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Fri Aug 22 2008
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Columns
Alexander Cockburn
Edward Said dead at 66
September 28, 2003
A mighty and a passionate heart has ceased to beat.
Edward Said died in a hospital in New York City Wednesday night
at 6.30 p.m., 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.
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
and pressed again. He lived at a rate that would have felled a man half his
age and 10 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 and 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 Marian 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 Marian 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 70
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 blase 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 with Jeffrey St. Clair of the
muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. To find out more about Alexander Cockbur
n and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Alexander Cockburn
"Count our blessings" December 31, 2003
"Down with "Happy Holidays!"" December 23, 2003
"How to kill Saddam" December 17, 2003
"Dean's Dilemma" December 13, 2003
"It should be late, it was never great" December 5, 2003
"London and Miami: Cops in two cities" November 28, 2003
"The London trip of a global tyrant" November 19, 2003
"Where's the next meal coming from? 31 million Americans don't know" November 12, 2003
"From Bill to George: How many dimes worth of difference?" November 5, 2003
"Krugman's world" October 28, 2003
"GM seeds and virgins, wise and foolish" October 21, 2003
"David Kelly" October 16, 2003
"Paradise in Cookham" October 7, 2003
"Bush and Blair's chickens: but no poultry for the press?" September 30, 2003
"Edward Said dead at 66" September 28, 2003
"Alan Dershowitz, plagiarist" September 24, 2003
"Lighten up, America!" September 17, 2003
"Neocons and Democrats" September 10, 2003
"Tunnel! LIghts! Action!" September 4, 2003
"Kofi Annan, De Mello and the U.H." August 27, 2003
"Labor Day Blues" August 27, 2003
"Empire's good and bad days" August 20, 2003
"That "Anti-Semite!" slur" August 13, 2003
"If not Camejo, then Flynt! The death of the lesser of two evils" August 5, 2003
"Want to meet the real WMD fabricator? Yup, a mild-mannered Swede" July 30, 2003
"Green Party taking the plunge in 2004" July 25, 2003
"Goodbye, Uday and Quesay: Why the news is bad for Bush and Blair" July 23, 2003
"Alfred Kroeber" July 17, 2003
"Judy Miller's war" July 10, 2003
"Ending world hunger in Sacramento" June 26, 2003
"Anyone But Bush? Watch out, Dems!" June 25, 2003
"My life as a rabbi" June 18, 2003
"Why do Africans get AIDS?" June 10, 2003
"The terrible truth (part MMCCXVIII): it's a stacked deck" June 4, 2003
"David Horowitz gets it all wrong" June 4, 2003
"The Road Map hoax" May 28, 2003
"The rebellion and its martyers: Ed Rosenthal faces the music" May 21, 2003
"What's the big deal about Jayson Blair?" May 14, 2003
"Those damned six-breast martinis" May 7, 2003
"Vowing to vote Democrat next time?" April 30, 2003
"The decline and fall of American journalism" April 23, 2003
"The Remington of our time" April 20, 2003
"We said it would be a nightmare, and, yes, that's what it is" April 8, 2003
"Chickens in a darkening sky" March 27, 2003
"What next for the peace movement?" March 19, 2003
"What will the U.S. find if it invades Iraq?" March 11, 2003
"E2 and the Towers" February 26, 2003
"No! In thunder" February 19, 2003
"The great "intelligence" fraud" February 12, 2003
"One Angry Jury" February 5, 2003
"Yes, that really was the President of the United States" January 29, 2003
"Rave On, Walt Whitman" January 28, 2003
"Big Brother’s been around a long time" January 26, 2003
"Cops, dogs and death" January 22, 2003
""NO TO WAR!" Is anyone listening?" January 15, 2003
"The right not to be in pain: the Feds vs Ed Rosenthal" January 15, 2003
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

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