"Mi
Hermosa Antigua Casa" y otras Fabricaciones de Edward Said
por
Justus Reid Weiner
|
Commentary "My Beautiful
Old House" and Justus Reid Weiner AMONG SPOKESMEN for the
Palestinian cause in our day, surely none is so articulate, or so
well-known, as Edward W. Said. The holder of an endowed chair in English
and comparative literature at Columbia University,[1]
a prolific author of books[2]
and articles[3]
both scholarly[4]
and popular, a frequent lecturer[5]
and commentator on radio and television,[6]
a sometime diplomatic intermediary[7]
and congressional witness,[8]
the subject of countless profiles and interviews in the world media,[9]
Said--who was born in Jerusalem in 1935 The adulation in which Said is
held by Palestinians themselves is suggested by a recent ceremony honoring
him at the U.S.--based Palestinian Heritage Institute that was attended by
450 Arab diplomats and Arab-Americans,[10]
as by the overflow audience of 1,000 that gathered to hear him lecture
last year in Bethlehem.[11]
But his prestige is no less high among American and European academics and
intellectuals, who have extravagantly praised his literary scholarship and
admire his uncompromising politics. As for the scholarship, his most
famous book, Orientalism (1978),[12]
with its bold thesis that the Western study of Islam (and by extension
other cultures) is itself a form of "colonialism," has had as
profound and radicalizing an influence on literary studies in colleges and
universities as it has had on Islamic self-perceptions. And as for
politics, so stringent is Said's vision of the Middle East that in recent
years he has changed from being a supporter of Yasir Arafat to a
vociferous opponent, accusing the PLO chairman of having betrayed 50 years
of Palestinian aspirations by signing the Oslo agreements with Israel.[13]
The very model of an engaged
academic, Said has been politically active since at least the late 1960's,
when he co-founded the fervently pro-Palestinian Association of
Arab-American University Graduates.[14]
In 1974, he was the principal author and translator of Arafat's notorious
address to the UN General Assembly in which the PLO leader brandished both
a gun and an olive branch;[15]
during the Carter years he transmitted overtures between Arafat and the
administration, and in the Reagan years participated in the breakthrough
meeting of a member of the Palestine National Council (PNC), the PLO's
"parliament in exile," with Secretary of State George Shultz;[16]
and he himself served for many years as a member of the PNC. [17]
Said's books bearing directly on the Palestinian issue include After
the Last Sky: Palestinian Lives (1986); Blaming the Victims:
Spurious Scholarship and the Palestine Question (1988); The Pen and
the Sword (1994); The Politics of Dispossession: The Struggle for
Palestinian Self-Determination (1995); and Peace and Its
Discontents: Essays on Palestine in the Middle East Peace Process (1996).
There can be no doubt that a
great deal of the moral authority accruing to Edward Said derives as much
from his personal as from his intellectual credentials.[18]
As a living embodiment of the Palestinian cause, he has made much in print
and on film of his birth, childhood, and schooling in Palestine,[19]
telling a story of idyllic beginnings[20]
and violent disruption--of a paradise lost--that resonates with personal
pain while also serving as a powerfully compelling metaphor for the larger
Palestinian condition.[201]
As Salman Rushdie put it in lauding Said's After the Last Sky, in
writing about his "internal struggle: the anguish of living with
displacement, with exile,"[22]
Said "enables us to feel the pain of his people."[23]
Both his personal pain and the
pain he feels for his people are on especially vivid display in a 1998 BBC
documentary that Said both wrote and narrated, In Search of Palestine.
The film, aired around the world to mark the 50th anniversary of the
Palestinian nakbah ("disaster") of 1948, and recently
shown in New York on the local PBS affiliate, features extensive footage
of Said standing outside his birthplace at what is now 10 Brenner Street
in Jewish western Jerusalem.
But just the mention of that
birthplace confronts us with a problem. Although Said has defined his own
intellectual vocation as one of "tell[ing] the truth against
extremely difficult odds"[24]--he
has sweepingly declared that the duty of the intellectual is "to
speak the truth, as plainly, directly, and as honestly as possible"[25]--it
turns out that, in retailing the facts of his own personal biography over
the years, he has spoken anything but the plain, direct, or honest
truth. Instead, he has served up, and consciously encouraged others to
serve up, a wildly distorted version of the truth, made up in equal parts
of outright deception and of artful obfuscations carefully tailored to
strengthen his wider ideological agenda--and in particular to promote the
claims of Palestinian refugees against Israel.
For the past three years I
have been looking into the core autobiographical assertions made by Said
about his childhood in Palestine[26]--a
childhood that he has repeatedly asserted[27]
is central to the formation of his political thought and indeed of his
emblematic political identity as a Palestinian refugee. My search, a
fascinating adventure in itself, took me through sometimes obscure public
records and archives in five countries on four continents and involved
tracking down and interviewing numerous relatives, neighbors, school
classmates, and professional colleagues. Virtually everything I learned,
the principal conclusions of which are set out below, contradicts the
story of Said's early life as Said has told it.
To complicate matters still
further, however, some time after completing the manuscript of this
article, I learned of the forthcoming publication of another new book by
Said, a memoir entitled Out of Place[28]
--that is due to be released later this month. Remarkably--but, as I shall
have reason to speculate later, perhaps not surprisingly--this new book
thoroughly revises the personal tale Said has been reciting all these
years, bringing it into greater conformity with the truth while at the
same time ignoring his 30 years of carefully crafted deception.
But I am getting ahead of
myself. In order to untangle the strands of this enigma, we must begin by
examining what has been the standard version of the life of Edward Said
and see where and how it diverges from the facts.
II
FOR A characteristic rendition
of the standard version, we need look no farther than a long and typically
admiring feature article on Said that appeared almost exactly a year ago
in the New York Times ("A Palestinian Confronts Time," by
Janny Scott, September 19, 1998[29]).
