Saturday, January 29, 2011

Never Prouder to be an Arab

What could be more heartwarming than the sight of Egyptian demonstrators chanting the Tunisian anthem in recognition and solidarity of their Tunisian brothers and sisters? The people of Tunisia and now the masses in Egypt have managed to do in two weeks what the scheming politicians have pretended to want to do for the last fifty.  All the fake, self-serving calls by political leaders for Arab unity and nationalism of the 1950s and 60s never amounted to much.  The ideal of Arab unity was never more than a convenient prop brought out periodically by leaders to burnish their image all the while working feverishly to keep their respective populations as hermetically sealed from one another as possible. Time and technology has slowly loosened these leaders' iron grip on their people.  Nothing has been more effective in bringing down the barriers among the people in the Middle East as much as satellite TV starting in the 1990s and now the Internet. This was not a top down enforcement of a fake Arabization scheme meant to squeeze all Arabs into a single mold but a more a natural people to people cultural cross fertilization.  No one, not in the most remote corner of the Arab world, could be effectively isolated either from the rest of the region or the rest of world. The leaders could no longer control the message.

When seen against this backdrop , Hosni Mubarak, in his speech last night, comes across as alarmingly out of touch.  While Ben Ali quickly read the writing on the wall, Mubarak seems to be ready to let his country go up in flames before giving an inch. Then there is King Abdallah, another one with their head in the sand, coming out in support of Mubarak.  While few could have foreseen the scale and speed of what has transpired in the last two weeks, Arab leaders across the Middle East ignore its implications at their own peril.  The formula of most Arab leaders,  "autocracy with stability is better than chaos", which is used to lull their people into submission has outlived its usefulness; it is history.  In fact, the opposite is true, without  expeditious implementation of real reform , chaos is assured.

4 comments:

Isobel said...

I am thrilled to see the uprisings...although I have to admit that I have a lot of catching up to do with history and politics to understand it all. I think the fact that the protest is coming from within will carry it far...I hope. It would be wonderful to see strength instead of repression all over the Middle East.

KJ said...

As with Isobel, I have lots of catching up to do in the world of politics, which never interested me to begin with as it has always been the cumulative BS of mankind. However, now that - at least for now - the power is in the hands of the people... the most priceless moment, though, was when I saw US politicians on TV visibly worried about this ally of theirs being overthrown.

Isobel said...

Oh! I want to "like" your comment KJ...but there's no "like" button here! ;) Ya, Hilary's latest statement "The US wants an orderly transition in Egypt." as if the US is the priority here. Grrrr....

Rabi Tawil (AKA Abu Kareem) said...

Isobel and KJ,
Here is perhaps one reason why many in the US don't get...lazy journalists. I have seen the same CNN reporter over three days report from the balcony of his hotel room with shots of the same stretch of road in Cairo. I would have been nice if would get out and explore a little or as we say in Arabic "shim el hawa" (go out and smell the air). Perhaps he would have gotten a little more real street level news.