Sunday Aug 23, 2009

Inside the Middle East: Some day, Yale's prince will come

Posted by Martin Kramer
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One of the most disturbing aspects of the Danish cartoons scandal at Yale University Press is the role of the university administration.

When author Jytte Klausen was summoned by John Donatich, director of the press, to hear that it wouldn't publish the cartoons in her book about them, Donatich had company. Also present were the chair of Yale's Mideast center, Marcia Inhorn, and Linda Lorimer, Yale vice president and secretary of the Yale Corporation.

Klausen now asserts that the university effectively forced the hand of press, by collecting almost "unanimous" opinions of "experts" warning that violence would erupt if the images were republished.

Klausen: "Once the university had decided to collect these alarmist reports about the consequences [of including the pictures], there was very little the press could do. That is why I agreed to go ahead with it, [although] I disagree with it."

The press has confirmed reaching its decision "after receiving the outside advice collected by the university." And that advice was collected from on high. Islamic art historian Sheila Blair, one of the outside experts (who recommended in favor of publication), says she was approached by an assistant in the office of Yale president Richard Levin.

What prompted the Yale administration to intervene? Roger Kimball and Diana West have already suggested that Yale University is foraging for funding from oil-soaked Arab sources.

Yale's administration intervened not to prevent violence, but to prevent damage to its fundraising prospects in Araby. There's a strong prima facie case for this, and it revolves around Yale's courting of Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal.

Over the years, I've reported on Prince Alwaleed's efforts to buy up prime academic real estate in the United States. It was six years ago, in July 2003, that Alwaleed, then the world's fifth-richest man, announced his plan to go on what I called "an academic shopping spree."

On a stop in Britain, Alwaleed revealed that "I am in the process of establishing centers of Arab and Islamic studies at select universities in the United States." I made a prediction:

If you want a fabulously wealthy Saudi royal to drop out of the sky in his private jet and leave a few million, you had better watch what you say. Prince Alwaleed's buying binge is liable to reduce the entire field [of Middle Eastern studies] to a cargo cult, with profs and center directors dancing the ardha in the hope of attracting the flying prince. In the near future, don't be surprised to see grinning university presidents posing with Prince Alwaleed. They will say there are no strings attached. Puris omnia pura: To the pure all things are pure."

Sure enough, in December 2005, Harvard and Georgetown universities announced that they'd each received $20 million endowments from Prince Alwaleed - Harvard for an Islamic studies program and Georgetown for John Esposito's Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding.

Sure enough, a photographer captured Georgetown's President John J. DeGioia beaming alongside the Prince, and a Georgetown administrator made the inevitable assurance: "The funds are designated, but there are no strings attached."

The crucial thing to know about Prince Alwaleed is that he believes in "strategic philanthropy." He's not tied emotionally to particular universities, and he's not interested in honors. He seeks maximum return on investment.

The two $20 million gifts he made in 2005 followed a semi-secret competition, in which half a dozen institutions put on their most Saudi-friendly face. Alwaleed later named some names in an interview with the New York Times: Harvard, Georgetown, Chicago, Michigan, "and several of the Ivy Leagues" were in the running. The interviewer pressed for more names. "Please. Keep the other universities out," said Alwaleed. "I'd rather not embarrass them."

Who was spared embarrassment? The Yale Daily News asked President Levin if Yale had been in the race; Levin "said two University proposals had been in the final running." Finalist, but not a winner.

But everyone assumes that Alwaleed will run another competition. He isn't worth as much as he was a few years back, but according to Forbes, he's still worth over $13 billion. (In March, he summoned a Forbes reporter to spend a week with him, just to prove he's still living the opulent life. "Observing wealth on this scale, even for a seasoned billionaires reporter, was staggering.")

And he's still in the academic market - so says Muna AbuSulayman, executive director of the Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation: "Because of what is happening (in the markets) people might think he is stopping his philanthropy; on the contrary he is fully committed to his charity goals no matter what happens."

