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The Washington Post Is Wrong

Posted on October 31, 2008 by The Editors. There are 1 Comments

You may have heard a bit about Barack Obama’s connection with radical palestinian activist Rashid Khalidi.  The latest pushback from the Obama campaign and his fellow travelers in the media is that Khalidi is merely a college professor that Obama worked with at the University of Chicago and Obama’s association with him only shows that Obama is open minded and willing to listen to views on Israel in order to “challenge” his thinking.  That isn’t just wrong, it’s misleading and it’s dangerous.

In today’s Washington Post, the editors bring us this on Khalidi:

For the record, Mr. Khalidi is an American born in New York who graduated from Yale a couple of years after George W. Bush. For much of his long academic career, he taught at the University of Chicago, where he and his wife became friends with Barack and Michelle Obama. In the early 1990s, he worked as an adviser to the Palestinian delegation at peace talks in Madrid and Washington sponsored by the first Bush administration. We don’t agree with a lot of what Mr. Khalidi has had to say about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict over the years, and Mr. Obama has made clear that he doesn’t, either. But to compare the professor to neo-Nazis—or even to Mr. Ayers—is a vile smear.

Perhaps unsurprising for a member of academia, Mr. Khalidi holds complex views. In an article published this year in the Nation magazine, he scathingly denounced Israeli practices in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and U.S. Middle East policy but also condemned Palestinians for failing to embrace a nonviolent strategy. He said that the two-state solution favored by the Bush administration (and Mr. Obama) was “deeply flawed” but conceded there were also “flaws in the alternatives.” Listening to Mr. Khalidi can be challenging—as Mr. Obama put it in the dinner toast recorded on the 2003 tape and reported by the Times in a detailed account of the event last April, he “offers constant reminders to me of my own blind spots and my own biases.”

From reading the editorial you’d think that we were the idiots for criticizing Obama’s relationship with Khalidi.  In fact, the Post titled their editorial, “An Idiot Wind,” leaving no doubt what they think of those that criticize this relationship.

Unsurprisingly, the Post leaves out quite a bit of detail about Khalidi’s activities and it is important that the record show just how radical and evil this man truly is.  Thanks go to Rachel Neuwirth at Campus Watch for writing on this topic today:

Rashid Khalidi was the director of the PLO’s press agency WAFA from 1976 to 1982, at a time when the PLO was conducting a massacre of 37 Israeli civilians in a bus on Israel’s coastal road, the brutal murder of a four-year-old Israeli girl in Nahariya, and numerous other terrorist killings of Israeli civilians. The PLO was also waging a brutal war against the Lebanese Christian community during this period, and carried out numerous massacres of Lebanese Christians; the worst of these was the killing of about 500 people in the village of Damour. During this same period, Rashid’s wife Mona Khalidi was an English translator for WAFA. Rashid Khalidi is now an advocate of a “one state solution” for all of “Palestine” - meaning the destruction of Israel and its replacement by an Arab state. Asaf Romirowsky and Jonathan Calt Harris, in an article in the Washington Times on July 9, 2004, summarized Rashid Khalidi’s views about Israel this way: “[His] extremism comes out when he calls Israel an ‘apartheid system in creation’ and a ‘racist state’ that ‘brainwashed’ Americans do not understand. Jerusalem, with its Jewish majority since the 1880s, he deems ‘an Arab city’ whose control by Israeli ‘foreigners’ is ‘unacceptable.’ And so on.” Khalidi also accuses Israel of “ethnic cleansing.”

In 1995 Rashid and Mona Khalidi co-founded the The Arab-American Action Network, a virulently anti-Israel organization that strongly supports the Palestinian Arab terrorist movement. It regards the creation of the state of Israel as a “naqba” ("catastrophe" in Arabic). Mona Khalidi served as the group’s President from its inception until some time this year, although she is now listed only as a member of its board of directors.

Rashid and Mona Khalidi became close friends of Barack and Michelle Obama during the time when both Barack and Rashid taught at the University of Chicago (1992-2003). At a lavish farewell party for Khalidi in Chicago in 2003, when Khalidi left his prestigious position at the University of Chicago for an even more prestigious one at Columbia University in New York, Obama gave Khalidi a glowing eulogy. He said that he and his wife Michelle had been frequent dinner guests of the Khalidis, and that the Khalidis had frequently babysat for the Obama children. According to a Los Angeles Times account based on a video of Obama’s speech, he added that “his many talks with the Khalidis, . . .had been ‘consistent reminders to me of my own blind spots and my own biases. . . . It’s for that reason that I’m hoping that, for many years to come, we continue that conversation-a conversation that is necessary not just around Mona and Rashid’s dinner table,’ but around ‘this entire world.’”

Obama’s assistance to the Khalidis, however, went beyond mere kind words at a farewell party. In 2001 and again in 2002, Obama, in his capacity as a member of the board of directors of the Leftist non-profit organization the Woods Fund, voted to give the Arab-American Action Network co-founded by Rashid and Mona, and directed by Mona Khalidi, $75,000 in grants.

Her whole piece is a must read for every Jew and supporter of Israel.  Barack Obama’s relationships with anti-semites and enemies of the State of Israel is not trivial and there is absolutely no reason to believe that his views differ much from those of his “former” allies.  And lets remember, these weren’t casual relationships, the Obama’s were frequent dinner guests of the Khalidis and the Khalidi’s babysat for the Obama’s kids.

Comments

Posted by helmut  on  11/01  at  10:03 AM

Questioning the policies of Israel or the plight of Palestinians is not anti-semitic.  Wondering aloud how Israel will maintain its existance as a Jewish state in the face of the demographic march of time is no where near anti-semitic. Reading this essay by Kalidi, http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080526/khalidi does not an anti-semite make.  To know someone does not mean you agree with them.  To respect someone does not mean you agree with them.  To read an opposing viewpoint or to try and understand where they come from is not weakness.  Paraphrasing Sun Tzu, know thy enemy, know thyself.

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