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Freud, Zionism, and Vienna
by Edward
Said
This is a parable worth a few
lines here, although it derives from a rather peculiar personal experience
of mine which has attracted unusual, if undeserved, media and public
attention. Ordinarily, I don't use myself as an example, but because this
one has been so misrepresented and also because it might illuminate the
context of the Palestinian-Zionist struggle it took place in, I have
permitted myself to use it. In late June and early July 2000, I made a
personal family visit to Lebanon, where I also gave two public lectures.
Like most Arabs, my family and I were very interested to visit South
Lebanon to see the recently evacuated "security zone" militarily
occupied by Israel for 22 years, from which troops of the Jewish state
were unceremoniously expelled by the Lebanese resistance. Our visit took
place on 3 July, during which day-long excursion we spent time in the
notorious Khiam prison, built by the Israelis in 1987, in which 8,000
people were tortured and detained in dreadful, bestial conditions. Right
after that we drove to the border post, also abandoned by Israeli troops,
now a deserted area except for Lebanese visitors who come there in large
numbers to throw stones of celebration across the still heavily fortified
border. No Israelis, neither military nor civilians, were in sight.
During our 10-minute stop I
was photographed there without my knowledge pitching a tiny pebble in
competition with some of the younger men present, none of whom of course
had any particular target in sight. The area was empty for miles and
miles. Two days later my picture appeared in newspapers in Israel and all
over the West. I was described as a rock-throwing terrorist, a man of
violence, and so on and on, in the familiar chorus of defamation and
falsehood known to anyone who has incurred the hostility of Zionist
propaganda.
Two ironies stand out. One was
that although I have written at least eight books on Palestine and have
always advocated resistance to Zionist occupation, I have never argued for
anything but peaceful coexistence between us and the Jews of Israel once
Israel's military repression and dispossession of Palestinians has
stopped. My writings have circulated all over the world in at least 35
languages, so my positions are scarcely unknown, and my message is very
clear. But, having found it useless to refute the facts and arguments I
have presented and, more important, having been unable to prevent my work
from reaching larger and larger audiences, the Zionist movement has
resorted to shabbier and shabbier techniques to try to stop me. Two years
ago they hired an obscure Israeli-American lawyer to "research"
the first ten years of my life and "prove" that even though I
was born in Jerusalem I was never really there; this was supposed to show
that I was a liar who had misrepresented my right to return, even though
-- and this is the stupidity and triviality of the argument -- the
invidious Israeli Law of Return allows any Jew anywhere the
"right" to come to Israel and live, whether or not they had even
set foot in Israel before.
Besides, so crude and
inaccurate were this lawyer's methods of investigation that many people
whom he interviewed wrote in and contradicted what he said; none of the
journals, except one, that he approached for publication accepted his
article because of its misrepresentations and distortions. Not only was
this campaign an effort to discredit me personally (the editor of the
journal that published it said openly that he had printed the silly
rubbish produced by this hired gun simply because he wanted to discredit
me personally precisely because I have a lot of readers) but quite
amazingly it was meant to show that all Palestinians are liars and cannot
be believed in their assertions about a right to return.
Fast upon the heels of this
orchestrated effort there came the business of the stone-throwing. And
here is the second irony. Despite Israel's 22-year devastation of south
Lebanon, its destruction of entire villages, the killing of hundreds of
civilians, its use of mercenary soldiers to plunder and punish, its
deplorable use of the most inhuman methods of torture and imprisonment in
Khiam and elsewhere -- despite all that, Israeli propaganda, aided and
abetted by a corrupt Western media, chose to focus on a harmless act of
mine, blowing it up to monstrously absurd proportions that suggested that
I was a violent fanatic interested in killing Jews. The context was left
out, as were the circumstances, i.e. that I simply threw a pebble, that no
Israeli was anywhere present, that no physical injury or harm was
threatened to anyone. More bizarrely still, a whole, again orchestrated
campaign was mounted to try to get me dismissed from the university where
I have taught for 38 years. Articles in the press, commentary, letters of
abuse and death threats were all used to intimidate or silence me,
including those by colleagues of mine who suddenly discovered their
allegiance to the state of Israel. The comedy of it all, the total lack of
logic that tried to connect a trivial incident in South Lebanon to my life
and works, was to no avail, however. Colleagues rallied to my side, as did
many members of the public. Most important, the university administration
magnificently defended my right to my opinions and actions, and noted that
the campaign against me wasn't at all about my having thrown a stone (an
act rightly characterised as protected speech), but about my political
positions and activity that resisted Israel's policy of occupation and
repression.
The latest episode in all this
Zionist pressure is in some ways the saddest and most shameful. In late
July 2000, I was contacted by the director of the Freud Institute and
Museum in Vienna to ask if I would accept an invitation to deliver the
annual Freud lecture there in May 2001. I said yes, and on 21 August
received an official letter from the Institute's director inviting me to
do so in the name of the board. I promptly accepted, having written about
Freud and for many years been a great admirer of his work and life.
(Incidentally, it should be noted that Freud was an early anti-Zionist but
later modified his view when Nazi persecutions of European Jews made a
Jewish state seem like a possible solution to widespread and lethal
anti-Semitism. But I believe that his position vis-à-vis Zionism was
always an ambivalent one.)
