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These Are Secular Popular Revolts – Yet Everyone is Blaming Religion
Our writer, who was in Cairo as the revolution took hold in Egypt, reports from Bahrain on why Islam has little to do with what is going on
Mubarak claimed that Islamists were behind the Egyptian revolution. Ben Ali said the same in Tunisia. King Abdullah of Jordan sees a dark and sinister hand – al-Qa'ida's hand, the Muslim Brotherhood's hand, an Islamist hand – behind the civil insurrection across the Arab world. Yesterday the Bahraini authorities discovered Hizbollah's bloody hand behind the Shia uprising there. For Hizbollah, read Iran. How on earth do well-educated if singularly undemocratic men get this thing so wrong? Confronted by a series of secular explosions – Bahrain does not quite fit into this bracket – they blame radical Islam. The Shah made an identical mistake in reverse. Confronted by an obviously Islamic uprising, he blamed it on Communists.
Bobbysocks Obama and Clinton have managed an even weirder somersault. Having originally supported the "stable" dictatorships of the Middle East – when they should have stood by the forces of democracy – they decided to support civilian calls for democracy in the Arab world at a time when the Arabs were so utterly disenchanted with the West's hypocrisy that they didn't want America on their side. "The Americans interfered in our country for 30 years under Mubarak, supporting his regime, arming his soldiers," an Egyptian student told me in Tahrir Square last week. "Now we would be grateful if they stopped interfering on our side." At the end of the week, I heard identical voices in Bahrain. "We are getting shot by American weapons fired by American-trained Bahraini soldiers with American-made tanks," a medical orderly told me on Friday. "And now Obama wants to be on our side?"
The events of the past two months and the spirit of anti-regime Arab insurrection – for dignity and justice, rather than any Islamic emirate – will remain in our history books for hundreds of years. And the failure of Islam's strictest adherents will be discussed for decades. There was a special piquancy to the latest footage from al-Qa'ida yesterday, recorded before the overthrow of Mubarak, that emphasised the need for Islam to triumph in Egypt; yet a week earlier the forces of secular, nationalist, honourable Egypt, Muslim and Christian men and women, had got rid of the old man without any help from Bin Laden Inc. Even weirder was the reaction from Iran, whose supreme leader convinced himself that the Egyptian people's success was a victory for Islam. It's a sobering thought that only al-Qa'ida and Iran and their most loathed enemies, the anti-Islamist Arab dictators, believed that religion lay behind the mass rebellion of pro-democracy protesters.
The bloodiest irony of all – which dawned rather slowly on Obama – was that the Islamic Republic of Iran was praising the democrats of Egypt while threatening to execute its own democratic opposition leaders.
Not, then, a great week for "Islamicism". There's a catch, of course. Almost all the millions of Arab demonstrators who wish to shrug off the cloak of autocracy which – with our Western help – has smothered their lives in humiliation and fear are indeed Muslims. And Muslims – unlike the "Christian" West – have not lost their faith. Under the stones and coshes of Mubarak's police killers, they counter-attacked, shouting "Allah akbar" for this was indeed for them a "jihad" – not a religious war but a struggle for justice. "God is Great" and a demand for justice are entirely consistent. For the struggle against injustice is the very spirit of the Koran.
In Bahrain we have a special case. Here a Shia majority is ruled by a minority of pro-monarchy Sunni Muslims. Syria, by the way, may suffer from "Bahrainitis" for the same reason: a Sunni majority ruled by an Alawite (Shia) minority. Well, at least the West – in its sagging support for King Hamad of Bahrain – can point to the fact that Bahrain, like Kuwait, has a parliament. It's a sad old beast, existing from 1973 to 1975 when it was dissolved unconstitutionally, and then reinvented in 2001 as part of a package of "reforms". But the new parliament turned out to be even more unrepresentative than the first. Opposition politicians were harassed by state security, and parliamentary boundaries were gerrymandered, Ulster-style, to make sure that the minority Sunnis controlled it. In 2006 and 2010, for example, the main Shia party in Bahrain gained only 18 out of 40 seats. Indeed, there is a distinctly Northern Ireland feel to Sunni perspectives in Bahrain. Many have told me that they fear for their lives, that Shia mobs will burn their homes and kill them.
