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Because of Israel's
abominable behaviour towards Palestinians, most Arabs -- myself
included -- have tended to direct our criticism less to the
general situation in the Arab world than we might ordinarily do.
I do not think it is an exaggeration to say, however, that once
we start to look at what obtains in the Arab world most of us
are fairly appalled by the over-all condition of mediocrity and
galloping degeneration that seem to have become our lot.
In all significant fields (except perhaps for cooking) we have
declined to the bottom of the heap when it comes to quality of
life. We have become an embarrassment, as much for our
powerlessness, and hypocrisy (for instance, vis-à-vis the
Intifada, for which the Arab states do next to nothing) as for
the abysmally poor social, economic and political conditions that have overtaken every
Arab country almost without exception Illiteracy, poverty,
unemployment and unproductivity have increased alarmingly. And whereas
the rest of the world seems to be moving in a democratic direction,
the Arab world is going the other way, toward even greater degrees of
tyranny, autocracy, and Mafia- style rule. As a result, more and more
of us feel that we should no longer keep silent about this. Yet one
scarcely knows where to begin in trying to ameliorate the situation,
although honesty about what we have allowed to happen to ourselves is
a good way to start. A small number of instances illustrate what I
mean more eloquently than lists of facts and figures, all of which,
incidentally, would support what I mean here. A short time ago, the
Egyptian-American intellectual Saad Eddin Ibrahim, professor of
sociology at the American University in Cairo and director of the Ibn
Khaldun Centre, was sentenced to seven years in prison with hard
labour by a state security court. And this after two months of
solitary confinement consequent on summary arrest, followed by several
months of trial for financial misdemeanour, tarnishing Egypt's image,
tampering with the election process, stirring up confessional or
sectarian sentiment, as well as being an enemy informer. These are
major charges, of course, but what seems amazing is that the court
rendered its judgment in a matter of hours after hearing evidence for
months.
A huge amount of attention has been lavished on the case for
obvious reasons. A prominent intellectual had been brought low in a
country whose political centrality and size almost guaranteed much
commentary and, especially in the liberal West, a great deal of
negative judgment against the systemthat seemed to be persecuting a
man for his independent, if not always widely popular, opinions. The
few Arabs who defended him almost uniformly began by saying that they
found his views and his methods distasteful: he was known to favour
normalisation with Israel, he seemed to prosper financially because of
what seemed to be his entrepreneurship, and his ideas in general
circulated with more success outside, rather than inside, the Arab
world. Still, it was meant to be clear to everyone that an example was
being made of him; he therefore suffered unjustly, despite his on the
whole rather special way of life and success.
I must be one of the few people who has followed the case from
a distance, but who knew Ibrahim about 30 years ago and has not seen
or heard from him since. I have visited Egypt and AUC several times in
the last two decades, but his path and mine never crossed. I don't
recall reading anything by him, but I did know of his interest in
civil society, his cordial relationship with the power elite in Egypt,
Jordan and elsewhere, as well as his interest in elections and
minorities. All of this I gleaned at second or third hand, so I am not
in a position to say anything about his ideas. Nor do I think they are
really relevant, one way or the other. I assume that he has ideas, and
I also assume that, like all intellectuals, he has generated as much
hostility as support. That proves nothing and strikes me as entirely
normal.
What appears incontrovertibly abnormal, however, is that he has been
systematically punished by the state because of his fame and his
criticism of several of the state's policies. The lesson seems to be
that if you have the temerity to speak out too much and if you
displease the powers that be, you will be severely cut down. Many
countries in the world are ruled by emergency decree. Without
exception such rule must be opposed and condemned. There can be no
reason short of absolute natural catastrophe to suspend unilaterally
the rule of law and the protection of impartial justice. Even the
worst criminals in a society of laws are entitled to justice and
proportional sentence. In the United States, for example, many
commentators on the Ibrahim case fail to point out that America (which
is not ruled by emergency decree) is one of the worst offenders when
it comes to unfair sentencing (usually affecting non-whites), capital
punishment, and a horrible prison system that per capita is the
largest and most punitive in the world. In other words, what Egypt
does must be looked at from a perspective that includes so-called
civilised countries, many of whose journalists have condemned
Ibrahim's treatment without also admitting that his case is not
unique, whether in the Middle East or in the West. Thousands of
Islamist militants are treated far worse, without much protest from
liberal journalists who are passionate defenders of Ibrahim (such as
Thomas Friedman) and who have nothing to say either about their own
countries' human rights abuses, despite the law, or about the fate of
less visible Arab victims of state injustice than Saad Eddin Ibrahim.
