Help Fight Judonia!

Please help sustain EAAZI in the battle against Jewish Zionist transnational political economic manipulation and corruption.

For more info click here or here!

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Jacob Lassner and Nadia Abu el Haj

The Context of Lassner's Review of Facts on the Ground
by Joachim Martillo (ThorsProvoni@aol.com)

The unifying factor in the campaign to deny Nadia Abu el-Haj tenure is the Boston-area Jewish Community, which developed strong communal defense mechanisms in response to Boston Catholic church leaders like Father Charles Coughlin and Father Leonard Feeney. Nowadays the Boston Catholic Church takes a much less adversarial approach to non-Catholic groups while the organized Jewish community has moved from defense to attack, and the David Project serves as its fist.

The David Project, which was founded in 2002 for the purpose of diminishing the impact of critics of Israel according to its mission statement, produced the propaganda film Columbia Unbecoming to defame Arab and Muslim faculty at Columbia University. During approximately the same time period, the David Project thwarted Sheikh Zayed's attempt to create an Islamic studies professorship at Harvard Divinity School and lead the conspiracy to deny Boston Muslims their constitutional rights to assemble freely to practice their religion by bringing a lawsuit through a shill to raze the Roxbury Mosque before it was even completed.
Alexander Joffe, who attacked Abu El Haj's book entitled Facts on the Ground (published 2001) in The Journal of Near Eastern Studies (Chicago: Oct 2005. Vol. 64, Iss. 4; p. 297, see http://tinyurl.com/2pzdx4) is currently research director for the David Project. Previously he was director of the Campus Watch project of The Middle East Forum founded by Daniel Pipes, who is a leading American Islamophobe and Arabophobe. The Middle East Forum publishes the Middle East Quarterly in which Lassner's article (see below) appeared.

Daniel Pipes grew up in the Boston Jewish community like both Columbia Professor Alan F. Segal, who seems to have opposed granting tenure to Nadia Abu el-Haj before he even read her book, and also Brandeis Israel Studies Chairman S. Ilan Troen, who is a former oleh (immigrant to Israel) and close collaborator of Northwestern professor Jacob Lassner.

While Shulamit Reinharz, who made a racist attack on Nadia Abu el-Haj in The Boston Jewish Advocate, is not American born, she has been thoroughly naturalized into the Boston-area Jewish community as a Brandeis professor, wife of Brandeis President Jehuda Reinharz and former David Project Director. Aren Maeir, who has also attacked Nadia Abu el Haj, is likewise a naturalized member of the Boston Jewish community through his MIT connection.

Troen, the Reinharzes, Lassner and his wife, Joffe, and Maeir are all strongly committed to the creation of Israel Studies Departments at American Universities to serve as safe havens of Zionist ideological indoctrination within US academia. Israel Studies advocates were appalled and outraged when Berkeley appointed the Israeli post-Zionist scholar Oren Yiftachel to the Visiting Israeli Professorship funded by the Bay Area Zionist philanthropist Helen Diller, but Nadia Abu el-Haj is an even worse nightmare for the Israel Studies movement. Because she is a brilliant Palestinian scholar of Israel studies (even if she does not so call herself), academic Zionists, the Zionist Lobby, and the organized Jewish community have decided to stop her and her kind by whatever means it takes.

Lassner starts his attempt to demolish Abu el-Haj with the following false claim.

Abu el-Haj, an anthropologist at Barnard College of Columbia University, explores in this interesting study how archeology has shaped the social and political imagination of Israel and served the aims of the state. The blurb on the back cover of the book by Talal Asad, another anthropologist, succinctly captures Abu el-Haj's project: "She presents the first critical account of Israeli archeological practice while tracing the dynamic relationships among science, colonization, nation-state building, and territorial expansion."

Facts on the Ground begins with the pre-state period before there was a State of Israel with aims. Talal Asad makes no such overreaching assertion on the back cover. He actually states the following.

A fascinating and important study. Factually detailed and theoretically informed by the latest thinking in the anthropology and sociology of science, Nadia Abu El-Haj has provided us with an understanding of precisely how archeology has contributed so crucially to the formation of nationalist sensibilities in a settler-colonial society.

The quotation to which Lassner refers is the publisher's description and was probably written by someone in marketing communications, who at most skimmed a few chapters of the book, but it does serve the purpose of motivating Jewish Columbia and Barnard alumni to write nasty letters to the administration by ascribing such a statement to someone with an Arabic sounding name.

