by David Horovitz
Historian Bernard Lewis diagnoses the fundamental cause of the region-wide explosion of protest, and dismisses Western notions of a quick fix. Bernard Lewis, the renowned Islamic scholar, believes that at the root of the protests sweeping across our region is the Arab peoples’ widespread sense of injustice.
 “The sort of authoritarian, even dictatorial regimes, that rule most  of the countries in the modern Islamic Middle East, are a modern creation,” he  notes. “The pre-modern regimes were much more open, much more  tolerant.”
But Lewis regards a dash toward Western-style elections, far  from representing a solution to the region’s difficulties, as constituting “a  dangerous aggravation” of the problem, and fears that radical Islamic movements  would be best placed to exploit so misguided a move. A much better course, he  says, would be to encourage the gradual development of local, self-governing  institutions, in accordance with the Islamic tradition of  “consultation.”
Lewis also believes that it was no coincidence that the  current unrest erupted first in Tunisia, the one Arab country, he notes, where  women play a significant part in public life. The role of women in  determining the future of the Arab world, he says, will be crucial.
Once  described as the most influential post-war historian of Islam and the Middle  East, Lewis, 94, set out his thinking on the current Middle East ferment in a  conversation with me before an invited audience at the home of the US Ambassador  to Israel, James Cunningham, a few days ago. Excerpts:
Does the current wave of  protest in the region indicate that, in fact, the Arab masses do want democracy?  And is that what we’re going to see unfolding now?
The Arab masses certainly  want change. And they want improvement. But when you say do they want democracy,  that’s a more difficult question to answer. What does “democracy” mean? It’s a  word that’s used with very different meanings, even in different parts of the  Western world. And it’s a political concept that has no history, no record  whatever in the Arab, Islamic world.
In the West, we tend to get  excessively concerned with elections, regarding the holding of elections as the  purest expression of democracy, as the climax of the process of  democratization. Well, the second may be true – the climax of the  process. But the process can be a long and difficult one. Consider, for example,  that democracy was fairly new in Germany in the inter-war period and Hitler came  to power in a free and fair election.
We, in the Western world  particularly, tend to think of democracy in our own terms – that’s natural and  normal – to mean periodic elections in our style. But I think it’s a great  mistake to try and think of the Middle East in those terms and that can only  lead to disastrous results, as you’ve already seen in various places. They are  simply not ready for free and fair elections.
One of the most moving  experiences of my life was in the year 1950, most of which I spent in Turkey.  That was the time when the Turkish government held a free and genuinely fair  election – the election of 1950 – in which that government was defeated, and  even more remarkably the government then quietly and decently withdrew from  power and handed over power to the victorious opposition.
What followed I  can only describe as catastrophic. Adnan Menderes, the leader of the party which  won the election, which came to power by their success in the election, soon  made it perfectly clear that he had no intention whatever of leaving by the same  route by which he had come, that he regarded this as a change of regime, and  that he had no respect at all for the electoral process.
And people in  Turkey began to realize this. I remember vividly sitting one day in the faculty  lounge at the school of political sciences in Ankara. This would have  been after several years of the Menderes regime. We were sitting in the faculty  lounge with some of the professors discussing the history of different political  institutions and forms. And one of them suddenly said, to everyone’s  astonishment, “Well, the father of democracy in Turkey is Adnan  Menderes.”
The others looked around in bewilderment. They said, “Adnan  Menderes, the father of Turkish democracy? What do you mean?” Well, said this  professor, “he raped the mother of democracy.” It sounds much better in  Turkish...
This happened again and again and again. You win an election  because an election is forced on the country. But it is seen as a one-way  street. Most of the countries in the region are not yet ready for  elections.
Yet in Egypt now, for example, the assumption is that we’re  proceeding toward elections in September and that seems to be what the West is  inclined to encourage.
I would view that with mistrust and apprehension.  If there’s a genuinely free election – assuming that such a thing could happen –  the religious parties have an immediate advantage. First, they have a network of  communication through the preacher and the mosque which no other political  tendency can hope to equal. Second, they use familiar language. The language of  Western democracy is for the most part newly translated and not intelligible to  the great masses.
In genuinely fair and free elections, [the Muslim  parties] are very likely to win and I think that would be a disaster. A  much better course would be a gradual development of democracy, not through  general elections, but rather through local self-governing  institutions. For that, there is a real tradition in the  region.
If you look at the history of the Middle East in the Islamic  period, and if you look at their own political literature, it is totally against  authoritarian or absolutist rule. The word they always insist on is  consultation. This is not just a matter of theory. There’s a  remarkable passage, for example, in the report of a French ambassador to the  sultan of Turkey a few years before the French Revolution.
