Author: Sandhya Jain
Publication: The Pioneer
Date: May 4, 2004
As Iraq gets murkier and Uncle Sam
loses credibility in the war on terror, American analysts are waking up
to the extent to which Saudi funds have penetrated the nation's soft underbelly.
According to Lee Kaplan, Saudis have pumped massive funds into leading
educational institutions as part of a concerted plan to turn American academia
against Israel and in favour of their vision of a global Muslim state in
which Jews, Christians and other infidels will have subordinate status
to the followers of Islam (FrontPageMagazine 5 April 2004).
Wahhabism is rabidly anti-West and
scorns religious tolerance and human rights. Western attempts to promote
democratic reforms in the House of Saud are seen as an insult to Islam;
hence Saudi royals have waged a genteel jihad through ideas (i.e., paid
the intellectual pipers of the West), even while financing Al Qaeda and
Palestinian radicals. The US Senate Judiciary Committee recently found
that the Saudi kingdom controlled most Muslim bodies in the country, paying
80% of the mortgages on mosques.
In just three decades, the Saudi
royal family has donated over US $70 billion to indoctrinate worldwide
institutions against the West and Israel. American academics naturally
deny the funds have strings attached, yet it seems reasonable to ask, as
Kaplan does, why a theocratic regime with 30% to 50% of its population
illiterate, would take more interest in the US educational system than
in its own.
Saudi gifts to American institutions
are mind-boggling. King Fahd donated US $20 million to establish the Middle
East Studies Center at the University of Arkansas. Two Saudi financiers
of Al Qaeda gave US $5 million to UC Berkeley's Center For Middle East
Studies. Then, Harvard got US $2.5 million; Georgetown US $8.1 million,
including a $500,000 scholarship in the name of President Bush; Cornell
US $11 million; MIT US $5 million; Texas A&M US $1.5 million and Princeton
US $1 million. Rutgers received US $5 million to endow a chair, as did
Columbia. Several other universities also received Saudi largesse.
It is not difficult to see how this
translates into mind control. American conservatives point out that by
funding Middle East Studies Centers and endowed chairs on campuses across
the country, the Saudis were able to determine the curriculum taught to
American students about the situation in the Middle East. This curriculum
is anti-West, anti-Christian, anti-Jew, and moulds students to hate Israel
and to hate America as an "imperialist" or "racist" nation.
Historian Martin Kramer laments
that Columbia University has become "Bir Zeit on-the-Hudson." Bir Zeit
university was created by Israel for Palestinians in the West Bank, but
rather than serving their educational needs, turned into a breeding ground
for terrorist ideologues, with faculty writing against the US and Israel.
At Columbia, Palestinians dominate modern Middle East teaching and discourage
diversity of opinion.
A chair endowed by Saudi money is
filled by academics renowned for their Palestinian or Saudi activism rather
than their scholarship. Columbia's new "Edward Said Chair Of Arab Studies"
went to Rashid Khalidi, a University of Chicago historian and Palestinian
activist. Said was an English literature professor with specialization
on Jane Austen, but his anti-American and anti-Israel views dominated Middle
East studies across America. Columbia's Middle East department has another
anti-US, anti-Israel Palestinian professor, Joseph Massad. Between Khalidi
and Massad, students will be exposed to a one-dimensional view of the Gulf.
The situation has become so lop-sided
that Lisa Anderson, head of International Studies at Columbia, publicly
admitted that Middle East Studies at Columbia and other campuses are not
balanced. Far more serious is the fact that Columbia tried to conceal the
source of funds for the Edward Said Chair until pressure from outside academics
and the legal requirements of the State of New York compelled disclosure.
Saudi endowed chairs and departments
have produced college faculty who mouth the very propaganda provided to
children in Saudi Arabian schools. For instance, Connecticut State University's
Norton Mezvinsky says Judaism is a religion of "racism" whose adherents
believe the "blood of non-Jews has no intrinsic value" and that the killing
of non-Jews does "not constitute murder according to the Jewish religion."
Joel Beinin, Middle East Studies Professor at Stanford, rants against America's
"Zionist lobby" that uses power "to make and unmake regimes."
Joel Beinin is also the sole guest
lecturer to the University of Arkansas' Middle East Studies department,
funded by King Fahd. It offers an Arabic language course. A sample newsletter
published by the department has a full-page poem translated by some students,
called "A Letter To A Faraway Friend" (from inside the occupied territory).
It subtly demeans Israel and praises martyrdom and death. The rot has spread
to virtually every campus. Harvard received US $2 million. At its graduation
ceremony, student Zayed Yasin spoke eloquently on "My American Jihad,"
supported Hamas, and said suicide bombers should be paid. He also raised
funds for the Holy Land Foundation, an Islamic charity shut down by the
Bush administration as an Al-Qaeda front.
What has particularly upset conservatives
is that while these departments are created by Saudi money, they also receive
matching State funds through a Cold War provision known as Title VI. After
11 September 2002, Title VI funded an additional 118 Middle East Resource
Centers at US colleges and universities to teach Arabic and promote security
analysis. But rather than serving the needs of the military and intelligence
services, most departments permitted students the luxury of low standards
of Arabic and focused on research articles serving the cause of jihad.
Title VI money not only pays the
salaries of academics advancing Saudi interests, but also supports activists
whose reach extends beyond the campuses. The combined funding for Middle
East centers provides stipends, scholarships and fellowships to Gulf students,
thus supporting their work as activists. Some students have trained in
activism overseas during the summer, and returned to US campuses to deploy
their skills, creating an anti-American and anti-Israeli atmosphere. This
has resulted in an increase in anti-Semitic attacks on college campuses.
Some time ago, Jewish students at San Francisco State had to be escorted
to safety by city police during a pro-Israel rally. At Concordia University,
1500 "students" showed up to create a riot and prevent former Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from speaking on terrorism; ticket holders
needed police escort off campus as well.
Kaplan feels it is time to curb
the abuse of Title VI. Academic departments with political agendas violate
the principles of Academic Freedom established by the American Association
of University Professors. In fact, the US Congress has begun to examine
the manner in which it provides Title VI funding; universities would do
well to scrutinize the manner in which they receive and utilize funds.
I can empathize with American conservatives
as India has also suffered from the domination of pro-Islam, anti-India,
Leftist intellectuals. Under their hegemony, Indian universities refused
to recognize, leave alone tolerate, diversity of opinion. But whereas our
intellectuals failed in their core objective of de-nationalizing Indians
and weaning them away from their culture and traditions, anti-Americanism
has reached dangerous proportions in American society as a whole. What
an irony: America is the main inspiration and support of India's de-nationalized
intellectuals and even today accords more importance to a Romila Thapar
as opposed to B.B. Lal.