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An Evening with Bernard Lewis: Terrorists, Tea and Hatred

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  • An Evening with Bernard Lewis: Terrorists, Tea and Hatred

    Palestine Chronicle
    May 13 2004

    An Evening with Bernard Lewis: Terrorists, Tea and Hatred


    "The only solution, Lewis concludes, is the Western recolonization of
    the Arab world, starting with Iraq .."

    By Sarah Whalen
    The Palestine Chronicle

    I wonder.

    What is a terrorist?

    Saudis, Wahhabis, Muslims who follow the shariah, and suicide
    bombers, Orientalist Bernard Lewis told a rapt audience of mostly
    Jewish Americans in New Orleans last week.

    Lewis, a British Jew who studied law but failed to finish, apparently
    hates the sharia only slightly less than he hates Saudi Arabia
    generally and Wahhabism specifically. "A lunatic fringe in a marginal
    country," he sneers. The West's present troubles, Lewis avers, arise
    from "an unholy combination of two events:" the creation of the
    Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the discovery of oil there.

    The audience titters at the word "unholy."

    Encouraged, Lewis warms to his subject. "Imagine," he offers, "if the
    Ku Klux Klan obtained the oil wells of Texas, and had all that
    money…a pale approximation" of what happened with Saudi Arabia.
    "Imagine," Lewis urges, "that the KKK used all this money to
    establish a network of well-endowed schools and colleges all over
    Christendom, peddling their particular brand of Christianity."

    The audience gasps and shudders at the thought of Christianity being
    spread. Or is it a "KKK" brand of Christianity? Or Islam? Lewis is
    unclear, but on a roll.

    Suicide bombing also has Islamic origins, Lewis insists. He admits
    Islam "clearly forbids suicide." But this doesn't stop Muslims from
    doing it, says Lewis, who shifts to the Assassins, spinning lurid
    tales of the dagger-wielding, supposedly hashish-smoking Ismaili
    sect's practices in the 11th and 12th centuries that terrorized
    Crusaders and most of "Persia and Palestine." The Assassins, Lewis
    claims, were "eventually suppressed" only to "reappear in the late
    19th and early 20th centuries."

    And their heirs, ignoble, modern suicide bombers, Lewis warns, may
    soon become a metaphor for the whole Middle East, locked into "a
    downward spiral of hate and spite, rage and self-pity, poverty and
    oppression."

    The only solution, Lewis concludes, is the Western recolonization of
    the Arab world, starting with Iraq.

    But why stop there?

    An American-Israeli Ottoman empire awaits.

    The audience wildly applauds.

    Lewis takes questions from lesser beings, all of whom bask in his
    genial but insulting answers. Then, the audience storms the table
    laden with The Crisis of Islam, and What Went Wrong, manifestos that
    made Lewis the Bush Administration's chief neocon ideologue.

    Lewis graciously signs purchases.

    I stand in line and wonder: Do these new Lewis fans, many of whom
    descend from Holocaust victims and survivors, know that a French
    court once fined him for denying the Armenian genocide? Do they know
    that today's date--April 24--marks the Armenian genocide's 89th
    anniversary?

    It is my turn: "You claim the Ismaili Assassins are the precursors of
    modern Palestinian suicide bombers. I wanted to ask about Masada--"

    Lewis jumps, as though poked with a pin. "Masada!" he says
    emphatically. "Damn! I meant to say something about that."

    I nod.

    "I wonder whether this tradition actually started much earlier in
    Palestine with the Jewish tradition of the Sicarii."

    Lewis's eyes narrow suspiciously. The Sicarii, Lewis knows, were
    Jewish Zealot assassins specializing in murder by "sicae," small
    daggers.

    During the 66 CE Jewish rebellion, some Sicarii fled to Masada, King
    Herod's fortress, slaughtered the Roman garrison stationed there, and
    plundered nearby settlements, including Jewish villages. The Masada
    group eventually numbered 960 men, women, and children.

    In 72 CE, the Roman governor Silva besieged Masada with the 10th
    Legion. Jewish historian Josephus recorded the testimony of two
    Jewish women and five Jewish children, the sole survivors of what
    happened next, on Passover Eve, 73 CE, when the
    Sicarii announced that rather than surrender, the Jewish men would
    murder their wives and children, then "cast lots to choose ten men to
    dispatch the remainder," with the lone surviving Jew then running
    "his sword entirely through himself."

    This they did.

    Lewis glares. "Well," he says, "Judaism so abhors suicide that there
    is not a word about Masada in any Jewish history or rabbinical period
    text, only by Josephus." And he chuckles and remarks that in writing
    down the truth, Josephus became a despised Roman collaborator.

    I nod. But I ask: "Why do we ignore murder-suicide's place in ancient
    Israeli-Palestinian culture? Modern Israelis made murder-suicide into
    a national shrine at Masada. But there's nothing heroic about
    murdering your wives and children and all your male friends, and then
    killing yourself, which is what the Sicarii did. So why glorify them,
    as Israel does?"

    Lewis does not blink.

    So I press on.

    "Israeli Army recruits take oaths of allegiance at Masada. And since
    every Israeli serves some time in the armed forces, they're all
    indoctrinated into this view. Zionist youth groups hike to Masada,
    there promising to support the Israeli state unto death. How can you
    blame 11th century Ismaili Assassins for inventing suicide bombings,
    when the Sicarii predated Islam by hundreds of years?"

    "At least," Lewis snaps, "the Jews only killed themselves at Masada,
    and not anyone else."

    But surviving Sicarii groups fled to Alexandria and Thebes. Scholars
    say Ismaili fringe traditions originated out of Egypt. And Egypt is
    the home of the Muslim Brotherhood. So who taught who how to be a
    suicide bomber?

    Is recolonizing Israel an option?

    Lewis turns away.

    I wonder.

    http://www.palestinechronicle.com/story.php?sid=20040513103628345
    From: Baghdasarian
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