Binghamton Faculty Remember Richard Antoun

In an article published yesterday by Inside Binghamton University, faculty members remember Dick Antoun, who was murdered a few days ago by a Ph.D student.  For part of the time that I was a Ph.D. student there, Professor Antoun was director of the Middle East and North Africa Program, including when I and three of my friends organized a three week Maghrebi Arts Festival and when we organized a MENA Students Group.  He was very supportive.
I think Steve Straight hit the nail on the head when he described Antoun as a peacemaker.  Straight joined the Anthropology Department at the same time as Antoun, and noted
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Professor Richard Antoun

Richard T. Antoun, Professor Emiritus, Anthropology, Binghamton University

Richard T. Antoun, Professor Emiritus, Anthropology, Binghamton University


Richard T. Antoun — a respected Binghamton University anthropology professor who grew up in Shrewsbury — spent his entire career seeking peace. His work focused on bridging the divide between religions and cultures, particularly in the Middle East.
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The student, Abdulsalam S. al-Zahrani, 46, was from Saudi Arabia. Mr. Antoun was serving on the dissertation committee for Mr. Zahrani’s graduate thesis and apparently had known him for quite some time, according to news reports.
The university’s Web site says Mr. Zahrani’s doctoral thesis is called, “Sacred Voice, Profane Sight: The Senses, Cosmology, and Epistemology in Early Arabic Culture.”
–via Professor spent career seeking peace

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