The point, of course, is that justice is justice, and injustice
injustice, no matter who is indicted and mistreated. The travesty of
due process in the Ibrahim case is an offense not because he is rich
and famous, but because the offense is a serious one no matter who its
victim is. And what is so significant about the case is that it speaks
volumes about our current malaise and our sense of distorted
priorities when it is assumed that any citizen at all, not just a
famous academic, can be subject to the distortions of power in the
Arab world. The case tells us that our rulers hold that no one is
immune from their wrath and that citizens should maintain a permanent
sense of fear and capitulation when it comes to authority, whether
secular or religious. When the state is transformed from its role as
the people's property and becomes instead the possession of a regime
or a ruler, to be used as it/he sees fit, we have to admit that as a
sovereign people we have been defeated, and have entered a phase of
advanced degeneration which it may be too late to repair or reverse.
Neither a constitution nor an election process has any real
meaning if such suspensions of law and justice can take place with the
relative acquiescence of an entire people, especially the
intellectuals. What I mean is not just that we don't have democracy,
but that at bottom we seem to have refused the very concept itself. I
became dramatically aware of this eight years ago when, after a
lecture I gave in London in which I criticized the Arab governments
for their abuse of human freedoms, I was summoned by an Arab
ambassador to apologize for my remarks. When I refused even to speak
to the man, a friend interceded and arranged for me to have tea with
the offended ambassador at my friend's house. What transpired was
profoundly revealing. When I repeated my comments, the ambassador lost
his temper (he happened also to be a member of the ruling party) and
told me in no uncertain terms that, as far as he and his regime were
concerned, democracy was little more than AIDS, pornography, and
chaos. "We don't want that," he kept repeating with almost insensate
rage.
Then I understood: so deep has the authoritarianism in us
become that any challenge to it is seen as little short of devilish
and therefore unacceptable. Not for nothing have so many people turned
to an extremist form of religion as a result of desperation and the
absence of hope. When democratic rights were first abrogated in the
early years of independence because there seemed to be genuine
security concerns, no one realised that the "emergency" would continue
for half a century while showing no sign at all of abating in the
interests of personal freedom. On the contrary, as the security state
has become more insecure -- after all, what state in our area can
actually provide its citizens with the kind of security and freedom
from fear and want that they are entitled to? -- the level of
repression increases. No one is safe, no one is free of anxiety, no
value is preserved by law.
So low has the individual's status sunk that even one's basic
right of citizenship, one's right to exist free of personal threat
from the state, has all but vanished. As a second instance of what I
am describing as a worsening situation, there is the case of the
Lebanese journalist Raghida Dergham, a capable Lebanese woman who has
represented Al-Hayat in New York for several years. A fine reporter
and commentator with an excellent reputation in America, she has
brought credit to her profession and her country for several years.
She has now been indicted for high treason in her country because she
attended a public Washington meeting and debated Uri Lubrani, an
Israeli Mossad operative who was one of (and perhaps the chief of) the
supervisors of the occupation regime in south Lebanon. (Before that he
had been Israel's connection with the Shah of Iran). Dergham's
passport has been withdrawn, and if she returns to her country she
will immediately be arrested. (Another Lebanese journalist, Samir
Kassir, has had his citizenship revoked because something he wrote
seems to have angered the authorities).
