesse published his research in his publication.

Abu El Haj new yorker cartoon

The New Yorker story is interesting not just for its recap of the tenure battle, but because the author puts that battle in the context of a furious tug of war taking place in higher education over academic freedom and the right of third party advocacy groups to intervene in the tenure process and inject political considerations into scholarly discourse.

I never thought of this analogy until just now, but it appears to me that what Campus Watch and Paula Stern did was akin to the Terry Schiavo circus. In the latter case, a group of religious fanatics with a vested interest attempted to intervene in both a personal family tragedy and a medical process out of which they should’ve kept their noses. Their effort demeaned the family involved and dragged the field of medicine into a political arena in which it had no business being. I’d argue that the Schiavo fiasco contributed significantly to the Republican defeat in the 2006 elections.

The Abu El Haj detractors have paid no such price. In fact, they’ve gone on to new targets of opportunity in their propaganda battle on behalf of Israel. But articles like Kramer’s and efforts like mine help shine a light on such smearmongering so that it may be discredited even more firmly the next time it rears its ugly head.

I thought one particular section of Kramer’s essay was particularly evocative and helpful in understanding the political motivations of Abu El Haj’s opponents. Here she quotes Jonathan Boyarin, an Orthodox Jewish academic and friend of the Barnard professor:

Sometimes, I think the Jews who attack Nadia are really grasping at the idea that Israel is THE standard of Jewish life and faith–so, for them, defending Israel, even against scholarly debate, becomes the way to express Jewishness. I haven’t advanced much in my understanding of this kind of anxiety. But I know that if you’re looking for a reasoned, progressive scholar who’s on the same side as those guys, you’re not going to find him.

This is an important epiphany. The mission of Campus Watch and Paula Stern has everything to do with Jewish identity (and a narrowly defined identity at that) and little or nothing to do with academics. That is why their efforts should be derided and disqualified by the academy.

Pipes reinforces the intolerance and extremism of his approach in this passage:

…I very much dispute the notion that academics cannot function freely and be accountable at the same time. It doesn’t come free, this very special set of privileges they have, and there’s nothing to be said for the abstracted position that they can disdain the public, the students, and only engage with each other. They are financed by the public and are thus accountable in some way to the public. They say, No, only we can judge and evaluate each other’s work. Well, that’s not how things work in this country.

This is a profoundly important distillation of Pipes’ anti-intellectual philosophy. The academy is not to be trusted with decisions affecting itself. The public and its representatives like Pipes are the best judges of what is best for the academy since they take into account not just academic needs, but society at large’s needs. I can’t think of a much more pernicious approach, one that is more inimical to the very foundations of scholarly inquiry and academic freedom, than this.

While I tend to think that Kramer bent over backwards to portray Abu El Haj in the most favorable light possible, in this passage she finds a weakness in the latter’s work which bothered me during my entire time writing about this. Kramer notes:

…a tendency to reduce the complexities of Zionism to colonial terms…

I think this idea deserved amplification because it does deeply inform Facts on the Ground and renders it a less persuasive critique than it might otherwise have been. There is too much dismissive ideological grandstanding and speech that trumpets an academic anti-colonial approach that detracts rather than amplifies.

There were a few moments in reading the New Yorker piece when I thought the author stretched too far in portraying Abu El Haj as a mainstream academic figure:

[Virginia] Dominguez [Abu El Haj's dissertation advisor] says that Facts on the Ground was received by Israeli social scientists “not as a scathing critique but as right in line with what they were doing there.”

In fact, I have read no Israeli social scientists who defended Abu El Haj’s work. I’m not saying there aren’t any since I don’t read Israeli academic publications. I AM saying that there were many Israeli academics, especially archaeologists, who reacted with high moral dudgeon to her attacks on them. Again, I’m not saying their views were correct or justified. But I believe we should call a spade a spade and not ignore the academic uproar her work caused in certain Israeli circles, as both Kramer and Dominguez seem to do. [NOTE: Ms. Kramer informs me that the Columbia Spectator does feature comments by Israeli academics who support Abu El Haj's work, so I stand corrected on that score.]

A tidbit: those of you who follow the Jewish right will enjoy Charles Jacob’s (founder of the David Project) description of himself as a “classic liberal.”

