A champion of justice
By JAMAL KANJ
Thursday, October 04, 2012
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=339020
LAST week was the ninth anniversary of Edward Said's death.
He died in New York following 12-year battle with lymphocytic leukaemia.
He was born in Jerusalem 12 years prior to joining hundreds
of thousands of his compatriots in a force, lifelong journey into exile or
refugee camps.
He was a towering figure in American academia and
distinguished cultural critic best known for his 1978 book Orientalism.
In it, he believed Western perception of the East was based
on false colonial, self-serving rationalisation to justify imperial domination.
According to him: "Western scholars appropriated the
task of exploration and interpretation of the Orient's languages, history and
culture for themselves, with the implication that the East was not capable of
composing its own narrative."
More than 30 years after its publication, Orientalism
continues to dominate academic discourse and Western media bias when covering
the East.
On the heels of Orientalism, Said wrote The Question of
Palestine in 1979 followed by Covering Islam in 1983, in which he used the
Orientalism theory to expose contemporary media bias when covering the Islamic
world.
In Covering Islam, he asserts that most professed Western
experts were politically motivated by self-interest and influenced by discreet
cultural biases.
He makes a compelling argument that "untruth and
falsehood about Islam" is propagated and filtered in the Western media
under the cover of objectivity, democracy and freedom.
I was fortunate to have met him at a small dinner table when
he was a visiting professor at the University of California, San Diego, in
1989.
He was eloquent in critiquing shortcomings of the
Palestinian leadership and as articulate when making the Palestinian case
before a standing room only lecture later that night.
After meeting and studying Said, you couldn't help but feel
you were in the company of a genius. He was an accomplished pianist and an
authority on topics ranging from literature and politics to culture, art and
music.
His memoir Out of Place, which he wrote during the sunset
years of his life, was the quintessential Palestinian story of people yearning
for a place to belong. It was an account most Palestinians would identify with,
whether they lived in refugee camps or had a successful life in exile.
I have read many of Said's books and confess that most are
not easy to read. His subject writing is certain to challenge the most erudite
and intellectual reader.
Exceptional scholars are typically celebrated in the West.
Said was the recipient of many academic awards, but the lack of official US
acknowledgement of his talent was mainly due to his tireless efforts fighting
the most powerful and organised single-issue group in America.
For instance, the charge of anti-Semitism has become a
psychological weapon in the hands of Zionists, who use it to numb Israel's
opponents and stifle its critics.
Said questioned this dilemma extensively in his 2003 book
Culture and Resistance, pointing out that "there is a great difference
between acknowledging Jewish oppression and using that as a cover for the
oppression of another people".
At a time when it became convenient for Western
intellectuals to ignore Israel's brutality to avoid the wrath of national
Jewish organisations, he refused to be silenced. For Said, "injustice was
to be rectified, not rationalised".
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