A Prof [Hamid Dabashi] Tangles the Truth

Those of us who watch Middle East studies at Columbia University differ as to which professor of that lot is the most egregious. Joseph Massad, with his malign theories and intemperate extremism? Rashid Khalidi, with his roots as a PLO flak, his funny-money chair, his strange ideas, and his false gravitas? No, my favorite is Hamid Dabashi, that paragon of purple prose, male hysteria, and – now we learn – trouble telling the truth about his own biography.

This news comes from the “Columbians for Academic Freedom” website, where a student named Aharon posted an item titled “Press Rules.” In it, he notes that Dabashi told a radio interviewer on March 6, 2005, that he “stopped speaking publicly because of a rash of threatening phone calls that go way beyond academic arguments.” Then Dabashi played one of those allegedly threatening calls:

Mr. Dabashi, I read about you in today’s New York Post. You stinking terrorist Muslim pig. I hope the CIA is studying you so it can kick you out of this country back to some filthy Arab country where you belong, you terrorist bastard.

But Dabashi also wrote an article for the Times Higher Education Supplement on October 18, 2002, in which he recounted what happened in June 2002 (after I co-authored an article that mentioned him) – namely someone leaving the identical message:

Hey, Mr Dabashi, I read about you in today’s New York Post. You stinking, terrorist Muslim pig. I hope the CIA is studying you so we can kick you out of this country back to some filthy Arab country where you belong. You terrorist bastard.

This double use of the same call, years apart, spurs several thoughts: (1) It confirms my doubts about the onslaught of threatening calls he supposedly received due to my critique. The call he received is indeed vile and inexcusable, but it is not a threat. (Meaning, law enforcement would not find it actionable.)

(2) The recycling of this call years apart confirms how few calls he received – or why else would Dabashi keep coming back to the same old one?

(3) Dabashi falsely presented a call from 2002 as though it happened in 2005.

(4) His claim in the March 6, 2005, radio interview that he “has stopped speaking publicly” because of threatening phone calls is untrue. (Earlier, by the way, he made the same point less strongly, telling the New York Times in January 2005 only that he “has canceled several appearances.”) As Aharon writes, that telephone message in June 2002 “certainly did not lead to him ending his public speaking - I’ve heard him myself since Summer 2002.” A little research turns up plenty of instances of his public speaking. Here are four examples, just from the beginning of 2003 and only in New York City:

  • January 24, 2003 – Dabashi organized and gave an opening night speech at a Palestinian Film Festival.
  • February 15, 2003 – Dabashi spoke to the “Campus Anti-War Network Benefit” at Pier Sixty. A picture of him at this event includes a caption that says he “brought the house down with his indictment of the Bush administration” (and also mentions Campus Watch and myself).
  • March 26, 2003 – Dabashi addressed “an antiwar teach-in” that attracted an audience of 3,000.
  • April 2, 2003 – Dabashi took part in a panel at the Asia Society sponsored by the Institute for Cultural Diplomacy.

(5) Dabashi’s inability to get the facts of his own life correctly emulates his mentor, Edward Said, who famously lied about his childhood, as Justus Weiner so remarkably exposed in a September 1999 article, “‘My Beautiful Old House’ and Other Fabrications of Edward Said.”

In yet another way, then, Hamid Dabashi brings discredit to his department, his university, and his field of study.

Daniel Pipes, a historian, has led the Middle East Forum since its founding in 1994. He taught at Chicago, Harvard, Pepperdine, and the U.S. Naval War College. He served in five U.S. administrations, received two presidential appointments, and testified before many congressional committees. The author of 16 books on the Middle East, Islam, and other topics, Mr. Pipes writes a column for the Washington Times and the Spectator; his work has been translated into 39 languages. DanielPipes.org contains an archive of his writings and media appearances; he tweets at @DanielPipes. He received both his A.B. and Ph.D. from Harvard. The Washington Post deems him “perhaps the most prominent U.S. scholar on radical Islam.” Al-Qaeda invited Mr. Pipes to convert and Edward Said called him an “Orientalist.”
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