David Littman (activist): Difference between revisions
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* "Utopia: A 'United States of Abraham'," Part 5, Chapter 48 (pp. 453-68) (Lecture: Society for Semitic Studies, [[Lund University]], Sweden, November 23, 1994). Part 5, Chapter 48 (pp. 453-68), in ''The Myth''. |
* "Utopia: A 'United States of Abraham'," Part 5, Chapter 48 (pp. 453-68) (Lecture: Society for Semitic Studies, [[Lund University]], Sweden, November 23, 1994). Part 5, Chapter 48 (pp. 453-68), in ''The Myth''. |
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* [http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-littman090902.asp "Jihad and Jihadist Bombers; What’s in a name?," by David G. Littman, ''[[National Review]]'', September 9, 2002, accessed January 12, 2010] |
* [http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-littman090902.asp "Jihad and Jihadist Bombers; What’s in a name?," by David G. Littman, ''[[National Review]]'', September 9, 2002, accessed January 12, 2010] |
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* ''[[The Myth of Islamic Tolerance]]: How Islamic Law Treats Non-Muslims'', edited by Robert Spencer, [[Prometheus Books]] 2005, ISBN 1-59102-249-5, contributor of multiple chapters. |
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==Notes and references== |
==Notes and references== |
Revision as of 07:18, 13 January 2010
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David Gerald Littman (b. July 4, 1933, London, England) is a British historian[1][2] and a human rights activist[3][4] at the United Nations in Geneva, operating in various NGOs gathered under the name "Association for World Education". He is the husband of Bat Ye'or.[5]
Personal life
Littman married in 1959 and moved to Switzerland the next year with his wife Gisèle, who later became known under the pseudonym Bat Ye'or. In 1960, they moved to Lausanne, Switzerland.
The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization was founded by his brother, Louis Littman.[6]
Career
Education
He was educated at Canford School, Dorset, England, and Trinity College, Dublin, where he earned his BA and MA degrees in Modern History and Political Science, followed by post-graduate studies at the Institute of Archaeology, University of London.
Working with the Mossad
For four months in 1961, Littman ran the Casablanca office of the Geneva-based international NGO for children Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants de l'Afrique du Nord (OSSEAN), Littman volunteered for a mission arranged with the assistance of Mossad to assist in evacuating Jewish children from Morocco, the codename for the mission was Operation Mural, after months of negotiation by Littman the children left Morocco under the guise of a supposed holiday in Switzerland. In all Littman assisted in the repatriation of 530 children immigrated to Israel.
In 1986, the 25th anniversary of the operation, a gathering of the children was arranged and Littman was honored with a certificate in recognition of his activities.[7][8]
Centre d'Information et de Documentation sur le Moyen Orient
In 1970, with friends, the Littmans founded the Centre d'Information et de Documentation sur le Moyen Orient in Geneva, which published studies on Middle East subjects till the mid-1980s.
Further NGO and UN activities
In 1987, Littman appeared before the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, charging the Soviet delegate with antisemitism in an ascerbic diatribe,[9] and in 1988 he appeared before a meeting of the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva which heard various "experts" discuss glastnost, in which he raised the cases of several Jews in the USSR who were being refused the right to emigrate; he extended his request to Boris Yeltsin in 1991.[10] In August 1989, he appeared before the UN Commission on Human Rights representing the NGO the World Union for Progessive Judaism (WUPJ).[11][12]
In October 1990, as the WUPJ's representative to the Commission, he spoke up for the release of single Jewish women from Syria, in March 1991 representing the WUPJ he urged the Commission to name a special representative to inquire into their situation, and in August 1991 he urged the Commission to work for their release.[13][14] In August 1991 he appeared before the Commission on behalf of the WUPJ, saying that voices were being raised on all sides for the release of Lebanese Jews held as hostages in Lebanon.[15][16] In December 1991, he wrote a letter on behalf of WUPJ appealing to UN Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, asking him to discover the fate of the 11 Lebanese Jews who had been kidnapped in the mid-1980s.[17]
After 1991, Littman worked with René Wadlow, main representative of the International Fellowship of Reconciliation, then with the World Federalist Movement, and the Association of World Citizens. He has been a representative at the UN in Geneva for the Association for World Education since 1997, and the World Union for Progressive Judaism again since 2001. During his work at the UN, he has delivered or drafted over 300 oral and written NGO statements to the CHR and the Sub-CHR.