I wish there had been a little more in Kramer’s article about the mysterious “Hugh Fitzgerald” who wrote the Frontpagemagzine-Campus Watch article which helped fuel the tenure battle.  Personally, I don’t believe that Fitzgerald is a real person. I would love for Kramer to have gone back to that original story and researched its origins further, including Fitzgerald’s real identity.  [NOTE: Ms. Kramer informs me that she made a considerable effort to do just that and was ultimately unsuccessful.]

A note about the New Yorker cartoon above: I thought it was an interesting and powerful evocation of the conflict. It portrays the lone academic standing on the steps of Columbia’s Low Library (precisely where the Alma Mater statue normally sits), battling against political forces outside herself and the campus. In that sense it conveys well some of the issues involved. But it also misses something important. While Abu El Haj may see herself as purely an academic and scholar, in her work she does take a political position. She is engaged in the debate though perhaps in a more nuanced way than Pipes or Stern. If she was not engaged, then she would have used a different set of rhetorical tropes to describe Israeli archaeological practice than she did. Again, I’m not saying there is anything wrong with her being engaged in this way. But I think that everyone needs to put all their cards on the table and in this battle none of the parties have fully done so, though Abu El Haj has done so much more transparently than her enemies.

Thanks to Seth Flaxman and Dan Sieradski for almost simulateneously notifying me about my 20 seconds of New Yorker fame.

Obama, Muslim? Oh Yeah, According to Daniel Pipes

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Obama muslim
That frisky Danny Pipes is up to his usual shenanigans. This time he’s managed to deliver the goods about Barack Obama’s Muslim upbringing. Say what? You didn’t know Obama was a Muslim? Well neither did anyone else in the world except David Horowitz, Danny and Charles Johnson. But boy are they gonna let you know about what they know. This nonsense is from, where else, Frontpagemagazine:

Available evidence suggests Obama was born a Muslim to a non-practicing Muslim father and for some years had a reasonably Muslim upbringing under the auspices of his Indonesian step-father.

How is Obama Muslim? Well, first his biological father was from Kenya. His father was born a Muslim (though he never practiced as one during Obama’s lifetime). And Obama’s Indonesian step-father supposedly inculcated him in the ways of Islam. There’s only a few problems with all this (as there is with everything Danny Boy writes) as Media Matters points out. Obama’s stepfather, Lolo Soetoro, was far from a devout Muslim. The Chicago Tribune notes:

Soetoro, who died in 1987, was hardly the image of a pious Muslim, friends and family members say.

His nephew, Sonny Trisulo, 49, said Soetoro always liked women and alcohol. One of his health problems was a failing liver. “He loved drinking, was a smart and warm person, the naughtiest one in the family,” Trisulo recalled.

I’m sure Lolo deeply initiated young Barry into the ways of Islam.

There is, of course, a “serious” reason why Pipes is concerned about whether Obama was ever a Muslim. If he ever was and left Islam, then the jihadists could justify taking his life. And no American would want to elect a president who would be the target of Al Qaeda, now would they?

[If Obama was] ever a Muslim or seen by others as a Muslim” — [or m]ore precisely, might Muslims consider him a ‘murtadd’ (apostate), that is, a Muslim who converted to another religion and, therefore someone whose blood may be shed.”

All of this is of course meretricious nonsense. But it takes on significance in light of the presidential campaign in a way that Ben Smith of Politico captured well:

Keep an eye on this one, because if Obama’s the nominee, this FrontPagemagazine piece by the conservative writer Daniel Pipes is likely to be the template for a faux-legitimate assault on Obama’s religion. But the political impact of the piece isn’t the tortured argument. It’s branding Obama a Muslim, by a subtler means.

That is precisely why this is important. Pipes is the slimy initiator of the whispering campaign against Obama. You don’t have to really prove he was Muslim. All you have to do is insinuate the idea into the minds of enough people and it will take on a life of its own. This is Swift Boating by another means.

Keep in mind of course where ol’ Danny Boy finds his current political home–right by Rudy Giuliani’s side (though the campaign denies Pipes an “official” role). You don’t think that’s an accident do you? Rudy is prepared to fight dirty in this one if he gets the nomination. And he wants everyone to know he’s prepared to use the slimiest he can find to douse his opponent with pond scum. And Daniel Pipes is certainly slimy. He’s a Jewish version of James Carville, but worse. At least Carville understood that it’s all a political game played on behalf of a good cause. Pipes is a true believer, the kind who centuries ago inspired people to go on Crusades to fight the infidel to the death. That’s the kind of person Rudy Giuliani is turning to to win the presidency. God help us all if he does.

