HOME
DV NEWS
SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
Edward
Said, Dead at 67
A
Mighty and Passionate Heart
by
Alexander Cockburn
A
mighty and a passionate heart has ceased to beat.
Edward
Said, the greatest Arab of his generation, died in hospital in New York City
Wednesday night at 6:30 pm, felled at last by complications arising from the
leukemia he fought so gamely ever since the early 1990s.
We
march through life buoyed by those comrades-in-arms we know to be marching with
us, under the same banners, flying the same colors, sustained by the same hopes
and convictions. They can be a thousand miles away; we may not have spoken to
them in months; but their companionship is burned into our souls and we are
sustained by the knowledge that they are with us in the world.
Few
more than Edward Said, for me and so many others beside. How many times, after
a week, a month or more, I have reached him on the phone and within a second
been lofted in my spirits, as we pressed through our updates: his trips, his
triumphs, the insults sustained; the enemies rebuked and put to flight. Even in
his pettiness he was magnificent, and as I would laugh at his fury at some
squalid gibe hurled at him by an eighth-rate scrivener, he would clamber from
the pedestal of martyrdom and laugh at himself.
He
never lost his fire, even as the leukemia pressed, was routed, pressed again.
He lived at a rate that would have felled a man half his age and ten times as
healthy: a plane to London, an honorary degree, on to Lebanon, on to the West
Bank, on to Cairo, to Madrid, back to New York. And all the while he was
pouring out the Said prose that I most enjoyed, the fiery diatribes he
distributed to CounterPunch and to a vast world audience. At the top of his
form his prose has the pitiless, relentless clarity of Swift.
The
Palestinians will never know a greater polemical champion. A few weeks ago I
was, with his genial permission, putting together from three of his essays the
concluding piece in our forthcoming CounterPunch collection, The Politics of
Anti-Semitism. I was seized, as so often before, by the power of the prose:
how could anyone read those searing sentences and not boil with rage, while
simultaneously admiring Edward's generosity of soul: that with the imperative
of justice and nationhood for his people came the humanity that called for
reconciliation between Palestinians and Israeli Jews.
His
literary energy was prodigious. Memoir, criticism, homily, fiction poured from
his pen, a fountain pen that reminded one that Edward was very much an
intellectual in the nineteenth- century tradition of a Zola or of a Victor
Hugo, who once remarked that genius is a promontory in the infinite. I read
that line as a schoolboy, wrote it in my notebook and though I laugh now a
little at the pretension of the line, I do think of Edward as a promontory, a
physical bulk on the intellectual and political landscape that forced people,
however disinclined they may have been, to confront the Palestinian experience.
Years
ago his wife Mariam asked me if I would make available my apartment in New
York, where I lived at that time, as the site for a surprise 40th birthday for
Edward. I dislike surprise parties but of course agreed. The evening arrived;
guests assembled in my sitting room on the eleventh floor of 333 Central Park
West. The dining room table groaned under Middle Eastern delicacies. Then came
the word from the front door. Edward and Mariam had arrived! They were
ascending in the elevator. Then we could all hear Edward's furious bellow:
"But I don't want to go to dinner with *******, Alex!" They entered
at last and the shout went up from seventy throats, Happy Birthday! He reeled
back in surprise and then recovered, and then saw about the room all those
friends happy to have traveled thousands of miles to shake his hand. I could
see him slowly expand with joy at each new unexpected face and salutation.
He
never became blasé in the face of friendship and admiration, or indeed honorary
degrees, just as he never grew a thick skin. Each insult was as fresh and as
wounding as the first he ever received. A quarter of century ago he would call,
with mock heroic English intonation, "Alex-and-er, have you seen the
latest New Republic? Have you read this filthy, this utterly disgusting
diatribe? You haven't? Oh, I know, you don't care about the feelings of a mere
black man such as myself." I'd start laughing, and say I had better things
to do than read Martin Peretz, or Edward Alexander or whoever the assailant
was, but for half an hour he would brood, rehearse fiery rebuttals and listen
moodily as I told him to pay no attention.
He
never lost the capacity to be wounded by the treachery and opportunism of
supposed friends. A few weeks ago he called to ask whether I had read a
particularly stupid attack on him by his very old friend Christopher Hitchens
in the Atlantic Monthly. He described with pained sarcasm a phone call in which
Hitchens had presumably tried to square his own conscience by advertising to
Edward the impending assault. I asked Edward why he was surprised, and indeed
why he cared. But he was surprised and he did care. His skin was so, so thin, I
think because he knew that as long as he lived, as long as he marched onward as
a proud, unapologetic and vociferous Palestinian, there would be some enemy on
the next housetop down the street eager to pour sewage on his head.
Edward,
dear friend, I wave adieu to you across the abyss. I don't even have to close
my eyes to savor your presence, your caustic or merry laughter, your elegance,
your spirit as vivid as that of d'Artagnan, the fiery Gascon. You will burn
like the brightest of flames in my memory, as you will in the memories of all
who knew and admired and loved you.
Alexander Cockburn is coeditor of The
Politics of Anti-Semitism, and the author of The Golden Age is In Us
(Verso, 1995) and 5 Days That Shook the World: Seattle and Beyond
(Verso, 2000) with Jeffrey St. Clair. Cockburn and St. Clair are the editors of CounterPunch, where this article first
appeared.
* Behold, the
Head of a Neo-Con!
* Handmaid in
Babylon: Annan, Vieira de Mello And the UN's Decline and Fall
* California's
Glorious Recall: If Not Camejo, Then Flynt!
* Meet the Real
WMD Fabricator: A Swede Called Rolf Ekeus* New
York Times Screws Up Again; Uday, Qusay Deaths are Bad for Bush and Blair;
Kroeber and the Indians; General Hitchens Visits the Front
* The
Terrible Truth (Part MMCCXVILL)
* A Whiner
Called David Horowitz Moans at Sid Blumenthal and Imagined CIA Slur