Walid Khalidi is today 100-year old. He has lived through the years and decades of Palestinian suffering and dispossession. I was fortunate to have studied under professor Khalidi--both as undergraduate and graduate student at AUB. I visited professor Khalidi twice in the last two years, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His mind is as sharp as it was when he was my teacher in the last 70s and early 80s, and his memory is--literally--perfect. He has published in Al-Akhbar in the last few years, writing in his impressive Qur'anic Arabic. He still reads and writes a lot, as part of his daily routine. He is working on his memoirs (in English), and will deal with various aspects of Arab politics and his personal journey. He was a chief advisor to Saeb Salam in the 1958 civil war in Lebanon, and he is most proud of his decision in 1956 to resign from Oxford University in protest against the Tripartite war of aggression against Egypt. He told me about his first meeting with Nasser in 1956 and how the latter commented that he looked British. Walid answered by referencing his centuries-old ancestry in Jerusalem. He was one of the few people who could criticize Yasser Arafat to his face, but Arafat did not always take his advice. He talked to me about his friendship with Kim Philby. His account of the man is at variance with the Western depiction in which Philby is always portrayed as a bumbling drunk who could not take a step without falling. He said he never saw him during the years of friendship drunk except once shortly before his defection when he was under tremendous pressure. I am confident that Walid Khalidi who devoted his entire life to Palestine will continue to write about Palestine into his second century.
(In this picture from 2024, Walid's nephew--and my very dear friend--Hany Salam, and me around Walid Khalidi).