All this is set to change. Control of state power has to be legitimised to be effective, and the use of live fire to overwhelm peaceful protest was bound to end in Bahrain in a series of little Bloody Sundays. Once Arabs learnt to lose their fear, they could claim the civil rights that Catholics in Northern Ireland once demanded in the face of RUC brutality. In the end, the British had to destroy Unionist rule and bring the IRA into joint power with Protestants. The parallels are not exact and the Shias do not (yet) have a militia, although the Bahraini government has produced photographs of pistols and swords – hardly a major weapon of the IRA – to support their contention that its opponents include "terrorists".
In Bahrain there is, needless to say, a sectarian as much as a secular battle, something that the Crown Prince unwittingly acknowledged when he originally said that the security forces had to suppress protests to prevent sectarian violence. It's a view held all too savagely by Saudi Arabia, which has a strong interest in the suppression of dissent in Bahrain. The Shias of Saudi Arabia might get uppity if their co-religionists in Bahrain overwhelm the state. Then we'll really hear the leaders of the Shia Islamic Republic of Iran crowing.
But these interconnected insurrections should not be seen in a simple ferment-in-the-Middle-East framework. The Yemeni uprising against President Saleh (32 years in power) is democratic but also tribal, and it won't be long before the opposition uses guns. Yemen is a heavily armed society, tribes with flags, nationalist-rampant. And then there is Libya.
Gaddafi is so odd, his Green Book theories – dispatched by Benghazi demonstrators last week when they pulled down a concrete version of this particular volume – so preposterous, his rule so cruel (and he's been running the place for 42 years) that he is an Ozymandias waiting to fall. His flirtation with Berlusconi – worse still, his cloying love affair with Tony Blair whose foreign secretary, Jack Straw, praised the Libyan lunatic's "statesmanship" – was never going to save him. Bedecked with more medals than General Eisenhower, desperate for a doctor to face-lift his sagging jowls, this wretched man is threatening "terrible" punishment against his own people for challenging his rule. Two things to remember about Libya: like Yemen, it's a tribal land; and when it turned against its Italian fascist overlords, it began a savage war of liberation whose brave leaders faced the hangman's noose with unbelievable courage. Just because Gaddafi is a nutter does not mean his people are fools.
So it's a sea-change in the Middle East's political, social, cultural world. It will create many tragedies, raise many hopes and shed far too much blood. Better perhaps to ignore all the analysts and the "think tanks" whose silly "experts" dominate the satellite channels. If Czechs could have their freedom, why not the Egyptians? If dictators can be overthrown in Europe – first the fascists, then the Communists – why not in the great Arab Muslim world? And – just for a moment – keep religion out of this.
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45 Comments so far
Show All"We are getting shot by American weapons fired by American-trained Bahraini soldiers with American-made tanks,"
"the exporting from the United States of warlike instruments and military stores is not to be interfered with." G. Washngton 1793
gun runners from the get-go.
"The Shah made an identical mistake in reverse. Confronted by an obviously Islamic uprising, he blamed it on Communists."
A left-wing Iranian refugee from Islamic Iran told me that the secular Left was indeed the power behind the 1979 Iranian Revolution that ousted the Shah, but the Americans freaked out at the possibility of a left-wing Iran and brought in the Ayatollah Khomeini as a better alternative -- this was at the time that the US was busy instigating unrest in the Moslem population of the Soviet Union as a means of bringing down the USSR.
Well he was in exile in France at the time and flown in on an Air France jet.
wow, you lot are quick to blame America for everything.
what a quaint, patriarchal viewpoint.
the world's governments aren't children.
America doesn't operate in a vacuum.
the worst atrocities occur in countries the U. S. hasn't influenced.
the left are madly in hate with America. Too freakin' funny!
What further historical evidence do you need that America is indeed behind the graeatest atrocities since WW2, idiot? Just do the body count.
And stop apologizing for mass-murder and genocide.
Amen
Let's include the end of WW2, the only use of nuclear weapons, was by the US of A.
NO: include ALL its history, from its inception.
There aren't any countries that the US hasn't influenced: the other countries do not operate in a vacuum either.
This tendency to imagine that other people are "just" a certain way and somehow lack agency is amazingly tenacious.
