I have not been posting lately because, as I have indicated,
I do not think that I have the kind of specialist knowledge of the Israeli
situation that would give what I say any merit. But I have been watching those
reports obsessively. First CNN and then MSNBC finally began to have reports
about and interviews with the families of the Palestinians being released, and
not at all surprisingly, one finds those stories as moving as the stories about
the released Israelis. Now that
reporters can get into Gaza more easily, we begin to see pictures of the total
devastation that has been wrought in Gaza city by the Israelis. Having supported Hamas for years as a counter
to the Palestinian Authority in order to make any possibility of an independent
Palestinian state impossible, and having been caught completely by surprise by
the Hamas attack, Netanyahu is now committed to the total destruction of Hamas.
It is my impression that the destruction of Gaza and the deaths of 20,000 or
more Palestinians is, from his point of view, a feature not a bug of the war
effort he has mounted.
I suppose we shall have to leave it to history and the
experts to make a final judgment on the performance of Biden, but it seems to
me it may turn out in the end that he has played this disaster as well as he
possibly could to retain some influence with Israel and pressure them to back
off from their war plans. I have no idea whether this is true. It may just be my
desperate effort to find some suggestion of hope in a disasterous situation.
Meanwhile, if a may turn to a much happier matter, my
grandson Samuel (or Sam, as he wishes to be called now) will turn 18 next month
and I have been brooding about what to give him as a birthday present. He is
currently applying to colleges and his father tells me that he will be taking a
course next semester on Middle Eastern affairs. Considering all of that, I have
decided to give them three books.
The first is a copy of the great work by Erich Auerbach, Mimesis. I read Mimesis many many years ago, and not surprisingly I was fascinated
and delighted by it, but it has been decades since I looked at the book and
when Samuel’s copy (whoops, I mean Sam’s copy) arrived from Amazon, I picked it
up and reread the first chapter. Lord it is a wonderful book.
The second book I decided to give him, to prepare him for
his course next semester, is Edward Said’s Orientalism.
Coincidentally, the edition of the Auerbach book that arrived is a fiftieth
anniversary reprint with a special new preface by Said.
The third book I chose is my book The Ideal of the University, which
began as a series of lectures at the
University of Wisconsin Madison and was published 54 years ago.
If hr reads those three books, I think he will be ready
for the great adventure of college.