“IF EDWARD WERE STILL ALIVE” Remembering Edward W. Said at 90: Keynote Address by Timothy Brennan
On November 1, 2025, Edward W. Said would have celebrated his 90th birthday. The Palestinian literary scholar and co-founder of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra died in 2003 at the age of 67, following a serious illness.
“Long after his death, Edward W. Said remains a partner in many imaginary conversations,” writes Timothy Brennan in Places of Mind, his award-winning 2021 biography of Said, whose work continues to resonate in books, films, scholarly works, and throughout the internet. Brennan, an author and public speaker who teaches as Professor of Cultural Studies & Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota, was Said’s student at Columbia University in New York. He honored his former teacher as a great humanist and activist with a keynote address at the Barenboim-Said Akademie on Monday, 3 November 2025. Prof. Dr. Dr. James Helgeson, Dean of the Barenboim-Said Akademie, offered the welcome and introduction address.
The event also included a musical performance featuring an ensemble of members of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra. Cristina Gomez Godoy (Oboe), Ibrahim Alshaikh (Clarinet), Zeynep Ayaydinli (Bassoon), Bar Zemach (Horn), and Mohammed Alshaikh (Piano) performed Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Quintet for Piano and Winds in E-flat major K. 452.
Once a student of Edward’s, Timothy Brennan became a close friend who was an important part of the conversations, books, and ideas that animated our home and Edward’s work. His understanding of Edward’s intellectual journey, as well as his contradictions and compassion, is both deeply personal and profound. In Places of Mind, Timothy captured not only the arc of Edward’s public life but also the teacher, musician, and lover of language behind it all. I am grateful that he continues to carry forward Edward’s legacy through his own thoughtful writing and teaching, and that we can gather today to remember his legacy together.
—Mariam C. Said
Edward W. Said was a man of many talents and contradictions. He was Palestinian and cosmopolitan, a literary scholar and champion of freedom for his people, a music lover and a committed intellectual fighter for a just peace in the Middle East. Above all, however, Edward was my friend. He changed my life, and his disappearance created a void for me, one that really has been impossible to fill. We found in each other a counterpart to take ourselves further and to help see the supposed other more clearly and to understand them better. We recognized each other in our common humanity. For me, our joint work with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra—which finds its logical continuation and perhaps its culmination in the Barenboim- Said Akademie—probably remains the most important activity of my life.
—Daniel Barenboim