Lassner follows the misquotation with unsupported and unsupportable claims about Abu el-Haj's skill set, the role of archeology in Israeli society, and the central premise of the book.

Lassner never provides evidence to support his claim that Abu el-Haj lacks sufficient command of Hebrew. In those cases where the issue is idiom or diachronic linguistics, Abu el-Haj is correct while her critic is wrong.

In his extraordinarily unprofessional column in the Columbia Spectator, Professor Segal states the following.

She does make some simple mistakes in Hebrew at several important places in her book, especially in the chapters on Hebrew place names, but also including one that affects her conclusions about Israelis secularizing ancient concepts. Contrary to her opinion, "bayyit" does mean "temple" in ancient Hebrew: "the Hebrew terms secularizing in their effect insofar as the word 'temple' is absent" (p. 132).

The word temple is absent because the construend mikdash does not appear so that the listener or reader is left to make an implicit interpretation that bayyit means temple. Yael Zerubavel, who is unlike Segal a native speaker of Hebrew, writes the following in her book entitled Recovered Roots (p. 23).

Although the subperiodization of Antiquity into the First Temple and Second Temple periods might appear to enhance the religious dimension, their common representation in modern Hebrew as the First or Second "House" eliminates the explicit reference to their sacred dimension and renders them closer in spirit to the English terms, the First or Second Commonwealth.

Uri Avnery, who is a journalist and former MK, has the following opinion of Israeli archeology (Uri Avnery, "Three Provocations: The Method in the Madness," CounterPunch, Feb. 13, 2007,
http://www.counterpunch.org/avnery02132007.html).

"... most Israeli archaeologists have always been the loyal foot-soldiers of the official propaganda. Since the emergence of modern Zionism, they have been engaged in a desperate endeavor to 'find' archaeological evidence for the historical truth of the stories of the Old Testament. Until now, they have gone empty-handed: there exists no archaeological proof for the exodus from Egypt, the conquest of Canaan and the kingdoms of Saul, David and Solomon. But in their eagerness to prove the unprovable (because in the opinion of the vast majority of archaeologists and historians outside Israel – and also some in Israel – the Old Testament stories are but sacred myths), the archaeologists have destroyed many strata of other periods."

Lassner appears to have missed the book's main thesis, which appears on page 11.

Disputing the notion that all experimentation is dominated by theory, Ian Hacking insists that experimentation has a life of its own (1983: 150; see also Galison 1987, 1997). In other words, the history of experiment cannot be subsumed to that of theory. ... In granting experimentation independence from theory, Hacking also argues that we reconceptualize "the criteria of reality" (142). He suggests that reality has far less to do with what we think about the world than what we do in and to it (17). ... And it is precisely such processes of manipulation -- of intervention -- that characterize experimental life: the "making, moving, changing" of phenomena (Galison 1997:800).

Abu el-Haj demonstrates in her book that the practice of Israeli archeology affects the theory and the sociology of Israeli archeology and hence the larger Israeli society. If Lassner had a clue, could have overcome his Zionist prejudice, and had read the book (carefully), he might have recognized the tremendous scientific achievement in elucidating a process that occurs in many situations.

During Southern slavery Southern doctors used their slaves as experimental subjects to the profound corruption of the theory and sociology of US medicine, and the effects of this perversion lingered to affect the larger American society long after the end of slavery.

Lacking any insight into Abu el-Haj's book, Lassner tritely concludes his review with some hackneyed and false Zionist propaganda.

Israelis have replaced Arab place names bearing the remotest relationship to biblical toponyms with similar sounding or entirely different Hebrew names, both within Israel proper after the fighting of 1947-9 and after 1967 in the West Bank. In a sense, where Jews have come to rule, they have reversed the Arabization of historic Palestine that began with its conquest by the Muslim armies nearly 1,400 years ago. Given these circumstances, it is not surprising that Arabs are determined to preserve the memories of Arab Palestine and to use the past as an agenda to reclaim their land. Abu el-Haj's book is part of this enterprise.

More broadly, even were Israelis guilty of Abu el-Haj's charges, they would still have no monopoly in manipulating the past. The Palestinians, whose Arab ancestors crossed the Arabian frontier and conquered the Holy Land in the seventh century C.E., celebrate as their progenitors the varied peoples of ancient Canaan, the inhabitants of "historic" Palestine more than a thousand years removed from the initial Arab-Muslim incursions. A study of the Arab uses of the ancient past would be a welcome and even essential companion to Abu el-Haj's book.

