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Author Topic: An interview with Said  (Read 600 times)
Joseph27
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« on: 24 August 2003, 11:19:00 am »

If you get the time this is a great article to read.  

Q: The events of September 11 have bewildered and confused many Americans. What was your reaction?

Edward W. Said: Speaking as a New Yorker, I found it a shocking and terrifying event, particularly the scale of it. At bottom, it was an implacable desire to do harm to innocent people. It was aimed at symbols: the World Trade Center, the heart of American capitalism, and the Pentagon, the headquarters of the American military establishment. But it was not meant to be argued with. It wasn't part of any negotiation. No message was intended with it. It spoke for itself, which is unusual. It transcended the political and moved into the metaphysical. There was a kind of cosmic, demonic quality of mind at work here, which refused to have any interest in dialogue and political organization and persuasion. This was bloody-minded destruction for no other reason than to do it. Note that there was no claim for these attacks. There were no demands. There were no statements. It was a silent piece of terror. This was part of nothing. It was a leap into another realm--the realm of crazy abstractions and mythological generalities, involving people who have hijacked Islam for their own purposes. It's important not to fall into that trap and to try to respond with a metaphysical retaliation of some sort.

Q: What should the U.S. do?

Said: The just response to this terrible event should be to go immediately to the world community, the United Nations. The rule of international law should be marshaled, but it's probably too late because the United States has never done that; it's always gone it alone. To say that we're going to end countries or eradicate terrorism, and that it's a long war over many years, with many different instruments, suggests a much more complex and drawn-out conflict for which, I think, most Americans aren't prepared.There isn't a clear goal in sight. Osama bin Laden's organization has spun out from him and is now probably independent of him. There will be others who will appear and reappear. This is why we need a much more precise, a much more defined, a much more patiently constructed campaign, as well as one that surveys not just the terrorists' presence but the root causes of terrorism, which are ascertainable.

Q: What are those root causes?

Said: They come out of a long dialectic of
U.S. involvement in the affairs of the Islamic world, the oil-producing world, the Arab world, the Middle East--those areas that are considered to be essential to U.S. interests and security. And in this relentlessly unfolding series of interactions, the U.S. has played a very distinctive role, which most Americans have been either shielded from or simply unaware of.

In the Islamic world, the U.S. is seen in two quite different ways. One view recognizes what an extraordinary country the U.S. is. Every Arab or Muslim that I know is tremendously interested in the United States. Many of them send their children here for education. Many of them come here for vacations. They do business here or get their training here.

The other view is of the official United States, the United States of armies and interventions. The United States that in 1953 overthrew the nationalist government of Mossadegh in Iran and brought back the shah. The United States that has been involved first in the Gulf War and then in the tremendously damaging sanctions against Iraqi civilians.

The United States that is the supporter of Israel against the Palestinians.
If you live in the area, you see these things as part of a continuing drive for dominance, and with it a kind of obduracy, a stubborn opposition to the wishes and desires and aspirations of the people there. Most Arabs and Muslims feel that the United States hasn't really been paying much attention to their desires. They think it has been pursuing its policies for its own sake and not according to many of the principles that it claims are its own--democracy, self-determination, freedom of speech, and freedom of assembly, international law. It's very hard, for example, to justify the thirty-four-year occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. It's very hard to justify 140 Israeli settlements and roughly 400,000 settlers. These actions were taken with the support and financing of the United States. How can you say this is part of U.S. adherence to international law and U.N. resolutions? The result is a kind of schizophrenic picture of the United States.

Now we come to the really sad part. The Arab rulers are basically unpopular. They are supported by the United States against the wishes of their people. In all of this rather heady mixture of violence and policies that are remarkably unpopular right down to the last iota, it's not hard for demagogues, especially people who claim to speak in the name of religion, in this case Islam, to raise a crusade against the United States and say that we must somehow bring America down.