NYT ‘Scoops’ on the Giuliani Neocon Mideast Advisors Story…Weeks After Harper’s!

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Don’t get me wrong. He NYT IS the newspaper of record so it’s great that they’ve outed Giuliani’s neocon pro-Israel stack of Mideast policy advisers including Daniel Pipes and Norman “WWIV” Podhoretz. It’s a great story. But why didn’t they note that Ken Silverstein at Harper’s has been reporting the story for months (as have I, but Ken was there first)? In fact, Ken’s first story came out on August 27th in which he reported that Giuliani’s team of advisers included Podhoretz, Martin Kramer and Charles Hill. He also published a subsequent story about Pipes joining the team and another about Pipes’ support for the war crimes notion of razing entire Palestinian villages in retaliation for attacks on Israel. In other words, he was all over this story before it was a gleam in the NYT’s eye.

I’m a former academic and I was trained if you didn’t credit your sources you were just plain no good. Maybe journalism is different. I’m not sure why it should be but maybe it is. But I do believe in setting the record straight and Ken should get the credit even if Marc Santora and Michael Cooper aren’t willing to give it to him. [UPDATE: Michael Cooper has written saying that Marc Santora began researching this story in the summer and did not know about Ken's work. That's an honest reply. However, if I could find Ken's work by doing a Google search on Daniel Pipes it seems to me that a crack NYT journalist should've been able to do so as well. I'm not saying this to be snarky. I just think that given the importance that attaches to NYT reportage that other journalists who are the first to report a story deserve credit or acknowledgement for that when the NYT follows with a later story.]

Another great quotation from Ken’s reporting is this characterization of the overall Mideast policy group:

I asked Augustus Richard Norton of Boston University, an expert adviser to the Iraq Study Group, for his take on Giuliani’s crew. He dubbed the group “AIPAC’s Dream Team.”

We shouldn’t let that phrase die. It should attach to Giuliani like Elmer’s glue every time any of us mention him.

By the way, one thing the Times story missed out on completely, which is very important, is that Giuliani’s rejection of the notion of creating an independent Palestinian state flies in the face of bipartisan consensus U.S. policy going back decades. In other words, Giuliani is a radical troglodyte when it comes to his views on Israel. I guess you can’t quite say that in the august NYT–but I just did.

Pipes Advocated Arming Saddam as ‘Protector of Regional Status Quo’

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007

Thanks to Maher Mughrabi, correspondent for the Australian Age, for digging up some interesting information about Daniel Pipes about which I hadn’t known. Way back in 1987, Pipes (along with Bushites like Don Rumsfeld) were advocating cozying up to Saddam in his war against Iran. I did a little Google-rummaging through the internet and found this telling passage at Skepticfiles written in 1991:

…The 4/27/87 issue of The New Republic [includes] an essay engagingly entitled Back Iraq, by Daniel Pipes and Laurie Mylroie. Under the unavoidable subtitle “It’s time for a U.S. ’tilt,’” they managed to anticipate the recent crisis by more than three years. Sadly, they got the name of the enemy wrong. Mylroie, her expertise established herein, is the co-author with Judy Miller of the New York Times of a recent fast-buck paperback titled: “Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf.”

“IRANIAN TROOPS entrenched in southern Iraq…challenge the entire political order of the Middle East. The fall of the existing regime in Iraq would enormously enhance Iranian influence, endanger the supply of oil, threaten pro-American regimes throughout the area, and upset the Arab-Israeli balance. ….

“Ironically, helping Iraq militarily may offer the best way for Washington to regain its position in Tehran. The American weapons that Iraq could make good use of include remotely scatterable and anti-personnel mines, and counterartillery radar. Indeed, Baghdad has already expressed an interest in purchasing American arms, but Washington rejected both the Iraqis’ request for C-130 cargo aircraft and a Jordanian proposal to let the Iraqis use King Hussein’s U.S.-made counterartillery radar. …

“The United States might also consider upgrading intelligence it is supplying to Baghdad to balance the military damage done to Iraq by the arms-for-hostage swap. We now know that the United States has been providing Iraq with information on Iranian troop concentrations and damage assessments of Iraqi attacks on Iranian targets. It’s good this news is out; it gives the Ayatollah pause.

