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Arab writers withdraw from U.S. book over publisher's refusal to remove Isr

King Solomon

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Arab writers withdraw from U.S. book over publisher's refusal to remove Israeli contributions​

Planned publication by Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Texas halted after directors refuse to single out Israeli authors.

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An anthology of women's writing in the Middle East, due to be published by a major U.S. university is withheld from publication, over the demand of one writer that contributions from two Israeli academicians be withheld.

The Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Texas at Austin had planned to publish an anthology of writing by Middle Eastern women in honor of Elizabeth Fernea, a professor emerita at the university who died in 2008, and who focused on women's issues in the Middle East.

But, according to Inside Higher Ed, one of the anthology's 29 authors said that she would withdraw her work from the anthology unless it excluded the work of two Israeli writers who were also asked to contribute to the anthology.

When the publishers refused to exclude the Israelis, a total of 13 authors withdrew their work from the book -- which would have left the book without any Arab contributors. This led the center to cancel the book's publication.

"My view is that it is not proper to single out individual contributors for other contributors to veto," Kamran Scot Aghaie, director of the center, told Inside Higher Ed. "As an academic institution, we cannot censor people for the country they are from."


Arab writers withdraw from U.S. book over publisher's refusal to remove Israeli contributions - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
 
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Well in General Arabic people feel disgusted by anything that is even remotely related to Israel. Even saying the word is bad because that land is called "Occupied Palestine". But personally speaking I say there might yet be a chance where one day Muslims and Jews can co-exist peacefully once more like they always did since the start of Islam.
 
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Really dumb people.....


good that these idiots's books are not being published any more...

Well in General Arabic people feel disgusted by anything that is even remotely related to Israel. Even saying the word is bad because that land is called "Occupied Palestine". But personally speaking I say there might yet be a chance where one day Muslims and Jews can co-exist peacefully once more like they always did since the start of Islam.

The only way according to u muslims and non-muslims can co-exist peacefully is if non-muslims remain subservient to muslims...

The moment they gain power politically or militarily, they become a threat and has to be eliminated. like hindus in South asia or jews in middle east..
 
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Really dumb people.....


good that these idiots's books are not being published any more...

Why such venom against Americans?

In another news, minister of "the only democracy blablablah" says his country is for the white man only:


Meanwhile on Sunday, Israeli daily Maariv published an interview with Interior Minister Eli Yishai, in which he stated that most of the "Muslims that arrive here do not even believe that this country belongs to us, to the white man."

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Why such venom against Americans?

In another news, minister of "the only democracy blablablah" says his country is for the white man only:




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first of all, my 'venom' was towards those Arab writers...

Secondly, i read the report, i think what he meant was muslims dont want jews to exist in middle east...but white man context is not right as u mention as i know many israelis who are dark skinned. There are many jews from Southern part of India who have migrated to Israel. Most of them are dark skinned. They have never faced any discrimination because of their skin color..
 
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first of all, my 'venom' was towards those Arab writers...

Well, you spoke of "their book" -- and the book doesn't belong to the withdrawing writers, but to a US university. Most of the books' invited writers aren't even Arab.

Secondly, i read the report, i think what he meant was muslims dont want jews to exist in middle east...but white man context is not right as u mention as i know many israelis who are dark skinned. There are many jews from Southern part of India who have migrated to Israel. Most of them are dark skinned. They have never faced any discrimination because of their skin color..

Your perception of that area is so warped, that you can't even see racist rhetoric for what it is when it comes from an Israeli. What the guy was saying, is that Black migrants to Israel -- the overwhelming majority of whom are Christian -- don't recognize that the country is for White people: notice he didn't say Jewish people (which would be bad enough), he said "White". And he wasn't discussing Muslim armed resistence against Israel; he was talking about African refugees. For a bit of context, know that this guy -- his name is Eli Yishai -- can perhaps be considered the main culprit for the race riots in southern Tel Aviv in the last weeks, as he's publicly agitated against the presence of the African asylum seekers. That there are non-White Jews doesn't really matter. Yishai himself wouldn't be considered White in many places, but that is how he sees himself.
 