The classical and early Islamic imperialists did not engage in the sort of mass murder, ethnic cleansing and genocide that we moderns (and especially Zionists) practice. Palestine went from Byzantine to Arab Islamic rule with little effect on anyone outside the political elite. The native population, which practiced various forms of Christianity, Judaism and Samaritanism was gradually Islamized and Arabized over centuries as were the names. In contrast, Zionists, whose only connection to Palestine is mythological or religious, hastened to cover up their crimes by creating a new Zionist Hebrew map to replace the map of ruined and ethnically cleansed Arab Palestine as Meron Benvenisti describes in his book Sacred Landscapes: The Buried History of the Holy Land Since 1948.

Original Article

This item is available on the Middle East Forum website, at http://www.meforum.org/article/560

Facts on the Ground
Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society

by Nadia Abu el-Haj
University of Chicago Press, 2001. 352 pp. $52 ($20, paper)

Reviewed by Jacob Lassner
Middle East Quarterly
Summer 2003

Not Grounded in Fact

The peoples of the Middle East have long waged battles to co-opt history. Since ancient times, communal polities, ranging from small tribal configurations to vast empires, and from closely knit ethnic groups to more inclusive modern nations, have turned to the past to legitimize the present. Abu el-Haj, an anthropologist at Barnard College of Columbia University, explores in this interesting study how archeology has shaped the social and political imagination of Israel and served the aims of the state. The blurb on the back cover of the book by Talal Asad, another anthropologist, succinctly captures Abu el-Haj's project: "She presents the first critical account of Israeli archeological practice while tracing the dynamic relationships among science, colonization, nation-state building, and territorial expansion."

Practice or Malpractice?

For Abu el-Haj, archeology as practiced in Israel reflects an overwhelming need to legitimize the national ethos. She holds that the scholarly discipline of Israeli archeology defers, intentionally or otherwise, to the needs of contemporary nation-building. This is a weighty charge. Does Abu el-Haj substantiate it?

To begin with, discussion of "Israeli archeological practice" is rather sketchy, and understandably so. There is much ground to cover here. However one defines "archeological practice," writing about it calls for an understanding of archeological method, an ability to interrogate technical reports, and the perusal of numerous publications in which archeological data is used to reconstruct actual states of the past. In sum, writing about archeological practice calls for considerable familiarity with the techniques of field archeology and the burgeoning historiography of the ancient Near East.

In particular, discussing Israeli archeology as a cultural phenomenon requires an in-depth understanding of Israeli society and, above all, a working knowledge of scholarly Hebrew. Abu el-Haj indicates she studied Hebrew in a desultory fashion, and although her bibliography and footnotes do contain references to Hebrew publications, she appears to have invested lightly in the multitude of Hebrew sources that could have informed her study and made it compelling.

As it stands, Abu el-Haj's reading of Israeli academic culture and its relationship to the politics of statehood politicizes the work of Israel's scholarly establishment in a way that can be misleading. Even when granting certain Israeli archeologists their academic integrity, she tends to describe their findings as bent by the state for its own political purposes. This is inaccurate. In fact, Israeli archeology is characterized by lively discussion that values independent scientific inquiry and often undermines conventional wisdom, be it the previous wisdom of peers or that of the nation's foundational narratives. Both the print and electronic media give extensive coverage to archeological digs and displays. The broad outline of that lively debate is well known among those many Israelis who follow archeological developments.

Given her interest in cultural studies, it is not surprising that Abu el-Haj casts an exceedingly wide net, and that leads to problems. Her discussion of archeological practice conflates the statements of tour guides, the claims of museum displays, the design of archeological parks in Jerusalem, and the assertions of Israeli political figures—particularly those politicians with strong links to the settler movement—with the research and writing of a highly demanding scholarly discipline. To be sure, scholarly debate is sometimes vulgarized for Israeli public consumption, but that is part and parcel of the way scholarship is made accessible in all cultures.

One has always to appreciate the distinction between the academic study of material remains and the manner in which the evidence of archeology is put to use for more narrowly defined political or even commercial interests. Abu el-Haj does not make this distinction sufficiently clear. Quite the opposite. This is a book about the politicization of the academy. Her very title is revealing. One would expect a book on archeology to be titled Facts in the Ground, but her title is Facts on the Ground, a reference to Moshe Dayan's description of newly created Jewish settlements on Arab territory captured during the 1967 war. As this suggests, her focus is less the "archeological practice" she stakes out in the subtitle and more the political uses of archeology, that is "territorial fashioning."