“CURRENTLY the United States provides Iraq with commodity credits worth $500 million annually. Repayment terms could be eased. Opening a line of export-import credits was discussed early in 1986; the United States backed down at the time, but should move forward now. Other economic steps (such as reducing tariffs on Iraqi goods) should be explored as well. Such measures would assert U.S. confidence in Iraq’s political viability and its ability to repay its debts after the war’s end, and would encourage other countries–especially Iraq’s Arab allies and European creditors–to continue financing Iraqi war efforts.

…”A MORE SERIOUS argument against a tilt toward Iraqis the danger that a victorious Baghdad would itself turn against pro- American states in the region–mainly Israel, but also Kuwait and other weak states in the Persian Gulf region. Under Saddam Hussein, Iraq has a history of anti-Americanism, anti-Zionism, support for terrorism, and friendliness toward the Soviet Union.

“But the Iranian revolution and seven years of bloody and inconclusive warfare have changed Iraq’s view of its Arab neighbors, the United States, and even Israel. Iraq restored relations with the United States in November 1984. Its leaders no longer consider the Palestinian issue their problem. Iraq’s allies since 1979 have been those states– Kuwait [!], Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Morocco–most threatened by revolutionary upheaval, most friendly to the United States, and most open to negotiations with Israel. These allies have forced a degree of moderation on Iraq… Iraq is now the de facto protector of the regional status quo.

This isn’t exactly the type of journalism The New Republic would be proud of and I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s not available at their site. I should take that back–Marty Peretz wouldn’t be ashamed of this article. But any other self-respecting journalist would be.

To be absolutely fair (something Pipes never is toward his enemies), Pipes clearly shows the ability to tack toward favorable neocon political winds. He changed his tune and became a major cheerleader of the Iraq war. But just as with Rumsfeld’s embrace of Saddam during the same period, we must ask ourselves whether someone who backed Saddam wholeheartedly in 1987 is the type of person who should be advising any presidential candidate on Mideast issues.

Giuliani Advisor Daniel Pipes Advocating War Crimes Against Palestinians?

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007

Ken Silverstein (no relation as far as I know) has uncovered some good dirt on new Giuliani campaign advisor, Daniel Pipes. He was first to report that Pipes had been hired by the campaign. Ken is also reading Pipes’ blog (it’s a dirty job but somebody’s gotta do it) and ferreting out some material that oughta embarrass the American public, if not Giuliani or Pipes:

Daniel Pipes…essentially argued for war crimes against Palestinians, and there was no cry of protest from the media or anywhere else.

“Believing that if you don’t win a war, you lose it, I have long encouraged the Israeli government to take more assertive measures in response to attacks,” Pipes wrote on his blog on September 6.

“In a Jerusalem Post piece six years ago, “Preventing war: Israel’s options,” I called for shutting off utilities to the Palestinian Authority as well as a host of other measures, such as permitting no transportation in the PA of people or goods beyond basic necessities, implementing the death penalty against murderers, and razing villages from which attacks are launched. Then and now, such responses have two benefits: First, they send a strong deterrent signal “Hit us and we will hit you back much harder” thereby reducing the number of attacks in the short term. Second, they impress Palestinians with the Israeli will to survive, and so bring closer their eventual acceptance of the Jewish state.”

The Geneva Conventions label collective punishments as a war crime. “No protected person may be punished for an offense he or she has not personally committed,” according to Article 33. “Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.”

UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has warned the Israeli cabinet that implementation of the kinds of measures recommended by Pipes–similar to ones approved by the security cabinet recently–would be considered war crimes. So Rudy, how does it feel to employ someone advocating war crimes against Palestinians??

Would it be tiresomely obvious to point out how ludicrous such Pipes policy recommendations are? Of course, he cannot believe that razing entire Palestinian villages would “bring closer their eventual acceptance of the Jewish state.” Of if he does he’s one of the more wingnutty Jewish figures around. But more likely he just doesn’t give a shit whether Palestinians accept Israel or not. Probably as far as he’s concerned, shipping them off by force to Saudi Arabia as some Kahanist nutcases have proposed would be just fine; or picking them off one by one (or 10 by 10) until the rest flee in terror wouldn’t be a bad idea either.