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Well in General Arabic people feel disgusted by anything that is even remotely related to Israel. Even saying the word is bad because that land is called "Occupied Palestine". But personally speaking I say there might yet be a chance where one day Muslims and Jews can co-exist peacefully once more like they always did since the start of Islam.

Jordan_Israel_pic_1.jpg



also
Yes that is why you saudis love Israel and are in bed with them?
 
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Well, you spoke of "their book" -- and the book doesn't belong to the withdrawing writers, but to a US university. Most of the books' invited writers aren't even Arab.



Your perception of that area is so warped, that you can't even see racist rhetoric for what it is when it comes from an Israeli. What the guy was saying, is that Black migrants to Israel -- the overwhelming majority of whom are Christian -- don't recognize that the country is for White people: notice he didn't say Jewish people (which would be bad enough), he said "White". And he wasn't discussing Muslim armed resistence against Israel; he was talking about African refugees. For a bit of context, know that this guy -- his name is Eli Yishai -- can perhaps be considered the main culprit for the race riots in southern Tel Aviv in the last weeks, as he's publicly agitated against the presence of the African asylum seekers. That there are non-White Jews doesn't really matter. Yishai himself wouldn't be considered White in many places, but that is how he sees himself.

and ur perception of Israelis and jews are so hate filled that u change the quotes to justify ur perception..

what he said was this:

Muslims that arrive here do not even believe that this country belongs to us, to the white man

what he meant was immigrants from Africa who are black and muslim do not believe that Israel belongs to Jews(who overwhelmingly are white).
In My above post, i said that that particular quote was made in a jews vs muslims context and not blacks vs whites.And that is why i gave the example of dark skinned jews from India who have emigrated to Israel who have never faced any discrimination because of their skin color.
 
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and ur perception of Israelis and jews are so hate filled that u change the quotes to justify ur perception..

what he said was this:

what he meant was immigrants from Africa who are black and muslim do not believe that Israel belongs to Jews(who overwhelmingly are white).
In My above post, i said that that particular quote was made in a jews vs muslims context and not blacks vs whites.And that is why i gave the example of dark skinned jews from India who have emigrated to Israel who have never faced any discrimination because of their skin color.

I can bet that I've known way more Jews than there are in India. And I don't hate them.

As said before, Eli Yishai has publicly incited violence against Africans, all Africans. And most often he doesn't make any religious distinction in Africans, who are, as I said before, mostly non-Muslim. Like many other Israeli political, religious and community leaders, Eli Yishai is on a campaign to denigrate Africans, who've already been called "infiltrators", a "cancer" and inherently violent rapists. This latest swipe that they're Muslims who won't recognize Israel is without a doubt just one more act in the slur campaign against Blacks. Perhaps he identified them as Muslims because being anti-Muslim is more acceptable than being anti-Black (just see your own reaction to see that he's right).

See the man in action below.

Rape Culture in Israel - YouTube
Anti-African Rally in Tel Aviv - YouTube

And please, no matter how you spin it, saying that Israel is a country for the white man only is hurtfully racist. If a German politician said that of his country -- and Germany is much more of a white country than is Israel -- can you imagine the fallout in the international press and the reception of this statement among its hordes of Jewish journalists? I can only wonder what Black Jews must've thought after learning what their Interior minister believes. But perhaps that won't surprise them.
 
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But, according to Inside Higher Ed, one of the anthology's 29 authors said that she would withdraw her work from the anthology unless it excluded the work of two Israeli writers who were also asked to contribute to the anthology.

When the publishers refused to exclude the Israelis, a total of 13 authors withdrew their work from the book -- which would have left the book without any Arab contributors. This led the center to cancel the book's publication.

Understandable if the goal was to be fair as in giving the readers a buffet of opinions from women intellectuals from the region. When it comes to opinions, diversity is always a good thing. We can only wonder if the protesters know how we feel about this and exploited it to shut out the Israelis.
 
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While you may not agree with the boycott of a Palestinian writer against Israel. It is their personal right to do so. That is what freedom of expression is about.

Here is the other point of view from one of the author who withdrew her work


gulfnews : My ‘No’ says more, and matters more
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. Not that I had blurred vision or confused emotions; it was more an enlightened revelation, where I knew that I was sad, enraged and offended. And I knew exactly why I felt that way.