Some of the worst atrocities have occurred IN the USA: remember that little matter of the genocide of the American Indian?? Neither a quaint nor a patriarchal viewpoint but a fact. As far as blaming America (the USA) for everything well look at its history since this genocide and the simultaneous enslavement of black folks then consider that this nation certainly has had a hand in much of the global problems which include the economic and environmental disaster it is heaping on its own people which it has come to "quaintly" refer to as consumers rather than citizens. Not very funny is it?
What do Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg, PhD; Catherine Austin Fitts, Assistant Secretary of Housing under George H.W. Bush; Raymond L. McGovern, 27-year CIA veteran and former Chairman, National Intelligence Estimates (NIE); Senator Max Cleland, former member of the 9/11 Commission; Paul Craig Roberts, PhD, Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury under Ronald Reagan; Lt. Col. Karen U. Kwiatkowski, PhD, U.S. Air Force (ret); Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, former 6-term Congresswoman from Georgia; and Lt. Col. Robert Bowman, PhD, U.S. Air Force (ret) all have in common?
All question the official 9/11 Commission Report account of what led up to, and occurred on 9/11/01, and demand a new, truly independent and scientific investigation of the events of that day.
See
Patriots Question 9/11 - Responsible Criticism of the 9/11 Commission Report
http://patriotsquestion911.com/
Why have more than 1,400 professionally-certified architects and engineers signed a petition calling for a new, truly independent and scientific investigation of the events of 9/11/01?
See
AE911Truth.org
http://www.ae911truth.org/
Bill Maher, a couple of weeks ago, had an incident on his show -- couldn't make out the words of the so-called heckler, but Maher snidely said I might have to walk into the audience. I had to do that once before because of those Truthers. That kind of thing just makes me see red, because a lot more people are coming on board regarding 9-11 truth. I rarely watch the show anymore, but Cornell West was on and I wanted to hear what he had to say. Maher can voice a lot of common truths, but he's still an self-aggrandizing a**h**le.
Unfortunately, we chose what we perceived our "national interests" over a democratically elected President in Iran. We can never ascribe to anything, after Iran, democratic in this world, without being ascribed as "hypocrites". We dumped our humanity for God knows what?
The world's governments are all patriarchies in their own hiearchy with the U.S. being the daddy of all daddies (sugar daddy if you're a dictator who wants weapons to use against your own children or your neighbors.). If the worst atrocities did occur outside of the U.S. sphere of influence i.e. NowhereLand, it's only because they had been extraordinarily rendited to that place. It's meaningless to say that "the left hate America". One must distinguish between all of the elements comprising both terms. "one must distinguish between the liars and killers at the top of the government and the people who are being governed," said Howard Zinn.
It just makes me sad that we could have done better and more nobly. We made bad choices and we continue to make them to support Cherftoff and Senator Kerry. They both have to go!
I have great respect for most of what Robert Fisk does and writes, but one statement in this article undercuts the whole,
"For the struggle against injustice is the very spirit of the Koran."
This is a falsehood.
Yes, Islam did arise out of a struggle against injustice. Yes, Islam has many tenets which appear to be meant to promote justice.
These facts, however, are secondary to the real spirit of the Koran and this is why there is so much (in case you haven't noticed) corruption within islamic nations. It is exactly the same as why there is so much corruption in christian, jewish, hindu, free-market corporate, (whatever other patriarchal religion) nations.
The fundamental "spirit" of all of these religions is Domination and Submission.
They all mask their corruption within the guise of some form of a golden rule, but the bottom line and the foundation of all of them is Submission to the Great Patriarchal LIE.
As long as humans continue to participate in these corrupt and corrupting means of seeking domination through their phony "spirit"ualities and do not demand justice through something akin to what Mr. Fisk correctly calls "secular explosions", we will continue to wallow in, and witness the same wallowing in injustice.
I think the hour of Submission and Domination has ended. As with the Christmas tree tumbling in Washington DC yesterday, like a great pagan bow to the earth, the Rising of the Masses will now begin to end this former hour of our despair.
Birdbrain Alley, what an excellent post. I wondered about that quote from the Koran as well, but not knowing enough about the Koran I could only speculate.