I’ve written often here about Pipes and his schlock organ, Campus Watch. Be my guest, take a walk on the seamy side of Jewish right-wing politics. Hat tip to Mideast Undernews for this.

Giuliani Names Jewish Neocons Pipes, Podhoretz as Mideast Advisors

Friday, September 14th, 2007

While few presidential candidates embrace a progressive position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Rudy Giuliani has taken things to a new low. He’s the only candidate to turn his back on 30 years of U.S. Mideast policy and claim that the world is not ready for a Palestinian state. No doubt, Giuliani would also be opposed to a settlement freeze and the return of any of the West Bank to the PA–all positions long held by previous Administrations, both Democrat and Republican.

Not to be outdone in rejecting previously sacrosanct U.S. Mideast policies, Giuliani has opened his arms to some of the most wingnutty of Jewish right-wingers. Recently, he announced that Norman Podhoretz had signed on as a Mideast advisor. He’s the guy who’s just itching for us the drop the “big one” on Iran. He has a new book, World War IV: The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism. For a delightfully vicious review, see Peter Beinart’s in the NY Times Book Review. The guy practically founded the neocon movement and is the embodiment of an ideological dinosaur. Need we say more??

And then Giuliani did himself one better by adding Daniel Pipes to his team. This is the guy who believes that Islam is an evil religion (except for the few Muslim “moderates” like Nona Darwish and Wafa Sultan who denounce their co-religionists and embrace Zionism). Pipes and his group, Campus Watch drove out Debbie Almontaser as principal of New York’s first Arab public school. CW also has played an instrumental role in the campaign to deny tenure to Barnard Palestinian-American professor Nadia Abu El-Haj.

I didn’t really believe this was possible but it appears Giuliani is trying to run to the right of AIPAC on Israel issues. Can anyone be farther to the right than AIPAC on this? I guess it really IS possible. And that’s the horror of what Giuliani’s doing.

The tendency at this point in a presidential race is not to focus too intensively on appointments like the two I mention above. It’s early. People aren’t paying much attention. Things can change one way or the other. But look at it another way: the guy is the leading Republican presidential candidate with 21% of the Republican vote in current polls.

Giuliani hopes to seal his support among neocons and right-wing pro-Israel Jews with these appointments. But we should remind the American people that there is no room for Islam-haters in American political campaigns. Any candidate who believes there is something to gain from pandering to Islamophobes should be made to pay a price for stooping to the lowest common denominator of American politics.

Samuel Freedman on the Smearing of Debbie Almontaser

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

The NY Times’ Samuel Freedman weighs in on the smear campaign against Debbie Almontaser and the Khalil Gibran Academy by the Jewish neocon world. It’s a fine article which I wish could’ve been written a little earlier in the campaign so that it could’ve made more of a difference in defending Almontaser and her reputation. But no matter, it’s important that Freedman has documented for the world to see the overt racism of the school’s and Almontaser’s accusers. After quoting some especially pungent anti-Arab vitriol from right-wing blogs, Freedman notes:

Thus commenced the smear campaign against the Khalil Gibran International Academy and, specifically, Debbie Almontaser. For the next six months, from blogs to talk shows to cable networks to the right-wing press, the hysteria and hatred never ceased. Regrettably, it worked.

Ms. Almontaser resigned as principal earlier this month. Nominally, she quit to quell the controversy about her remarks to The New York Post insufficiently denouncing the term “intifada” on a T-shirt made by a local Arab-American organization. That episode, however, merely provided the pretext for her ouster, for the triumph of a concerted exercise in character assassination.

The Times columnist has come forward to draw a line in the sand and say: “This should not be acceptable discourse in our city.” I only wish more prominent figures like Joel Klein, Michael Bloomberg, Randi Weingarten (who sealed Almontaser’s fate by her betrayal), and even Abe Foxman would’ve done what Freedman did. Where are the leaders when you need them? Covering their asses and ducking down in their foxholes.