The author is seemingly aware that one can draw distinctions between archeology as a scholarly enterprise and archeology as a national discourse, but she seems unwilling or unable to find the proper balance in analyzing the two. Instead, she prefers the all-embracing "archeological practice," a term well suited to her attempt to boil all aspects of Israeli political culture in one discursive stew.

I find her least persuasive when her analysis turns to cultural and postcolonial studies. The references to that broadly ranging and very fashionable literature might help establish her credentials among social scientists and literary scholars who stress the discursive power of scholarship. But these references to theory tend to interrupt the flow of her exposition while adding little to an understanding of the interplay between the formation of Israel's modern nation-state and its real or imagined past.

In the end, Abu el-Haj misrepresents the Israeli passion for archeology. Its purpose is not to legitimize the national ethos. To the contrary: archeology appeals to Israelis because it offers a visual dimension to a past otherwise firmly anchored in oral and literary traditions. For professionals and amateurs alike, the archeology of the land of Israel is not a vehicle to authenticate the nation's existence or its distinctively Jewish character or the passionate attachment of Israelis to the land they claim as their state. All that is taken for granted by Israel's Jewish citizens and by most of the world as well. Rather it is only those who deny Israel's right to exist or contest the legitimacy of its current borders who deny altogether or compromise Israel's links to the historic past.

Post-1967 Developments

Archeology has played an indirect role in the politics of the Arab-Israel dispute. The strength (and also weakness) of Facts on the Ground lies in its presentation of archeological activity following the war of 1967, during which Israel conquered the West Bank of the Hashemite kingdom of Jordan. That conquest allowed Israeli archeologists to explore the highlands that were the political and demographic center of biblical Israel and its post-biblical successors. Denied access by the Jordanian authorities during the nineteen years that the West Bank was ruled from Amman, Israeli archeologists began extensive field studies throughout the areas subsequently named by Israelis "Judea and Samaria," after the Hebrew toponyms of biblical times. Similarly, the reunification of Jerusalem led to large-scale archeological activity around and within the holy city, including areas controlled previously by the Jordanians. As a result of this activity, scholars working on the holy city have been able to recover specific sites of an ancient past extending from Greco-Roman to Islamic times.

The unification of Jerusalem also brought about enormous changes in the city landscape. Areas adjacent to the Old City on the western side, which had become a slum before the war, were leveled and rebuilt according to a master plan. Within the Old City itself, the Jewish quarter has been rebuilt and resettled by Jews; its ancient synagogues, reduced to ruins following the Arab conquest of the quarter in 1948, have returned; archeological gardens are found throughout the city; the ancient Roman Cardo, the main commercial thoroughfare of the city in Greco-Roman times, has been restored and lined with modern shops; and the ancient Jewish cemetery, which had been desecrated by the Jordanian army, was restored. In addition, what is likely to have been the first Islamic government complex in Jerusalem has been excavated and opened for public viewing.

As Abu el-Haj reminds us, a good deal of this activity gave rise to controversy, and not only between Jews and Arabs. Authorities considered it natural to restore the Jewish quarter and its synagogues and once again make it the place of a living Jewish community. One may argue that the design of the quarter reflects relatively good taste; in any case, it is certainly not offensive.

Elsewhere, the wholesale changes were more problematic. The Arab houses behind the Western Wall of the Temple Mount, the holiest shrine of the Jewish people, were leveled to make way for an enormous plaza over which fly many flags of the Jewish state. The wall itself, traditionally a place of private prayer, was transformed into a massive open-air synagogue that has given rise to various disputes among Jews. An ancient tunnel extending from the outer wall of the city to the plaza was opened in 1996 to facilitate traffic but drew Arab rioters who assumed that the plan was to undermine the foundations of the Temple Mount's Muslim holy sites. Ultra-Orthodox Jews complained that archeological digs around the city might compromise ancient Jewish burial sites; secular Jews complained about a lack of integrated planning and excessive kitsch. It is difficult, however, to find in all this a submergence of archeology to the interests of the state.

