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Writing in The Guardian on February 15, one Moustafa Bayoumi said that Israel’s current actions in Gaza are so “evil” that many observers just aren’t sure how to react. So what are they doing? According to Bayoumi, they’re turning to the late Edward Said (1935-2003), a Palestinian propagandist who was a professor at Columbia University for forty years, “as their guide.”
Who was Edward Said? He was one of the leading founders of postcolonial studies, an academic discipline which, simply put, seeks to discredit Western scholars’ writings about non-Western societies – because they’re tainted by racism and imperialism, naturally – and to blame the failings of those non-Western societies, whatever they may be, on the malevolent Western powers that once upon a time so cruelly colonized them. The goal of all this was simple: to demonize the West – and exalt the rest.
Said, author of Orientalism (1978), never saw a non-Western society whose worst attributes he couldn’t excuse, lie about, or ignore. But, as the son of a Palestinian Christian father and a Lebanese Christian mother, he was especially preoccupied with Arabs and Islam. For many years Said, who identified as a Palestinian-American, even claimed – in numerous essays, interviews, reference books, and a BBC documentary – to have been brought up in Jerusalem and fled from there to Cairo with his family when he was twelve; in fact, as a 1999 Commentary article by Justus Reid Weiner revealed, Said was raised in Cairo and only spent brief periods in Jerusalem.
Indeed, the Jerusalem house in which he claimed to have grown up, and in which “the great Jewish philosopher Martin Buber lived” after the Saids were supposedly forced to leave for Cairo (“Buber of course was a great apostle of coexistence between Arabs and Jews, but he didn’t mind living in an Arab house whose inhabitants had been displaced”), belonged in fact to Said’s aunt – and it was she who evicted the Bubers, not the other way around. Far from being a poor child refugee, Said was the son of a rich Cairo businessman who sent him to an elite prep school in Massachusetts and then to Princeton and Harvard.
Weiner wasn’t alone in exposing Said’s deceptions. In a 1982 article for the New York Review of Books, Bernard Lewis, the longtime dean of Islamic Studies, punched innumerable holes in Said’s arguments. Orientalism, Said contended, was principally a project of former imperial powers – Britain and France. In fact, Lewis pointed out, the historical study of Arabic and other Eastern cultures originally “had its main centers in Germany and neighboring countries,” none of which had ever been colonial powers in north Africa or south Asia. Lewis proceeded to make a devastating case that Said, in his treatments of Islam and of Western coverage thereof, exhibited a “disdain of facts” and betrayed “surprising gaps” in his knowledge of Islam and Arabic.
Weiner’s eye-opening revelations and Lewis’s severe critique should’ve put a big dent in Said’s vaunted reputation as an expert on the Middle East and a pious devotee of the Truth. But he was one of those leftist heroes whose fans would’ve stuck by him no matter what.
And why was that? Because Said gave Israel-haters and lovers of Palestinians – and, more broadly, lovers of Arabs and Islam – just what they wanted. Routinely, and with exquisite finesse, he dodged, to the fullest extent possible, the dark, violent, and supremacist reality of the Islamic religion, as spelled out in the Koran, while instead focusing on, and castigating, negative – and honest – Western depictions of that world. In doing so, he presented himself as a supremely serious, knowledgeable, and civilized student of both Western and Islamic cultures even as he characterized Western writers who spelled out the facts about Islam as at best simplistic and uninformed, and at worst racist.
Chronically, he asserted or implied that atrocities committed in the name of Islam were reactive, a response to Western oppression or abuse; it was not for Said to expatiate upon the doctrine of jihad or the stringent canons of sharia law. On occasion, even as he refrained from dwelling on the moral depravity of even the worst Islamic atrocities, he made what seemed to amount to aesthetic judgments about Western accounts thereof. In a 1988 article for the New Left Review, for example, he referred to “the unpleasant tingling induced by the word terrorism” – but chose not to address the far greater “unpleasantness” of experiencing a terrorist act like, say, 9/11 or the Boston Marathon bombing or the 2015 mass shooting at the Bataclan Theater in Paris.
In that same New Left Review article, Said went on: “I find the entire arsenal of words and phrases that derive from the concept of terrorism both inadequate and shameful.” As I commented in a 2002 Hudson Review essay about Said, “the arsenals that matter, where contemporary terrorism is concerned, are composed not of ‘words and phrases’ but of guns, knives, and bombs.”