Who ever cared about Debbie Almontaser and what she went through in this ordeal?? Listen to a friend speak about it:

“She feels that she’s been violated, personally and professionally,” said Louis Cristillo, a research professor at Teachers College at Columbia University who has studied the experiences of Muslim children in the New York public schools. “To be painted as somebody who’s un-American, questioning her patriotism, is extremely hurtful for her. She’s really shocked at how devastatingly effective the defamation was.”

And here Freedman names names of those responsible for blackening Almontaser’s reputation:

In syndicated columns by Daniel Pipes, in articles and editorials in The New York Post and The New York Sun, on such Web sites as PipeLineNews and Militant Islam Monitor, both concerned with radical Islam, the Gibran school was repeatedly characterized as a “madrassa,” an Arabic term plainly meant to evoke images of indoctrination into terrorism and holy war.

Bella Rabinowitz, writing on March 9 in PipeLineNews, called Gibran “an Islamist public school whose curriculum shares the same ideology as the Sept. 11 terrorists.” Alicia Colon wrote in The Sun on May 1, “How delighted Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda must have been to hear the news” that New York “is bowing down in homage to accommodate and perhaps groom future radicals.”

Also important to me are the inclusion of two statements of support from local rabbis with whom the ex-Gibran principal worked in laying the groundwork for the school:

“There’s zero correspondence between the caricature and the actual person,” said Rabbi Andy Bachman of Beth Elohim, a Reform Jewish congregation in Park Slope, who was on the Gibran school’s advisory board. “The words that were used to describe her, the fears that were evoked, are absolutely unrelated to her and her life’s work. Not in any way, shape or form.”

Another rabbi who has worked with Ms. Almontaser on interfaith efforts, Michael Feinberg of the Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition, said: “It’s all about insinuation and innuendo and this formula of Arab equals Muslim equals terrorist. The viciousness and the vileness of this case surpass anything I’ve seen before.”

This entire episode brings to mind a quotation from Pirkey Avot:

“Whoever destroys one life is as if he has destroyed an entire world.”

Similarly, whoever destroys one reputation is as if he has destroyed the good name of us all.

New York Rabbi Defends Local Arab School

Monday, August 20th, 2007

And it’s about time too as Haaretz reports:

U.S. Rabbi Michael Feinberg defended a planned Arab school in New York on Monday…

Addressing a rally in front of the New York Department of Education, Rabbi Feinberg called on elected officials to come forward in support of the Khalil Gibran International Academy, which is scheduled to open on September 4.

Rabbi Feinberg called the virulent Internet campaign against the school “the lowest of McCarthyite tactics.”

debbie almontaserDebbie Almontaser: burned at stake by NY Post, Campus Watch and local Islamophobes (Diane Bondareff/AP)

Yesterday, I wrote about Larry Cohler Esses terrific reportage on the Debbie Almontaser ‘witch-burning’ incident instigated by Daniel Pipes’ Campus Watch gang. I said yesterday that it was a shande that the Jewish community has let anti-Arab demagogues like Campus Watch take the lead on this issue. Despite the fact that Almontaser was a committed ally of the ADL, having gone through inter-faith training with them, no one from that group came to her aid during the Intifada incident. They let her twist in the wind.

To be fair, Cohler-Esses notes that Rabbi Michael Paley, Judaic consultant at the Jewish Federation (and someone I knew when he was a college student at Brandeis) has also come to the school’s defense (his daughter is an intern there). But why is he the only Federation official speaking out in support?

And the politicians were equally callow. Mayor Bloomberg expressed tepid support and said she made the right decision in resigning. Joel Klein, schools chancellor said barely anything. The teachers union president, to which Almontaser had belonged when she as a teacher before she was named principal, betrayed her and sealed her fate by denouncing her.

We must remember what happens when good people stand by and do nothing as victims’ reputations and careers are trashed. We may be judged as a society by what we did and what we refused to do in situations like this.

A local journalist tells me that left anti-Semitic elements may have entered the fray on behalf of the school. I replied to him:

When a community’s leaders leave the field of battle to the right-wing crazies, well then crazy things will happen. When people see the mayor, chancellor & teachers union president abandon someone like Almontaser, then the left extremist fruitcakes see their chance to fill the vacuum. The ADL & Federation are also to blame for taking a powder on this.

Leaders are meant to lead. When they don’t, others who are less worthy will.