A more nuanced case for the melding of archeology and state policy can be made, however, for excavations on the West Bank, where upwards of 200,000 Jews have set down roots in predominantly Arab lands. Jews who have taken to the West Bank armed with the Hebrew Bible are well aware of the various digs that connect the highlands with ancient Jewish settlements. They have established a modern map of settlement to reclaim the homeland of their forefathers.

Israelis have replaced Arab place names bearing the remotest relationship to biblical toponyms with similar sounding or entirely different Hebrew names, both within Israel proper after the fighting of 1947-9 and after 1967 in the West Bank. In a sense, where Jews have come to rule, they have reversed the Arabization of historic Palestine that began with its conquest by the Muslim armies nearly 1,400 years ago. Given these circumstances, it is not surprising that Arabs are determined to preserve the memories of Arab Palestine and to use the past as an agenda to reclaim their land. Abu el-Haj's book is part of this enterprise.

More broadly, even were Israelis guilty of Abu el-Haj's charges, they would still have no monopoly in manipulating the past. The Palestinians, whose Arab ancestors crossed the Arabian frontier and conquered the Holy Land in the seventh century C.E., celebrate as their progenitors the varied peoples of ancient Canaan, the inhabitants of "historic" Palestine more than a thousand years removed from the initial Arab-Muslim incursions. A study of the Arab uses of the ancient past would be a welcome and even essential companion to Abu el-Haj's book.

Jacob Lassner, professor of history and religion at Northwestern University, has written extensively on the political uses of architecture and city planning in the Islamic Near East.


This item is available on the Middle East Forum website, at http://www.meforum.org/article/560
Sphere: Related Content

3 comments:

Joachim Martillo said...

I wish I had more time to look into the connections among the anti-Abu el Haj crowd.

I purchased Facts on the Ground about 4 years ago after attending an Israel on Campus Coalition meeting that discussed the growing problem of pro-Palestinian academics on campus. Abu el Haj was identified as one of the most dastardly.

As I remember, I purchased Recovered Roots because Abu el Haj talks about the work of Yael Zerubavel in her preface or elsewhere in the book. If I am not mistaken, Zerubavel and Abu el Haj thank almost the same group of scholars for their advice and assistance.

The following article directly address the issue of Israel Studies. The view of al-Jazeera is simply wrong.

http://media.www.thejusticeonline.com/media/storage/paper573/news/2007/09/25/OpEd/OpEd-Israel.Studies.al.JewZeera-2988473.shtml

It asks the question: "Can the University's new Schusterman Center for Israel Studies function in other than an advocacy role?"

I answer: "Only if it could invite a Palestinian Israel studies scholar like Nadia Abu el Haj to be a member."

Here is a comment that I made on another list about Brandeis Shusterman Center director Ilan Troen.

I have not read Jews and Muslims in the Arab World: Haunted by Pasts Real and Imagined, by Lassner and Troen, but I have met Troen.

I attended a Harvard seminar in which he discussed the language used to talk about the conflict over Palestine.

Troen made some good points, but he criticized Arabs, who refused to recognize Jewish peoplehood, and provided some examples of Arab intellectuals and political leaders, whom he delineated as racists and bigots.

His position was completely unreasonable. Arab Christians and Muslims do not generally know much about Jews, and their knowledge rarely goes beyond Arab Jews, whom they perceive for the most part as ethnically identical to themselves.

As a consequence, such Arab intellectuals find ethnic Ashkenazi and German Jewish concepts of Jewish nationhood completely incomprehensible (as historically did most non-ethnic Ashkenazi or non-German Jews).

Moreover, the essentialist primordialist concept of a single Jewish people that has existed for approximately 3000 years is complete nonsense.

In historic Poland Jews (i.e, people that had some sort of ancestral connection to Jewish religion) belonged to two separate ethnic groups. Some were ethnic Ashkenazim and others were ethnic Tatars.

Ethnic Ashkenazim, if they practiced a religion, only practiced Judaism. In contrast Polish Lithuanian Tatars that practiced some form of religion were either Armenian Apostolic Orthodox, Sunni Muslims, or Karaite Jews. There is also evidence that in the past there were Polish Lithuanian Armenian Catholic Tatars and Polish Lithuanian Rabbinic Jewish Tatars, but Roman Catholic Tatars fairly quickly assimilated among Roman Catholic Poles and Rabbinic Jewish Tatars fairly quickly assimilated among ethnic Ashkenazim.

While Tatar and ethnic Ashkenazi Jews generally had fairly good relations through the 18th century, from the 19th century onward friction increased.