Ironically, many of these people, including Osama bin Laden and the mujahedeen, were, in fact, nourished by the United States in the early eighties in its efforts to drive the Soviets out of Afghanistan. It was thought that to rally Islam against godless communism would be doing the Soviet Union a very bad turn indeed, and that, in fact, transpired. In 1985, a group of mujahedeen came to Washington and was greeted by President Reagan, who called them "freedom fighters. "These people, by the way, don't represent Islam in any formal sense. They're not imams or sheiks. They are self-appointed warriors for Islam. Osama bin Laden, who is a Saudi, feels himself to be a patriot because the U.S. has forces in Saudi Arabia, which is sacred because it is the land of the prophet Mohammed. There is also this great sense of triumphalism, that just as we defeated the Soviet Union, we can do this. And out of this sense of desperation and pathological religion, there develops an all-encompassing drive to harm and hurt, without regard for the innocent and the uninvolved, which was the case in New York. Now to understand this is, of course, not at all to condone it. And what terrifies me is that we're entering a phase where if you start to speak about this as something that can be understood historically--without any sympathy--you are going to be thought of as unpatriotic, and you are going to be forbidden. It's very dangerous. It is precisely incumbent on every citizen to quite understand the world we're living in and the history we are a part of and we are forming as a superpower.

Q: Some pundits and politicians seem to be echoing Kurtz in Heart of Darkness when he said, "Exterminate all the brutes."

Said: In the first few days, I found it depressingly monochromatic. There's been essentially the same analysis over and over again and very little allowance made for different views and interpretations and reflections. What is quite worrisome is the absence of analysis and reflection. Take the word "terrorism." It has become synonymous now with anti-Americanism, which, in turn, has become synonymous with being critical of the United States, which, in turn, has become synonymous with being unpatriotic. That's an unacceptable series of equations. The definition of terrorism has to be more precise, so that we are able to discriminate between, for example, what it is that the Palestinians are doing to fight the Israeli military occupation and terrorism of the sort that resulted in the World Trade Center bombing.

Q: What's the distinction you're drawing?

Said: Take a young man from Gaza living in the most horrendous conditions--most of it imposed by Israel--who straps dynamite around himself and then throws himself into a crowd of Israelis. I've never condoned or agreed with it, but at least it is understandable as the desperate wish of a human being who feels himself being crowded out of life and all of his surroundings, who sees his fellow citizens, other Palestinians, his parents, sisters, and brothers, suffering, being injured, or being killed. He wants to do something, to strike back. That can be understood as the act of a truly desperate person trying to free himself from unjustly imposed conditions. It's not something I agree with, but at least you could understand it. The people who perpetrated the terror of the World Trade Center and Pentagon bombings are something different because these people were obviously not desperate and poor refugee dwellers. They were middle class, educated enough to speak English, to be able to go to flight school, to come to America, to live in Florida.

Q: In your introduction to the updated
version of Covering Islam: How The Media and The Experts Determine How We See The Rest of The World, you say: "Malicious generalizations about Islam have become the last acceptable form of denigration of foreign culture in the West." Why is that?

Said: The sense of Islam as a threatening Other--with Muslims depicted as fanatical, violent, lustful, irrational--develops during the colonial period in what I called Orientalism. The study of the Other has a lot to do with the control and dominance of Europe and the West generally in the Islamic world. And it has persisted because it's based very, very deeply in religious roots, where Islam is seen as a kind of competitor of Christianity. If you look at the curricula of most universities and schools in this country, considering our long encounter with the Islamic world, there is very little there that you can get hold of that is really informative about Islam. If you look at the popular media, you'll see that the stereotype that begins with Rudolph Valentino in The Sheik has really remained and developed into the transnational villain of television and film and culture in general. It is very easy to make wild generalizations about Islam. All you have to do is read almost any issue of The New Republic and you'll see there the radical evil that's associated with Islam, the Arabs as having a depraved culture, and so forth. These are impossible generalizations to make in the United States about any other religious or ethnic group.

Q: In a recent article in the London Observer, you say the U.S. drive for war uncannily resembles Captain Ahab in pursuit of Moby Dick. Tell me what you have in mind there.

Said: Captain Ahab was a man possessed with an obsessional drive to pursue the white whale, which had harmed him--which had torn his leg out--to the ends of the Earth, no matter what happened. In the final scene of the novel, Captain Ahab is being borne out to sea, wrapped around the white whale with the rope of his own harpoon and going obviously to his death. It was a scene of almost suicidal finality. Now, all the words that George Bush used in public during the early stages of the crisis--"wanted, dead or alive," "a crusade," etc.--suggest not so much an orderly and considered progress towards bringing the man to justice according to international norms, but rather something apocalyptic, something of the order of the criminal atrocity itself. That will make matters a lot, lot worse, because there are always consequences. And it would seem to me that to give Osama bin Laden--who has been turned into Moby Dick, he's been made a symbol of all that's evil in the world--a kind of mythological proportion is really playing his game. I think we need to secularize the man. We need to bring him down to the realm of reality. Treat him as a criminal, as a man who is a demagogue, who has unlawfully unleashed violence against innocent people. Punish him accordingly, and don't bring down the world around him and ourselves.

