Helen Thomas and Queen Noor were in the news last week, American women of Middle East descent making career moves.
Thomas, who has annoyed ten presidents with questions at White House press conferences, made the mistake of answering one herself and ended up unemployed shortly before her 90th birthday.
Her Majesty, nee Lisa Halaby of Washington, widow of Jordan’s King Hussein, was in Hollywood to promote a movie she helped make with Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth” producers warning about nuclear proliferation.
An octogenarian journalist’s compassion goes out to Thomas, the daughter of Lebanese immigrants, despite her telling people of my birth to “get the hell out of Palestine” and relocate to “Poland, Germany and America and everywhere else.”
Making such a remark to two men with microphones wearing yarmulkes is surely more a sign of senior misjudgment than vicious anti-Semitism, but the demands of political correctness have led to White House denunciation and Thomas’ banishment after more than half a century of hard work as a journalist.
Unlike Thomas, Queen Noor was born to American wealth and privilege a generation later, her father a Deputy Defense Secretary for Truman who became head of Pan American Airways and later JFK’s head of the Federal Aviation Administration.