But for Said such explicit references to Islamic weaponry were, it seemed, downright vulgar – undeserving of the attention of a serious scholar with a fine-tuned ear for, shall we say, discordant and disagreeable language. A learned sage such as himself, he made clear, should approach acts of mass jihadist butchery by attending not, in the manner of some lowbrow tabloid sensationalist, to the messy facts on the ground – all those blasted-apart young Ariana Grande fans at the Manchester Arena! all those pedestrians mowed down by a truck on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice! – but by soberly seeking out “explanation[s]” and “mitigating circumstances” and placing such acts in the context of “other dysfunctions, symptoms and maladies of the contemporary world.”
Said filled whole books, including Orientalism (1978) and Culture and Imperialism (1993), with such abhorrent, reality-avoiding drivel – sentence after sentence of Latinate words that effectively transported the reader from the coarse, concrete facts of terrorism into the more sophisticated realm of the abstract, the cognitive, the analytical. He also spouted this sort of bilge very frequently on American network TV, where – dapper, smooth-talking, invariably wearing an elegant suit and tie – Said seemed the very embodiment of scholarly seriousness and intellectual probity and was invariably presented not just as one more tendentious commentator but as the very face and voice of the noble Palestinian cause.
This, then, is the man whose works are now, Mahmoud Bayoumi tells us, being cited by people who consider Israel’s current campaign of self-defense “evil.”
In his Guardian essay, Bayoumi quotes with approval a recent statement by Timothy Brennan, a biographer of Said, who wishes that Said were here today to explain to everybody what “the Zionist project really is in practice.” Of course, on October 7, the world saw what the Hamas project really is in practice. What we’ve been seeing ever since is a sovereign nation exercising its right to defend itself from savages. That, ladies and gentlemen, is “the Zionist project,” and it can be summed up in two words: “Never again.”
But for disciples of Said such as Bayoumi and Brennan, the proper rhetorical approach to the present situation is to drop the events of October 7 down the memory hole – or to come as close as is reasonably possible to doing so – and to act as if the IDF charged into Gaza without provocation and out of sheer villainy.
Indeed, in his heyday as a slick apologist for villainy and a merchant of lies, Said was downright awe-inspiring in the extent to which he ignored brutal Islamic actions while accusing the West – Israel included – of precisely those kinds of actions. In his Guardian essay, Bayoumi quotes the following passage from Said – not as a sample of his hero’s extraordinary duplicity, but as an example of the Great One at his eloquent best:
I cannot understand how raw, naked evidence can be overridden by American intellectuals just because the “security” of Israel demands it. But it is overridden or hidden no matter how overpoweringly cruel, no matter how inhuman and barbaric, no matter how loudly Israel proclaims what it is doing. To bomb a hospital; to use napalm against civilians; to require Palestinian men and boys to crawl, or bark, or scream “Arafat is a whore’s son”; to break the arms and legs of children; to confine people in desert detention camps without adequate space, sanitation, water or legal charge; to use teargas in schools: All these are horrific acts, whether they are part of a war against ‘terrorism’ or the requirements of security.
First of all, full points to Bayoumi for – in the wake of October 7 – quoting a passage in which Said put the term “security” in scare quotes, as if Israel’s concern for its own security were a myth, a lie, a ludicrous pretext. Having thus dismissed that concern, Said went on to accuse Israel of several kinds of transgressions. Recall that Said has elsewhere charged Westerners with crying “terrorism” without ever seeking “explanation[s]” or “mitigating circumstances” or context; but when it came to charging Israel with a litany of crimes, Said had no interest in discussing what might have led Israel to commit them – if, indeed, it did commit them.
If Bayoumi – who, not incidentally, is co-editor of The Edward Said Reader (2001) as well as of The Selected Works of Edward Said: 1966–2006 (2021) – quotes Said’s j’accuse, it’s obviously because he wants us to see it as applying to Israel’s conduct of its current war on Gaza. Typically absent, however, is any acknowledgment that Israel gave Gaza to the Palestinians, let them elect Hamas to run it, and looked the other way for years while Hamas spent international humanitarian aid on weaponry and tunnels. Absent is an admission that the Israeli government allowed Gazans to hold jobs in Israel proper, where many of them worked for families who trusted them and, in many cases, surely loved them – families to which, early on the morning of October 7, those trusted and beloved Gazans led Hamas terrorists, step by wicked step, so that they might commit acts of rape, slaughter, and dismemberment.