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"truth is a group of metaphors, metonyms, and anthropomorphisms; a sum of human relation which is poetically and rhetorically intensified, metamorphosed and adored so that after a long time it is then codified in the binding canon."
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« on: 24 August 2003, 11:19:00 am »



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Imagine
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« Reply #1 on: 24 August 2003, 16:27:00 pm »

Interesting article, really.

Said says that he can understand an arab man blowing himself up because he is desperate.
I wonder what Said would say if Israel would claim that they also are desperate.
The jews have been prosecuted trough all history, and now when they finally have their own land they too want to defend it by all means.

The Moby Dick story might as well be applicable to many Arabs.
They too hunt down the state of Israel even if it will cost their own life. Captain Ahab might have been obsessed with catching the whale, many Arabs are obsessed with destroying Israel and/or USA.

Too bad the interview doesn't mention these aspects. That would have been interesting as well.

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funk

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« Reply #2 on: 25 August 2003, 16:19:00 pm »

The problem is that Israel isn't 'their' land.

If somebody steals your toys they don't suddently become 'their' toys, and you want them back. Right?

[This message has been edited by funk (edited 25-08-2003).]

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Imagine
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« Reply #3 on: 25 August 2003, 19:39:00 pm »

Funk,

Exactly, there we have a problem.

What is anyway the expiry date for land ownership?
100 years, 1000 years?

Imagine you own a piece of land in Texas.
One given day a native American knocks your door and tells you to leave his property.
Reason: The US government illegally took it from his grand-grandfather and gave it to your family.

What would you say?

How many generations should pass for a claim not to be a claim anymore?

Can the aboriginals rightfully claim back Australia because the British stole it from their ancestors?

[This message has been edited by Imagine (edited 25-08-2003).]

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Bruno
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« Reply #4 on: 26 August 2003, 1:38:00 am »

Said is a literature professor living a comfortable life in the US who lied about being born in Palestine. He writes regularly for an Egyptian newspaper that serialized the Protocols of Zion.

He's a loon kept alive by the fringes of silly society.

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nualum
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« Reply #5 on: 26 August 2003, 6:54:00 am »

Bruno's sound bite is a perfect example of an ad hominem argument. Instead of even dealing with the ideas in the article, he attacks the writer--as if that had anything to do with the ideas.

Incidentally, what is the source for the charge that Said lied about where he was born? Given the fantastic rationalizations behind why the occupied territories are, in fact, not occupied, perhaps it all depends of what is/was Palestine.

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Joseph27
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« Reply #6 on: 26 August 2003, 11:29:00 am »

Bruno I would expect more from you - rather than this silly post.

Said is a very well respected scholar who has written some extremely important text.  His argument for a one state solution to the current middle east problems has earnt him the scorn of some very powerful Zionists in both Washington and Israel.  

The text to which you are obviously referring has been refuted and Weiner was quite poor in his criticism.  The typical reactionary rubbish we are used to in ‘Commentary’ magazine.  I struggle to understand why you would attempt to use their character assassination to attack a very good interview with some very good valid points re Middle East political discourse.

Just a note on the review - “he didn’t get the family relationships right, he didn’t understand, or won't understand, that my father was a fifty-percent partner in everything my family owned in Palestine, which included the house and all our property. My cousin, now eighty years old, went to Palestine in 1996 for the first time since he left in 1948, and put in a claim for the property that we lost.

Various people Weiner had spoken to wrote to me, including classmates of mine from both Egypt and Palestine. One, an Egyptian Jew, was outraged about the distortions in what Weiner said. And then of course the most preposterous thing of all is that Weiner never spoke to me. He worked for three years, he claims to have contacted my secretary, who swears that's a lie, but he never contacted me directly, which he could have simply by writing a letter”.

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Bruno
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« Reply #7 on: 26 August 2003, 23:18:00 pm »

Said is so discredited that it's not worth picking him apart for a couple fo conspiracy theorists. But if you have the time please see Chris Hitchens' dissection of the man and his ideas in last month's Altantic.
http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2003/09/hitchens.htm
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nualum
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« Reply #8 on: 27 August 2003, 7:38:00 am »

To paraphrase one of our contributors . . . Bruno appears to be a propagandist living a comfortable life in Singapore who lied about Said's lying that he was born in Palestine.