According to her, the Alwaleed Foundation has set aside $100 million for its Islam-West dialogue project, which endowed the centers at Harvard and Georgetown.

This same Muna AbuSulayman is also Alwaleed's point-person for his academic programs. "I used to work with him at Kingdom Holding, I was head of strategic studies, and I was given the assignment of doing the first centers in the US. I guess I did such a good job that he actually offered me the foundation."

You can see her in this photo of Alwaleed with Georgetown's president, and in this one of Alwaleed with Harvard's provost (she's the one with the hijab).

AbuSulayman continues to monitor the Alwaleed centers; in March, she convened their directors in London for their first joint planning meeting. (In this photo, she's surrounded by the directors of the endowed centers, including Georgetown's John Esposito and Harvard's Roy Mottahedeh. Look carefully for strings attached.)

Now it gets interesting. In April, Yale named Muna AbuSulayman a "Yale World Fellow" for 2009.

This isn't some honorific, and she'll reside from August through December in New Haven. (Her Facebook fan page, August 16: "I need help locating a Town House/condo for short term leasing near Yale University... Anyone familiar with that area?")

Can you imagine a better way to set the stage for a major Alwaleed gift? Hosting for a semester the very person who structured the Harvard and Georgetown gifts, and who now directs Alwaleed's charitable foundation? A stroke of genius.

Imagine, then - and we're just imagining - that someone in the Yale administration, perhaps in President Levin's office, gets wind of the fact that Yale University Press is about to publish a book on the Danish cartoons - The Cartoons That Shook the World.

The book is going to include the Danish cartoons, plus earlier depictions of the Prophet Muhammad tormented in Dante's Inferno, and who-knows-what-else. Whooah!

Good luck explaining to people like Prince Alwaleed that Yale University and Yale University Press are two different shops.

The university can't interfere in editorial matters, so what's to be done?

Summon some "experts," who'll be smart enough to know just what to say. Yale will be accused of surrendering to an imagined threat by extremists, but so be it: self-censorship to spare bloodshed in Nigeria or Indonesia still sounds a lot nobler than self-censorship to keep a Saudi prince on the line for $20 million.

Yale has seen its endowment suffer billions in losses, and its administration has the mission of making the bucks back. Yale's motto is lux et veritas, light and truth, but these days it might as well be pecunia non olet: money has no odor -whatever its source.

Still, that isn't the mission of Yale University Press, which seeks to help authors of exceptional merit shed full light on the truth.

More than three years ago, I warned against "the deep corruption that Prince Alwaleed's buying spree is spreading through academe and Middle Eastern studies." If this is what caused Yale University to trespass so rudely against the independence of its press, then the rot has spread even further than I imagined.

I've been a reader for Yale University Press, which I think publishes a more interesting list in Middle Eastern studies than any university press. But if editorial decisions are to be subjected to vetting and possible abortion by Yale's money collectors, why bother?

Ignore all the denials, and watch for a hefty gift from Arabia, perhaps for another Alwaleed program in Islamic apologetics. Fat endowments speak louder than words - or cartoons.