In brief, in historic Poland there was an Ashkenazi ethnic group but there was no single Jewish ethnic or national group, and, in fact by the late 19th century when Zionist ideas began to take hold among ethnic Ashkenazim, there was outright hostility between the two Polish Jewish communities.

I understand the intricacies of Zionist and Yiddishist Ashkenazi ethno-nationalism because I read most of the languages that were in use in historic Poland and because I have an interest in everything Polish. I could probably give a fairly long lecture on Sarmatian origin myths among the Polish Szlachta or on interethnic relations among ethnic Poles and Kassubians and ethnic Germans or about the permeable boundaries of the ethnic German and ethnic Ashkenazi communities in early 19th century Poland, but to expect Arab intellectuals and leaders to understand the details of Polish ethnology and to agree with Zionist ideas that are demonstrably false is unfair to say the least.

It is interesting that of all Arab and Arab American academics of my acquaintanceship, she is probably the one that shows the greatest interest in Jewish and Israel studies. By my standards her work is flawed, but not for any of the reasons that her critics give, and she will probably correct her scholarly deficiencies -- something that Edward Said never did.

Is it any wonder that Zionists are so frightened and outraged by her?

Consider her ongoing work.

"Professor Abu El-Haj’s work examines the relationship between scientific knowledge and the making of social imaginations and political orders. Her first book examined the practice of archaeology—a historical science—and sought to specify the ways in which it generated facts and to understand how those facts circulated in wider social worlds, helping to fashion the cultural understandings, political possibilities and “common-sense” assumptions. Abu El-Haj’s more recent scholarship explores the field of genetic anthropology by analyzing, first, projects that seek to reconstruct the origins and migrations of specific populations and second, the participation of for-profit corporations that offer genetic ancestry testing. The intersection of race, Diaspora, and kinship figures prominently in this study, where genetic origins emerge as a shared concern among those who may seek redress or recognition."

Jabotinskian Zionists are obsessed with the genetic connection of ethnic Ashkenazim to ancient Israel, but ethnic Ashkenazim have no ancestral connection as the textual, onomastic, archeological, and linguistic data clearly show. Hence, the latter day fascination with statistical genetic anthropology among Jabotinskian Zionists.

What did Mark Twain say? There are lies, damn lies and statistics. It is not a big part of my business, but I have been a working statistician since 1978, and I have evaluated the statistical genetic anthropological claims with regard to ethnic Ashkenazi ancestry from the Hammer Oppenheim research group. They are rubbish.

Take a look at http://gath.wordpress.com/2006/12/06/re-discussion-of-nadia-abu-el-hajs-book-on-israeli-archaeology/ .

Aren Maeir shows a lot of evidence from the discussion thread of being thoroughly enmeshed in Jabotinskian genetic racism. (Did I say anything about Khazars? I use a different working hypothesis of the origin of ethnic Ashkenazim.)

Nadia Abu el Haj is a smart lady. Because she will eventually figure out the issues and expose them brilliantly, Jabotinskian Zionists have to diminish the impact of her scholarship in a sort of preventive strike by denying her the tenure that she merits on the basis of the quality of her exiting oeuvre and the promise that she shows.

Joachim Martillo said...

Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance by Michael Adas may describe the same phenomenon that Nadia Abu el-Haj discussess in Facts on the Ground.

Joachim Martillo said...

Because I have read both Recovered Roots and Facts on the Ground carefully -- something that I doubt Segal has done -- I can add that Zerubavel, who is a native speaker of Modern Israeli Hebrew makes clear in note 45 associated with the passage that Abu el Haj is completely right on this issue of Modern Israeli Hebrew idiom while Segal is completely in the wrong.

Here is the passage.

Although the subperiodization of Antiquity into the First Temple and Second Temple periods might appear to enhance the religious dimension, their common representation in modern Hebrew as the First or Second "House" eliminates the explicit reference to their sacred dimension and renders them closer in spirit to the English terms, the First or Second Commonwealth.

Here is note 45.

In this historiographic context, the Hebrew term for the Temple bet hamikdash (the house of sanctuary) is shortened to the First or Second House (ha-bayit ha-rishon or ha-bayit ha-sheni).

The Columbia administration should be investigating whether Segal has crossed the line into moral turpitude and possible criminal activity (Title 18 USC Section 241 Conspiracy against Rights) that would require his immediate termination despite having tenure.

Post a Comment

Comments are moderated.