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・ Alfred Friendly
・ Alfred Friendly Foundation
・ Alfred Fripp
・ Alfred Frith
・ Alfred Fry
・ Alfred Fryer
・ Alfred Fröhlich
・ Alfred Frölicher
・ Alfred Frøkjær Jørgensen
・ Alfred Fuchs
・ Alfred Fuller
・ Alfred Fyodorov
・ Alfred G. Allen
・ Alfred G. Becker
・ Alfred G. Fischer
Alfred G. Gerteiny
・ Alfred G. Gilman
・ Alfred G. Hansen
・ Alfred G. Jones
・ Alfred G. Knudson
・ Alfred G. Mayer
・ Alfred G. Vanderbilt Handicap
・ Alfred G. Ward
・ Alfred G. Wheelock
・ Alfred Gabriel Nathorst
・ Alfred Gaby
・ Alfred Gaida
・ Alfred Galpin
・ Alfred Gard
・ Alfred Gardyne de Chastelain


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Alfred G. Gerteiny : ウィキペディア英語版
Alfred G. Gerteiny

Alfred G. Gerteiny (born 1930) is an American author and scholar of Middle Eastern and African Studies, a specialist on the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, the Palestinian issue, and International Terrorism. Gerteiny posits that the "imposition" of Israel in Palestine by the International Community was an unprecedented historical blunder, and U.S. blind support of Israel, its strategy, policies and practices in the Occupied Territories as instrumental to the instability and chaos in the Middle East. Gerteiny shares with Richard Arens, Chaim Shatan, and Richard Falk—UN Special Rapporteur on Palestine Human Rights—among other, the belief that these practices may amount to genocide, based on the interpretive comments of the progenitor of the UN Genocide Convention, Raphael Lemkin. Gerteiny considers that the two states solution to the conflict in Palestine is fundamentally flawed, not only because of the intractable mutual claim to the whole former mandate by the warring parties, but also because of its fundamental meaning and importance to Judaism, Christianity and Islam, the 3 branches of the Abrahamic Tradition. He has suggested that a more practical and equitable solution may be one patterned after the Helvetic model—an internationally neutralized "Holy Land Confederation," with Jewish, Christian and Muslim cantons, and with Jerusalem as capital. In ''the Terrorist Conjunction,'' he further argues that "bad foreign policy choices, when coupled with grievances in the Middle East, are a fuel that triggers terrorizing violence."
Before devoting his academic focus on the Middle East, Gerteiny was best known for his field work in, and expertise on the Islamic Republic of Mauritania hitherto unknown African territory, which mysteries he reported in books and journal articles.
As an academic, Gerteiny emphasized the fundamental importance of Tenure, Academic Freedom and Collegiality in the pursuit of truth, particularly at institutions of higher learning, and as president of the University of Bridgeport's Chapter of the American Association of University Professors, he led the longest higher education faculty strike in U.S. history in defense of these values, ultimately losing tenure and position, along with the striking faculty.
==Early life and education==
Gerteiny was born in Heliopolis, Egypt, where he was reared in the family’s French cultural tradition. He is the son of Officier d'Académie Georges J. Gerteiny, Secrétaire de l’Institut Français d’Archaéologie Orientale du Caire, and of Nabiha Sophie.
After completing the primary education cycle at the Heliopolis Jesuit school, Gerteiny graduated from the Lycée Français du Caire, and in Europe, from Institut d'Etudes et de Recherches Diplomatique de Paris. He also took specialized courses at the Hague Academy of International Law. In New York, he attended Columbia University’s Middle East Institute, and in 1963 was awarded a Ph.D. in Contemporary History from St. John’s University. Gerteiny lectured and conducted graduate seminars at St. John’s University’s African Studies Center, as well as at the University of Bridgeport where he served as chairman of History; he also lectured worldwide.

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