The French  ambassador was instructed by his government to press the Turkish government in  certain negotiations and was making very slow progress. Paris said angrily, “Why  don’t you do something?”
The ambassador replied that “you must understand that  here things are not as they are in France, where the king is sole master and  does as he pleases. Here, the sultan has to consult with the holders of high  office. He has to consult with the retired former holders of high office. He has  to consult with the merchants, the craft guilds and all sorts of other  groups.”
This is absolutely true. It’s an extraordinarily revealing and  informative passage and the point comes up again and again through the 19th and  20th centuries.
You have this traditional system of consultation with  groups which are not democratic as we use that word in the Western world, but  which have a source of authority other than the state – authority which derives  from within the group, whether it be the landed gentry or the civil service, or  the scribes or whatever. That’s very important. And that form of consultation  could be a much better basis for the development of free and civilized  government.
And therefore, for an anxious West which is trying to work  out what signals it should be sending and what processes it should be  encouraging, what opportunity does America and the free world have to influence  this process?
I’d rather take it from the other side and say what signals you  should not be sending. And that is not pressing for elections. This idea  that a general election, Western-style, is a solution to all these problems,  seems to me a dangerous fallacy which can only lead to disaster. I think  we should let them do it their way by consultative groups. There are various  kinds. There are all sorts of possibilities.
It’s happening now in Iraq,  for example.
Yet the sense one gets is that the people in the streets, in  Egypt, for example, want to have elections quickly and have a new leadership.  That is the signal that they’re sending. Won’t it be supercilious and  arrogant of the West to try to talk them out of it? 
They’re all agreed that they  want to get rid of the present leadership, but I don’t think they’re agreed on  what they want in its place. For example, we get very, very different figures as  to the probable support for the Muslim Brothers.
Yes, we’ve seen 20, 30,  40 percent and we’ve seen attitudes from that Pew Poll, from a couple of months  ago, that were very extreme.
This is my point. And it’s very difficult to  rely on these things. People don’t tell the truth when they’re being  asked questions.
Broadly speaking, the notion of the Muslim Brotherhood,  which is much disputed – from being perceived as essentially benign,  unthreatening, even secular, according to one remark (later corrected, by US  National Intelligence Director James Clapper), to being perceived as a radical  and terrible threat. How would you judge it?
To say that they’re secular would  show an astonishing ignorance of the English lexicon. I don’t think [the Muslim  Brotherhood in Egypt] is in any sense benign. I think it is a very dangerous,  radical Islamic movement. If they obtain power, the consequences would be  disastrous for Egypt.
I’m an historian. My business is the past, not the  future. But I can imagine a situation in which the Muslim Brotherhood and other  organizations of the same kind obtain control of much of the Arab  world. It’s not impossible. I wouldn’t say it’s likely, but it’s not  unlikely.
And if that happens, they would gradually sink back into  medieval squalor.
Remember that according to their own statistics, the  total exports of the entire Arab world other than fossil fuels amount to less  than those of Finland, one small European country. Sooner or later the oil age  will come to an end. Oil will be either exhausted or superseded as a source of  energy and then they have virtually nothing. In that case it’s easy to  imagine a situation in which Africa north of the Sahara becomes not unlike  Africa south of the Sahara.
As we look at this region in ferment, how  would you characterize what is unfolding now? Can we generalize about the  uprisings that are erupting in the various countries? Is there a common theme?
There’s a common theme of anger and resentment. And the anger and resentment are  universal and well-grounded. They come from a number of things. First of  all, there’s the obvious one – the greater awareness that they have, thanks to  modern media and modern communications, of the difference between their  situation and the situation in other parts of the world. I mean, being abjectly  poor is bad enough. But when everybody else around you is pretty far from  abjectly poor, then it becomes pretty intolerable.
Another thing is the  sexual aspect of it. One has to remember that in the Muslim world, casual  sex, Western-style, doesn’t exist. If a young man wants sex, there are only two  possibilities – marriage and the brothel. You have these vast numbers of young  men growing up without the money, either for the brothel or the brideprice, with  raging sexual desire. On the one hand, it can lead to the suicide bomber, who is  attracted by the virgins of paradise – the only ones available to him. On  the other hand, sheer frustration.
So you have this explosion, which  different regimes are handling in very different ways. Were you surprised with  the ease with which, in Tunisia and Egypt, autocratic leaders were ousted? Do  you see other countries where a similar process is likely to unfold?
