For years, vestigial colonial contempt for Arabs combined with rank
prejudice against the Islamic religion, exacerbated by an obsession with
oil, proved a blinding combination. Then 9/11 pulled its shroud across
the sun. But like the night yielding to dawn, all of this now appears
in a new light.
Americans are seeing Arabs and Muslims as if for the
first time, and we are, despite ourselves, impressed and moved. In this
regard, too, the Arab revolution has been, well, revolutionary.
Tomgram: James Carroll, Where Did All the Fatwas Go?
[Note to TomDispatch Readers: I have a special offer to make today. Jerusalem, Jerusalem: How the Ancient City Ignited Our Modern World, a new book by Boston Globe columnist and bestselling author of Constantine’s Sword
James Carroll, will officially be published tomorrow. Let me extend the
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already my frontrunner for year’s best book. For a $100 donation, which
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A week or so ago, a friend of mine noticed a poster taped to a wall
inside the rotunda of the Wisconsin State Capitol building, where
American demonstrators were camped out. It showed
a lone demonstrator walking toward a line of helmeted Egyptian police,
holding high a protest sign. Under the photo, a caption said simply:
“Walk like an Egyptian.”
If you want to know something new about our American world, just
think about that. No further explanation was needed. Across this
country Americans undoubtedly understood just what that meant and what
it represented: an unbelievably brave explosion of desire for freedom in
the Arab world. If that caption had said, “Walk like a Tunisian (or
Bahraini, Algerian, Iranian, Iraqi, Omani, Libyan, etc.),” few would
have found that strange either. It’s already as normal here as mom and
apple pie. And yet, had you predicted that this was coming as 2010
ended, you would have been laughed out of the American living room by
experts, among others, who assured you that Arabs were incapable of such
acts, that their religion prevented it, and that “walk like an
Egyptian” was nothing more than a 1986 hit by the Bangles about the bizarre way Egyptians of old moved.
Sometimes the tectonic plates of our cultural world shift radically
and we hardly know it’s happened. This seems to be such a moment and
today one of my favorite columnists, James Carroll of the Boston Globe,
considers just that shift. In the disastrous early years of the
George W. Bush era, Carroll put the rest of the mainstream media and
the punditocracy to shame. As a weekly columnist, he was perhaps the
first media figure to notice -- and warn against -- a presidential
"slip of the tongue" just after the assaults of 9/11, when President
Bush referred
to his new Global War on Terror as a "crusade." He was possibly the
first mainstream columnist to warn against the consequences of launching
a war on Afghanistan in response to those attacks. In September 2003,
he was possibly the first to pronounce the Iraq War "lost" in print.
He’s still ahead of the game. As he so strikingly summed up
events in the Middle East in his column last week, “The revolutions in
the Arab streets, whatever their individual outcomes, have already
overturned the dominant assumption of global geopolitics -- that
hundreds of millions of impoverished people will uncomplainingly accept
their assignment to the antechamber of hell.” Tomorrow, his newest
book, Jerusalem, Jerusalem: How the Ancient City Ignited Our Modern World,
is officially published. It is a stunning reconsideration of much of
Western (even American) as well as Middle Eastern history. It offers a
new way of looking at the origins and development of Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam, of the Christopher Columbus story, of the
history of printing, and of so much else, including the moment in 1973
when the Middle East nearly went nuclear. There is no way to sum it up,
except to indicate that the bestselling author of Constantine’s Sword
has done it again. Here’s my advice: buy this book. It will change the
way you see our world. (To catch Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast
audio interview in which Carroll discusses just how the Arab
revolutions, the last acts of the post-colonial drama, punctured
American myths, click here, or download it to your iPod here.) Tom
The Disappearance of the Nightmare Arab: How a Revolution of Hope
Is Changing the Way Americans Look at Islam
by James Carroll
The Absence of Arab Perfidy, the Presence of God
For those same two months, jihadists who think nothing of
slaughtering innocents in the name of Allah have been nowhere in sight,
as millions of ordinary Arabs launched demonstration after demonstration
with a non-violent discipline worthy of Mohandas Gandhi. True, rebels
in Libya took up arms, but defensively, in order to throw back the
murderous assaults of Muammar Qaddafi’s men.
In
the meantime, across North Africa and the Middle East, none of the
usual American saws about Islamic perfidy have been evident. The
demonizing of Israel, anti-Semitic sloganeering, the burning of American
flags, outcries against “Crusaders and Jews” -- all have been absent
from nearly every instance of revolt. Osama Bin Laden -- to whom, many
Americans became convinced in these last years, Muslims are supposed to
have all but sworn allegiance -- has been appealed to not at all. Where
are the fatwas?
