Yale University's Middle East Studies
falling behind the curve?
By
Cinnamon Stillwell and Jonathan Calt Harris
Feb 18, 2005 - For more than 150
years Yale University's Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations
(NELC) has been one of North America's most important centers for study of the
ancient and medieval Near East.
Its scholars have been pioneers
in Arabic, Islamic and Graeco-Arabic Studies, Assyriology, Egyptology, and the
Christian Orient.
After After the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, Islamic Studies at universities across America were
expanded rushed to meet the increasing interest in South Asia and the Middle
East. But Yale University's Department of Near Eastern Languages &
Civilizations (NELC)NELC has been slow to respond. Traditionally concentrated
on ancient and medieval Middle Eastern cultures and languages, Yale's NELC
department and is coming under fire from students hungry for more contemporary
offerings. While the department has hired several new faculty members in an
attempt to modernize their ranks, critics insist that it's "too little,
too slow." Critics charge that the NELC department, mired in funding
disputes, bureaucracy, and ideological rifts, is losing relevance in the
context of the modern Middle East
Yale's exceptionalexceptional
reputation in ancient and medieval studies makes the wisdom of responding to shifting
academic currents questionable, even if they are in response to student
interest. A variety of courses on the modern Middle East are available through
Yale's History department and its Judaic Studies and Islamic Studies programs,
as well as some others. Yale students are hardly deprived when it comes to the
Middle East. In this context, the desire to modernize NECL NELC in response to
apparent market demand seems as much an effort to capitalize in an economic and
political sense as it does a well-thought out program of intellectual
development.
But whatever the curricular
oversights, The wisdom of making curricular changes at Yale is even more
problematic given that members of the faculty have had little difficulty
shifting direction following 9/11, and not, as one might imagine, toward U.S.
interests or sympathy for the victims of terrorism. Rather, it has become
commonplace for Yale professors to express open hostility towards the United
States and Israel, while belittling the threat of terrorist regimes and
dictatorships throughout the Arab and Muslim world.
At a panel discussion on
terrorism and the Middle East held immediately after the Sept. 11 attacks,
Strobe Talbott, deputy secretary of state under Bill Clinton and director of
Yale's Center for the Study of Globalization, insisted that it was "from
the desperate, angry and bereaved that those suicide pilots came."
Abbas Amanat, a professor of
Middle Eastern history, chalked up Osama bin Laden's popularity in the Middle
East to "an arrogant U.S. foreign policy," including of course,
"support for Israel."
The panel's conclusions were so
outlandishly one-sided that other faculty members felt compelled to respond.
Professor of Classics and History Donald Kagan was quoted in the Yale Daily
News: "Our schools have retreated from encouraging of right and wrong --
with the exception of an education in moral relativism that borders on
nihilism."
I survey these studies at http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/55
Lack of freedom and anti-modern ideologies cause terrorism, this is too
declarative n should be dropped but too many academics remain loath to point
this In April 2003, yet another panel was convened, this time to debate the war
against Saddam Hussein's Baathist regime in Iraq. The sentiment expressed at
this "teach-in," which was sponsored by the Yale Coalition for Peace,
the Muslim Students Association, and the Students for Justice in Palestine, was
overwhelmingly anti-American and anti-Israel, and occasionally anti-Semitic.
Dmitri Gutas, Professor of
Graeco-Arabic Studies and Chairman of the NELC department, used the occasion to
push anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. He attributed the Bush administration's
plans to invade Iraq to a cabal of Jewish neo-cons, including Richard Perle,
Paul Wolfowitz and Bill Kristol. "These people," Gutas claimed, were
the sole shapers of U.S. foreign policy, while Israel, he maintained, was the
main recipient of its success. An American victory in Iraq, according to Gutas,
would result in Israel's "expansion over the local population."
Unsurprisingly, Gutas has consistently advocated for divestment from Israel.
Glenda Gilmore, C. Van Woodward
Professor of History, delivered an especially paranoid diatribe about the
international conspiracy of "right-wingers" she seemed to think were
out to get her. Her villains included Daniel Pipes, simply because he had
highlighted her rabidly anti-American views. In fact, Gilmore herself made such
views quite clear in an opinion piece for the Yale Daily News (Oct. 11, 2002),
in which she called the U.S. "an imperial power in the most sinister sense
of the term." But in Gilmore's insulated world, criticism is not allowed n
it is simply someone trying to, as she put it, "shut you up."
In October 2003, long after the
fall of Baghdad, the NELC department organized the second installment of a
panel series titled, "Iraq: Beyond the Headlines." The panel focused
on the U.S. occupation and Iraq's future, which, needless to say, was not
portrayed as particularly rosy. Panel members included five NELC professors,
who all but proclaimed the destruction of Iraq's cultural heritage at the hands
of the U.S. occupation. Not only was the U.S. blamed for the looting of Iraq's
museums and archeological sites, but also for stealing the country's oil,
censoring the media, and perhaps most curious of all, preventing democracy from
taking root.
Professor of Graeco-Arabic
Studies Dimitri Gutas accused America of "killing the heritage of Iraq and
also killing the truth," despite the emergence of a free press for the
first time in Iraq's history, and unfettered Western press access, something
unknown in more than three decades. NELC faculty members have even politicized
departmental finances. While encouraging students enrolled in Arab and Islamic
Studies to study abroad in Arabic speaking countries, the department—citing
safety concerns—stopped all funding for study in Israel. Archaeological
projects are maintained in Egypt and Syria, but are refused to Israel. The
university has cited State Department advisories to avoid funding tIsrael
travel. But Yale has no qualms about funding trips to Cuba despite the fact
that they are required to obtain special annual licenses from the State
Department for each "structural educational program" in that country.
The 2003 "Reach Out Cuba Spring Break Trip" was billed as a way to
cover "the history and legacy of the Cuban revolution."
While objectivity may still
exist outside the field of Middle East Studies, Yale's reputation as a pillar
of higher education is seriously undermined by the anti-American, anti-Israel
politics of the NELC department.
The university must decide to
meet the needs of a changing world and a politically diverse student body, or
it will fade into irrelevance. How to go about doing so, given both student
pressures for ‘relevance' and faculty pressure for a single political view, is
far from simple.
Cinnamon Stillwell and Jonathan Calt Harris wrote this for Campus Watch, a
project of the Middle East Forum designed to critique Middle East Studies at
North American universities.