Texas University Cancels Book with Israeli Authors (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Mark Tapson 05/30/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/05/30/texas-university-cancels-book-with-israeli-authors/
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A female Arab author claims a “cherished victory” by forcing the
University of Texas to scrap the publication of an anthology of
women’s voices from the Middle East – because two of the twenty-nine
writers were Israeli.
The Center for Middle Eastern Studies at UT Austin was planning to
publish the book in honor of the late American scholar Elizabeth
Fernai, a professor there whose life and work were focused on the
Middle East.
At first, novelist Huzama Habayeb was delighted to contribute as one
of fifteen Arab writers. But that turned to “horror,” as a Gulf News
editorial put it, when she realized that the collection would also
feature two Israeli women, Yehudit Hendel and Orly Castel-Bloom.
Habayeb withdrew her manuscript, complaining to the Center that
Israel is an “occupier” of her land “Palestine” – although she was
born in Kuwait, raised in Jordan, lives in Dubai, and has never set
foot in Israel.
The university accepted her withdrawal but moved forward with plans
to publish. Taken aback by this, Habayeb determined to ban the book
altogether. She urged other Arab contributors to withdraw their
manuscripts. A friend, Egyptian novelist Radwa Ashour who is married
to a Palestinian poet, was the first to go along. Then others got
onboard.
The Center shrugged and said the book was already at the printers and
would be published as is. Habayeb wasn’t about to give up. “There are
academic boycott movements around the world protesting the Israeli
occupation,” she said, then incorrectly claimed that “the only two
countries where they don’t exist are the United States and Israel.”
She threatened to embarrass the university: “It doesn’t need a genius
to figure out that the Texas center wanted to resolve the issue
quickly and silently.”
According to Dr. Kamran Scot Aghaie, the Center’s director, twelve
authors asked to withdraw their contributions from the volume, with
one additional request from the translator of another
submission. “All the Arab writers whom I managed to contact withdrew
their contributions,” Habayeb exulted.
The Center for Middle Eastern Studies refused to censor or
discriminate against the Israelis, but the boycott led to enough
withdrawals to make the book project no longer viable, so the
publication was discontinued. Habayeb crowed to the Dubai-based
website Gulf News,
I am so proud of having the book cancelled. I am a Palestinian and to
achieve this, to be able to resist the illegal Israeli occupation of
my homeland is something that I will cherish forever. It is my own
victory in the struggle.
An opinion piece in the Gulf News gleefully reported that “Habayeb
has a smile on her face this morning” and described her actions
as “those of a resistance fighter.” It insisted that “academics the
world over need to ensure that Israel is isolated for its immoral and
illegal actions in occupying Palestine and repressing the Palestinian
people.” (Dr. Aghaie offers another perspective on that: “The
unfortunate reality is that in Middle Eastern Studies sometimes
politics trumps academic ideals.”) The editorial closes by saying
that “the pen is mightier than the sword” – an odd moral to draw from
the censorship of nearly thirty writers.
In her own editorial to Gulf News, self-importantly titled “My ‘No’
Says More, and Matters More,” Habayeb waxed melodramatic about what
she considers her courageous stand:
I started as a lone voice. In the silence of a rather vigilant night,
my keyboard was my sole collaborator. Few words of protest, engulfed
by anger and discontent, found their way into a yet-to-be-filled
draft email.
My overly conscious heart was heavy. “I cannot accept, ethically and
morally, that my voice be shared equally with writers who reflect the
voice of an obnoxious occupier,” I wrote…
She denounced Israel’s presence in the book as “an allegedly
legitimate literary Middle Eastern component that desperately seeks
acceptance, notwithstanding its ‘genocidal’ practices against
Palestinians.” Actually, Israel is not desperate, literarily or
otherwise; it is flourishing and happy, as always. Thirteen Nobel
Prizes for Literature have been awarded to Israeli authors; the Arab
world has received one, despite its enormous population advantage.
It is the Arab world that is desperate – desperately impoverished
(apart from the oil-moneyed elites), desperately ignorant,
desperately backward (apart from the faux modernization of a tiny
handful of places like Dubai, where Habayeb lives), and desperately
humiliated by the success story that is Israel, a tiny sliver of a
country that the Arab world is obsessed with (but incapable of)
destroying. As for Israel’s “genocidal practices,” they are
apparently very ineffective, since Palestinians have one of the
highest rates of population growth in the world.
Habayeb agonized over her response to the Center’s outrageous
inclusion of two Israelis, referring to her “defeated self”
as “homeless”: “How can I refuse to hate a ‘killer state’ or not turn
a deaf ear to voices that reflect its disgrace? I can’t. I simply
cannot.”
So she kept up a “10-day unrelenting campaign, infused with
persistent passion and decades-long inherited losses and accumulated
pains,” until she convinced enough contributors to pull out, and
her “no” was joined by other “no’s”:
In a region caught in defeat and despair, the ‘No’ turning
into ‘No’s’ comes as a symbolic victory. My ‘No’ is alone no more.
My ‘No’ says more, and it means even more. It is heard loud…
Actually, it is not heard at all, nor will any of the twenty-eight
other voices be heard that would have been published in the book. All
Habayeb has accomplished, with her hateful determination to excise a
mere two Israeli essays from a book of twenty-nine, is the Pyrrhic
victory of silencing everyone, including herself and fourteen of her
fellow Arabs.
Habayeb and her cohorts’ chorus of “no’s” is the contrast between the
moribund, nihilistic Arab world and Israel’s “yes.” “We love death
more than you love life,” they proudly proclaim. Even in a matter so
small as an obscure academic publication, Israel’s enemies are happy
to ruin everything for everyone, even themselves, in their desperate,
impotent compulsion to punish Israel. (Copyright © 2012
FrontPageMagazine.com 05/30/12)
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