In Bruno's sound bite note, he says unequivocally that Said lied about being born in Palestine. Hitchens' article refutes that directly. He says that Said "was the target of a number of scurrilous attacks essentially aimed at denying Said the right to call himself a Palestinian at all"

Perhaps Bruno does not know the meaning of scurrilous--or he knows it all too well.

Hitchens' article is a thoughtful analysis of Said's book. It is an opinion piece and says that Said chose a one-sided approach and employed a broad brush in his analysis. It takes strong exception to Said's interpretation of events post 9/11. It does nothing to support Bruno's ad hominem allegations about Said.

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Imagine
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« Reply #9 on: 27 August 2003, 13:32:00 pm »

In other words:

I claim to be an eskimo, and I say that ice is cold.

So, ice cannot be cold because I am not an eskimo?

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Joseph27
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« Reply #10 on: 27 August 2003, 13:58:00 pm »

Said's books alone show him to be a man of considerable intelligence.  His analysis of middle east politics is first rate - and I must that the only criticisms I have read of him have come from light weights with an agenda to discredit him.  

With the mindset that you have shown here Bruno it would seem that you have no interests in finding any peaceful solution to anything

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Bruno
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« Reply #11 on: 27 August 2003, 23:59:00 pm »

Nualum, I think you've misunderstood Hitchens. His piece is a withering dismantling of Said's thought. I pluck just one section:

SAID: In the process the uncountable sediments of history, which include innumerable histories and a dizzying variety of peoples, languages, experiences, and cultures, all these are swept aside or ignored, relegated to the sand heap along with the treasures ground into meaningless fragments that were taken out of Baghdad's libraries and museums. My argument is that history is made by men and women, just as it can also be unmade and re-written, always with various silences and elisions, always with shapes imposed and disfigurements tolerated, so that "our" East, "our" Orient, becomes "ours" to possess and direct.

HITCHENS: This passage is rescued from sheer vulgarity only by its incoherence. The sole testable proposition (or nontautology) is the fantastic allegation that American forces powdered the artifacts of the Iraq museum in order to show who was boss. And the essential emptiness of putting the "our" in quotation marks, with its related insistence on possession and appropriation, is nakedly revealed thereby. We can be empirically sure of four things: that by design the museums and libraries of Baghdad survived the earlier precision bombardment without a scratch or a splinter; that much of the looting and desecration occurred before coalition forces had complete control of the city; that no looting was committed by U.S. soldiers; and that the substantial reconstitution of the museum's collection has been undertaken by the occupation authorities, and their allies among Iraqi dissidents, with considerable care and scruple. This leaves only two arguable questions: How much more swiftly might the coalition troops have moved to protect the galleries and shelves? And how are we to divide the responsibility for desecration and theft between Iraqi officials and Iraqi mobs? The depravity of both is, to be sure, partly to be blamed on the Saddam regime; would it be too "Orientalist" to go any further?


As for my reference to Said's birth, it does seem I misidentified the controversy. It's not about his birth, but about his claim to be a Palestinian refugee. You see, his parents maintained permanent residence in Cairo, where his father was a prosperous businessman with a US passport. Hardly the stuff of refugee life.

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Publius
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« Reply #12 on: 26 September 2003, 23:08:00 pm »

Goodbye to this Palestinian hardliner who rejected the peace process.
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Joseph27
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« Reply #13 on: 28 September 2003, 8:21:00 am »

Rest in Peace Edward - he brought to the world a new and very poignent discourse on western views of the orient - his thesis will be read by generations to come
He was an intellect and a brilliant scholar.

Publius I should have expected such an intelligent comment from you - maybe if hardliners in Washington and Israel stopped attacking every Palestinian and actually listened to the more moderate ones we may begin to affect some degree of peace back into middle east politics.  Bush's or Sharon's concept of peace revolves around a weak people being forced to accept occupation at the point of a gun.  

The violence will not stop - until both sides want it to stop

something considerably more than

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"truth is a group of metaphors, metonyms, and anthropomorphisms; a sum of human relation which is poetically and rhetorically intensified, metamorphosed and adored so that after a long time it is then codified in the binding canon."
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« Reply #14 on: 28 September 2003, 22:02:00 pm »

Joe,

You ought to actually read Said...He was an enemy of the peace process. He was the first to admit this repeatedly in print.

As for intelligent comments, it was you (not I) who wrote that it would be a good thing if Iran possessed nuclear weapons.  

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