Georgetown University has the Alwaleed bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, which pumps out “Islamophobia” propaganda by the bucketload, gives Sharia supremacists such as Jonathan A. C. Brown and gutter thugs such as Nathan Lean an aura of respectability, and sponsors the Bridge Initiative, which endeavors to hoodwink Catholic institutions into thinking there is no jihad threat and that “Islamophobia” is the real problem (as if they needed much convincing). But what will happen if their Saudi sugar daddy can’t keep the millions coming? Will sanity return to this corner of American academia, and the other universities upon which Alwaleed has showered his poisonous largesse? Will Brown, Lean and their ilk have to get honest work, or start brandishing squeegees at DC intersections? Stay tuned.
“What will Middle East studies do without Alwaleed bin Talal?,” by A. J. Cashchetta, Jerusalem Post, March 21, 2018 (thanks to the Geller Report):
Last November, when the crown prince and de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman (MbS), arrested dozens of wealthy royals and businessmen, many were stunned to learn that his cousin Alwaleed bin Talal was among those charged with corruption. Few have as much to lose from bin Talal’s misfortune as the Middle East studies industry, which has profited handsomely from his “activist philanthropy.”
According to one 2004 estimate, since the 1970s Saudi Arabia has spent “north of $75 billion” on dawa – that is, on spreading Wahhabi Islam to non-Muslim societies. Many millions went to American colleges and universities willing to assist the kingdom. That they accepted the money is clearly a conflict of interests. Would they have accepted money from the Vatican to promote Catholicism? Or from the Soviet Union to promote communism?
In 2003 Alwaleed bin Talal became the face of the Saudis’ academic dawa when he went on what Martin Kramer called an “academic shopping spree” in search of cooperative scholars who shared his ideals.
At the root of bin Talal’s problem is the ambitious Saudi reform package called Vision 2030. MbS claims it will stamp out corruption and transform the kingdom into “a country of moderate Islam that will be open to all.” If his reform efforts are genuine, it’s unlikely he’ll approve of continued funding to promote the militant, anti-American, anti-Israel version of Islam bin Talal has financed. And if the anti-corruption element of the reforms are just MbS’s way to steal the wealth from his competitors, bin Talal may never regain the influence he enjoyed prior to his arrest.
After three months’ detention, bin Talal paid a $6b. fine and was released, but he has not traveled since and has stopped giving interviews. This has led to a great deal of conjecture everywhere except for academia, where few are talking.
The press speculates that bin Talal is not really free at all and is closely watched. The New York Times reports that he no longer controls his Kingdom Holding Company, while the Daily Mail quotes an insider who advises not to “buy the c**p of Alwaleed being treated right,” and claims that he will never be allowed to travel again.
Financial publications wonder about the fate of bin Talal’s fortune. In 2013, Bloomberg estimated his net worth at $27b. Last week Forbes removed him (and all Saudis) from its 2018 Billionaires List.
But in academia, it’s mostly quiet, especially from the recipients of bin Talal’s largesse. In 2005 he gave $20 million each to Harvard and Georgetown. Harvard created the Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Islamic Studies Program, and Georgetown’s Walsh School of Foreign Service renamed its Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding the Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding.
Unable to find any official statement from either Harvard or Georgetown, I reached out to both, asking if they had experienced or were anticipating negative effects from their patron’s arrest, and if either had taken a stance on the corruption charges levied against him.
At Georgetown’s bin Talal Center, someone identifying herself only as “Anastasia” confirmed that neither the university nor the center had issued a statement, and replied “no comment” to all other questions.
There has been no statement from John Esposito, founding director of Georgetown’s bin Talal Center, though he tweeted two articles criticizing MbS for “torturing” and humiliating the detained royals. One of those articles was written by Mehdi Hasan, an adjunct professor at the Georgetown bin Talal Center. Jonathan A.C. Brown, the current director of the center, attempted a half-hearted defense of his benefactor when he told the student newspaper that MbS’s reform efforts are really “just cover for the Crown Prince to consolidate power and remove competition.”
Calls to Harvard’s bin Talal Center went unanswered. Emailed questions to the university and the Islamic studies program went unanswered. Only William A. Graham, professor of Middle Eastern studies and director of Harvard’s bin Talal Program, responded: “I’m afraid we have no basis for comment.”
Their predicament invites silence. The Vision 2030 reforms may indeed be just a smokescreen enabling MbS to pose as a moderate, telling the West what he knows it wants to hear while consolidating power. Then again when he becomes king, he too might go on a shopping spree, and convert bin Talal Centers into bin Salman Centers. No one wants to offend a potential donor….
Diane Harvey says
“Will sanity return to this corner of American academia, and the other universities upon which Alwaleed has showered his poisonous largesse?”
Quite unlikely. Once you’ve gone full loony/lefty, your ability to discern is pretty much shot to pieces. Further who would want to trust such people.
jihad3tracker says
HELLO TO DIANE & DFD — COMMENTING BELOW HER:
Yes, Georgetown University & other campuses are “hooked on Muslim money”. Saudi prince Alwaleed has sent corruptive PETRODOLLARS for more than 20 years.
How much is secretly in school administrator bank accounts? We have no way of finding out, but I would bet serious coin on major deep corruption.
Maybe not huge donations to dozens of universities. Smart targeting to under-funded professorial departments that need help paying salaries.
DFD says
“Will the fall of Alwaleed bin Talal herald a return to sanity in the universities he has funded?”
Me thinks they are hooked on Muslim money – just a thought.
But of course, they may discover integrity and ….. Muhar, har, har har! Harde di har har!!!!
(That was my evil Prof. Moriarty laughter!)
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DFD says
Hmh, I wonder about the state of education at such uni.. err, what you call ’em? Thingies…
Ah! Here’s an illustration of their mathematical achievements and abilities: https://i.pinimg.com/564x/c4/ba/83/c4ba839cbc3caff304d3b015bbf9fc43.jpg
Indiana Tom says
which endeavors to hoodwink Catholic institutions into thinking there is no jihad threat and that “Islamophobia” is the real problem (as if they needed much convincing). Understatement…
but a lot of other denominations are lining up for the group apostasy of acquiescing to the Muslims.
I have encountered the wonderful Muslim propaganda in a few of the Protestant churches I have attended.
Linda says
Alwaleed bin Talal. can go to hell as far as I’m concerned. I hope Mr. Everything is good for his word and ousts the Muslim Brotherhood from Saudi Arabia and does everything else that he says he will do. The world wide scourge of fundamentalist Islam needs to stop for the sakes of Muslims and non-Muslims alike.
Brian hoff says
There is no muslim brotherhood anywhere in the world. It os easy to crack down on something that doesnot exsit.
Linda says
As I heard it, the Muslim Brotherhood is an established political group of Arabs.
Granddaddy says
You are correct. It is called Jama’at al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun, a.k.a. the Society of Muslim Brothers.
Darryl Kerney says
some other sugar daddy will step in and keep things rolling along
gravenimage says
Will the fall of Alwaleed bin Talal herald a return to sanity in the universities he has funded?
………………….
I *hope* so–but his role may just be taken over by some other member of the Saudi “royal” family.