Perhaps the two biggest surprises of all here: out of a culture that
has notoriously disempowered women has sprung a protest movement rife
with female leadership, while a religion regarded as inherently
incompatible with democratic ideals has been the context from which
comes an unprecedented outbreak of democratic hope. And make no
mistake: the Muslim religion is essential to what has been happening
across the Middle East, even without Islamic “fanatics” chanting
hate-filled slogans.
Without such fanatics, who in the West knows what this religion actually looks like?
In fact, its clearest image has been there on our television screens
again and again. In this period of transformation, every week has been
punctuated with the poignant formality of Friday prayers, including
broadcast scenes of masses of Muslims prostrate in orderly rows across
vast squares in every contested Arab capital. Young and old, illiterate
and tech savvy, those in flowing robes and those in tight blue jeans
have been alike in such observances. From mosque pulpits have come fiery
denunciations of despotism and corruption, but no blood-thirst and none
of the malicious Imams who so haunt the nightmares of Europeans and
Americans.
Yet sacrosanct Fridays have consistently seen decisive social action,
with resistant regimes typically getting the picture on subsequent
weekends. (The Tunisian prime minister, a holdover from the toppled
regime of autocrat Zine Ben Ali, for example, resigned on the last
Sunday in February.) These outcomes have been sparked not only by
preaching, but by the mosque-inspired cohesion of a collectivity that
finds no contradiction between piety and political purpose; religion,
that is, has been a source of resolve.
It’s an irony, then, that Western journalists, always so quick to tie
bad Muslim behavior to religion, have rushed to term this good Muslim
behavior “secular.” In a word wielded by the New York Times,
Islam is now considered little but an “afterthought” to the revolution.
In this, the media is simply wrong. The protests, demonstrations, and
uprisings that have swept across the Middle East have visibly built
their foundations on the irreducible sense of self-worth that, for
believers, comes from a felt closeness to God, who is as near to each
person -- as the Qu’ran says -- as his or her own jugular vein. The call
to prayer is a five-times-daily reminder of that infinite individual
dignity.
A Rejection Not Only of Violence, But of the Old Lies
The new Arab condition is not Nirvana, nor has some political utopia
been achieved. In no Arab state is the endgame in sight, much less
played out. History warns that revolutions have a tendency to devour
their children, just as it warns that every religion can sponsor
violence and war as easily and naturally as nonviolence and peace.
History warns as well that, in times of social upheaval, Jews are the
preferred and perennial scapegoat, and the State of Israel is a ready
target for that hatred. Arab bigotry has not magically gone away, nor
has the human temptation to drown fear with blood. But few, if any,
revolutions have been launched with such wily commitment to the force of
popular will, not arms. When it comes to “people power,” Arabs have
given the concept several new twists.
Because so many people have believed in themselves -- protecting one
another simply by standing together -- they have been able to reject not
only violence, but any further belief in the lies of their despotic
rulers. The stark absence of Israel as a major flashpoint of protest in
these last weeks, to take a telling example, stands in marked contrast
to the way in which the challenged or overthrown despots of various
Middle Eastern lands habitually exploited both anti-semitism
(sponsoring, for instance, the dissemination through Arab newsstands of
the long-discredited Protocols of the Elders of Zion) and the plight of
Palestinians (feigning sympathy for the dispossessed victims of Israeli
occupation while doing nothing to help them, precisely because Arab
dictators needed suffering Palestinians to distract from the suffering
of their own citizens).
Not surprisingly, if always sadly, the Arab revolution has brought
incidents of Jew-baiting in its wake -- in late February in Tunis, for
example, by a mob outside the city’s main synagogue. That display was,
however, quickly denounced and repudiated by the leadership of the Free
Tunisia movement. When a group of Cairo thugs assaulted CBS
correspondent Lara Logan, they reportedly hurled the word “Jew” at her
as an epithet. So yes, such incidents happened, but what makes them
remarkable is their rarity on such a sprawling landscape.
To be sure, Arabs broadly identify with the humiliated Palestinians,
readily identify Israel as an enemy, and resent the American alliance
with Israel, but something different is unfolding now. When the United
States vetoed the U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Israeli
settlements in the very thick of February’s revolutionary protests, to
flag one signal, the issue was largely ignored by Arab protesters. In
Palestinian areas of the West Bank and Gaza, the spirit of Arab revolt
showed itself mainly in a youth-driven and resolutely non-violent
movement to overcome the intra-Palestinian divisions between Fatah and
Hamas. Again and again, that is, the Arab Muslim population has refused
to behave as Americans have been conditioned to expect.
The Mainstreaming of Anti-Muslim Prejudice
Conditioned by whom? Prejudice against Arabs generally and Islam in
particular is an old, old story. A few months ago, the widespread nature
of the knee-jerk suspicion that all Muslims are potentially violent was
confirmed by National Public Radio commentator Juan Williams, who said,
“I get worried. I get nervous” around those “in Muslim garb,” those who
identify themselves “first and foremost as Muslims.”
