My Class with Rashid Khalidi

Published in Folha
(Brazil) on 10/29/2008
by Luciana Coelho (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Caroline Martinez. Edited by Louis Standish.
During a visit to New York last March, my friend Gustavo Chacra (who has a great blog on our competitor newspaper, by the way) took me to watch one of the classes in his Master’s program at Columbia. The professor was Rashid Khalidi.

The classroom was packed and most of the students were younger than us. The class was about Middle Eastern History, and on that day the topics of discussion were populational equilibrium and political power in the region (since first the Jews and then the Palestinians used the demographic boom to try and redistribute power). He spoke for about an hour and a half without any hint of bias—despite the sensitive topic and the fact that he defends Palestinian positions outside the classroom. Nobody left their chair, nobody was talking, nobody was sleeping, nobody was doodling.

It was one of the most sensational classes I’ve ever had in my life.

Look, I studied at the University of São Paulo (Journalism, but I also took History, Social Science and law classes), I did my undergrad at NYU, I came from a good high school, I am the daughter of an excellent history professor and I have even been lucky enough in the past 11 years to work with many people who were smarter than average and who were willing to teach. So my list of memorable classes, in both narrow and broad terms, is long, VERY long.

But Khalidi’s class was one of those unique experiences. You didn’t want to miss a single word he said, as he frenetically scribbled numbers on the board and responded to each question with a logic and pertinence so fluid that it almost became easy to understand one of the most politically complicated regions on the planet.

Very well. The Chair of Arab Studies (a position formerly held by Edward Said) at Columbia and director of the University’s Middle East Institute, Khalidi, who is Palestinian, is being compared to terrorists and neo-Nazis by the McCain campaign. It’s surreal.

Things blew up today after McCain went around throwing tantrums because the Los Angeles Times, which has endorsed Obama, would not release a video that shows the Democratic candidate at a party in 2003 at which Khalidi was present (the video was obtained under that condition that it would not be made public, according to the LA Times).

“There is a video (…) with one of the principal spokesmen of the Palestine Liberation Organization [the extinct PLO of Yasser Arafat], and why it was not taken public I cannot say. I guarantee that if there were a tape of me and Sarah Palin and some neo-Nazis, that would be made public. Of course the American people need to know about this, particularly about Ayers, and also about the PLO.”

Ah, yes, the Republican campaign says that Bill Ayers, the ex-Weatherman who set off bombs in the US to protest against the Vietnam War in the 70s, was also there. OK, he doesn’t appear in the video, according to those who have seen it, but it is already known that Obama knows him—the Democratic candidate has already lamented what Ayers did in the past, but the Republican candidate continues to question the proximity of his rival’s ties to the current university professor when he was in Chicago.

Later, Fox News re-aired the interview, with McCain saying: “These people—Ayers and Khalidi—committed terrorist acts.”

Huh? Even Fox News was obligated to clear up that the professor never killed anybody—despite having questioned his past.

I remained silent. I am just going to include Khalidi’s bio from Columbia, one of the most prestigious universities in the US.

Oh yeah, ABC said that the International Republican Institute, an organization whose leadership McCain belongs to, has financed Khalidi’s projects.

Education
D.Phil. – Oxford University 1974
B.A. – Yale University 1970

Current Departmental Service
Personnel Committee

Interests and Research
Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies, specializes in Middle Eastern history.
Affiliations
Member, Search Committee for Dean of the School of International and Public Affairs
Member, Executive Committee, Middle East Institute
Editor, Journal of Palestine Studies
Member, Conseil Scientifique, Ramses2, Maison Méditerranéenne des Sciences de l’Homme, Aix-en-Provence
Member, Council on Foreign Relations
Member, Board of Trustees, al-Quds University, Jerusalem
Member, Board of Trustees, Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
Member, Advisory Board, Bruno Kreisky Forum, Vienna
Member, Advisory Board, Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East.
Member, Editorial Board, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa & the Middle East.
Manuscript reader, University of California Press; Cambridge University Press; University of Chicago Press; Columbia University Press; Harvard University Press; University of Indiana Press; Penn State University Press; Princeton University Press; University of Utah Press


Em março do ano passado, durante uma visita que fiz a Nova York, meu amigo Gustavo Chacra (que tem um ótimo blog na concorrência, aliás) me levou para assistir com ele uma aula do mestrado que cursava em Columbia. O professor era Rashid Khalidi.

