Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

Mahzor

Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘jewish-advocate’

Shulamit Reinharz: Abu El Haj Academically Suspect for Calling Herself ‘Palestinian’

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

Scott Jaschik interviewed Shulamit Reinharz about her Jewish Advocate column on Nadia Abu El Haj, which I wrote about here. He elicited further damning opinions from the neocon spouse of Brandeis president, Yehuda Reinharz. In her column, she states she declined to attend her Barnard reunion for the strange reason that no one at Barnard would tell her whether or not Abu El Haj had been granted tenure. She adds another odd statement–that she could not find anywhere Abu El Haj’s birthplace:

I am not sure if she identifies as a Palestinian as a consequence of being born in what some people now call Palestine or because she identifies with Palestinians and was born elsewhere.

One cannot help wondering what the point of all this is. Thankfully, Jaschik has smoked out her prejudices for the world to see:

In an interview, Reinharz said that this was a legitimate question to ask [about Abu El Haj's birthplace]. “She makes a point of calling herself a Palestinian scholar so I was curious about why she did that. The word Palestinian is a contested term,” Reinharz said. “There is no country yet called Palestine so I didn’t know what she meant by that.” She added that “people who call themselves Palestinian garner sympathy for the Palestinian cause, and this is a book that is an attack on Israeli archaelology so I thought maybe it was relevant.” She stressed that she wasn’t inquiring about El-Haj’s religious beliefs, just what she meant by Palestinian.

You see, if you’re a scholar and call yourself Palestinian anything you write on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is immediately suspect. Reinharz neglects to say whether or not Jewish scholars should be similarly suspect though since she is one I’d guess her answer would be an emphatic No. In addition, calling oneself “Palestinian” seems to be a propganda tactic rather than a legitimate expression of ethnic identity for Reinharz.

It’s also telling that she raises the hackneyed old “there is no such thing as a Palestinian people” canard used by Israeli nationalists and those as far to the right as Kahanists. One of my readers reveals that Reinharz was a leader of the David Project, a conservative Jewish group which attacks alleged Islamism on campus and in society.

The topping on the cake for this interview is this closing quotation:

“It’s not racism, it’s curiosity,” she said.

So questioning a scholar’s scholarship based on their ethnicity is not racism, but rather mere intellectual curiousity. Makes sense to me…Thankfully, the president of the Middle East Studies Association disagrees:

But others see this as the latest sign of how bitter the debates have become.

[Zachary] Lockman of NYU, called the comments “slimy” and said “I find it incredibly offensive to question someone’s place of birth or nationality.” Noting that he is Jewish, Lockman said it was inconceivable that a professor would publish a column critiquing another professor’s scholarship and devote a paragraph to wondering about what that professor meant about being Jewish. “People would acknowledge that as outrageous,” he said.

“Her origin is irrelevant to her scholarship,” Lockman said. “It’s clear people are pulling out all the stops.”

Personally, I think Reinharz is out of her academic element. She’s a women’s studies professor. Yet all of a sudden she’s expert enough in the fields of archaeology and anthropology, which are Abu El Haj’s specialties in her book, to render unbiased judgment.

All this raises an interesting question. Now that the wife of Brandeis’ president has weighed in on another school’s internal tenure decisions can we expect the wife of Barnard’s president (if he’s an academic) to intervene in Brandeis’ tenure process? Just where does this end? There’s a reason DePaul should’ve told Alan Dershowitz to butt out of the Finkelstein tenure decision–because if you don’t, pretty soon you’ll have national campaigns by academics and outsiders regarding ANY unpopular or controversial scholar up for tenure. If we think Congress can’t govern due to intense partisanship wait till we see what the tenure field could turn into. There could be blood in the halls of academe–and only some of it figurative.

Brandeis President’s Wife Intervenes in Tenure Process for Barnard’s Abu El Haj

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

By all accounts, Yehuda Reinharz seems to be a pretty decent university president (Brandeis) and a distinguished scholar in his field. However, Shulamit Reinharz, his spouse and a scholar of women’s studies is a horse of a different color. Reinhharz is a dyed in the wool neocon of the Lynn Cheney-Diane Ravitch type. When Pres. Reinharz cravenly invited the Jewish Islamophobe, Daniel Pipes to join him in his office after his Brandeis speaking engagement one could only imagine Shulamit whispering in his ear that he should make nice to the Campus Watch founder after he boasted that he would cost Brandeis a $5-million gift if it allowed Norman Finkelstein to speak on campus.

