http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=52A81A38-23C3-4BA9-AF94-
CD5E13611980
 
What Influence Does Saudi Money Buy?            
By
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/aut
hors.aspx?Name=Asaf Romirowsky> Asaf Romirowsky
Jewish Exponent | Tuesday, January 22, 2008 

An Islamic group came to Temple University last spring with an offer to
provide $1.5 million for an endowed chair in Islamic studies to honor
religion professor Mahmoud Ayoub. After months of talks, the deal never got
off the ground, once trustees and others raised concerns about the
contributor, the International Institute of Islamic Thought, a nonprofit
research group that had been under scrutiny as part of a government probe
into the funding of suspected terrorists. 

Some would like to consider money given by Saudis and other Arab nations to
American universities as generous gifts to those U.S. universities who have
educated their elites. A closer look reveals a different picture that
includes incitement, anti-Semitism and a skewed view of Islam. 


There have been some cases when universities have turned down funds. In July
2000, the Harvard Divinity School first accepted $2.5 million from the ruler
of the United Arab Emirates, Sheik Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, to endow an
academic chair in Islamic Religious Studies. However, Rachel Fish, a
divinity student at the time and a founding member of Harvard University
Graduate-Students Friends of Israel, raised an uproar, documenting the
sheik's anti-Semitic ties. 


The Harvard administration was forced to face facts and take a closer look
at who was offering the funds -- and why. As a result, the money was not
accepted; in 2004, the sheik withdrew funds. 


But this is not the norm. Several years ago, a multimillion gift from the
Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal was shared between Harvard and Georgetown
universities. 


These monetary efforts began in the 1960s and '70s, with Muslim donors
funneling millions of dollars into American universities to support Islamic
studies, hire faculty specialists in Islam, and fund the writing of books
and seminars on the topic. 


Such support represents one of the biggest problems academia faces today --
that is, how to arrive at a fair and balanced discussion when it relates to
Mideast studies. 


A disturbing variable in the equation, which complicates the situation
further, is the unwillingness of many American Jews to take a strong stand
on the Arab-Israeli conflict. In particular, rabbis and Jewish educators --
no matter where they stand on the political spectrum -- often behave in an
apologetic manner when it comes to Israel, rather than make assertive
arguments from a Zionist point of view. 


This unwillingness to confront the pro-Palestinian propaganda being nurtured
by Middle Eastern-studies departments is one of the major sources of
confusion among Jewish students. For example, so long as liberal American
Jews fail to speak up about the issue of post-1948 Jewish refugees from Arab
lands, and instead, merely allow the discussion to center on a Palestinian
"right of return," Jewish students will be on the defensive. 


If pro-Israel advocates on campus are discussing the Jewish state only in
terms of "Israeli oppression," rather than in debunking such notions, the
result is always going to favor the anti-Israel forces. That is why college
campuses today have become podiums for those who denigrate Israel, as is
apparent from the different human rights, anti-globalization and
anti-imperialism groups that have adopted the Palestinian cause. 


Within academic circles, individual views are often turned into a political
litmus test. For example, Fouad Ajami, the articulate interpreter of Arab
culture and politics who teaches at Johns Hopkins University, has been
subject to scathing attacks from Arab critics. Ostensibly, these critics
find his scholarship faulty. In reality, they see him as too soft on the
question of Israel, and worse, selling out to the enemy. 


As we look to educate ourselves and the next generation about Israel and the
Middle East, we should question the sheer amount of cash being offered and
the influence these people are thereby buying, creating bastions of
noncritical, pro-Islamic scholarship within academia. 

 



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