I was  expecting a wave of such movements. I didn’t think it would be as quick  and easy as it was in Egypt. But I expect that there will be more. We can see in  so many countries, the regimes are already gravely in danger.
In Syria we  don’t see, so far, any major expression of an effort at people  power. It’s a more ruthless regime. In Iran, the stakes are much higher.  It requires much more courage to go out on the street when the regime is  presumably prepared to go to greater lengths to hold onto power. Do you see  these kinds of processes taking hold in the more repressive and ruthless  regimes?
As far as one can judge, these movements of opposition are very strong,  even in Iran for example. Now, as you say, the Iranian regime is very  repressive. Nevertheless, there are ways in which people can communicate,  notably by telephone, e-mail and the rest, and the messages coming out of Iran  are unequivocal. It makes it clear that the regime is extremely  unpopular. There are two oppositions, opposition to the regime, and  opposition within the regime. I think that with even a little help from outside  it would be possible to do something. As the saying goes, “You can’t beat  something with nothing.”
A little help from outside? It’s a subtle  process. If the help is overt, it can be used by the regime in Iran, for  example, to suggest unwarranted and untenable Western influence. How do you give  help to people seeking the overthrow of these regimes?
One method is by  political warfare, by having some sort of propaganda campaign against the  regime. This would not be difficult. There’s a vast Iranian population  now in the Western world, particularly in the United States, who I’m sure would  be willing to help in this, and thanks to modern communications, it would not be  too difficult to get the message across. The messages coming out of Iran make  this very clear. You must have heard when the American forces went into Iraq,  lots of Iranians wrote e-mails or telephoned, saying, “You should have tackled  your problems in alphabetical order.”
Tell us more about the nature of  the Arab masses, their sense of their own religion, their sense of the agenda  that Islam sets out for them.
Well, you see, two things have  happened. One is that their position on the whole has been getting worse.  The second, which is much more important, is that their awareness of that is  getting much greater. As I said before, thanks to modern communications, they  can now compare their own position with that in other countries. And they don’t  have to look very far to do that. I have sat with friends in Arab countries,  watching Israeli television, and their responses to that are  mindboggling.
What is so striking to them?
One particular instance that I  remember: There was a little Arab boy whose arm was broken by an Israeli  policeman during a demonstration and he appeared the next day on Israeli  television with a bandage on his arm, denouncing Israeli brutality. I was in  Amman at the time, watching this. And sitting next to me was an Iraqi, who had  fled Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, and he looked at this with his jaw dropping and he  said, “I would gladly let Saddam Hussein break both my arms and both my legs if  he would let me talk like that on Iraqi television.”
Take us a little  deeper into the mindset. Help us reconcile the discord in Egypt, for  example, between hundreds and thousands of people coming out onto the streets  and demanding to be rid of a dictatorial leadership, which most people in the  West have interpreted as a push for freedoms and Western style democracy, at the  same time as we read opinion surveys which show overwhelming proportions of  Egyptians taking very bleak views on some aspects of human rights, supporting  terrible punishments for adultery, benighted attitudes to homosexuality and so  on.
It’s not easy to define what they are for. It’s much easier to  define what they are against. They are against the present tyrannies, which as  they see it, not only oppress them, but dishonor their name, their religion,  their nationality. They want to see something better in its place. Now  what that something better would be is differently defined. They are not usually  talking in terms of parliamentary democracy and free elections and so  on. That’s not part of the common discourse. For different groups  it means different things. But usually, it’s religiously defined. That doesn’t  necessarily mean the Muslim Brothers’ type of religion. There is also an  Islamic tradition which is not like that – as I referred to earlier, the  tradition of consultation. It is a form of government.
If we have  different potential Islamic paths that these peoples could now go down, how  strong is a more moderate Muslim tradition? How likely is it that that would  prevail? I ask you that because of your bleak characterization of the Muslim  Brotherhood which, again, some experts claim is relatively benign.
I  don’t know how one could get the impression that the Muslim Brotherhood is  relatively benign unless you mean relatively as compared with the Nazi  party.
There are other trends within the Islamic world which look back to  their own glorious paths and think in other terms. There is a great deal  of talk nowadays about consultation. That is very much part of the  tradition.
The sort of authoritarian, even dictatorial regimes, that rule  most of the countries in the modern Islamic Middle East, are a modern creation.  They are a result of modernization. The pre-modern regimes were much more  open, much more tolerant. You can see this from a number of contemporary  descriptions. And the memory of that is still living.