Now, Ms. Dr. Reinharz has taken the rather extraordinary step of, Dershowitz-like, intervening in the tenure process of a Barnard College anthropologist, Nadia Abu El Haj. Of course, Reinharz, in a Jewish Advocate article, doesn’t explicitly say she opposes tenure. But she does everything but confirm her position. And she does so in a strange awkward way that hints at her opposition to Abu El Haj on racist grounds:

I did not go to my 40th Barnard College reunion last month, although friends and the college development office urged me to attend. I chose not to go because I could not get an answer to a question I was asking concerning the tenure case of assistant anthropology professor Nadia Abu El-Haj.

According to information on the Web, El-Haj is a Palestinian. I was unsuccessful in my efforts to find exactly where she was born, a topic that interested me because I am not sure if she identifies as a Palestinian as a consequence of being born in what some people now call Palestine or because she identifies with Palestinians and was born elsewhere. I couldn’t find the facts.

Reinharz doesn’t explain why where Abu El Haj was born should have any bearing on the credibility of her scholarly research. And by the way, considering she’s a hot shot academic I’d say her research methods are sorely lacking. I don’t even have a PhD and I discovered that Abu El Haj was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon. So what difference does it make?

In her hit job on Abu El Haj, Reinharz quotes the usual suspects including the alleged “Hugh Fitzgerald” (no one I know has been able to confirm there is a real person by that name who wrote articles under that name) of the undoubtedly unbiased Jihad Watch site. Fitzgerald’s trash against Abu El Haj (not a single quote from her work in his piece) appeared jointly at Campus Watch and Frontpagemagazine. She also quotes the omnipresent Alexander Joffe, academic manque, without acknowledging that he currently works for the David Project, a Boston group dedicated to ferreting out alleged anti-Semitic bias in academia.

I found this passage laughable:

Does El-Haj have the credentials to do a study that would make such an attack credible? Apparently not, according to Fitzgerald and many others.

Fitzgerald himself has no known scholarly credentials and none have ever been cited in any articles he has published. Joffe is no longer an archaeologist and even when he published his attack on Abu El Haj he was director of Campus Watch. Talk about doubtful scholarly credentials!

Reinharz knows how unseemly it would be to state straight out she opposes Abu El Haj’s tenure but she does everything but here:

As a Barnard alumna, I am understandably interested in the way my alma mater builds its faculty and teaches current students. Thus, I inquired repeatedly if El-Haj had received tenure. At first, I was told I should not meddle. I was not meddling, just asking a question, but my ivory tower was turning into an ivory fortress. Finally, I learned that a decision will be made in the fall. I’ll be watching.

All I can is she has a lot of nerve. If the wife of the president of Brandeis University wants to stick her snout into Barnard’s tenure process I hope she’s prepared for Barnard faculty sticking their snouts into Brandeis’ tenure process. I hope she’s prepared for her graduate student’s to be raked over the coals if they ever apply for a job at Columbia or Barnard. Personally, I’m not advocating that this happen. But Lord, do unto others and they damn well might do unto you too.

How did I run into this column? It’s linked at the equally sleazy Barnard alumni anti-Abu El Haj website. Figures.

Mort Klein: Brandeis Faculty Not Zionist Enough

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

Referring in a Jewish Advocate interview to recent Israel-related controversies at Brandeis University, Mort Klein, Zionist Organization of America president, castigated the school:

…Brandeis has turned its back on its Jewish supporters and has alienated past donors, like himself: “The issue is not being pro-Israel, but they’re bringing and affiliating with people who are anti-Israel,” said Klein. “It’s more imperative on Brandeis to be careful who they hire, honor and affiliate with because they have more credibility as a Jewish-oriented institution.”

He was referring respectively to Khalil Shikaki, Tony Kushner and Jimmy Carter. Mort Klein was a past donor to Brandeis? As a college fundraiser I’m used to blowhards like this boasting of how much money they USED TO GIVE to make a point about how disenchanted they are about one thing or another. Invariably, if you check the record they once gave a $25 gift somewhere along about 1972. So much for their former generosity to the institution under discussion.

Mort would like Yehuda Reinharz to appoint a Committee of Academic Purity before whom every faculty candidate would have to appear. There they would pledge allegiance to the State of Israel and Zionism. Anyone who didn’t feel they could do so would, of course, be out of a job. That’s Jewish academic freedom Klein-style.