But here's where you really got me: "The fundamental "spirit" of all of these religions is Domination and Submission." Wow. How well and simply put.
I might add that there is a heavy emphasis on "exclusion" as a manipulative tool to achieve the first two objectives.
Good point Birdbrain Alley!
Organized religion has been an important part of state domination and oppression for thousands of years.
However, many religious people can and do reject "participation in these corrupt and corrupting means of seeking domination through their phony 'spirit'ualities" and draw strength and inspiration from their religious experience that empowers them "to demand justice through something akin to what Mr. Fisk correctly calls 'secular explositions'."
Mr. Fisk makes this point when he states that the majority of people participating in these protests across the Arab world are Muslims shouting "Allah akbar" and protesting alongside Christians as well as more secular Arabs in what is "for them a 'jihad' - not a religious war but a struggle for justice. 'God is Great' and a demand for justice are entirely consistent."
By the way I am an atheist.
PuffinThrush:
I agree with you up to a point, but Fisk himself is a little confused. I'll just make two points: 1) As Fisk notes, the vast majority of the protesters are Muslim. Unlike the West/Christian world, Islam makes does not make distinctions between the spiritual and temporal--it views the two as an integrated part of the whole, and 2) there is, contrary to what Fisk avers, no "holy war" in Islam. That is a western/Christian notion. And, of course, as some of the posters here already know, the word "jihad" means struggle, exertion or effort, and has nothing to do with war, holy or otherwise.
Framing the ME revolutions as a purge for Sharia Law is a common conservative meme.
Keep the American people frightened. They are such suckers.
Keeping it simple. People want democracy--opportunities and a degree of self-determination, and oh yes, survival. Governments fear popular power--it's so messy--so they hyperventilate about "enemies" until right becomes wrong, and wrong (eg killing and torture) becomes right.
I don't know if Robert reads these comments. But if he does...please keep publishing photos from the wars. Your pictures from Palestine had a huge impact on me. I printed the photo of the father and son being shot to death in 12 frames, and the young girl blown apart being held by her father. I took the photos and posted them on our local billboard up and down the highway.
Some were torn down with a nasty note left in its place. But I heard that it really shook some folks up. They've never seen the "Spoils of War"
I feel this is what we need more of Mr. Fisk. Americans need to see the dead children to understand what we are participating in around the world. We are not bad people, though we are led by some who are.
I appreciate your comments, Ecumenik, however, i speak with people from all walks of life, and i can tell you that our movies, tv and video games have numbed people to pictures of anything. Do you know about the high schoolers who youtube gang rapes of class mates? This wasn't just one incident either.
It doesn't even occur to them to intervene. It is all reality tv to them......Citizens of the u.s. have seen torture photos. They have read the stories. Where are the uprisings of the populace here? If a person thinks torture is fine and dandy with or without a photo, they are already sociopathic. As i have read, i believe the 'Germans' said they had no idea..........And they didn't even have youtube and twitter!
You're right, readytotransform, and given your analysis, this country is swarming with sociopaths. I've shown my students the torture photos, and about half of them are unmoved. I wonder if a culture can produce sociopaths. If so, ours is a nation doing an excellent job of it.
"I printed the photo of the father and son being shot to death in 12 frames"
As they were killed by Palestinians, why are you blaming Israel?
Read Ecumenik's post "again". There's no mention of Israel. There's a point about US participation, but that could (and does) cover a multitude of sins. The post was about Fisk's revelation of the horrors of war, not about whose side people claim to be on.
Bit of a knee jerk response, there, Chris? Wasn't you who left the note, by any chance?
Ah yes. Got him now. Been busy, hasn't he?
Thanks for the heads up. See you round.
http://fzy.co/cb
This is class warfare on a global scale.
Most dictaors have their pet dieties; if they have none handy they create one or become their own god in the guise of some ideoligical claptrap. What a scam.
God exists but you cant't ever see him or fully understand his motives.
In the words of my jump master who stood by the door tapping each of us in the butt as we exited the C-130, trusting in our chutes to safely deposit us on mother earth, "god sucks!"
"How on earth do well-educated if singularly undemocratic men get this thing so wrong?"
