GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. -- Rashid Khalidi is intent on debunking the
historical inaccuracies and distortions he believes dominate the
American public's perception of the Middle East and the conflict between
Israelis and Palestinians. As this year's Fall Arts Celebration
Distinguished Academic Lecturer at Grand Valley State University,
Khalidi will speak on, "The Great Powers and the Middle East:
Yesterday and Today."
Khalidi’s insightful and challenging views will be presented during his
lecture on Tuesday, September 22, 7 p.m., at the L.V. Eberhard Center,
301 West Fulton, on the Robert C. Pew Grand Rapids Campus. The event is
open to the public with free admission.
The Edward Said Chair in Modern Arab Studies at Columbia University
since 2003, Khalidi has devoted his professional career to Middle East
studies and the history of Palestine Nationalism. He received his
bachelor’s from Yale in 1970, and his doctorate in philosophy from
Oxford in 1974. He is editor of the Journal of Palestine Studies, and
was president of the Middle East Studies Association in 1994, and an
advisor to the Palestinian delegation to the Madrid and Washington
Arab-Israeli peace negotiations from October 1991 until June 1993.
“Khalidi’s lecture comes at the time of a major diplomatic push by the
Obama administration to restart peace negotiations between Israel and
the Palestinians and also to put forth a new path on how to work with
Middle Eastern and Muslim countries and peoples,” said Majd Al-Mallah,
director of Middle East Studies at Grand Valley. “In the wake of such
activity, the lecture will provide much needed context to the
complexities of the relationship between the West and the Middle East.”
Born in New York 60 years ago to a Palestinian father and Lebanese
mother, Khalidi’s scholarship is highly respected by his supporters and
even many of his detractors. His most recent book, Sowing Crisis: The
Cold War and American Dominance in the Middle East, strives to put into
perspective the decades of superpower struggles in the Middle East
between Washington and Moscow. In light of new initiatives by President
Obama’s administration to pursue a peaceful settlement between Israel
and Palestine, his lecture will be of interest to both academics and the
general public.
Each year Grand Valley’s Fall Arts Celebration reinforces the complex
and exciting roles the arts and humanities play in the good life. All
five events this year, through October 19, are open to the community
with free admission.
For additional information on Grand Valley’s Fall Arts Celebration, call
(616) 331-2180, or visit www.gvsu.edu/gvmagazine/
for the full story on pages 10-12 of the Summer 2009 issue of Grand
Valley Magazine.
Rashid Khalidi to speak at Grand Valley
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