Here is the relevant paragraph:
And here, from Current
Biography Yearbook (1989), in a five-page profile personally approved
by its subject, is a more expansive take:
But why rely on the words of
others? Both of these summaries merely recapitulate Said's own oft-recited
outline of his early life:
This same rendering of his
early years recurs over and over again in writings both by and about Said.[34]
(Thus, for example, the website of the Nation, a magazine with
which he is affiliated as a music critic: "In 1948, Said and his
family were dispossessed from Palestine and settled in Cairo.")[35]
It is what undergirds his self-definition as an archetypal
"exile"--i.e., one who, like his people in general, was
separated from his homeland in a sudden act of historic violence. Except
for the detail of his birth, it is a tissue of falsehoods.
III
HERE ARE the bare bones of the
truth: Said's father Wadie (also known as William)[36]
grew up and went to school in Jerusalem but evidently emigrated in 1911 to
the United States. During World War I, he reportedly served with American
forces in Europe before returning to the Middle East with a U.S. passport
to start what would become a very successful career in business.[37]
At least nine years prior to his son's birth in 1935, however, Wadie Said
was already residing permanently in Cairo, Egypt. There, according to the
1926 French edition of The Egyptian Directory, he owned the
Standard Stationery Company. The company prospered sufficiently to open a
branch in Alexandria in 1929 and in due course a second store in Cairo
itself. [38]
And Jerusalem? In that city
lived Wadie Said's brother Boulos Yusef, his wife Nabiha, and their five
children.[43]
To this branch of the family, as to other destinations, the affluent
Cairo-based Saids made periodic visits.[44]
In November 1935, during one of those visits, Edward Said was born. On his
birth certificate, prepared by the ministry of health of the British
Mandate, his parents specified their permanent address as Cairo, and,
indicating that they maintained no residence in Palestine, left blank
the space for a local address.[45]
Similarly blank is the entry for a local address in the church record of
Edward Said's baptism, an event that likewise took place in Jerusalem two
years later.[46]
Of the 29 telephone and commercial directories for Jerusalem and Palestine
from 1931 through 1948 that I was able to locate, more than half carry
business and/or residential listings for Boulos Said and his wife. There
are no listings for Edward Said's parents in any of the directories,
whether in English, Hebrew, or Arabic.[47]
But wait. During his visit in
1992, according to Said, he was able to locate his "family's
house" only because a cousin then living in Canada "had drawn me
a map from memory that he sent along with a copy of the title deed."[53]
If that is so--if, that is, Said really had in hand a copy of the title
deed to what he has described as "my beautiful old house"--then
he could not have helped noticing the absence on it of his parents' names,
his siblings' names, or his own name. For it never was, and is not now,
their or his house.
Is it not curious in the
extreme that Said, while on record as remembering the "rooms [in this
house] where as a boy he read Sherlock Holmes and Tarzan,
and where he and his mother read Shakespeare to each other,"[65]
has nowhere brought to mind the presence upstairs of the Yugoslavian
consulate, the comings and goings of visa-seekers, diplomats, and
politicians, including for a time the king of Yugoslavia himself, or the
arrival of limousines and their elegantly attired occupants for official
functions like the annual Yugoslavian independence-day reception? On
November 29, 1947, the very night the UN voted in favor of the partition
plan for Palestine, and a couple of weeks before he has told us the Saids
were forced to leave for Cairo, this reception was attended by no lesser
figures than the British-appointed mayor of Jerusalem;[66]
Golda Meir, then director of the political department at the Jewish
Agency;[67]
Hussein Haldi, the secretary of the Arab Higher Committee;[68]
and most of the city's social and political elite.[69]
Is it not curious, again, that Martin Buber's residence in this house should have gone unnoticed by Edward Said? Actually, that is not so; at least, not quite. In 1992, Said wrote of having heard, years earlier, "that Martin Buber had lived in the house for a time after 1948" (emphasis added).[76] Last year, in a speech at Birzeit University on the West Bank, he amplified this thought with characteristic vehemence:
But the truth is the other way
around: it was Said's aunt who evicted the Bubers,[78]
an event--surely a memorable one--that took place during the very period
when Edward Said was allegedly growing up in the selfsame house, and long
before Israel's war of independence in 1948. But there can be little
wonder why neither that event, nor the presence in and subsequent removal
from the building of Martin Buber's surely no less memorable library of
some 15,000 books,[79]
has ever figured in his meticulous recollections of "my beautiful old
house . . . in Al-Talbiyeh." The Bubers and their library were there.
Said was not.
NONE OF this, to be sure, is
to gainsay the possibility or even the likelihood that, after 1942, when
the Bubers had departed and Nabiha Said and her five children moved in,[80]
Edward Said's nuclear family may have stayed for brief periods with their
cousins on the main entrance floor at 10 Brenner Street. By now, however,
both families would have been quite large, while the apartment in question
had a grand total of only four bedrooms.[81]
Assuming two were set aside for parents, this would have meant
accommodating ten children in the remaining two bedrooms, without even
taking into account the needs of grandparents or live-in servants,
drivers, cooks, and the like. It is hard to imagine Wadie Said, accustomed
as he was to spacious arrangements, enduring this for any great length of
time.[82]
VI LET US look now at the latter
part of that sentence: that is, at the circumstances of the Said family's
departure as "refugees" from Jerusalem to Cairo, an event Said
himself has repeatedly placed in mid-December 1947.
In the first, on December 21,
1947, an Anglo-Jewish journalist for Palestine Post was shot
dead by Arabs.[100]
In the second, which occurred on February 11, 1948, a member of the
Haganah, the indigenous Jewish defense force,[101]
was wounded by an Arab,[102]
and that same day, at the unauthorized behest of the Haganah sector
commander,[103]
a sound van proceeded to drive through the area, warning Arabs to
evacuate.[104]
According to the Hebrew newspaper Ha'aretz (February 12, 1948), the
three Haganah men in the vehicle were promptly arrested by British police.[105]
And elsewhere: "I
lost--and my family lost its property and rights in 1948."[118]
Compensation is owed for that property, he insists, as for all lost
Palestinian property. "I've never believed in giving that up. If we
lost it, then it has to be paid for by the Israelis."[119]
Perhaps little was to be hoped
for, it is true, in connection with his father's alleged interest in the
Palestine Educational Company. This store stood on Jaffa Street in an area
looted and burned by Arab rioters in late 1947,[125]
heavily damaged by shell fire during the war of 1948-49,[126]
and remaining in no-man's-land between Jordanian and Israeli positions
until Jerusalem was reunited by Israel in the Six-Day war of 1967;[127]
by that time, certainly, there could have been nothing left to salvage.
