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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
12.08.2008
The Paris-Ramallah Axis

Rarely has a poet died to so much noise. Today, the eulogy for Mahmoud Darwish comes from Tobias Buck, the certified and unfailing filter between the official Palestinians and those who read the Financial Times.

Buck reminds us that, aside from poetry and Yassir Arafat's guns and olive branch speech to the General Assembly, Darwish also penned the Declaration of Independence of the State of Palestine. This is a fantasmagorical document. Proclaimed in remote Algiers on November 15, 1988, when a Palestinian state could hardly be imagined, the manifesto embraced much potted history and purveyed the lie of uniform resistance to the Zionists by elites and peasants alike when, in fact, a true record of the locals would have included an embarrassing narrative of collaboration and cowardice. You can still feel in it the rhapsodical motifs that are usually preludes to failure. In any case, these were Darwish's words.

Quite naturally, Buck makes much of Darwish being a poet of exile. I don't think going into exile, particularly if your life is not 
threatened at home, is either a brave act or an exemplary act. But I do understand why living in Paris--as a revolutionary poet, no less--would be more satisfying than casting your lot with the crude insurgents in Ramallah. After all, Mrs. Arafat also chose Paris over Ramallah.

But the fact that Darwish lived much of his life in exile inevitably compels comparison with Edward Said. And Tobias Buck does his duty. Poor Said, with his natty tweeds and mournful demeanor from a mid-century English novel, is just about over, his theories now left to a few thuggish intellectuals at Columbia University and their graduates students, by now also aging professors at the State University of Whatever, professors whose acolytes can no longer get jobs. Now, of course, Said didn't choose exile. He went, first to Egypt as a child in the fall of 1947, when the victory of the Jews was far from certain, when in fact the Arabs simply assumed they would return in glory. They didn't. Still, Said's memoiristic work has the aura of fatalism to it. But, like Darwish, he chose exile, poor man, and to live under the last colonials.

Posted: Tuesday, August 12, 2008 8:33 PM with 12 comment(s)

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aeromonas said:

Such sarcasm.  How thoroughly unbecoming, Mr. Peretz.

August 12, 2008 9:13 PM

ndmackenzie said:

Richard Stern writes today in The New Republic:

-- On Saturday, August 9, another jewel in the crown of international decency died in Houston after cardiac surgery. Mahmoud Darwish was the leading poet of Palestine, and his life will be celebrated by three days of national mourning. He spoke and wrote about the attempt to expel his Palestinian brothers from history, but also wrote, "I will continue to humanise even the enemy... The first teacher who taught me Hebrew was a Jew. The first love affair in my life was with a Jewish girl. The first judge who sent me to prison was a Jewish woman. So from the beginning, I didn't see Jews as devils or angels but as human beings." Several of his poems are to Jewish lovers. "These poems take the side of love not war." Lin Hao, Ted Solotaroff, Mahmoud Darwish. These jewels in the human crown shine more and more brightly as brutality, greed, and meanness erupt in Ossetia, Darfur, Zimbabwe, and a hundred other pits of ugliness on the human map.

blogs.tnr.com/.../life-and-death-during-the-olympic-games.aspx

August 12, 2008 9:39 PM

jacksondyer said:

aeromonas said:  "Such sarcasm.  How thoroughly unbecoming, Mr. Peretz."

Sarcasm, yes! But well deserved sarcasm. In haven't read Darwish, but I know a lot about Said and a more contemptible liar writing about the Palestinians would have been hard to find.

Liars often succeed because the people he lies to want to hear the lies in the first place.

August 12, 2008 10:19 PM

boneill said:

No, jackson, don't speak ill of the man if you haven't read him.  Marty's comparison to Said is meaningless- they are both Palestinians!  His sarcasm obviates any real thought.   Darwish, while not heroic, was nuanced and interesting and beautiful in a way that Marty despises because it doesn't fit his comfort zone, and he doesn't understand it.    This "But the fact that Darwish lived much of his life in exile inevitably compels comparison with Edward Said." is just idiotic, especially when it is only to launch an attack at a man long-since departed.  

August 13, 2008 11:40 AM

The Ignorant Populist said:

Marty, Jesus, you really, really hate Palestinians.

Didn't know you read poetry Bone. I wasn't aware they have pop-up poetry books now.

August 13, 2008 1:03 PM

ndmackenzie said:

I just love that last paragraph - it is such a farrago:

-- But the fact that Darwish lived much of his life in exile inevitably compels comparison with Edward Said.  ... Now, of course, Said didn't choose exile. ...  But, like Darwish, [Said] chose exile, poor man, and to live under the last colonials.

Perhaps the confusion over Said's "exile" is nothing more than a senior moment.

August 13, 2008 1:27 PM

boneill said:

Yeah, they do Iggy.  The one for "The Wasteland" gave me nightmares for years.  

August 13, 2008 2:55 PM

jacksondyer said:

boneill:  "No, jackson, don't speak ill of the man if you haven't read him.  Marty's comparison to Said is meaningless- they are both Palestinians! "

I hate to interrupt your conversation with your Bigoted Irish buddy, but  I said nothing about Darwish so I don't know what you are fussing about, Neill.

I'll just let you carry on your love fast with Ignorant Bigot and mackenzie, the resident antisemites.

August 13, 2008 5:53 PM

jacksondyer said:

There is nothing confusing about this comparison:

"But the fact that Darwish lived much of his life in exile inevitably compels comparison with Edward Said.  ... Now, of course, Said didn't choose exile. ...  But, like Darwish, [Said] chose exile, poor man, and to live under the last colonials."

One can compare any two items on any list. Whether or not the comparison is fruitful is another matter.

August 13, 2008 5:56 PM

jacksondyer said:

The Ignorant Populist said:  "Marty, Jesus, you really, really hate Palestinians."

Coming from the Ignorant Irish Jew-hater this is rich!

August 13, 2008 5:57 PM

The Ignorant Populist said:

Bone :)!

August 14, 2008 7:02 PM

The Spine said:

I don't mean to harp on the death of the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish, and it would be somewhat

August 14, 2008 7:31 PM

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