Atlas Shrugs
April 14, 2014

_Jeffrey Herf to Brandeis: Dropping Hirsi Ali “Act of  Cowardice and 
Appeasment” _ 
(http://p.feedblitz.com/r3.asp?l=89771504&f=26412&u=13042656&c=4747918) 
 


 
Dear President Lawrence: 
As a scholar whose 1981 PhD comes from Brandeis, I read the news that you  
rescinded the offer of an honorary degree to Ayaan Hirsi Ali with particular 
 disgust and anger. Your decision is an act of cowardice and appeasement to 
 those 85 faculty members who signed their document of intolerance, and it 
has  done deep and long-lasting damage to a university whose very existence 
is  predicated on redressing the damage that discrimination within the 
academy had  done to American Jews for so many years. Unless you can find some 
way to  repair the damage you have done, I will not identify with or support 
Brandeis  as long as you are its President.
 
Ms. Hirsi has had the courage to say unpopular things about the religion of 
 Islam and the ideology of Islamism. In two of my prize-winning books, Nazi 
 Propaganda for the Arab World (Yale University Press, 2009) and The  
Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda during World War II and the Holocaust  (Harvard 
University Press, 2006), I have had occasion to address the role of  Islam and 
Islamism in fanning the flames of Jew-hatred. In publishing work  that 
documents the role of the Islamist interpretation of the Koran in  promulgating 
the most absurd and idiotic ideas about the Jews, I have faced  intolerance 
from scholars working on the Middle East. They have denounced  well-founded 
scholarship as "Islamophobia" or "Zionist propaganda" and denied  that the 
Koran or Islamism could possibly have anything to do with  anti-Semitism. Like 
Tony Kushner and Desmond Tutu, to whom Brandeis has given  honorary 
degrees, they have erroneously argued that Arab and Islamist  antagonism to 
Israel 
is exclusively the result of the alleged sins of  Israel. As far as I know, 
neither has had anything of substance to say about  the role of Islam and 
Islamism in fanning the flames of hatred of the Jews and  of Israel. These 
critics have said that those of us who point to the  anti-Jewish elements of 
the Koran and the Jew-hatred of modern Islamists are  guilty of intolerance 
towards Muslims. I have seen this up close for years  now. The last place I 
expected to find groveling, embarrassing appeasement of  this rubbish was from 
the president of Brandeis University. 
No doubt, Hirsi’s comments about Islam offend many believers. The same  
was true of Sigmund Freud's Future of an Illusion. Freud, you will  recall, 
dismissed religion as the product of a universal infantile neurosis of  
humanity. Yet I doubt that if Freud were alive today, those 85 faculty members  
would have protested his honorary degree. On the contrary, his criticism of  
religion in general, especially of Judaism or Christianity, would be seen 
as  simply an entry ticket into intellectual respectability. 
Your decision reflects a now-widespread double standard of broad criticism  
of Judaism and Christianity combined with fear, yes it is fear to write and 
 speak with equal critical spirit about Islam. We historians of modern 
Germany  and Nazism know that the Nazi interpretation of Christianity as well 
as 
the  core texts of the Christian tradition itself, were used by the Nazis 
to  justify their mass murders. In our own time, Hamas, Hezbollah, the Muslim 
 Brothers, Al Qaeda and the government of Iran, despite their differences, 
all  draw on phrases from the Koran and in the texts of subsequent Islamic  
commentaries to find theological justification for antagonism to Jews, 
Zionism  and the state of Israel. 
Ayaan Hirsi Ali has been willing   to point this out, something  Kushner 
and Tutu have never done. That the president of a university founded  by Jews 
in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust should have rescinded an  honor 
to a woman who has had the courage to attack the most important source  of 
Jew-hatred in the world today is a disgraceful act and a failure of  
leadership. Instead of appeasing intolerance in your faculty, you should have  
taken 
this moment to reaffirm the values for which Brandeis has stood for so  
long and reconfirm the place of universities as models of tolerance and  
enlightenment in our troubled society. Once a proud alumnus, I will be forced  
to 
disavow my relationship with Brandeis in the future. 
 
Sincerely, 
Jeffrey Herf 
Professor, Department of History 
University of Maryland 
College  Park



-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to