But the house is another matter: according to the head of the most
prominent real-estate agency in Israel, the building at 10 Brenner Street
is worth, at the most conservative estimate, $1.8 million today.[128]
And, financial gain apart, think of the example an action of this kind on
Said's part would set for his fellow Palestinians, and of the inestimable
political value that would accrue from what would inevitably become a
highly publicized and, to Israel, potentially quite embarrassing
proceeding.
VIII
Whatever we do finally make of
all this, there can be no denying that the parable itself is a lie. An
artful lie; a skillful lie; above all, a very useful and by now widely
accepted lie--but a lie. As he continues the process of silently
"spinning" this lie, a process now auspiciously launched in Out
of Place, it will be especially interesting to see who among his
legions of admirers, or among the friends of the Palestinian people, will
notice or care. That is a question with reverberations far, far
beyond the shifts and dodges and brazen misrepresentations of one
prevaricating intellectual.[141]
[1]. He is the Parr Professor of English and Comparative Literature, and one of only nine current Columbia faculty members recognized with the title of University Professor. Columbia University Bulletin (1997), 8. [2]. According to one source, Said has written 10 books. "Edward W. Said: Contributing Writer and Music Critic," Internet, http://www.thenation.com, Oct. 10, 1997. In a 1997 interview, Said put the number at 18 books. Robert Marquand, "Conversations with Outstanding Americans: Edward Said," Christian Science Monitor, May 27, 1997, 10. By 1998, he was credited with 20 books. Written citation for Edward W. Said's honorary degree, University of Michigan, n.d. Internet message from mjfrank@ umich.edu, May 4, 1998, 2. Whatever the actual number, they are regularly assigned in college courses throughout the United States and Europe. Eqbal Ahmad, Introduction to The Pen and the Sword by Edward W. Said (1994), 7. Another indication of Said's influence is an index of articles about his writings, containing 986 entries. Internet, University of California at Irvine, "Selected Critical References to Edward W. Said and His Writings," visited Mar. 7, 1998. [3]. Said writes articles about the Middle East and other subjects for the Progressive and contributes a twice-monthly column to the London-based Arabic daily Al Hayat that is widely distributed in the Arab world. Suzanne Trimel, "Faculty Profile: Edward Said," Columbia University Record, Apr. 24, 1998, 3. [4]. Said's scholarship has been credited with giving shape to entire disciplines. Janny Scott, "A Palestinian Confronts Time: For Columbia Literary Critic, Cancer is a Spur to Memory," New York Times, Sept. 19, 1998, A17. Professor Timothy Mitchell of New York University's Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies has remarked of Said: "He's had as much impact as any scholar in the humanities in the recent decades on American and Western scholarship more broadly." Idem. Even Said's critics acknowledge him to be the most prominent Arab scholar in the Western hemisphere. Kanan Makiya, Cruelty and Silence: War, Tyranny, Uprising and the Arab World (1993), 21. [5]. Said has lectured at 150 universities and colleges. "Edward W. Said: Contributing Writer and Music Critic," loc. cit. In 1997 and 1998 he gave special lectures in England, India, and France. Suzanne Trimel, op. cit., 3. [6]. Said has appeared on the British Broadcasting Corporation, The MacNeil/Lehrer Report, National Public Radio, Canadian Broadcasting Company, Australian radio, and many other places. Suzanne Trimel, op. cit., 3. (See, for instance, interview with Edward Said, The MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour, Educational Broadcasting and GWETA, September 12, 1990, Transcript #3858.) [7]. He transmitted overtures between the Carter administration and Yasir Arafat. Edward W. Said, The Pen and the Sword (1994), 136-37; Said K. Aburish, Arafat: From Defender to Dictator (1998), 156, 194. He later participated in the first official meeting of a member of the Palestine National Council (the PLO's quasi-parliament in exile) with President Reagan's Secretary of State, George Shultz. Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dispossession: The Struggle for Palestinian Self-Determination 1969-1994, (1994), xxviii. And see text below. [8]. Edward W. Said and Ibrahim Abu Lughod, "Summary of Statement," U.S. Congress, House Special Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on International Relations, Hearings on the Palestinian Issue in Middle East Peace Efforts, 94th Congress, 1st Sess., Sept. 30, 1975, (1976), 28-31, 31-36, 36-62. [9]. Eqbal Ahmad, op. cit., 7. Said was the subject of a BBC documentary entitled The Edward Said Story in the early 1990's (idem) and recently wrote and narrated another BBC documentary entitled Edward Said: A Very Personal View of Palestine, timed to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the events Palestinians refer to as the nakbah (catastrophe) of May 1948. It was broadcast in England on May 17, 1998. In the United States, it was aired by the Public Broadcasting System (for example, on WNET, the New York PBS affiliate, on July 5, 1999) under the title, In Search of Palestine. See text below. [10]. "Edward Said Honored," Jerusalem Times, May 21, 1999, 13. The Institute cited Said "for his active role in giving a human dimension to the Palestinian cause." Said has himself admitted that, over time, he began to "relish" telling "the story." Edward W. Said, The Pen and the Sword, 164. [11]. See his "West Bank Diary," Al-Ahram Weekly, Dec. 10-16, 1998. Internet, http://msanews.nynet.net/MSANEWS/199804/ 19980410.25.html. In Bethlehem, he urged a rapt audience to achieve liberation by lobbying public opinion, arguing that "[i]nterested people should be told personal stories, alongside accurate history." Lecture at the Third International Sabeel Conference on Liberation Theology on "The Challenge of the Jubilee," in Bethlehem, Feb. 13, 1998 (tape recording on file