It was a British  naval officer called Slade who put it very well. He was comparing the old order  with the new order, created by modernization. He said that “in the old order,  the nobility lived on their estates. In the new order, the state is the estate  of the new nobility.” I think that puts it admirably.
Are you leading  toward the possibility that the unraveling of these modern, non-consultative  regimes could return us to a genuine, potential, wider peopleto- people  partnership between the Muslim world and the West? And if so, how do we go about  achieving that?
The only time when they began to look favorably on outside  alliances is when they see themselves as confronting a still greater danger.  Sadat didn’t make peace because he was suddenly convinced of the merits of the  Zionist case. Sadat made peace because Egypt was becoming a Soviet colony. He  realized that on the best estimate of Israel’s power and on the worst estimate  of Israel’s intentions, Israel was much less of a danger to Egypt than the  Soviet Union at that time. That is why he set to work to make peace, and he was  of course, right.
One sees similar calculations later than that. Consider  for example, the battle between the Israeli forces and Hezbollah in 2006. It was  quite clear that the Arab governments were quietly cheering the Israelis and  hoping that they would finish the job and were very disappointed when they  failed to finish the job. The best way of attaining friendship is by confronting  a yet more dangerous enemy. There have been several such [enemies] in the Middle  East and there are several at the present time. That seems to me the best hope  of understanding between the Arabs on the one hand and either the West or the  Israelis on the other hand.
People talk about American imperialism as a  danger. That is absolute nonsense.
People who talk about American  imperialism in the Middle East either know nothing about America or know nothing  about imperialism. American imperialism is a term which might justly be used to  describe some of the processes by which the original 13 states increased to the  present 50. But as applied to American policy in the Middle East at the present  time, it is wrong to the point of absurdity. Take the classical examples of  imperialism: When the Romans went to Britain 2,000 years ago, or when the  British went to India 300 years ago, an exit strategy was not uppermost in their  minds.
When you look around the region, which are the potential enemies  which may be regarded as the greater threat?
At the moment, principally the  Iranian revolution. On the one hand they’re afraid of what you might call  Iranian imperialism, and on the other hand of the Iranian Shi’ite  revolution.
The Sunni-Shi’ite question is obviously different according  to which country you’re in. In a country like Iraq or Syria, where you  have both Sunnis and Shia, the distinction between Sunni and Shia, the clashes  between them, are very important. In a country like Egypt where there are no  Shia, which is 100% Sunni, it’s not an important issue. They don’t see the Shia  threat as an issue.
There’s one other group of people that I think one  should bear in mind when considering the future of the Middle East, and that is  women. The case has been made, and I think there is some force in it, that the  main reason for the relative backwardness of the Islamic world compared to the  West is the treatment of women. As far as I know, it was first made by a Turkish  writer called Namik Kemal in about 1880. At that time an agonizing debate had  been going on for more than a century: What went wrong? Why did we fall behind  the West?
He said, “The answer is very clear. We fell behind the West because of  the way we treat our women. By the way we treat our women we deprive ourselves  of the talents and services of half the population. And we submit the early  education of the other half to ignorant and downtrodden mothers.”
It goes  further than that. A child who grows up in a traditional Muslim household is  accustomed to authoritarian, autocratic rule from the start. I think the  position of women is of crucial importance.
That is why I am looking with  great interest at Tunisia. Tunisia is the one Arab country that has really done  something about women. In Tunisia there is compulsory education for girls, from  primary school, right through. In Tunisia, women are to be found in the  professions. There are doctors, lawyers, journalists, politicians and so  on. Women play a significant part in public life in Tunisia. I think that  is going to have an enormous impact. It’s already having this in Tunisia and you  can see that in various ways. But this will certainly spread to other  parts of the world.
Elsewhere, the question of women and the role of the  women is of crucial importance for the future of the Muslim world in  general.
A key country which has not been enveloped in these uprisings  yet is Saudi Arabia. Why do you think that is? Is that going to change?
There’s  not much prospect of its changing for the time being. But sooner or later oil  will be either exhausted or superseded, and then of course the change will be  dramatic.
And what of our other immediate neighbors in Jordan and among  the Palestinians. From a security point of view, Israel is worried about  what might unfold...
With good reason... Until recently I would have said  that the Hashemite kingdom is fairly safe. I used to go to Jordan every year for  many years and there was no doubting the popularity of the regime. Members of  the royal family would travel alone, driving their own open two-seater cars  across the city, without feeling in the slightest degree endangered, and even be  greeted with cheers and kisses whenever they passed. That again could  change.
The king would appear to be above the  fray...
Yes.
And by changing his government, has defused at least  some of the protest?
It’s too early to say.
