Smearing Rashid Khalidi
Palin's Idiot Wind
By VIJAY
PRASHAD
October 30, 2008
Counter Punch
http://www.counterpunch.org/prashad10302008.html
Idiot wind, blowing every time you move your mouth,
Blowing down the backroads, headin' south
-- Bob Dylan, "Idiot Wind." (1974).
Sarah Palin has done it again. On the advice of the McCain-Palin
team, she’s trying to tie Obama to another professor, this time
to Columbia University’s Rashid Khalidi. Here she is at Bowling
Green University, “It seems that there is yet another radical
professor from the neighborhood who spent a lot of time with
Barack Obama going back several years. This is important because
his associate, Rashid Khalidi, he in addition to being a
political ally of Barack Obama, he’s a former spokesperson for
the Palestinian Liberation Organization.”
The Bill Ayers move didn’t really work. He’s the first professor
that Palin refers to. The neighborhood is Hyde Park, which
surrounds the University of Chicago, where Khalidi and Barack
Obama used to work, where Ayers lives, and where Michelle Obama
works (she’s currently on leave from the University of Chicago
hospital). Few bought the Ayers story. It was far-fetched. It’s
true that Ayers was a Weatherman (one of its cofounders in
1969). Also true that he went underground not long after (“we
lived like hippies,” he later said). It is also the case that
the FBI dropped its case against him, but pursued his partner,
Bernardine Dohrn. They surrendered in 1980, and when a judge
lectured her about social change and tactics, Dohrn held fast,
telling him that they had “differing views on America.” So it
goes.
Obama was born in 1961. He was only eight when the Weathermen
formed. And he was in Indonesia. There he got his own lessons in
power from his step-father Lolo, “Better to be strong. If you
can’t be strong, be clever and make peace with someone who’s
strong. But always better to be strong yourself. Always.” Lolo
is one of the richest characters in Obama’s Dreams from my
father, and it is through Lolo’s reticence that we come to learn
how the 1965 mass genocide of Indonesian communists affected
Obama (which he calls “one of the more brutal and swift
campaigns of suppression in modern times,” and then lyrically
bemoans the amnesia, how the events can disappear “the same way
the rich and loamy earth could soak up the rivers of blood that
had once coursed through the streets”). Lolo sleeps with a gun
under his pillow. But Lolo is no terrorist.
Nor was Ayers. Ayers’ political development would come as part
of the history that paralyzed people like Lolo, and silenced the
other millions in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. It was for them,
and the state of paralysis in the Democratic Party, as well as
the lack of confidence in the New Left, that Ayers and others
decided to do something bolder, something more dangerous. In
Prairie Fire (1974), Ayers and his comrades straddled the divide
that has been within Marxist theory since its origin: the
problem of reform and revolution. “Engage the enemy” to move
toward power, said the document, but this seemed almost wishful
thinking. The more inspired passage is for those elements of
reform, and then for this to move, qualitatively, toward
something more: act “to encourage the people, to provoke leaps
of confidence and consciousness, to stir the imagination, to
popularize power, to agitate, to organize, to join in every
possible way the people’s day to day struggles.” These are the
“community organizers” that Palin denounced. If they are able to
move out of the everyday and trigger a new horizon, they are
dangerous indeed. More so than if they engaged the enemy with
guns.
But none of the McCain-Palin baiting worked. It might have if
the College of Education at the University of Illinois, Chicago,
had taken the bait. This is where Ayers’ teaches. If they did to
him what the University of Colorado had done to Ward Churchill,
then the McCain-Palin ticket might have had a cause célèbre to
sneer at as it unfolded on the streets that surround Jane
Addams’ Hull House. But it is to the credit of the University
officials that they didn’t enter the fray.
Obama’s always been comfortable with the radical fringe. When at
Occidental (1982-1983), Barack threw himself into the
anti-apartheid movement. “To avoid being mistaken for a
sellout,” he writes freely, “I chose my friends carefully. The
more politically active black students. The foreign students.