with the author); Suzanne Ruggi, "Edward W. Said: Humor, Conviction & Scholarly Agitation," Jerusalem Times, Feb. 20, 1998, 7. One of Said's most important books examines the significance of beginnings as a point of departure not only in creative writing but in life generally. Edward W. Said, Beginnings: Intention and Method (1975). [12]. This highly influential and controversial book was a runner-up in the criticism category for the National Book Critics Award ("Edward W. Said: Contributing Writer and Music Critic," loc. cit.) and has been translated into 26 languages (Janny Scott, op. cit., A17). [13]. See generally Edward W. Said, Peace and Its Discontents: Essays on Palestine and the Middle East Peace Process (1996). [14]. Ian McIntyre, "Disillusioned by Arafat," the (London) Times, July 7, 1994, 39; Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dis-possession, xxiv. [15]. Ibid.; ibid. [16]. See above, note 7. [17]. In 1977, Said served as a member of the PLO delegation to the United Nations. Guy Bechor, Lexicon Ashaf [The PLO Lexicon] (1991), 246. In addition, he helped to draft the 1988 resolution of the Palestine National Council (PNC) proclaiming an independent state of Palestine, and served as a member of the PNC from 1977 until 1991. Bryan Appleyard, "Reflections from the Tightrope," the (London) Independent, June 23, 1993, 23; "Edward Said: Bright Star of English Lit and the P.L.O.," New York Times, Feb. 22, 1980, A2; Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dispossession, 3. See also "Said, Edward W.," 1989 Current Biography Yearbook (Charles Moritz, ed., 1989), 493-94; Zoe Heller, "Cosmopolitan Mind, Complex Politics, Ties to Scholarship, Palestinian Cause Shape Professor's Life," San Francisco Examiner, Feb. 21, 1993, D7. [18]. Both his scholarship and his grasp of political and cultural history have, in fact, been subjected to severe criticism, though this has hardly sufficed to undermine his reputation or to prevent his recent accession to the presidency of the prestigious Modern Language Association. See, for example, Jeffrey Hartman, Letter to the Editor, Critical Inquiry (vol. 16, Autumn 1989), 199; Bernard Lewis, Islam and the West (1993), 115; Robert J. Griffin, "An Exchange on Edward Said and Difference," Critical Inquiry, (vol. 15, Spring 1989), 611; Susan Fraiman, "Jane Austen and Edward Said, Gender, Culture, and Imperialism," Critical Inquiry (Vol. 21, Summer 1995), 805, 807, 816, 817; Emmanuel Sivan, "Edward Said and his Arab Reviewers," Interpretations of Islam: Past and Present (1985) 134, 136-39, 142, 151; Kanan Makiya, op. cit., 278-79, 317-19, 348 n.9; Fouad Ajami, "The Silence in Arab Culture," New Republic, Apr. 6, 1987, 32; Walter Laqueur, review of The Question of Palestine by Edward Said, New Republic, Dec. 15, 1979, 23, 34-35. [19]. Unlike other academics, historians, or journalists who cover Palestinian and Israeli issues, Said repeatedly places himself at center stage. He has often been interviewed about his childhood in Jerusalem. See, for example, Dinitia Smith, "Arafat's Man in New York: The Divided Life of Columbia Professor Edward Said," New York, Jan. 25, 1989, 40, 42; Robert Marquand, op. cit., 10; Salman Rushdie, "On Palestinian Identity," New Left Review Nov.-Dec. 1986, 63; Mouin Rabbani, "Symbols Versus Substance: A Year After the Declaration of Principles," Journal of Palestine Studies (Vol. 24, 1995) 60, 63, 71-72; David Barsamian, "Edward W. Said: The Pen and The Sword: Culture and Imperialism," Z Magazine, July/Aug. 1993, 62, 69. Similarly, in his own writings, Said frequently highlights his early family life in Jerusalem and his subsequent "exile" in Egypt and the United States. Edward W. Said, "Between Worlds: Edward Said Makes Sense of His Life," London Review of Books, May 7, 1998, 3; Edward Said & Jean Mohr, After the Last Sky (1986); Edward Said, "Holy Land of My Fathers," the (London) Observer, Nov. 1 and 8, 1992 Review Section, 1; Edward W. Said, "Cairo Recalled," House and Garden, Apr. 1987, 20; Edward W. Said, "Palestine, Then and Now: An Exile's Journey Through Israel and the Occupied Territories," Harper's, Dec. 1992, 47, 50; Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dispossession, 3-6. [20]. See Laurie King-Irani, "Said Calls for Arab-Jewish Re-conciliation," Jerusalem Times, Dec. 5, 1997, 6. [21]. "In Orientalism, Culture and Imperialism, and then again in the five or six explicitly political books concerning Palestine and the Islamic world that I wrote around the same time, I felt that I had been fashioning a self who revealed for a Western audience things that so far had either been hidden or not discussed at all." Edward Said, "Between Worlds: Edward Said Makes Sense of His Life," loc. cit., 3, 7. The historian Martin Gilbert paraphrased Said's biographical narrative at length as an emblem of the Palestinian condition in Jerusalem in the Twentieth Century (1996), 346-48. [22]. Edward W. Said, After the Last Sky (1985), 112. In BBC World Hard Talk, http://ftp.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/japanese/ hardtalk.html, Jan. 2, 1998, Said addressed the tragedy of exile:
See also Robert Marquand, op. cit., 10; Edward W. Said, Representations of the Intellectual (1994), 47; Edward W. Said, "Reflections on Exile," Granta, Autumn 1984, 157. [23]. Salman Rushdie, "If I Forget Thee . . . Salman Rushdie on What it Means to be a Palestinian," review of After the Last Sky by Edward Said, in the Guardian, Sept. 19, 1986, Books Section, 11. [24]. Edward W. Said, The Pen and the Sword, 164. [25]. The full quotation reads:
Edward W. Said, "Israel-Palestine: A Third Way," Le Monde Diplomatique, Aug-Sept. 1998, internet, http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/1998/09/04said.html [26]. I began to question these assertions in researching a law-review article: Justus R. Weiner, "Peace and Its Discontents: Israeli and Palestinian Intellectuals Who Reject the Current Peace Process," Cornell International Law Journal (Vol. 29, 1996), 501. [27]. See above, footnote 19, and, generally, Janny Scott, op. cit., A17. [28]. Edward W. Said, Out of Place (1999). [29]. Janny Scott, op. cit., A17. [30]. "Said, Edward W.," loc. cit., 493-97. [31]. The full title is given above in footnote 19: "Palestine, Then and Now: An Exile's Journey Through Israel and the Occupied Territories," Harper's, Dec. 1992, 47. Also in Edward W. Said, "Holy Land of My Fathers," loc. cit. 49, and Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dispossession, 175. [32]. Edward Said, "Between Worlds: Edward Said Makes Sense of His Life," loc. cit., 3. [33]. Edward W. Said, The Pen and the Sword, 50. [34]. See John Sigler, "Palestinian Speaks for his People: Said Makes Plea for Tolerance and Understanding," review of The Politics of Dispossession, Montreal Gazette, Aug. 27, 1994, H2. In a recent article Said has referred to Jerusalem as "the small, compact city in which I grew up over fifty years ago." Edward W. Said, "Scenes from Palestine," Al-Ahram Weekly, Mar. 26-Apr. 1, 1998, internet, http://msanews.nynet.net/MSANEWS/199804/ 19980410.25.html. In a typical interview, he describes his childhood home near the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, his schooling at St. George's Academy in Jerusalem, and how, when his family left Jerusalem in December 1947 for Cairo, "I certainly didn't think I was never going to return." Only then does he discuss his privileged life in Cairo and the schools he attended there, presumably from December 1947 onward. Dinitia Smith, op. cit., 40, 44. [35]. Internet, http:/thenation.com/static/about/magazine/ bios/said. htm, Jan. 15, 1998. [36]. Edward Said's middle name is William or Wadie, in honor of his father. Edward W. Said, After the Last Sky, 88. [37]. This account of his father's American sojourn has been given often by Said himself. I have not verified it independently. [38]. The Egyptian Directory 1926 (Max Fischer, ed.), 326, 358. The following year's directory contains a one-third page feature advertisement for the Standard Stationery Company, suggesting a substantial commercial presence (795). The 1928 edition lists William Said as living on Kasr el-Nil Street in Cairo (408, 946). The listing for 1929 mentions a branch store located in Alexandria (401, 920). Nearly identical listings appear in the 1930, 1931, 1933, and 1936 directories, the latter three containing an icon indicating that William Said owned a car. The Egyptian Directory 1930, 408, 964; The Egyptian Directory 1931, 444, 461, 870; The Egyptian Directory 1933, 400, 417, 1042; The Egyptian Directory 1936, 522, 1231. [39]. Edward Said: A Very Personal View of Palestine, loc. cit.; Edward Said, After the Last Sky, 78. [40]. See Appendix 1, following these notes. Memo from Seth Wikas, Jan. 7, 1998 (on file with author); memo of Avi Green, Apr. 30, 1998 (on file with author). Some time after 1933 but prior to 1936 the family moved from Kasr El-Nil Street to 49 El-Falaki Street. See The Egyptian Directory 1933, 417; The Egyptian Directory 1936, 522. By March 1937, as the family continued to grow, William had moved to 1 Khamel-Muhamed Street. Egyptian State Railways, Telegraphs & Telephones, Cairo Telephone Directory Mar. 1937, 174. Their next move, before January 1942, was to 1 El-Aziz Osman Street. Cairo Telephone Directory Jan. 1942, 156. This was Edward Said's last permanent residence in Egypt, as he moved to the United States in 1951 and thereafter visited his parents in Cairo mainly during summer vacations. [41]. The continuous residence in Cairo of Edward Said's nuclear family is documented by the appearance of his father William Said in consecutive editions of The Egyptian Directory. For the years prior to Edward Said's birth in 1935, see above, footnote 38. For the years after, see, for example, The Egyptian Directory 1936, 508, 522, 1231; The Egyptian Directory 1939, 546, 932, 951; The Egyptian Directory 1940, 469, 931; The Egyptian Directory 1941, 350, 822; The Egyptian Directory 1942, 756, 774; The Egyptian Directory 1943, 351, 802; The Egyptian Directory 1944, 363, 832; The Egyptian Directory 1949, 302, 1138. See also Cairo Telephone Directory Mar. 1937, 167, 180; Cairo Telephone Directory Sept. 1938, 182, 197; Cairo Telephone Directory, Oct. 1940, 31; Cairo Telephone Directory, Jan. 1942, 156, 170; Cairo Telephone Directory, July 1944, 79, 84; Liste Des Abonnés Aux Téléphones Du Caire [Cairo Telephone Directory, French] May 1949, 164, 183. See also the Egyptian Trade Index 1945-46 (Elie Sawaf, ed.) 348-49; Egyptian Trade Index 1948, 493. And see La Semaine Financière et Politique, L'Annuaire Industriel et Commercial [Annual of Industry and Commerce, French] 1945-46, 267, 269; L'Annuaire Industriel et Commercial 1947, 326, 328. And see Who's Who for Agents and Distributors in Egypt & the Middle East 1948 (Middle East Publishing Co.), 242-43, and various editions of J. E. Blattner, Le Mondain Egyptian et du Proche-Orient (published in English as Who's Who in Egypt and the Near East and/or The Egyptian Who's Who): 1937, 239; 1943, 225; 1946, 304; 1947, 336; 1948, 441; 1949, 523. The 1937 edition of this privately published annual is the only directory I have succeeded in locating in which neither William Said nor the Standard Stationery Co. appears. [42]. Professor Gindy, who has maintained contact with Edward Said for over 55 years, reminisced about playing with him and his sisters in the Aquarium Grotto, a park across the street from their apartment building, and also recalled that he frequented the nearby Gezira Sporting Club, where he played tennis. She stated that the Saids lived in the building year-'round (except for summer trips to Lebanon) from the early 1940's until 1962; she could not recall his family's having made trips to Palestine. Telephone interview with Professor Huda Gindy in Cairo (Dec. 26, 1998). Memo from Seth Wikas, see above, note 40. [43]. This sentence in the text should be amended to read: In that city lived Wadie Said's sister Nabiha, her husband (and cousin) Boulos Yusef Said, and their five children. [44]. Cf. Edward Said, "Lost Between War and Peace: Edward Said Travels With His Son in Arafat's Palestine," London Review of Books, Sept. 5, 1996, 10. [45]. Certified copy