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1  |   A.L., Sunday Aug 23, 2009
ever tried to publish a Holocaust-denial book in a Publishing House owned by a Jew? Or, ever tried to get tenure writing about the Holocaust Industry? Or, ever tried to get funding for a Hollywood movie where the Jews are not the victims? There are biases everywhere. No reason to complain (and, BTW, this is really beyond Martin Kramer, who is an excellent scholar)
2  |   Zak, Milwaukee, Sunday Aug 23, 2009
A.L. the Holocaust really happened; it's an disputable historical fact. Comparing it to the Muhammad cartoon controversy is like comparing apples to oranges.
3  |   Jack, Sunday Aug 23, 2009
To the first poster: Are you really trying to compare the refusal to publish holocaust denial literature to refusing to publish a couple of pictures in order to pander to a couple of Islamists? I'm sure that many would hesitate to pulish something denying the genocide in Darfur as well. Is that also somehow comparable? Also, a not-insignificant point being made is the biasing of the university Middle-East departments across the states. (Something which seems almost redundant and unnecessary due to the already iron-clasp the radical left has on our University Campuses already).
4  |   DJStahl, USA, Sunday Aug 23, 2009
"A.L." What? You can't seriously compare Holocaust-denial with this. That's "Big Lie" technique. Notable Hollywood movies have been made where Jews aren't victims, but energetic heroes: "Defiance" and "Escape from Sobibor" among them. And big movies with Jewish villains aren't rare: the remake of "Starsky and Hutch," for example. Norman G. Finkelstein the only guy I've heard of who wrote extensively on what he called the Holocaust industry; it's more likely he got shot down on tenure because he called Dershowitz a plagiarist -- and academics round the US handed Finkelstein his head.
5  |   Stuart Creque, USA, Sunday Aug 23, 2009
Had Yale University Press decided not to publish a scholarly work on the Danish cartoons at all, there likely would have been little uproar. But having decided to publish a scholarly work on the subject and THEN telling the author that the very subject of the work cannot be included in the work itself ranks as the worst form of hypocritical self-censorship and a complete betrayal of the University's stated principles.
6  |   Jan, Australia, Monday Aug 24, 2009
There is a deep irony here. Anyone read the the book by Muhammad the subject of the cartoons? If you haven't it will only take 2 days to read, and it's worth a read. He was undoubtedly the master of critical comment on other religions! So Yale of the American free speech, prevents a Dane, versed in liberal expression, from publishing a critical picture or a man who had no hesitation in criticising other religions of his day. How ironic that the liberal and free should sell their souls to their own repression!
7  |   Chris USA, Monday Aug 24, 2009
In any capitalist economy service of the greater common good is an aristolean accident. The engine that drives the system is concentration of capital. Unless you're a Gomez Adams with enough funds to challenge Prince Alwaleed your probably not going to succeed.
8  |   Marvin, Israel, Monday Aug 24, 2009
Publishing for Dhimmis
9  |   Elisabeth Almqvist, sweden., Monday Aug 24, 2009
Extract from Book by Walid Shoebat:.".Mecca exerts morespiritual influence of false theology on more people than any other city on earth. Today major Universities such as Harvard, Cambridge, Georgetown and many others have been bought by the Saudis to create Islamist friendly indoktrinations program. Saudi Arabia exports radical Islam to every nation in the world. Why are we having so much trouble today radical Islam ? It's because Saudi-Arabia has exported Wahabbism throughout the world. Today, we have over a billion people who bows down daily towards an image in Arabia. Arabia has OIL..
10  |   Padraig nyc, Tuesday Aug 25, 2009
Thanks for this enlightening article. Yale's motto should be Lex Luther, not that the Jebbies at Georgetown are any better. They'd all wear turbans for a few more bucks, and "spin" the campus so it's headed East. God protect us from the money changers.
11  |   Bernard Ross, Friday Aug 28, 2009
This explains the animosity towards israel in academic circles. nothing is mentioned of the connection between the prince and obama through khalid al mansour and as to whether the prince financed obamas autobiography and harvard law school stint. Sudden meteoric rises are best explained by financial backing which usually has its price. Since when does a hrvard law student write an autobiography
12  |   Gary, Canada, Saturday Aug 29, 2009
It is easier to get tenure these days for denying Holocaust than for denying other historical facts or promoting other conspiracy theories. There are plenty of academicians in the West who hostile to Jews and most of them have tenure. The book in question is not denying any historical facts. My suggestion to the author is to go ahead and publish the book anyway, without the cartoons. The readers will understand what is going on. This action will speak for itself. A book about the cartoons without the cartoons.
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Inside the Middle East Shalem Center's Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies' scholar of Islam and the Arab world Martin Kramer on this turbulent region.

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