A sala estava lotada, a maioria dos alunos era mais nova do que nós. A aula era de História do Oriente Médio e naquele dia abordaria o equilíbrio populacional e o poder político na região (como primeiro os judeus e depois os palestinos usaram a bomba demográfica para tentar redistribuir as cartas). Ele falou por cerca de uma hora e meia, sem partidarismos _apesar da sensibilidade o tema e apesar de, fora da sala de aula, defender as posições palestinas. Ninguém deixou a cadeira, ninguém conversava, ninguém dormia, ninguém rabiscava.

Foi uma das aulas mais sensacionais a que eu assisti na vida.

Olha, eu fiz USP (jornalismo, vá lá, mas meu currículo é coalhado de aulas na História, nas Ciências Sociais e no Direito), cursei especialização na NYU, vim de um bom colégio, sou filha de uma excelente professora de História e ainda dei a sorte _ainda dou_ de, em 11 anos, trabalhar com muita gente acima da média e disposta a ensinar. Ou seja: minha lista de aulas, no sentido estrito e amplo, memoráveis é longa, BEM longa.

Mas a aula do Khalidi é daquelas experiências únicas. Você não quer peder uma palavra do sujeito, que rabisca freneticamente números na lousa e responde a cada pergunta com uma pertinência e uma lógica tão fluidas que quase fica fácil entender uma das regiões mais politicamente complicadas do planeta.

Pois bem. Dono da cadeira de Estudos Árabes que foi do Edward Said em Columbia, diretor do Instituto de Oriente Médio da universidade, Khalid, que é palestino, está sendo comparado a terroristas e neonazistas pela campanha de McCain. É algo no mínimo surrealista.

A coisa explodiu hoje depois que McCain andou dando chiliques porque o jornal "Los Angeles Times", que declarou apoio a Obama, tinha um vídeo que mostra o democrata em uma festa em 2003 na qual Khalid está presente e não o exibiu (o vídeo foi obtido sob condição de não ser divulgado, alega o "LA Times").

“Há um vídeo (...) em que um dos principais porta-vozes da Organização para a Libertação da Palestina [a extinta OLP de Yasser Arafat], e por que ele não foi levado a público eu não seu dizer. Garanto que seu fosse uma fita comigo e Sarah palin e uns neonazistas, ela ia ser tornada púbica. É claro que os americanos precisam saber disso, particularmente sobre Ayers, e também sobre a OLP."

Ah, sim, diz a campanha republicana que Bill Ayers, o ex-weatherman que nos anos 70 explodiu bombas nos EUA para protestar contra a Guerra do Vietnã, também estava. Ok, ele não aparece no vídeo, segundo quem assistiu, mas já se sabe que Obama o conhece _o democrata já lamentou o que Ayers fez no passado, e o republicano continua questionando a proximidade do laço do rival com o hoje professor universitário em Chicago.

Depois, a Fox News reexibia a entrevista, com McCain dizendo: "Essas pessoas _Ayers e Khalidi_ cometeram atos terroristas".

Heim?! Até a Fox News foi obrigada a esclarecer que o professor não matou ninguém _embora tenham questionado seu passado.

Eu fiquei muda. Vou só colar abaixo a biografia do Khalidi de Columbia, uma das universidades de maior prestígio dos EUA.

Ah, sim. A ABC diz que o Instituto Internacional Republicano, de cuja direção McCain faz parte, já financiou projetos de Khalidi.

Education
D.Phil. – Oxford University 1974
B.A. – Yale University 1970
Current Departmental Service
Personnel Committee
Interests and Research
Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies, specializes in Middle Eastern history.
Affiliations
Member, Search Committee for Dean of the School of International and Public Affairs
Member, Executive Committee, Middle East Institute
Editor, Journal of Palestine Studies
Member, Conseil Scientifique, Ramses2, Maison Méditerranéenne des Sciences de l’Homme, Aix-en-Provence
Member, Council on Foreign Relations
Member, Board of Trustees, al-Quds University, Jerusalem
Member, Board of Trustees, Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
Member, Advisory Board, Bruno Kreisky Forum, Vienna
Member, Advisory Board, Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East.
Member, Editorial Board, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa & the Middle East.
Manuscript reader, University of California Press; Cambridge University Press; University of Chicago Press; Columbia University Press; Harvard University Press; University of Indiana Press; Penn State University Press; Princeton University Press; University of Utah Press

This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

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