The Dergham case is an amazing act of perversity that suggests
how far conceptions of the "crime" of "normalization" -- a stupid
concept when overused either to divert attention from Arab
indifference to the Palestinians, to attack other Arabs, or to promote
ignorance, as I argued in my last article -- can be taken. In the
first place, Dergham's debate with Lubrani was held in public, in the
United States. There was nothing secret about it; it was nothing more
than a debate, and certainly not a negotiation. To expect a normal,
functioning citizen to obey laws that forbid even mentioning Israel's
name is mindless, to say the least. Besides, every Arab government
that I know of has had dealings with Israel, secret or open. The whole
world, and especially Israel's Palestinian victims, knows that Israel,
its army, agents, police and society exist: what earthly use is there
in pretending that it doesn't? But to call what Dergham did high
treason is not so much to reveal that the notion of treason has been
extended beyond reason and normal practice, but rather to show with
what radical hostility the state views its own citizens, particularly
those who carry out their professional obligations with skill and
conscience. Besides, in most countries except ours, open debate is one
of the ways by which the Arab viewpoint is made known. How can that be
opposed?
But to Arab governments, sad as it may seem, an enlightened
view is something they feel that they must oppose, especially if it
displeases the ruler. One can understand and even accept that there
can be an adversarial relationship between the state and its citizens,
but there is now a situation of such profound antagonism whereby the
individual citizen can be threatened with near-extinction by
government and ruler, that the entire balance between various
interests in the state has lost all meaning. Crime is no longer an
objective act, governed by recognized, publicly codified procedures of
evidence, trial, punishment and appeal, but has become the prerogative
of the state entirely to define and punish at will.
At issue is the right to free thought and expression and,
underlying that, the right to be free of ludicrously enacted
restrictions against individual freedom. Both the cases I have cited
were brought against well-known personalities who have the resources
and connections to draw attention to what was so unjustly done to
them. But a whole, mostly hidden, population of possible victims
exists in Arab societies today, against whom similar measures can be
and have been taken, either individually or collectively. For them
such ridiculously overused rubrics as homosexuality, atheism,
extremism, terrorism and fundamentalism have been used much of the
time without sufficient care and nuance, just so that critics of the
ruling groups could be silenced or imprisoned. Torture has been as
common in Arab prisons, alas, as it has been in Israeli ones.
Most of us live in fear of such a fate, and this is why many
intellectuals keep silent or thank their lucky stars that what has
happened to Saad Eddin Ibrahim and Raghida Dergham hasn't happened to
them. And certainly these two individuals have been singled out so
that an example could be made of their humiliation and punishment.
Foolishly, however, other intellectuals also hope that if they behave,
join the chorus of condemnation, and be careful to say only the
"right" things, they will not suffer a similar fate. At this point, I
do not know which is worse: direct censorship practiced by the
government, or the self-censorship of caution exercised by each and
every one of us so that we can lead our lives inoffensively without
going to jail or disappearing in the night. The other day I met a
young Iraqi Kurd who had just escaped from his country. There, he told
me, if someone wanted to do you harm, you could be reported to the
police as an enemy of the state: the likelihood is that you and your
family would thereafter just disappear. Of how many countries in the
world today is this true, and how many of them are Arab? I am too
embarrassed to ask.
As the Arab world spins into further incoherence and shame, it
is up to everyone of us to speak up against these terrible abuses of
power. No one is safe unless every citizen protests what in effect is
a reversion to mediaeval practices of autocracy. If we accuse Israel
of what it has done to the Palestinians, we must be willing to apply
exactly the same standards of behaviour to our own countries. This
norm is as true for the American as it is for the Arab and the Israeli
intellectual, who must criticise human rights abuses from a universal
point of view, not simply when they occur within the domain of an
officially designated enemy. Our own cause is strengthened when we
take positions that can be applied to all situations, without
conditions like saying "I disagree with his views, but" as a way of
lessening the difficulty and the onus of speaking out. The truth is
that, as Arabs, all we have left now is the power of speaking out, and
unless we exercise that right, the slide into terminal degeneration
cannot ever be stopped.
The hour is very late.
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