The topic I proposed for my
lecture was "Freud and the Non-European" in which I intended to
argue that although Freud's work was for and about Europe, his interest in
ancient civilisations like those of Egypt, Palestine, Greek and Africa was
an indication of the universalism of his vision and the humane scope of
his work. Moreover, I believed that his thought deserved to be appreciated
for its anti-provincialism, quite unlike that of his contemporaries who
denigrated other non-European cultures as lesser or inferior.
Then without warning on 8
February of this year, I was informed by the Institute's chairman, a
Viennese sociologist by the name of Schülein, that the board had decided
to cancel my lecture, because (he said) of the political situation in the
Middle East "and the consequences of it." No other explanation
was given. It was a most unprofessional and lamentable gesture very much
in contradiction with the spirit and the letter of Freud's work. In over
30 years of lecturing all over the world this had never happened to me,
and I immediately responded by asking Schalein in a one-sentence letter to
explain to me how a lecture on Freud in Vienna had anything to do with
"the political condition in the Middle East." I have of course
received no answer.
To make matters worse, the New
York Times published a story on 10 March about the episode, along with
a grotesquely enlarged version of the famous photograph in South Lebanon
last July, an event that had taken place well before the Freud people had
invited me in late August. When Schalein was interviewed by the Times,
he had the gall to bring up the photo and say what he never had the
courage to say to me, that it (as well as my criticism of Israel's
occupation) was the reason for the cancellation, given, he added, that it
might offend Viennese Jewish sensitivities in the context of Jörg
Haider's presence, the Holocaust, and the history of Austrian
anti-Semitism. That a respectable academic should say such rubbish beggars
the imagination, but that he should do so even as Israel is besieging and
killing Palestinians mercilessly on a daily basis -- that is indecent.
What in their appalling
pusillanimity the Freudian gang did not say publicly was that the real
reason for the unseemly cancellation of my lecture was that it was the
price they paid to their donors in Israel and the US. An exhibition of
Freud's papers mounted by the Institute has already been in Vienna and New
York; now the hope is that it will be put on in Israel. The potential
funders seem to have demanded that they would pay for the exhibition in
Tel Aviv if my lecture were cancelled. The spineless Vienna board caved
in, and my lecture was cancelled accordingly, not because I advocate
violence and hatred, but because I do not!
I said at the time that Freud
was hounded out of Vienna by the Nazis and the majority of the Austrian
people. Today those same paragons of courage and intellectual principle
ban a Palestinian from lecturing. So low has this particularly unpleasant
brand of Zionism sunk that it cannot justify itself by open debate and
genuine dialogue. It uses the shadowy mafia tactics of threat and
extortion to exact silence and compliance. So desperately does it seek
acceptance that it reveals itself in Israel and through its supporters
elsewhere, alas, to be in favour of effacing the Palestinian voice
entirely, whether by choking Palestinian villages like Bir Zeit, or by
shutting down discussion and criticism wherever it can find collaborators
and cowards to carry out its reprehensible demands. No wonder that in such
a climate Ariel Sharon is Israel's leader.
But in the end these thuggish
tactics backfire, since not everyone is afraid, and not every voice can be
silenced. After 50 years of Zionist censorship and misrepresentation, the
Palestinians continue their struggle. And everywhere, despite poor media
coverage, despite the venality of institutions like the Freud Society,
despite the cowardice of intellectuals who put their consciences to sleep,
people speak up for justice and peace. Immediately after Vienna cancelled
my invitation, the London Freud Museum invited me to deliver the lecture I
was to have given in Vienna. (After being driven from Vienna in 1938,
Freud spent the last year of his life in London.) Two Austrian
institutions, the Institute for the Human Sciences and the Austrian
Society for Literature invited me to lecture in Vienna at a date of my
choosing. A group of distinguished psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic
critics (including Mustafa Safouan) wrote a letter to the Freud Institute
protesting the cancellation. Many others have been shocked at such naked
bullying and have said so in public. Meanwhile, Palestinian resistance
continues everywhere.
I still believe it is our role
as a people seeking peace with justice to provide an alternative vision to
Zionism's, a vision based on equality and inclusion, rather than on
apartheid and exclusion. Each episode such as the one I have described
here augments my conviction that neither Israelis nor Palestinians have
any alternative to sharing a land that both claim. I also believe that the
Al-Aqsa Intifada must be directed towards that end, even though political
and cultural resistance to Israel's reprehensible occupation policies of
siege, humiliation, starvation and collective punishment must be
vigourously resisted. The Israeli military causes immense damage to
Palestinians day after day: more innocent people are killed, their land
destroyed or confiscated, their houses bombed and demolished, their
movements circumscribed or stopped entirely. Thousands of civilians cannot
find work, go to school, or receive medical treatment as a result of these
Israeli actions. Such arrogance and suicidal rage against the Palestinians
will bring no results except more suffering and more hatred, which is why
in the end Sharon has always failed and resorted to useless murder and
pillage. For our own sakes, we must rise above Zionism's bankruptcy and
continue to articulate our own message of peace with justice. If the way
seems difficult, it cannot be abandoned. When any of us is stopped, ten
others can take his or her place. That is the genuine hallmark of our
struggle, and neither censorship nor base complicity with it can prevent
its success.
Source:
by the same author:
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