And on the Palestinian front,  what you said before about the overstated assumption that elections are the  panacea, that seems to be what unfolded with the Palestinians. There was  a dash for elections, when the only choices were between Fatah and Hamas. I  don’t see people-protests [against the regime] in Gaza, but in the West Bank  could there be some replication of what happened in Egypt, directed against  Israel?
I don’t see elections, Western-style, as the answer to the problem. I  see it rather as a dangerous aggravation of a problem. The Western-style  election is part of a very distinctively Western political system, which has no  relevance at all to the situation in most Middle Eastern countries. It can only  lead to one direction, as it did in Germany, for example.
Two weeks ago,  I interviewed Natan Sharansky. He gave an enthusiastic endorsement of the push  for freedom. But a caveat was: Don’t have this sense that elections equals  democracy. Therefore, his recipe was: Go slower. But he still seemed to be  pushing in the Western, democratic direction. He was saying, you need to take  time; you need to create a climate in which opposition parties can organize,  other parties can organize, so you don’t only have the Muslim Brotherhood; you  need to have a media environment in which their message can be fairly reported;  and then people have to be confident that they can make their choices without  fear of persecution. That sounds very smart to me, but it also sounds very  Western. Are you suggesting that might be a path or that it fails to  understand the differences between the West and the Muslim world?
One has to  understand not so much the differences between the two as the differences in the  political discourse. In the Western world, we talk all the time about  freedom. In the Islamic world, freedom is not a political term. It’s a  legal term: Freedom as opposed to slavery. This was a society in which slavery  was an accepted institution existing all over the Muslim world. You were free if  you were not a slave. It was entirely a legal and social term, with no political  connotation whatsoever. You can see in the ongoing debate in Arabic and other  languages the puzzlement with which the use of the term freedom was first  perceived.
They just didn’t understand it. I mean, what does this have to  do with politics or government? Eventually, they got the message. But it’s still  alien to them. In Muslim terms, the aim of good government is  justice.
The major contrast is not between freedom and tyranny, between  freedom and servitude, but between justice and oppression. Or if you like,  between justice and injustice. If one follows that particular discourse in the  Arab and more generally the Muslim world, it would be more  illuminating.
So while we look at these protests as a demand for a  greater stake in self-government and a push for what we consider to be freedoms,  what you’re diagnosing here is outrage against injustice?
Right.
And how  is that demand met?
Corruption and oppression are corruption and oppression by  whichever system you define them. There’s not much difference between their  definition of corruption and our definition of corruption.
So, if the  leaderships in these countries were not corrupt and were just, they would not  have been confronted? It’s that they’ve not governed fairly?
Yes.
That  resonates with what happened in Iran. You had elections and the results were  announced before the votes had been counted...
The people felt they were  being cheated.
It’s the sense of injustice at the core?
Yes. I think one  should look at it in terms of justice and injustice, rather than freedom and  oppression. I think that would make it much easier to understand the mental and  therefore the political processes in the Islamic world.
And so to the  Israel question. Israel, like everybody else, was taken completely by surprise.  How should Israel be responding to these protests?
Watch carefully, keep silent,  make the necessary preparations.
And reach out. Reach out. This is a real  possibility nowadays. There are increasing numbers of people in the Arab world  who look with, I would even say, with wonderment at what they see in Israel, at  the functioning of a free and open society. I read an article quite recently by  a Palestinian Arab whom I will not endanger by naming, in which he said that “as  things stand in the world at the present time, the best hope that an Arab has  for his future is as a second class citizen of a Jewish state.” A rather  extraordinary statement coming from an Arab spokesman. But if you think about  it, he’s not far wrong. The alternative, being in an Arab state, is very much  worse. They certainly do better as second class citizens of the Jewish state.  There’s a growing realization of that. People would speak much more openly about  that if it were safe to do so, which it obviously isn’t.
There are two  things which I think are helpful towards a better understanding between the  Arabs and Israel. One of them is the well-known one, of the perception of a  greater danger, which I mentioned before. Sadat turned to Israel because  he saw that Egypt was becoming a Russian colony. The same thing has happened  again on a number of occasions. Now they see Israel as a barrier against the  Iranian threat.
The other one, which is less easy to define but in the  long run is probably more important, is [regarding Israel] as a model of  democratic government. A model of a free and open society with rights for women  – an increasingly important point, especially in the perception of  women.
In both of these respects I think that there are some hopeful  signs for the future.
Original URL:http://www.jpost.com/Cooperations/Google/Default.aspx?q=bernard%20lewis%20jpost
David Horovitz
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment