In these times...
Smear tactics and confrontations against Middle East scholars
have begun to threaten the rights of free speech and inquiry
April 28, 2005
iranian.com
Message from Ali Banuazizi, President of the
Middle East
Studies Association of North America, an international community
of scholars and educators
specializing in the region.
A deep paradox besets the field of Middle Eastern studies and the
pre-eminent association that represents it in North America these
days. On the one hand, there is a wide recognition of the critical
need for expert knowledge and deeper understanding of the Middle
East and the Muslim world as the United States faces its most vexing,
intractable, and high-stake challenges in this vast region, especially
at a time when America's relations with the people of the
region are fraught with misperceptions, distrust, and hostility.
Whether it is in the arena of human rights, democratization,
political reform, religious extremism, international terrorism,
nuclear proliferation;
in coping with the consequences of an ill-conceived war; or helping
the Palestinians and Israelis achieve a durable peace, the Middle
East continues to be at center-stage of the U.S. foreign policy
concerns. At the level of the public, too, one sees a surge of
interest in the Middle East, particularly since the tragic events
of September 11th, reflected in the much wider readership of books
about the region, in the extensive mass-media coverage, and in
the remarkable popularity of courses on Middle Eastern languages,
cultures, and politics on our college campuses.
On the other hand,
precisely at such a time of national need and public interest,
the field of Middle Eastern studies and many of
its practitioners are facing a barrage of criticisms, accusations
of ideological bias and distortion of the truth, mediocrity, and
irrelevance to the nation's foreign policy goals. There have
been even accusations that scholars in the field failed to foretell
threats to the nation's security by religious extremists-confusing
the function of scholarship with that of intelligence gathering
and analysis.
Skeptical about the academy's own ability to
conduct its business of teaching and research with the requisite
objectivity and independence, there have been several legislative
initiatives at the state and federal levels to establish monitoring
mechanisms to ensure "balance and fairness" at publicly
funded programs of Middle Eastern studies and presumably similar
programs focused on other world regions.
Others in this crusade,
less patient, and more zealous in their cause, have seen fit
to encourage academic vigilantism on campuses to watch, report,
and
if necessary to intimidate scholars who present "biased," "anti-American,"
"pro-Islamic," or "pro-Palestinian" views in their class lectures,
in public statements outside their institutions,
or in their writings. Often, these charges, as well as any
criticism of current Israeli policies, are described as being anti-Israel
and therefore, until proven otherwise, ipso facto "anti-Semitic."
Not surprisingly, such smear tactics and confrontations
have begun to threaten the rights of free speech and inquiry and,
if
not contained,
could potentially undermine the integrity of our academic
institutions. Insofar as the substantive criticisms came from those
who see serious flaws and biases in the dominant paradigms or
the prevailing
political
sentiments in our
field, they can do no harm and may indeed stimulate critical debates,
which in the long run could be highly beneficial. Many of our members
will remember that,
a generation ago, our association was criticized for being too supportive
of the status quo in the Middle East, unresponsive to gender
issues, and oblivious
to the economic inequalities and the political oppression that characterized
many Middle Eastern societies.
A decade later, MESA, like other area-studies
associations, was faulted for marginalizing the study of the Middle
East and thus making it less susceptible to the intellectual
and
methodological rigors
of discipline-based inquiry. Both of these critiques seem to have given
way in recent years to other concerns. The key difference
between
our field's
former critics and those who proudly declare themselves to be MESA's
nemesis today is the latter's willingness to stoop to the level
of ad hominem attacks,
defamation, and intimidation.
Aside from the problem of tactics, what
many of MESA's current detractors have managed to do, unwittingly
or deliberately, is to locate the association's
mission and scholarly concerns within the very narrow confines of
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, contemporary Middle Eastern politics,
and, more recently, the
U.S.-led war on Islamic extremism and terrorism.
While all these
concerns
are certainly
important in their own right, they do not represent the professional
or scholarly interests of many-perhaps even the majority-of our
members. Indeed,
any attempt to place our association in one or another ideological
straitjacket is clearly a misrepresentation of the facts. Simply
put, MESA has never
spoken
with a single voice on the Arab-Israeli conflict, on the war on
terrorism, on the invasion of Iraq, or any other major American
foreign policy
issue. And hopefully
it never will.
What MESA does, with enviable distinction and effectiveness,
is to promote scholarship on the Middle East and Islam through
its publication
of a
flagship journal and
bulletin, by holding annual meetings that are attended by thousands
of young and well-established scholars and students, and by recognizing
genuine scholarly
achievement through its various award programs. It performs a watchdog
function on ethical issues. And, finally, it has steadfastly stood
for
and defended
freedom of expression and inquiry for scholars and public intellectuals
in the region
and, of recent, in the United States.
As a well-established association
that will be celebrating its 40th anniversary next year, we have
the esprit de corps, the intellectual
resources, and
the organizational capacity to absorb and take to heart constructive
criticisms of our ways and
our scholarship, and, when needed, to rebut ill-intended accusations.
Our real strength as a mature professional association,
I believe, is demonstrated
by
our ability to welcome and accommodate colleagues with diverse
perspectives
on the critical issues that we face. These are goals that MESA
and those of us privileged
to serve it as directors and staff members will continue to
pursue-not because
we have been prompted to do so by our detractors, but out of
our own sense of professionalism and commitment to an open and
vibrant
association
for
all those
in the field of Middle Eastern studies.
About
Professor Banuazizi has offered a course on the History of
Modern Iran in the History Department at Boston College since the
early
1980s. He served as Editor of the Journal of Iranian
Studies, from 1968 to 1982. He is a past president of the
Society for Iranian Studies, a member of the Advisory Committee
of Encyclopaedia
Iranica, and the Board of Directors of the Middle East Studies
Association of North America and its Committee on Academic Freedom
in the Middle East. Homepage.
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