of birth certificate for Edward Said and cover letter, Israel Ministry of Interior, No. 3439/128/1935, Mar. 24, 1997. By Edward Said's own admission, "Even though they lived in Cairo in 1935, my parents made sure that I was born in Jerusalem. . . . Hilda had already given birth to a male child, to be called Gerald, in a Cairo hospital, where he developed an infection and died soon after birth. As a radical alternative to another hospital disaster, my parents traveled to Jerusalem. . . ." Out of Place, 20. [46]. St. George's Episcopal Cathedral, Register of Baptisms in the County of Palestine, June 1901 to Oct. 1958, 63-65; interview with Suheil Dawani, Canon of St. George's Episcopal Cathedral, in Jerusalem (Feb. 6, 1998). [47]. See below, note 56. [48]. Edward W. Said, "Palestine, Then and Now: An Exile's Journey Through Israel and the Occupied Territories," loc. cit., 47. [49]. Edward Said, "Holy Land of My Fathers," loc. cit., 49. Also in his book, The Politics of Dispossession, 175-99. [50]. The photograph appears as Appendix 2 to these notes. [51]. "Edward Said Honored," Jerusalem Times, May 21, 1999, 13. [52],. Interview with Edward Said, "Making a Cause to be Reckoned With," Jerusalem Times, Mar. 6, 1998, 6. [53]. Edward Said, "Holy Land of My Fathers," loc. cit., 49, 50. Despite having in hand the map drawn by his cousin Yousef (also spelled Yusef), it took "almost two hours to find the house, and it is a tribute to my cousin's memory that only by sticking very literally to his map did we finally locate it." In light of the facts I have described, this is hardly surprising. Yousef had actually lived for six years on one floor of the house, and so remembered it well enough to draw a map after a 45-year absence; Edward Said, who had resided in Cairo and paid only visits to Jerusalem, naturally experienced great difficulty locating the house, even with a map in hand. [54]. These records, initially registered in English by clerks working for the British Mandate authorities, were kept in large ledger books. [55]. Land Registry Office of Jerusalem, 30 Register of Deeds 41, block no. 30027, parcel no. 50. The aunt, Nabiha Ibrahim Said, is listed as having a 25-percent interest in the property. Each of her five children, Yusef, George, Albert, Robert, and Evelyn, has a 15-percent interest. Robert Said, one of these children, was interviewed at his office in Amman by my research assistant, the Belgian lawyer Paul Lambert. Although initially cordial and cooperative, Robert Said refused to proceed further when questions began to zero in on his cousin Edward's biographical claims. Becoming verbally abusive, he accused Mr. Lambert, a Catholic, of having been "brainwashed by the Jews." He also said, "They [the Jews] are the worst people. You can't believe them, they're liars." Mr. Lambert was then all but thrown out of Robert Said's office by a burly employee. Interview with Robert Said, Amman, Jan. 23, 1997 (on file with author). [56]. Although none of the telephone books and business directories of Mandatory Palestine that I examined, spanning the period 1932-48, in English, Hebrew, or Arabic, contained a listing for Edward Said's parents, Jerusalem listings did exist in most of these same volumes for his uncle Boulos Y. Said at his business, the Palestine Educational Company, and for his aunt Nabiha, Mrs. B. Y. Said. See Palestine Posts, Telegraphs & Telephones, Telephone Directory January 1932; Miskhar v'Ta'asia [Commerce and Industry, Hebrew], The Palestine Directory and Handbook 1932; Telephone Directory January 1933; The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1935; Telephone Directory January 1936; The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1936; Telephone Directory January 1937; Government Printer, The Palestine Blue Book 1937; The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1937; Telephone Directory April 1938; Telephone Directory January 1939; Azriel Press, Madrikh Klali l'Eretz Yisrael [The Land of Israel Guide, Hebrew] 1939; The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1939; Madrikh Klali l'Eretz Yisrael 1940 [The Land of Israel Guide, Hebrew] 1940; Madrikh Hatelefon Nissan Taf-shin [Telephone Directory April 1940, Hebrew]; Telephone Directory July 1941; Palestine Posts, Telegraphs & Telephones, Subscribers List July 1941; Madrikh Klali l'Eretz Yisrael 1941 [The Land of Israel Guide, Hebrew] 1941; The Palestine Guide 1942; Palestine Directory: The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1942; Supplement to the 1942/3 Editions of The Palestine Directory: The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1944; Government of Palestine, Palestine Telephone Directory: Jerusalem and Southern Palestine January 1946; Hakumat Falastin [Government of Palestine], Dalil Atalefon Al-Falastin [Palestine Telephone Directory, Arabic] Jan. 1946; Madrikh Hatelefon Shvat taf-shin-vav [Telephone Directory February 1946, Hebrew]; Anglo-Palestine Publications Ltd., The Anglo-Palestine Year Book (F. J. Jacoby, ed.) 1946; The Palestine Guide Book (The Blue Directory) 1947-48; Palestine Directory: The Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1948. [57]. See Appendix 3 for a chronology of residential occupancy of the house at 10 Brenner St. [58]. On the basis of aerial photographs of Talbieh during the 1930's, I have determined that the house was constructed between 1932 and 1935. Aerial Photography Department Archives, Hebrew University, Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem, Sept. 17, 1996. It was impossible to determine the exact date since the records of the municipal office that granted building permits in Jerusalem were destroyed in a bombing/fire in 1944. Cf. J. Bowyer Bell, Terror Out of Zion (1977), 142-45. [59]. I gathered this information through on-site study and interviews with former tenants. Interview with Barbara (Buber) Goldschmidt, in Jerusalem, Nov. 10, 1996; telephone interview with Yehudit Agassi, in Herzlia, April 14, 1998; interview with Ruth (Neuman) Weintraub, in Jerusalem, Oct. 17, 1996; interview with Hella Mayer, in Jerusalem, Aug. 6, 1996; telephone