Executive Director Schwartz on Personal
Attacks, Newark Star-Ledger, October 18, 2006
Why apologize for my faith or support for freedom?
STEPHEN SCHWARTZ
18 October 2006
In two columns this summer, Paul Mulshine criticized the author Stephen
Schwartz's embrace of the Sufi tradition of Islam and his neo-conservative
philosophy.
As an author interested in controversy, I am used to criticism. Some is
fair; some is not. Earlier this year, two articles about me were published
in The Star-Ledger by columnist Paul Mulshine. He offered readers a
combination of Bush-bashing, McCarthyite paranoia about leftist radicals and
panic about Muslims.
On Aug. 20, under the headline "War of the words," Mulshine put forward his
judgment of President Bush and his Middle East policy, including a reference
to me as a writer on "Islamofascism." Mulshine called me "an intelligent and
interesting guy - perhaps a bit too interesting." What does it mean to be
called "a bit too interesting"?
Mulshine elucidated by taking up my personal life, dating back more than 20
years. He noted that my deceased parents were leftists. According to him, I
too "had a long run as a left-wing radical before moving to what is commonly
perceived to be the right." I was indeed a Marxist activist from 1963 (age
14) to 1983 (age 34), a "run" of 20 years. I then openly exited the
revolutionary milieu and became a supporter of the Reagan administration.
People change, and the journey of former leftist radicals to a conservative
or, more recently, a neoconservative position, is nothing new. I examined
the process by which certain Trotskyists and social democrats became
neoconservatives in my latest book, "Is It Good for the Jews? The Crisis of
America's Israel Lobby."
Some people go in the opposite direction; Hillary Clinton began her
political life supporting Barry Goldwater. But nor, unfortunately, is it new
for people to delve into others' pasts for ammunition useful in drive-by
polemics. Mulshine added to his attack by impugning my entry into the
pluralistic Sufi tradition of Islam. On the basis of no evidence, he wrote
that "in that great sea of trends and urges that is the Bay Area, Schwartz
became a Sufi." Thus I was portrayed not only as somehow suspect but as
superficial.
In reality, my interest in Sufi Islam began with a serious inquiry into the
anthropology of religion, almost completely independent of, if not opposed
to, the hippie excitements of the period. My involvement with religion
marked the beginning of a complicated movement away from radicalism.
Mulshine further derided Sufis on the basis of some experience with West
Coast devotees of New Age spirituality. By contrast, my investigation of
Sufism, as demonstrated by my published books and articles, has involved
on-the-ground study of Islamic cultures in the Balkans - during the late
wars there - as well as in Central Asia and Southeast Asia. I also
collaborate with Sufi dissidents in Saudi Arabia and Iran, where such people
face substantial danger.
In his second column, "The old left and the new right," published on Sept.
17, Mulshine unveiled a new plan of assault. He wrote about me as a
neoconservative "named Suleyman Ahmad al-Kosovi" and as "al-Kosovi, who also
goes by the name Stephen Schwartz." He had the facts exactly backward. I was
born Stephen Schwartz, the name I have used in 99 percent of my published
work. Suleyman Ahmad al-Kosovi is a pen name I employed once in a pamphlet
exposing radical Islamist activities on U.S. college campuses. I have a
Muslim name, which I use among Sufis, but I am not typically known as
"al-Kosovi." To refer to me only as "al-Kosovi" is no more appropriate than
insisting on knowing and using Mulshine's confirmation name in the Catholic
faith.
The first 500 or so words of his second column were a meandering diatribe
against the Black Panthers and "rich kids from the suburbs who saw
themselves as political activists." Well, to paraphrase Bob Dylan, "It ain't
me, Paul." I was invited to join a group of white radicals that supported
the Black Panthers but declined to do so. I graduated from a big-city high
school where there were as many working-class and middle-class students as
"rich kids." My mother was a social worker and my father a small
businessman. We were not rich.
Mulshine added two more statements I find objectionable. He asserted that I
"dabbled in Marxism and union organizing." I do not "dabble" in anything. I
have published several respectable volumes on the history of Marxism. I was
a shop steward and reform activist in the Transportation Communications
Union, went on to become the official historian of the Sailors' Union of the
Pacific and served as the elected secretary of the Northern California
Newspaper Guild - over some 14 years, both inside and outside the left.
Finally, Mulshine summarily condemned people like me who, along with
President Bush, use the "rhetoric" of "liberation" in dealing with the
problems of the Muslim world. Any American should perceive the difference
between the "socialist liberation" acclaimed by the left decades ago and the
"democratic capitalist liberation" proposed today.
In all these years, I never thought I would hear or read an American
assailing the principle of liberation. America has stood for the liberation
of humanity since the founding of our republic, through the campaigns for
freedom led by Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman and Ronald
Reagan. In abandoning the radical left and its false liberation, I believe I
embraced true liberation. I have no more reason to apologize or suffer
obloquy for that decision than for my choice in religion. Both reflect a
hallowed American and conservative belief in the inherent dignity of
individual conscience.
Stephen Schwartz is executive director of the Center for Islamic
Pluralism in Washington, D.C. The center's Web site is
www.islamicpluralism.org .