A memoriam for a valiant journalist

By Joseph Farah

People often ask me if I have written a book on the Middle East.

The answer is no.

Though I am as well-known for my Middle East reporting and punditry as any other topic, I have never been comfortable with the idea of writing a book on the subject.

The reason is simple.

The book I would write on the Middle East has already been written – and with far more painstaking research and clarity than I could do myself.

It’s called “From Time Immemorial: Origins of Arab-Jewish Conflict” by my now late great friend Joan Peters.

Joan Peters died this week in her home in Chicago. She was 78.

It was my great pleasure and honor to call Joan Peters a friend and colleague. The world owes her a great debt for her work on “From Time Immemorial.” It’s sad that her journalistic triumph was attacked for political reasons. Joan, a liberal through and through, in the best sense of the word, never really could understand that. The unwarranted criticism she faced for this truly great historical work caused her to withdraw from the public spotlight for the rest of her life. Joan Peters and I were seemingly on opposite ends of the political spectrum. But our mutual admiration was based on the fact that we were both truth seekers. I will truly miss her.

“From Time Immemorial,” the product of seven years of original research, helped, at least briefly, to change the terms of the debate about the conflicting claims of the Arabs and the Jews in the Middle East.

Peters documented the complex history of the region and in so doing deftly and authoritatively contradicted common misperceptions about the role and strategy of each side of the struggle. According to Peters, part of the problem in getting the truth out about the Mideast are the restrictions the Arab powers – including the Palestinian Authority – have placed on the media.

However, “Israel has a free press,” Peters explained. “Everything bad you can write about Israel is welcome in Israel. In fact, the Israeli press has been arguably the source of most of the anti-Israeli material in the world. They have many more papers that are what we would call anti-Israel than they have pro-Israel.”

Peters observed that the Arab leaders have intentionally perpetuated the “refugee problem” to strengthen their hand against Israel – to create a scapegoat so that their own people do not recognize who their real oppressor is: “There were many recommendations by American and foreign presidents and prime ministers to solve the Arab refugee problem. As the Arabs said in the Arab League at that time, ‘We want to keep this as an open sore and use these people as a pawn against Israel.'”

You probably won’t find “From Time Immemorial” in your local bookstore. It was published many years ago. Yet, history doesn’t change. Truth remains the same. This well-documented work is as fresh today as it was when it was published in 1984. And, fortunately, for the public, we keep our online store well-stocked with freshly reprinted copies all the time.

There are actually two books I recommend people read if they truly want to understand the history of the Middle East. Start with the Bible. And after that, read “From Time Immemorial.” These two books are the beginning of understanding the complexities of the most troublesome region in the world today – and probably for many years to come.

I’m often asked why there is so much confusion over the Middle East. It’s probably because most people haven’t read the Bible and this book by Joan Peters.

Even many Israelis don’t know this history. Most Jews don’t. It’s ironic, some have suggested, that it takes a Christian American reporter of Arabic heritage like me and a liberal American reporter like Joan Peters to tell the whole truth – the unvarnished, unrevised history of the Middle East.

It’s never too late, though, to learn the important lessons of history. In fact, there has never been a time when it has been so critical that we learn them.

Buy yourself a copy of “From Time Immemorial.” Read it. Devour it. Reread it. Embrace the history. Pass it on to others who need to know the truth. Send a copy to President Obama, to your congressman, to members of the Israeli Knesset.

Because if we don’t learn the lessons of history, we are surely doomed to repeat its mistakes. Joan Peters gave us the history. It’s up to us not to keep making the same mistakes.

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Joseph Farah

Joseph Farah is founder, editor and chief executive officer of WND. He is the author or co-author of 13 books that have sold more than 5 million copies, including his latest, "The Gospel in Every Book of the Old Testament." Before launching WND as the first independent online news outlet in 1997, he served as editor in chief of major market dailies including the legendary Sacramento Union. Read more of Joseph Farah's articles here.


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