interview with Victor Stark, Honorary Consul of Yugoslavian Embassy, in Haifa, July 2, 1996; telephone interview with Victor Stark, in Haifa, July 22, 1996; telephone interview with Leon Zeldis, Honorary Consul of Chilean Embassy, in Herzlia, Feb. 5, 1996; telephone interview with Fanny Silberman, Honorary Consul of Chilean Embassy, in Jerusalem, Sept. 13, 1996. (All on file with author.) [60]. Ms. Weintraub's parents, Yaakov and Elena Neuman, renovated the basement level of the house, converting what had previously been a storeroom/library into a habitable apartment by installing a kitchen and bathroom. The last member of the Neuman family did not move out of the basement level until 1983. Ms. Weintraub's mother was originally from Vienna and her father from Budapest, but the couple had lived in Athens, where her father was a wholesaler of German books. Fleeing on the last boat out of Piraeus in 1941, the family resided briefly in Haifa before settling in Jerusalem. There her father earned a living securing food and other scarce supplies for the British Mandatory authorities and for various embassies and consulates in Jerusalem, including the Yugoslavian Consulate situated upstairs. Interview with Ruth (Neuman) Weintraub, loc. cit. [61]. The upper level is connected by stairs to a small room, presumably used for storage, on the roof. My inspection showed that this room, accessible only from the upstairs level, and lacking plumbing, would be very cold in the winter and stifling in the summer. Certainly no family could have resided there. Memo to the file, August 21, 1998. [62]. This information was provided by the Honorary Consul of Yugoslavia in Israel, Victor Stark. Letter of Victor Stark, Feb. 7, 1996 (on file with author); telephone interview with Hon. Mirko Stefanovic, the Ambassador of Yugoslavia to Israel, in Tel Aviv, Apr. 8, 1996 (on file with author). In addition, two Mandate period block-and-parcel maps located in the Archives and the Measurement Department of the Jerusalem Municipality indicate that the Embassy (sic) of Yugoslavia was located in the house. Memorandum by Max Rapaport, July 4, 1996 (on file with author). Ruth (Neuman) Weintraub, who resided in the basement level from 1942 until the 1960's, similarly recalled that the upstairs level served as the Yugoslavian Consulate. See above, note 59. Finally, Ms. Hannah Degani, a retired professional photographer, informed me that she was retained by the Yugoslavian Counsul General in 1940 or 1941 to photograph his impressive offices on the upstairs level of the house. Herself then a resident of Talbieh, Ms. Degani also confirmed that the Bubers lived on the main entrance level (where she participated in discussions of philosophy and psychology) and that in the mid-1940's the Neumans lived in the basement-level apartment. Interview with Hannah Degani in Jerusalem, Oct. 11, 1998 (on file with author). [63]. Letter of Victor Stark, loc. cit. [64]. King Peter II, an ally of the British during World War II, was driven into exile by the German invasion of his country. He resided in the house from April 21 to June 5, 1941. Letter from H.R.H. Crown Prince Alexander of Yugoslavia, May 19, 1998 (on file with author); internet http://www.suc.org/royal. Stephen Clissold, A Short History of Yugoslavia: From Early Times Until 1966 (1966), 208-09. Another tenant, Yehudit (Buber) Agassi, recalls that Peter II lived upstairs for a period of time, and that he parked his car in the yard. Telephone interview with Yehudit (Buber) Agassi in Herzlia, loc. cit. King Peter II spent the remainder of the war in Allied territory, first in the Middle East and then in London. In the spring of 1945 Tito's Communist party won a plebiscite and formed a new government that was recognized by the king. Muriel Heppell & F. B. Singleton, Yugoslavia (1961), 169, 181, 238-39; Phyllis Auty, Yugoslavia (1965), 232-33. [65]. Robert Marquand, op. cit., 10. [66]. The name of the mayor was R. M. Graves. See his memoirs, Experiment in Anarchy (1949), 101. [67]. Meir (whose given name was Goldie Meyerson) later held various senior ministerial portfolios and was Israel's fourth prime minister from 1969 to 1974. Cf. R. M. Graves, op. cit., 101. [68]. Uri Milstein, History of the War of Independence: Volume 1, The Nation Girds for War (1996), 453-54. [69]. Ibid. [70]. Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1936, at Consulate Listing; Register of Commerce and Industry in Palestine 1937, at Consulate Listing. [71]. Interview with Yehudit Agassi, loc. cit.; interview with Barbara Goldschmidt, loc. cit. The basement was used for the overflow of Buber's library. [72]. Ibid. As of 1999, Martin Buber's large black metal mailbox was still affixed near the front door of the house's main entrance level. Buber's granddaughter Barbara Goldschmidt recalls trying unsuccessfully to remove it as the movers were packing up the last loads of the family's possessions in 1942. Interview with Barbara Goldschmidt, loc. cit. [73]. Ms. Agassi recalls that the landlord would come to visit the house with two young sons. Interview with Yehudit Agassi, loc. cit. [74]. Interview with Ruth Weintraub, loc. cit. [75]. Edward, the "oldest child and only son of Wadie Said," had no brothers. "Said, Edward W." 1989 Current Biography Yearbook, 493-94. See also Dinitia Smith, op. cit., 40, 44. [76]. Edward Said, "Holy Land of My Fathers," loc. cit., 49; also in Edward W. Said, "Palestine, Then and Now: An Exile's Journey Through Israel and the Occupied Territories," loc. cit., 47, 50, and in Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dispossession, 5. [77]. Edward Said, Lecture at the Fifth International Conference for "The Scenarios of Palestine" at Birzeit University, Bethlehem, Nov. 12, 1998 (tape recording on file with author). [78]. Interview with Barbara Goldschmidt, loc. cit. Ms. Agassi has similarly recalled that the landlord, who lived in the neighborhood and frequently visited the house, utilized a local law permitting the ouster of a tenant when the landlord needed the premises for personal use. The landlord's lawyer asserted in court that Nabiha