Washington Report, September 9, 1985, Page 10
Personality
David Stuart Dodge
By Andrew I. Killgore
David Stuart Dodge might be called a metaphor. A metaphor
for the United States in the Middle East. Shortly before he was
born in Beirut in 1922 an American commission traveled to the Near
East to question the population. Did the Arab peoples recently freed
from Turkish rule want British or French "mandates,'' (a euphemism
for colonies) supposedly to lead them to ultimate independence?
The overwhelming response: Immediate independence was desired, but
if there had to be a mandatory power, these Arab peoples wanted
it to be the United States. Faith in America could not have been
greater.
Credit for this belongs to a remarkable succession
of Americans who started arriving in the Middle East about 150 years
ago to teach and to heal. David Dodge is a scion of those selfless
Americans. His great grandfather, Daniel Bliss, founded the American
University of Beirut in 1866, Dr. Bayard Dodge, David's father,
whose name is still revered in the Middle East, was President of
A.U.B. from 1923 to 1948. David, very highly regarded in his own
right and as a Dodge, a name almost synonymous with the prestigious
university, was kidnapped in 1982 while Acting President of A.U.B.
He was held hostage for a year. The real target of the kidnappers
was not a beloved American and a venerated institution, but a brutalizing
American policy that has torn the Arab East apart in the name of
security for Israel. The message was clear.
A Man of Character and Distinction
If his friends had only two words to describe David
Dodge, they might be "true aristocrat.” Like his father,
David lives very modestly, when in fact he is wealthy. Like so many
of the Christian missionary educators and physicians who gave the
United States such a good name in the Middle East, David practices
the philosophy of “waste not, want not," His good-natured, self-effacing
manner gives little hint that he is a graduate of Deerfield Academy
and has earned B.A. and M.A. degrees from Princeton University.
After
serving as an officer in Military Intelligence in World War II,
David went to work for the Arabian American Oil Company in Saudi
Arabia and New York City. For the next 25 years he had a distinguished
career with ARAMCO and TAPLINE (Trans-Arabian Pipeline Company),
serving 11 years as manager of TAPLINE's Government Relations Department.
He used his diplomatic talents and fluency in Arabic and French
to negotiate agreements between TAPLINE and the governments of Lebanon,
Syria and Jordan. Many of the Arab officials with whom he dealt
were not only graduates of the A.U.B., but also long-time friends
of the Dodge family.
From 1976 to 1978 David was President of the Near East
Foundation (N.E.F.), which provides technical assistance in agriculture
and public health to developing countries in the Middle East and
Africa. He is now Chairman of the Board of N.E.F., successor organization
to Near East Relief, a charitable organization which saved many
lives through its relief assistance to Middle East needy in World
War I. Dodge family money supported both organizations.
Since retiring from TAPLINE in 1976, David Dodge has
taken on another, almost full-time career. He is a Trustee of the
A.U.B, and of Princeton University-in-Asia, and Director of the
Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation in New York City. At various times
in the past he has been Treasurer of the Near East Council of Churches;
President of the Propeller Club (the principal American business
organization in Beirut); Chairman of the Eisenhower Exchange Fellowship
in Lebanon; and Director of the YMCA of Lebanon.
No Animosity Towards His Captors
Now settled at Princeton with his wife, the former Doris
Westfall, David works full time as recording secretary for Princeton
University. David is reticent about his own kidnapping, but is known
to have suffered a rough time in solitary confinement for months on
end. He feels no personal bitterness against his kidnappers, realizing
he was not their real target. He is deeply concerned for the seven
remaining American hostages still held captive in Lebanon. He steers
away from public discussion of their fate, except to express his certainty
that, as a minimum, they would not be released so long as Israel continued
to hold Lebanese Shiite hostages in Israel in violation of the Geneva
Convention and contrary to its own assurances last July that all such
hostages in Israeli custody were scheduled for early release. David
Dodge and his predecessors built an enviable reputation for the
United States in the Middle East. That reputation has steadily declined
since 1948. It now awaits the work of a new generation of pragmatic
American idealists to restore U.S. standing, based upon scrupulous
observance of our own American principles and beliefs. America's
Arab friends do not want "to Kill the thing they love"—to
borrow Oscar Wilde's despairing phrase—but instead are ready
to reach out to us. |