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Review: The Broken Promise of U.S.-Arab Relations: 1820-2003

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  • Review: The Broken Promise of U.S.-Arab Relations: 1820-2003

    Kirkus Reviews
    May 2010


    FAITH MISPLACED;
    The Broken Promise of U.S.-Arab Relations: 1820-2003

    SECTION: NONFICTION

    A sage, evenhanded look at the souring of a once-promising relationship.


    Makdisi (History/Rice Univ.; Artillery of Heaven: American
    Missionaries and the Failed Conversion of the Middle East, 2008, etc.)
    reaches back to the early Protestant missionary work in the Holy Land
    to underscore the positive, benevolent model of America to which Arabs
    were first exposed. The establishment of a mission in Beirut by
    evangelicals Pliny Fisk and Levi Parsons was one of the first American
    attempts to "reclaim" the biblical lands and convert the Muslim
    communities.

    Though it failed -- the Americans were "culturally deaf and arrogant"
    -- they instilled their values of education (especially for girls),
    anti-colonialism and altruism. With the inauguration of Syrian
    Protestant College in 1866 -- the precursor to the American University
    of Beirut -- the idea of converting souls had gently transformed into
    a more secular vision of tolerance and scientific inquiry. American
    humanitarian efforts for Greek independence and Armenian refugees of
    Turkish genocide rendered the United States as a promised land, and
    Arab emigration to America increased, giving rise to a rich tradition
    of exile, or mahjar, literature. In his 14 points, Woodrow Wilson set
    out "an inspiring new template for the world," which included
    self-determination for the remnant peoples breaking away from Ottoman
    rule, a vision that was later cited by Palestinian leader Yasser
    Arafat in his famous 1974 UN speech. So what happened? In a word,
    Israel. While numerous recent books delve more deeply into the
    Arab-Israel crisis of the modern era, Makdisi maneuvers through this
    minefield with a steady hand. He pinpoints a pivotal moment during the
    Suez Crisis, when American president Eisenhower rebuked the imperial
    powers and Israel for attacking Egypt, and America still held the
    moral card -- before capitulating to Cold War and oil interests.
    Ultimately, the author is optimistic that relations can improve when
    Americans begin to shed biases about and ignorance of Arab culture and
    history.

    A work of impressive clarity and scholarship.

    Publication Date: 6/22/2010 0:00:00
    Publisher: PublicAffairs
    Stage: Adult
    Star: 1
    ISBN: 978-1-58648-680-8
    Price: $28.95
    Author: Makdisi, Ussama
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