Hospital bombings? If Israel bombs a hospital, it’s because Hamas has used it as a cover; if Israel has killed civilians, it’s because Hamas has used them as human shields. Breaking the bones of children? It’s Hamas, not the IDF, that targets civilians. And whereas hospital staffs in Gaza have been shown to be heartless Hamas collaborators, Israeli hospitals consistently respond to Palestinian terror with compassionate medical care for sick and injured Palestinians. Then there’s the fact that Palestinians are taught from infancy to hate Israelis beyond all reason – whereas October 7 would never have happened if so many Israelis living near Gaza hadn’t been brought up to think far better of their Palestinian neighbors than they turned out to deserve.
Of course, as the pro-Hamas protests in the streets of North American and European cities have shown us in recent months, millions of people in the West firmly reject all of the above facts. Many of them are Muslims. Others are non-Muslims who attended schools and colleges where the postcolonial pap dreamed up by Edward Said is absolute, unquestioned orthodoxy. Islam is, in point of fact, a totalitarian, triumphalist ideology of bloodthirsty conquest; but Said managed to convince a large swath of the English-speaking world that it is, on the contrary, a peaceful faith whose adherents are innocent victims of irrational prejudice. The deeply unfortunate fact is that while Said is no longer with us, the intellectual snake pit that he constructed out of wholesale slander and evasion is, thanks to countless ideologically twisted professors, and to keepers of the flame like Bayoumi, a more powerful – and inimical – force than ever.
Mo de Profit says
Bloody hell, a leftist elite islamic apologist lied!!! He should have become a democrat.
Luz Maria Rodriguez says
There is a very high probability that this moron was a Democrat.
If it quakes like a duck, walks like a duck, looks like a duck, it very probably is a duck.
VOWG says
As informed as I have been all my life, I have no idea who he was and why he would have any influence on anything ever.. People who think he had influence are dumb as a bag of rocks.
Richard Rude says
Oh, but he had tremendous influence in Academia. Many Eastern Studies Departments carry his imprimatur. It will take decades to shed his malevolent influence.
Luz Maria Rodriguez says
Do you think Ayers, Obama’s ghost writer had any influence on young, malleable minds at the U of Chicago for the decades that slug taught there?
Mark Dunn says
I think he was regular on CNN, in the old day when they had an audience.
Thomas Groover says
His name and handy work has garnered notice all over discussion threads for a couple of decades, Particularly since 9-11, but as this article indicates, he’s been dominant in academic circles for much longer.
john blackman says
we have our own ” said ” only a female version of equal lying hypocrisy , namely crone hillary . her hero was non other than former senator robert byrd . former kkk member . a long forgotten quote of his is as follows ” i shall never fight in the armed forces with a negro by my side . rather i should die a thousand times and see old glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels ” and that is how the democrats truly see the black voting block . cemented by the ol race hustler al sharpton . the upside is that sen. byrd is getting his wish ” dying a thousand times ” and then some . its called hell .
SaguaroJack says
We are not supposed to enjoy schadenfreude, but in the case of Byrd and his ilk it takes very great effort to refrain.
Mark Twain is alleged to have said something to the effect that he would not say he was happy that someone had died, but that he did read certain obituaries with satisfaction.
Chief Mac says
The largest colonial enterprise on the planet is the Islamofascists Empire. They have 56 colonies already and have murdered 100s of millions of people in their crusade of blood and conquest.
Luz Maria Rodriguez says
And fools equate them with progress.
Give them Hillary, Soros, Obama, Biden.
Victoria says
Yes. They continue colonizing, burning invaded cultures as they advance.
Edward says
Here he is palling around with a former president (and future president?).
Edward says
The above link doesn’t seem to work. Here’s another one:
Steve says
When pathological liar and unreconstructed Stalinist Lillian Hellman (who was of course the very model of a Jewish antisemite) sued Mary McCarthy for libel (the suit unintendedly exposed Hellman’s despicable usurpation of Muriel Gardiner’s heroism in the anti Nazi resistance in Germany and Austria), she cited Edward Said as someone who could vouch for her probity. It figures- sort of like Joe Biden having Alexandria Ocasio Cortez defend his intellectual prowess .
TruthLaser says
Mary McCarthy said about Lillian Hellman that “every word she writes is a lie, including ‘and’ and ‘the.’”
Luz Maria Rodriguez says
Exceedingly interesting that such people (with contra-civilizational views & values) were allowed not only to enter America, but they were allowed to teach in institutions of “higher learning” effectively brainwashing students for decades. When it should have been very clear that they would teach subversive values. It’s no damn wonder that now we face a significant and destructive element within our own government. A civilized nation cannot long endure such stupidity and we probably will not.