In March 1997, Littman responded to a Palestinian Authority charge, that Israel had infected Palestinians with AIDS, by reminding the Commission in a speech that he made to it that it was not the first time such libels were leveled at Israel, as in 1983 then-PLO-chairman Yasser Arafat accused Israel of "poisoning Palestinian schoolgirls" in a letter addressed to the UN Secretary General, a charge later shown to be false by a team of independent medical experts, according to the Jerusalem Post.[18] The following month, despite Littman's request that Miroslav Somol (President of the Commission on Human Rights, and Czech Ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva) take action against what Littman called the "mendacious and racist allegations", after meeting with a delegation of Arab ambassadors Somol withdrew his promise to circulate as an official UN Commission document his letter condemning a Palestinian representative's accusation that Israel spread AIDS among Palestinian babies.[19]
When Israel withdrew from the Durban World Conference Against Racism in 2001, joining the U.S. and protesting anti-Israel and anti-Semitic remarks, in an appeal, The Hindu reported that on behalf of the WUPJ Rabbi Francois Garai and "historian Mr. David Littman, who represent the World Union for Progressive Judaism at the U.N.'s European headquarters in Geneva, said the Durban conference was being used to prepare a `holy war' against Israel and could wreck the world body." The appeal said:
"The U.N. is now undergoing its most shameful metamorphosis since its creation in 1945. Will you allow a U.N. conference intended to combat racism and discrimination to be brazenly hijacked by dictatorial regimes and mass demagogic NGO groups, thereby preparing a `final solution', `jihad', against Israel"?[20]
In December 2003, when Christoph Blocher won a seat in the Swiss Federal Council, Littman defended him from charges of anti-Semitism, saying "I personally do not accept the accusation that he is anti-Semetic and await with interest the new policies he will propose for Switzerland."[21]
Lecture; Controversy
Controversy attended lectures given by Littman and his wife at Georgetown University in October 2002 on "Ideology of Jihad, Dhimmitude and Human Rights". Littman presented a version of a talk he had given at the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, first providing a copy to the student organizers. One Jewish student requested before he gave his talk that he not to deliver his lecture; he refused, and faced a negative reaction from Muslim students, in particular when he mentioned disapprovingly that Muhammad's favorite wife, Aisha, was a small child when she was married off to the Prophet. A story subsequently appeared in the campus newspaper in which a Georgetown Israel Alliance spokesman said "The speakers gave us certain ideas about what they would speak about so that they could get in the door, and once they were in, they gave a completely different idea of what we had wanted. It was two-faced and manipulative." Littman said that unless the student organizers retract their accusations that he and his wife deceived them, he would consult a lawyer about a libel suit. Littman and his wife said this demonstrated how the Jews and Christians of Georgetown had embraced a dhimmi mentality, by abasing themselves before the sensibilities of Muslims, whose co-religionists persecute and oppress Jews and Christians abroad, and that political correctness had demanded that Islam be represented as inherently peaceful and tolerant, and no explorations of its history and doctrines that would lead to a contrary view were deemed acceptable.[22][23][24]
Writings
Early in his publishing career, Littman's writings were published in the Wiener Library Bulletin, a periodical of the Wiener Library. Others have been published by the Centre d' Information et de Documentation sur le Moyen-Orient (CID), an organization of which Littman and his wife were co-founders. The CID disseminated its publications by mailing them to prominent people and institutions. Littman also published historical writings with Les Editions de l'Avenir, which distributed its publications in a similar manner.[5]
He also published a chapter in The Century of Moses Montefiore, published by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, under the auspices of the Oxford University Press.[25][26]
Since 1971, Littman has published articles on historical and human rights issues in academic journals, including in Jean-Paul Sartre's Les Temps Modernes, in the press, and in three books.[5] He has translated into English many articles by Bat Ye’or, and co-translated three of her major books, the last published in 2005.[27][28]
Publications
- Arab Theologians on Jews and Israel (edited and introduction by D. F. Green – pseudonym of David Littman and Yehoshafat Harkabi), Editions de l'Avenir, Geneva, 1971-76: 3 eds. in English, 2 eds. in French, 1ed. in German (over 70,000 copies of all editions).
- David Littman, "Mission to Morocco (1863-1864)", in The Century of Moses Montefiore, (ed. Sonia and V.D. Lipman), Oxford University Press, 1985, pp. 171-229.
- "Human Rights and Human Wrongs," N° 1 – 11 (verbatim oral and written statements: 1986-91 made by all accredited representatives of the WUPJ to the UNCHR and UN Sub-Commission, Geneva: 84 texts, of which 68 (oral) and 9 (written) by David Littman (WUPJ, Geneva, 1986-1991). (344 pages)
- David G. Littman (ed.) "Human Rights and Human Wrongs at the United Nations," Part 5 (pp. 305-472) in (Ed.) Robert Spencer, The Myth of Islamic Tolerance: How Islamic Law Treats Non-Muslims (Prometheus Books, Amherst, N.Y. 2005).
- "Protected Peoples under Islam" by David Littman and Bat Ye'or, CID, Geneva, 1976
- "Jews under Muslim Rule in the late Nineteenth Century," Wiener Library Bulletin 28, n.s. 35/36 (1975)
- "Jews under Muslim Rule, II: Morocco 1903-1912", Wiener Library Bulletin 29, n.s. 37/38 (1976)
- "Quelques Aspects de la Condition de Dhimmi: Juifs d'Afrique du Nord avant la Colonisation," in Yod, Revue des Etudes Hébraiques et juives modernes et contemporaines (Publications Orientalistes de France), 2: 1, October 1976 (Geneva, Avenir, May 10, 1997)
- "Jews under Muslim Rule: The Case of Persia," Wiener Library Bulletin, 32, n.s. 49/50 (1979)
- "Les Juifs en Perse avant les Pahlevi," Les Temps Modernes, 395, Juin 1979 (pp.1,910-35).