They're not getting it "wrong," Robert. How else can force be justifiably used against protesters without first calling them Islamofascists? How else can the US be roused to assist its dictator-friends except by identifying the threat as coming from religious "terrorists"? How else can the US be convinced to get off its ass and strike Iran in order to protect po' defenseless Israel, except by crying "Jihad!"?
Well, it's too late for that. Protesters are protesting because they know that the US will not interfere -- that the US is finished in the Middle East, that all those dictatorships the US has been propping up for decades are on their own now. The only thing left is for the Republican Congress to cut off the "foreign aid" to those dicators. Good luck to them.
RE: They're not getting it "wrong," Robert. How else can force be justifiably used against protesters without first calling them Islamofascists?
What the "singularly undemocratic men" fear most is democracy. But, there's a problem, the global hegemon ostensibly "supports" democracy. So, they have to demonize them as Jihadhists, al Qaeda, Islamo-fascists, or in an earlier time, communists, anarchists etc. etc.
As we know people better from their deeds than their words, so we need more hard scientific evidence that one's life experiences and moral character are written upon one's face before saying things like, "desperate for a doctor to face-lift his sagging jowls", which is just petty ageism. Good Guys are not younger and more attractive than Bad Guys.
Sorry for the relatively unimportant comment, but I'm dam-ed sick and tired of agesim, sexism, racism, belief-ism, etc. which get in the way of honest evaluation of people and events, and it's imperative that we observe justly and fairly.
Aside from sensationalism, there are a number of components that make up or assist the slanted mess that passes for reality in government sanctioned mass media.
The first is exceptionalism and the second is that there are a large number of evangelical fundamentalists egging on their glorious Rapture and the third is that labels are very convenient for the human brain that wants to put everything in tidy cubbyholes.
No matter how intelligent a person is, ideology will blind them away from anything that doesn't fit their blinkered vision. Right wingers lacking any of the finer nuances tend to only think in binary. Good vs. evil, if you are not for us you are against us etc.
So when your average evangelical sees what's happening in the M.E. they naturally label it with the religion tag. They are not one of us!
They see what they want to see and the government fuelled by Wall Street and the military Industrial complex is only too happy to exaggerate that vision. It's only business, right?
Thank you, Robert Fisk, for "Bobbysocks Obama and Clinton." I will be laughing until the bombs hit.
why does Fisk equate "communism" with "fascism" as "dictatorship"?
in his mind, like in many, only "capitalism" is "democracy?
democracy is only a process in which the members of a society collective decide what kind of society they want.
the outcome can be anything, from communism to capitalism to kingdom.
The demographic driving these uprisings are people born since 1980. Young people who have come of age during the Age of the Internet. Yet we're supposed to believe that they're motivated by a desire to bring back that old time religion to their nations. Give me a break. Here we have the finest hour in the modern history of the Arab world, a secular uprising for democracy and human rights, and people in the U.S. want to blather on about religious fundamentalism. An entire way of political life end of World War II, dominated by the policy goals of Washington and its allied puppets, is threatened with demise. Let's all cheer as the water pours into Atlantis.
Oswald, you're right, as is Fisk.
This article by Fisk exactly comports with a superb interview this morning by Columbia University Professor Hamid Dabashi, who also said of the secular revolutions in this area of the world that the Empire posing as the US should "stay the hell out" and exert no influence --- which is also the view of most of the young English-speaking Egyptians I have heard on Al Jazeera English rebroadcast here by Free Speech and Link TV.
http://www.democracynow.org/2011/2/21/iran_the_green_movement_and_the
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
"Liberty over violent empire"
Party headquarters
Religion is not going to go away.
I think the USA/Israel actions are finally being exposed and the War Economy cannot be sustained, even the Fed knows this but they never mention the word "WAR". War is sacred and scary and profitable for the elite.
This is a world Moslem war now with many fronts while the CIA has a history of supporting the Sunnis over the Shia.
It is the job of the Media, along with the Hollywood War Machine to paint Moslems as terrorists because there aren't really many Moslem terrorists or people killed by them lately.
More people are killed in the drug war or by a million other everyday things.
But the fear and fascination of war makes most Folks shy away from confronting this most unjust horrible part of so called Civilization.
But I have a belief more than ever that the people are getting it right. It is a racket that has oppressed them more than the people in the West
This revolution is making the people rethink old beliefs.