The Chicanos. The Marxist professors and structural feminists
and punk-roc performance poets. We smoked cigarettes and wore
leather jackets. At night, in the dorms, we discussed
neocolonialism, Franz Fanon, Eurocentrism, and patriarchy.” All
this sounds familiar to me, an undergrad like him at the other
end of Los Angeles.
No surprise then that Obama would be comfortable around Bill
Ayers and Rashid Khalidi, both radicals in their different ways.
Khalidi is one of the best-regarded scholars of the Middle East
teaching in the United States. Until recently, Khalidi taught at
the University of Chicago. When I was in graduate school during
the late 1980s and early 1990s, Khalidi played a significant
role as the interpreter of events in the Middle East. These were
complex times, with nationalism exhausted and imperialism
emboldened, as well as with insurgent Islamism on the horizon.
Khalidi’s soberness was a tonic. During the first Gulf War, he
was essential. He also brought Edward Said to the campus, whose
lecture in an overcrowded lecture hall guided us toward an
adequate anti-imperialist position, between the heinousness of
the Ba’ath and the awful consistency of imperialism. When Edward
Said died in 2003, Columbia University honored his decades of
distinguished service with the Edward Said Chair of Arab
Studies. The first recipient of that chair was Rashid Khalidi,
who is a member of the History Department and of the Middle East
Institute (a part of the School of International and Public
Affairs, whose other faculty include such dangerous characters
as David Dinkins, Jeffery Sachs and Joseph Stiglitz). Khalidi is
a consistent critic of U. S. policy in the Middle East
(Resurrecting Empire, 2004) and of Israeli politics vis-à-vis
the Palestinians (The Iron Cage, 2006). He’s an inter-faith kind
of guy; not someone with the temperament to touch a document
like Prairie Fire with his pen.
Palin’s staff seem to be sloppy readers. Obama, we are told, did
toast Khalidi at his going-away party in 2003. So far so good.
Having seen the name Khalidi and Edward Said in the same
sentence, the Palin team assumed they were the same person. But,
it was Said, and not Khalidi, who played an active
organizational role in the Palestinian struggle. Between 1977
and 1991, Said was a member of the Palestinian National Council,
but not of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (the slippage
is made all too often). The PNC was a general, all-party council
of a people in the middle of a struggle, not like the PLO, which
was an umbrella of various political parties headed by al-Fatah
(whose leader in those years was Yasser Arafat, later a
recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace). Said broke with the PNC
in 1991, just about when he was in Chicago for his talk. He
would point out that the PLO, which had usurped the reins of the
Palestinian struggle, lost ground during the Oslo discussions
because of which it “lacked credibility and moral authority”
(his voluminous writings that detail this break are collected in
The Politics of Dispossession, 1994, Peace and Its Discontents,
1996, and The End of the Peace Process: Oslo and After, 2000).
Said also received his diagnosis about leukemia in 1991. It was
a fateful year.
Khalidi, whose name Palin could not pronounce, was born in New
York. He is an intellectual with a moral commitment to peace and
justice in the Middle East. His main organizational commitments
don’t include the PLO, which, in the period of Khalidi’s ascent
into the higher altitudes of the academy, was already in
impervious decline. Nothing the New Yorker could say or do would
help the festering Palestinian Authority, and neither would
Khalidi give his voice to being the puppet of al-Fatah’s Mahmoud
Abbas or Farouk Kaddoumi (if anything, the politics of Khalidi
might line up with those of Marwan Barghouti of al-Mustaqbal,
but Khalidi’s intellectualism might not be the disposition for
the jailed leader).
Smart Khalidi. He decided to keep mum while Palin rattles. And
he had the good sense to quote Dylan. “I am not speaking to the
media at this time, and certainly not until this idiot wind
passes.” Or really, you’ll never know the hurt I suffered nor
the Palin I rise above….We’re idiots babe. It’s a wonder we can
even feed ourselves.
Vijay Prashad is the George and Martha Kellner Chair of
South Asian History and Director of International Studies at
Trinity College, Hartford, CT His new book is
The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World,
New York: The New Press, 2007. He can be reached at:
vijay.prashad@trincoll.edu |