Williams was fired by NPR, but the commentariat rallied to him for
simply speaking a universal truth, one which, as Williams himself
acknowledged, was to be regretted: Muslims are scary. When NPR then
effectively reversed itself by forcing the resignation of the executive
who had fired him, anti-Muslim bigotry was resoundingly vindicated in
America, no matter the intentions of the various players.
Scary, indeed -- but no surprise. Such prejudice had been woven into
every fiber of American foreign and military policy across the previous
decade, a period when the overheated watchword was “Islamofascism.” In
2002, scholar Bernard Lewis’s book What Went Wrong? draped a
cloak of intellectual respectability around anti-Muslim contempt. It
seemed not to have occurred to Lewis that, if such an insulting question
in a book title deserves an answer at all, in the Arab context it
should be: “we” did -- with that “we” defined as Western civilization.
Whether the historical marker is 1099 for Crusader mayhem; 1417 for
the Portuguese capture of Ceuta, the first permanent European outpost in
North Africa; 1492 for the expulsion from Spain of Muslims (along with
Jews); 1798 for Napoleon’s arrival as a would-be conqueror in Cairo;
1869 for the opening of the Suez Canal by the French Empress Eugenie;
1917 for the British conquest of Palestine, which would start a
British-spawned contest between Jews and Arabs; or the 1930s, when vast
oil reserves were discovered in the Arabian peninsula --- all such
Western antecedents for trouble in Arab lands are routinely ignored or
downplayed in our world in favor of a preoccupation with a religion
deemed to be irrational, anti-modern, and inherently hostile to
democracy.
How deep-seated is such a prejudice? European Christians made expert
pronouncements about the built-in violence of Islam almost from the
start, although the seventh century Qur’an was not translated into Latin
until the twelfth century. When a relatively objective European account
of Islam’s origins and meaning finally appeared in the eighteenth
century, it was quickly added to the Roman Catholic Index of forbidden
books. Western culture is still at the mercy of such self-elevating
ignorance. That’s readily apparent in the fact that a fourteenth
century slander against Islam -- that it was only “spread by the sword”
-- was reiterated in 2006 (on the fifth anniversary of 9/11) by Pope
Benedict XVI. He did apologize, but by then the Muslim-haters had been
encouraged.
Western contempt for Islam is related to a post-Enlightenment
distrust of all religion. In modern historiography, for instance, the
brutal violence that killed millions during paroxysms of conflict across
Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is remembered as the
“religious wars,” even though religion was only part of a history that
included the birth of nations and nationalism, as well as of industrial
capitalism, and the opening of the “age of exploration,” also known as
the age of colonial exploitation.
“Secular” sources of violence have always been played down in favor
of sacred causes, whether the Reformation, Puritan fanaticism, or
Catholic anti-modernism. “Enlightened” nation-states were all-too-ready
to smugly denounce primitive and irrational religious violence as a way
of asserting that their own expressly non-religious campaigns against
rival states and aboriginal peoples were necessary and therefore just.
In this tale, secular violence is as rational as religious violence is
irrational. That schema holds to this day and is operative in Iraq and
Afghanistan, where the United States and its NATO allies pursue
dogmatically ideological and oil-driven wars that are nonetheless
virtuous simply by not being “religious.”
No fatwas for us. Never mind that these wars were declared to be
“against evil,” with God “not neutral,” as George W. Bush blithely put
it. And never mind that U.S. forces (both the military and the private
contractors) are strongly influenced by a certain kind of fervent
Christian evangelicalism that defines the American enemy as the
“infidel” -- the Muslim monster unleashed. In any case, ask the families
of the countless dead of America’s wars if ancient rites of human
sacrifice are not being re-enacted in them? The drone airplane and its
Hellfire missile are weapons out of the Book of the Apocalypse.
The Revolution of Hope
The new Arab revolution, with its Muslim underpinnings, is an
occasion of great hope. At the very least, “we” in the West must reckon
with this overturning of the premises of our prejudice.
Yes, dangers remain, as Arab regimes resist and revolutionaries
prepare to erect new political structures. Fanatics wait in the wings
for the democrats to falter, while violence, even undertaken in
self-defense, can open onto vistas of vengeance and cyclic retribution.
Old hatreds can reignite, and the never-vanquished forces of white
supremacist colonial dominance can reemerge. But that one of the world’s
great religions is essential to what is unfolding across North Africa
and the Middle East offers the promise that this momentous change can
lead, despite the dangers, to humane new structures of justice and
mercy, which remain pillars of the Islamic faith. For us, in our world,
this means we, too, will have been purged of something malicious -- an
ancient hatred of Muslims and Arabs that now lies exposed for what it
always was.