Onzeur Trante says
I am grateful that Said is not here to give his commentary on October 7th. There has been enough of that already from those of his class.
SaguaroJack says
One hopes Camille Paglia reads this article by Bruce Bawer. Camille has expressed admiration for some Said writings.
Anne says
Thank you Mr. Bawer, for your in depth analysis of the fraud and Anti Semetic Professor Said.
Next do Norm Chomsky….a Socialist posing as an Intellect.
virginia macdonald says
Said was just another slick little con artist. And by the way, the author of this piece is magnificent.
Mark Dunn says
I don’t want to read a balanced article on Nhom Chomsky, I just the dirt, as long as the facts are correct.
Lightbringer says
Noam Chomsky, like most “social scientists”, has a bad case of science envy, in this case a desire to be a computer scientist. One leading computer scientist at MIT, one of the fathers of artificial intelligence who will remain nameless here, quipped that Chomsky set the study of linguistics back forty years. Considering the pioneering work in that field done by the likes of Jacob Grimm (died 1863) and other giants of the discipline, that’s high “praise” indeed.
Poetcomic1 says
Like Said, Arafat himself was an Egyptian.
Steve says
With a blond, blue eyed uncle (the Grand Mufti Amin Al Husseini) who spent WW II in Nazi Germany exhorting Hitler to murder Jews with greater dispatch. His “Aryan” appearance (as well as his fanatical Jew hating) facilitated his acceptance by Hitler and Himmler
If you read Orianna Fallacci’s “Interview With History” Arafat (like Barack Hussein Osama AKA Bathhouse Barry) did things that Muslims ordinarily throw men off of roofs for doing. But then hypocrisy is the compliment the Left (and Islam) pay to virtue.
Isaac Barr MD says
At the University of Michigan the Edward Said lounge is for years an open Palestinian indoctrination center with 6 weeks courses in Palestinian antisemitic narratives. Students who attend get credits. No wonder that UM is one of the most antisemitic universities where the Islamic Palestinian mob and radical Left DEI woke combine to harass and degrade Jewish students. Needless to say that it is Jewish philanthropists who established parts of the university such as Alfred Taubman centers at the university.
Ed Snider says
Edward said, It is not for you
To criticize the smallest part
Of the things we do,
Things from the heart.
You must accept our inclination
For inflicting devastation
Clouding eyes with despair
For a crescent rotted past repair
Pillage and rape without blame
In praise of Allah’s name
Such is duty
(Don’t forget the booty)
To slaughter Jews, and gays, the infidel
To send them all to hell
Is our pleasure
By any measure
These things no longer left unsaid.
That’s what Edward said.
Domenic Pepe says
I guess I didn’t read the obituary column when Said croaked years ago.
In any case, thanks for the update and the enlightening article providing the unvarnished truth about this morally depraved Islamic liar psychopath.
Good riddance that Said croaked years ago. The world is a better place to be rid of him.
Alkflaeda says
That means Heaven has been lumbered with him. Or maybe the Other Place.
Atikva says
Never heard of Mr. Edward Said before. I don’t know what is more astounding: the inept lies published by Middle-East ‘scholars’ for the past 8 decades, the biggest one being the non-existing ‘Palestinian people’, or the bottomless gullibility of the Westerners who have never set foot over there, don’t speak the language, yet believe they know it all.
TruthLaser says
Or a member of the Labour Party.
danknight says
Bruce executes a brilliant autopsy of a mental midget …
… sadly … Said will continue to poison minds for many years to come …
Jack Buchanan says
Reminds of of an argument I had with a schoolmate in the 70s. I warned her that Ayatollah Khomeini was going to usher in the death penalty for Women who commit moral transgressions of Islamic Law in Iran, and she said “The Ayatollah loves his people! He won’t do anything like that!” Not long after came the hostage crisis. Ayatoll’ you so!.
Lightbringer says
I had some Iranian students (at an American university) around the time of their revolution and as they babbled on about the evil of the Shah and the coming joys of theocracy I, having grown up in a White Russian community, told them to be careful what they wished for, if history is any guide. Of course they did not listen.
Raymond in DC says
I feel fortunate I wrapped up my studies of international politics just a few years before Said’s ‘Orientalism’ came out, and thus was spared his malign influence and all that followed.