- The U.N. Finds Slavery in the Sudan, Middle East Quarterly (Philadelphia), September 1996.
- "Dangerous Censorship of a U.N. Special Rapporteur," by Rene Wadlow and David Littman, Justice (Tel Aviv) No. 14, September 1997.
- "Universal Human Rights and 'Human Rights in Islam,'" Midstream (New York) February/March 1999, pp. 2-7
- "Islamism Grows Stronger at the United Nations," Middle East Quarterly, September 1999, pp. 59-64.
- "Syria's Blood Libel Revival at the UN: 1991-2000," Midstream, February/March 2000.
- "Utopia: A 'United States of Abraham'," Part 5, Chapter 48 (pp. 453-68) (Lecture: Society for Semitic Studies, Lund University, Sweden, November 23, 1994). Part 5, Chapter 48 (pp. 453-68), in The Myth.
- "Jihad and Jihadist Bombers; What’s in a name?," by David G. Littman, National Review, September 9, 2002, accessed January 12, 2010
- The Myth of Islamic Tolerance: How Islamic Law Treats Non-Muslims, edited by Robert Spencer, Prometheus Books 2005, ISBN 1-59102-249-5, contributor of multiple chapters.
Notes and references
- ^ Thomas, Martyn and Adly A. Youssef, Copts in Egypt: a Christian minority under siege, (Orthdruk Bialystok, 2006), 190; David Gerald Littman: Historian, born in London, received his BA and MA degrees in modern history and political science at Trinity College Dublin......
- ^ "David Littman, an historian, is a representative to the United Nations (Geneva) of the Association for World Education." in Littman, David, "Islamism Grows Stronger at the United Nations", Middle East Quarterly, September 1999, Middle East Forum, and "David G. Littman is a historian. Since 1986, he has been active on human rights issues at the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in Geneva. His recent statements on this subject were made as a representative of the World Union for Progressive Judaism, a nongovernmental organization." in Littman, David, "The Truth About the Mideast: Fourteen fundamental facts about Israel and Palestine", National Review Online, October 7, 2007
- ^ "Germany Asked to Boycott UN Racism Conference". Der Spiegel. Retrieved January 10, 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Religious Freedom to Get Spotlight Conference to Focus on Persecuted Church", The State, p. B2, March 12, 1998, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ a b c Website of David Littman's wife Cite error: The named reference "littmanwebsite" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Littman Library of Jewish Civilization
- ^ "Codename: Operation Mural". Haaretz. December 17, 2007. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
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(help) - ^ "The Moroccan connection". The Jerusalem Post. June 22, 2009. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
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(help) - ^ "NATIONS UNIES : devant la sous-commission des droits de l'homme Le délégué soviétique s'est exposé à l'accusation d'antisémitisme," Le Monde, August 22, 1987, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "La réunion de la sous-commission des droits de l'homme de l'ONU La "glasnost", enfin, mais toujours sélective," Le Monde, September 9, 1988, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "ONU: la disparition de M. Mazilu Le silence du vice-président roumain de la sous-commission des droits de l'homme...", Le Monde, August 13, 1989, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "En vertu d'une résolution de la sous-commission des droits de l'homme L'ONU devrait se saisir de la question du Tibet", Le Monde, September 3, 2001, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "The Fate of 20 Jewish Women in Syria," The Jerusalem Post, October 2, 1990, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ Canadian Jewish Chronicle (Winnipeg), p. A21, March 13, 1991, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "Lebanese Jews' Release Sought in Prisoner Deal," The Jerusalem Post, August 16, 1991, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "Syrian Jews," The Jerusalem Post, August 25, 1991, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ The Washington Times, December 26, 1991, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "PA official: Israel infected Palestinians with AIDS," The Jerusalem Post, March 17, 1997, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "UN won't counter Palestinian AIDS allegation", The Jerusalem Post, April 11, 1997, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "U.S., Israel pull out of Durban meet," The Hindu, September 3, 2001, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ Herald-Journal, "Nationalist Billionaire Elected to powerful Swiss Cabinet post", Herald-Journal, December 10, 2003, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "Damned If You Do; Historians dare to criticize Islamic dhimmitude at Georgetown and pay a price," The National Review, October 29, 2002, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "Stateside: News from Jewish America", The Jerusalem Post, November 8, 2002, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "Evidence of Bigotry Absent from Lectures," The Hoya, November 19, 2002, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ Citation in: Proceedings of the Twelfth British Conference on Judeo-Spanish Studies (2001) edited by Hilary Pomeroy, Michael Alpert, Institute of Jewish Studies, Studies in Judaica, Brill
- ^ Amazon link for The Century of Moses Montefiore
- ^ "Article: Religion of War," The Jerusalem Post, January 2, 1997, accessed January 12, 2010
- ^ "Article: The Decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam: From Jihad to Dhimmitude, Seventh-Twentieth Centuries. (book reviews)", History: Review of New Books, March 22, 1997, accessed January 1, 2010