Said suffered from rheumatism and needed to move to escape the dampness where she was living. The counterclaims of the Bubers, who had a long-term lease agreement, included the assertion that Ms. Agassi also suffered from rheumatism, which was aggravated by the damp conditions in the house. Ms. Agassi also noted that the Bubers, relying on the long-term nature of their lease, had made major improvements in the apartment and landscaped the garden. Given the shortage of housing in Palestine during World War II, their eviction could not have come at a worse time. Interview with Yehudit Agassi, loc. cit. [79]. Interview with Barbara Goldschmidt, loc. cit. [80]. Cf. Edward W. Said, After the Last Sky, 18. [81]. Inspecting the house's interior, I was able to distinguish the original plaster construction from rooms constructed of drywall after 1948. During the pre-1948 period the main entrance floor consisted of one large living room, four bedrooms, one small kitchen, and two bathrooms. [82]. My reconstruction of the occupancy of the house for the various periods prior to 1948 virtually forecloses the possibility that Edward Said's nuclear family ever resided in the structure. See Appendix 3. As noted in the text, even brief stays as guests with their cousins on the main entrance floor would have been limited to the period from 1942 to 1948. Such temporary visits, if they indeed took place, do not begin to justify Professor Said's claims regarding the house at 10 Brenner Street. [83]. Edward W. Said, "Palestine, Then and Now: An Exile's Journey Through Israel and the Occupied Territories." loc. cit., 48; also in The Politics of Dispossession, 177. [84]. Edward Said: A Very Personal View of Palestine, loc. cit. [85]. Ibid. [86]. Edward W. Said, Out of Place, 112-13. [87]. Student Registry Books, St. George's Preparatory School, Jerusalem (available in the office of the headmaster), visited June 17, 1996, Oct. 21, 1996. By the time Said made his BBC documentary, I had visited the headmaster's office twice and on each visit had scrutinized, page by page, all three of the institution's registry books, without finding any trace of Said's being enrolled in the school on a permanent basis. See text below for the possibility that he was a temporary student on visits to his cousins in Jerusalem. [88]. Interviews with David Eben-Ezra, former student at St. George's Academy, Tel Aviv, Sept. 16, 1998, and November 5, 1998 (on file with author). Haig Boyagian, a former St. George's student who told me that he has remained friends with Said until today and who commended the latter's political viewpoint on Israeli-Palestinian issues, had the recollection that Said did attend the school. This disparate recollection, however, is not inconsistent with my conclusion that Said was, at most, at the school only briefly when his family visited Jerusalem from their home in Cairo. Significantly, Boyagian could not recall the period or duration of Said's attendance at St. George's. Telephone interview with Haig Boyagian, in New Jersey, Feb. 17, 1999 (on file with author). [89]. See above, footnote 32. [90]. "Said, Edward W." loc. cit. 493-97. [91]. Cf. Edward W. Said, "Palestine, Then and Now: An Exile's Journey Through Israel and the Occupied Territories," loc. cit., 47, 50. Also cf. Edward W. Said, The Politics of Dispossession, 179, and Out of Place, 113. [92]. Robert Marquand, op. cit., 10. No contemporaneous record of such a December 1947 warning appears in the archives of the daily newspapers Palestine Post (memo from Gary Emmanuel, Oct. 26, 1997, on file with author); Ha'aretz (memo from Yoni Rachamin, Jan. 18, 1999, on file with author). Ma'ariv (idem); Yediot Ahronot (idem); the New York Times (memo from William Kaplan, on file with author); Egyptian Gazette (memo from Seth Wikas loc. cit.); the (London) Times (memo from Gary Emmanuel, on file with author). The diary of the British mayor of Jerusalem during the period is also silent as to any use of threats to drive Arabs from Talbieh in December 1947. R. M. Graves, Experiment in Anarchy, 102-18. [93]. As will become apparent below, this detail, rather than substantiating Said's claimed residence in Jerusalem in late 1947, actually casts further doubt on it, as well as on his claim that he and his nuclear family departed Palestine at that time. [94]. See Martin Gilbert, Jerusalem in the Twentieth Century, 80, 175; Nachum Tim Gidal, Jerusalem in 3000 Years (1995), 180; Ezra Yakhin, Elnakam (1992), 192-98; A. J. Sherman, Mandate Days: British Lives in Palestine 1918-1948 (1997), 193; J. Bowyer Bell, Terror Out of Zion, 216; Dominique Lapierre & Larry Collins, O Jerusalem (1972), 21. [95]. Martin Gilbert, Jerusalem History Atlas (1977), 90; Ezra Yakhin, Elnakam, 84, 192-98. [96]. Interview with David Eben-Ezra, loc. cit.; interview with Efraim Degani, Deputy Commander of the Haganah in Talbieh, in Jerusalem, Oct. 11, 1998 (on file with author); telephone interview with Yosef Nevo, a Haganah commander in Jerusalem during 1947-48, in Herzlia, Oct. 7, 1998 (on file with author). [97]. Ve'im Bigvurot [Fourscore Years: A Tribute to Rubin and Hannah Mass on Their Eightieth Birthdays], Abraham Eben-Shushan, A. Sh. Elhanani, Aharon Bier, A.M. Habermann, Shin Shalom eds. (1974), 357-58; R. M. Graves, Experiment in Anarchy, 30. [98]. About 20 percent of the population of Talbieh comprised diplomats, foreign journalists, clergy, British officials, and others who were neither Arabs nor Jews. Many journalists and even some spies frequented the bar of the Salvia Hotel in the district. Interview with Efraim Degani, loc. cit. [99]. R. M. Graves, Experiment in Anarchy, 30. [100]. "Journalist Murdered in Jerusalem," Palestine Post, Dec. 22, 1947, 3; "Snipers Busy in Palestine," the (London) Times, Dec. 24, 1947, 3; R. M. Graves, Experiment in Anarchy, 117. [101]. The Haganah, the largest pre-state Jewish voluntary self-defense organization, gave rise to the Israel Defense Forces after Israel was founded. Dominique-D. Junod, The Imperiled Red Cross and the Palestine-Eretz-Yisrael Conflict 1945-1952 (1996), 166 n. 474. [102]. The Palestine Post furn |