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Will there be another Arab Spring?
Yes, as surely as mountains are washed to the sea, as surely as people long to
be free. (Bob Dylan) …History repeats.
In biblical times, the Assyrians
used terror to maintain their empire: They went in for showy things like making
pyramids of heads of their enemies. One day Egypt revolted. Revolt failed, people
screamed. Then Syria tried, it too was bloodily repressed. Various lands,
in sequence, revolted. At last Egypt tried again—and this time broke free. From
that day it was only a matter of time before the evil empire passed into
history. Merely two hundred years after the Assyrian capital city of Nineveh was
destroyed, reduced to a great earthen mound, peasants in the area did not know
what the mound was. As a Jewish scholar wrote, “Nineveh is gone, and who shall
bewail her?”
Of course modern Arab dictators are
careful not to provoke a revolt, and of course they are supported by the police
and organized Arab religions, just as how in WWII the various organized religions
in Japan’s East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere supported the Japanese empire. Of
course Arab peasants don’t believe in separation of church and state, human
rights, freedom of speech and democracy. Not most, not yet, but… they are
talking. And they can talk to cousins in North America. Even if the workers are
too busy to read, many can still hear. They might hear how the Muslim parts of Eastern
Europe are prospering, even though—or else because—after renouncing communism,
they went secular, not sharia.
I think Egypt, with it’s vast
population, will be the site of the new Arab spring, although it might not
happen until Arab babies being born today, born crying for democracy, are grown
adults. The day will come. And what will they think of us, in their excited days
of freedom?
Will they remember how back when
Obama was president the U.S. still believed in “Yankee imperialism?” As in
Secretary of State John Kerry going to Cairo and twisting Egypt’s arm to take a
huge loan, and military hardware, without attaching any strings, any requirement
whatsoever, for human rights? This although there is blazing evidence that
terrorism is associated with lack of civil rights? I know, yes, I know Obama
never utters the words “war on terror” but the next generation of Arabs won’t
know that: They’ll just think that back when they were children the Yankees
wanted imperialism more than they wanted to win "peace and freedom" for Arabs.
And then, in the seasons following
their liberation, idealistic Arab college students gathering in their libraries
to converse and research will know whether the West set an example in freedom
or in appeasement. As in cartoons.
Did westerners self-censor, to save their own skins, or instead set a “tough
love” example to help Arabs learn?
Here is a verse I memorized from a
school history textbook:
The Destruction of Sennacherib
By George Gordon Byron
The Assyrian came down like a wolf
on the fold
And his cohorts were gleaming in
silver and gold
And the sheen of their spears was
like stars on the sea,
When the blue waves roll nightly on
deep Galilee.
(Link to the rest of the poem)
Sean Crawford
January
Calgary
2015
~Well blog fans, today in my title I
am trying the word “poetics” because while having “poem” in a post gets a low
hit count, having “remarks” gets a count so low you wouldn’t believe me. (I’ve
blogged since 2009, I know my stats)
~During the cold war we compared
and contrasted our way of life with the dull Russians and communists, now in
the war on terror I sometimes compare us to Arabs and Muslims.
And so I thought of Arabs today when
I was reading Simone de Beauvoir’s Memoirs
of a Dutiful Daughter. Simone was only 11 years older than my father, yet
she lived in a dutiful time when her culture was too extreme, too rigid—like
the Muslim cultures of today. It strikes me this was merely a hundred years
ago. I don’t worry about Arabs reading it, since only 600 translations per year
are made into Arabic, but I wonder about dutiful Muslims in Europe or America:
Would it hurt the feelings of Muslims with too much ego (and without “boundaries”) to read Simone and then realize the West is merely 100 years ahead? Such a short time.
I think of it this way: While it doesn’t hurt the youngest boy in a huge family
if the eldest brother is far ahead, surely having a brother merely two years older
who was successful and liberated would feel like a sad reproach.
~Simone is like my friend Blair in
finding most people boring. No wonder her boyfriend was Jean Paul Sarte. On
page 236 she writes:
“The students I tried to get
friendly with at the Sorbonne were all, I thought, both male and female,
without any interest: they kept rushing about in noisy groups, laughing their
heads off; they weren’t interested in anything and were quite complacent about
their indifference.”
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