Presumptuously, as put by the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, I along with other Arab women writers, were to celebrate a collection of short stories coming out in the fall.

These embraced the voices of 30 women covering the Middle East, whereby ‘Israel’ is supposedly an integrally normalised Middle East state, according to the Americanised contorted concept of the ‘Middle East’; with no pains, no shame, and no open wounds.

The recently aborted project (Memory of a Promise: Short Stories by Middle Eastern Women) was meant to honour the late American scholar and writer Elizabeth Fernea, known for her highly appreciated writings about Middle East issues. She devoted “her life to advance the causes of those who are excluded and muted by political, economic and social oppression”.

Around 15 Arab writers were to share their voices and ‘concerns’ with their counterparts from Turkey, Iran and Afghanistan … and, of course, Israel — an allegedly legitimate literary Middle Eastern component that desperately seeks acceptance, notwithstanding its ‘genocidal’ practices against Palestinians.

The inclusion of Yehudit Hendel and Orly Castel-Bloom, two Israeli authors celebrated amongst ‘institutionalised’ Israeli literary circles, in the anthology-like book was imposed by the Texas Middle Eastern Studies Centre on the assumption that “their stories chosen focus on two women’s psychological reactions to personal challenges —- loneliness and illness”, as justified by the editorial staff. “This focus” should speak to “experiences all woman share”.

Well, certainly not to my experience! There is more to my suffering and painful experiences than ‘loneliness and illness’!

Homeless

As I stated in a decisive clear-cut letter of protest emailed to the Middle Eastern centre: While Yehudit Hendel was born in Warsaw, Poland, and immigrated to Haifa, Palestine, I was born in Kuwait to a Palestinian refugee family, and I am denied the right to return to Palestine, my homeland.

How is it possible to overlook the fact that I am homeless and yet console my defeated self that a home can be envisaged out of clichéd ‘cultural tolerance’? 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.

Since I could never compromise my pains or sugarcoat them with falsified “reasoning”, I requested that my contribution in the book be withdrawn. And it was withdrawn promptly. The Texas centre must have felt that a lone ‘No’ will hardly harm the celebrated short story anthology. There was no reason for it to worry or reconsider its stance, or at least question the ethical grounds upon which it drew the literary map of the Middle East.

As expected, it expressed sympathy and understanding. Apparently, I should be grateful to this ‘sympathetic-ness’ and ‘understanding-ness’!

It was a lone ‘No’ for a while though as I set out in a marathon campaign to make my ‘No’ matter more. I wanted my ‘No’ to add up into more ‘No’s’. Consequently, I contacted other Arab authors listed in the book, most of whom I had never met, but was well-acquainted with much of their work. Guess what? In a 10-day unrelenting campaign, infused with persistent passion and decades-long inherited losses and accumulated pains, my ‘No’ became scores of ‘No’s’. All the Arab writers whom I managed to contact withdrew their contributions in the unlikely ‘coming book’, a collective withdrawal process that gained escalating momentum with the help and support of friends and colleagues, who joined forces with us in what became a ‘to be or not to be’ fight.

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, yet it is by no means demagogic.


Huzama Habayeb is a Palestinian novelist.
 
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The only way according to u muslims and non-muslims can co-exist peacefully is if non-muslims remain subservient to muslims...
.... But personally speaking I say there might yet be a chance where one day Muslims and Jews can co-exist peacefully once more like they always did since the start of Islam.

The way this is to be done is to establish a two state solution with the Jewish majority areas becoming Israel and the Arab majority areas which are currently under Israeli control is allowed to become Palestine with their elected representatives. This is not "sub-servient" to muslims at all. Israel will have its won political borders where it will be sovereign and independant. And this is supported by majorities in Arab countries as well according to as recent as a 2010 survey
Poll: 85% agree to two-state solution - JPost - Middle East
 
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Well in General Arabic people feel disgusted by anything that is even remotely related to Israel. Even saying the word is bad because that land is called "Occupied Palestine". But personally speaking I say there might yet be a chance where one day Muslims and Jews can co-exist peacefully once more like they always did since the start of Islam.

How can there be ever peace if Arabs are not even ready to cooperate with individual Israelis or to meet them and talk to them?
 
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