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Redefining the 'Arab Spring':
Is Chaos Overtaking Revolution?
By RamzyBaroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 30, 2012
The age of revolutionary romance is over. Various Arab
countries are now facing hard truths. Millions of Arabs merely want to live
with a semblance of dignity, free from tyranny and continuous anxiety over
the future. This unromantic reality also includes outside ‘players’, whose
presence is of no positive value to genuine revolutionary movements, whether
in Egypt, Syria, or anywhere else. Shortly after longtime President
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was ousted in the Tunisian revolution in January
2011, some of us warned that the initial euphoria could eventually give way
to unhelpful simplification. Suddenly, all Arabs looked the same, sounded
the same and were expected to duplicate each other’s collective action.
An Al Jazeera news anchor might interrogate his guests on why some Arab
nations are rising while others are still asleep. The question of why
Algeria hasn’t revolted has occupied much international media. “No Arab
Spring for Algerians Going to the Polls,” was the title of a US National
Public Radio (NPR) program by Andrea Crossan on May 10. The very recent
Algerian elections were mostly juxtaposed with much more distant and
sporadic realities in other countries, rather than in the context of
Algeria’s own unique and urgent situation. Why should Algeria be
discussed within the context of Yemen, for example? What kind of conclusions
are we seeking exactly? Is it that some Arabs are brave, while others are
cowardly? Do people revolt by remote control, on the behest of an
inquisitive news anchor? Algeria is known as the country of a million
martyrs for its incredible sacrifices in the quest for liberation between
1954-62. Some sort of consensus is being reached that Algerians are still
traumatized by the decade-long civil war which started in 1992. The butchery
of thousands was openly supported by Western powers, who had feared the
emergence of an Islamic state close to their shores. While
Palestinians have been traumatized severely in the 64 years that followed
their expulsion from Palestine, they remain in a constant revolutionary
influx. The current trauma that millions of Syrians are experiencing as a
result of the violence also cannot be expressed by mere numbers. Yet the
violence is likely to escalate to a civil war, as destructive as that of
Lebanon’s, if a political solution is not formulated under the auspices of a
third, trusted party. It is easy to fall victim to conventional
wisdoms, to disseminate odd theories about Arabs and their regimes. The
problem is that every day is churning out new events which cannot fit into a
simplified concept like the ‘Arab Spring’. The poeticism of the term was
hardly helpful when 74 people died and hundreds more were injured as fans of
two Egyptian soccer clubs clashed in Port Said on February 1st. The
disturbing news seemed inconsistent with the Tahrir Square rallies one year
prior. Some in the media dismissed the killings as ‘confusing’ or just
‘unfortunate.’ It simply didn’t fit the almost scripted perception we wished
to have of Egypt’s ‘perfect’ revolution. But Egyptians understood well the
roots of the violence, and explained it within a local context. The fact is,
the occasional violence that followed the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak
was uniquely Egyptian and perfectly rational within the many movements that
were attempting to exploit the revolution. If things go according
to plan, Egypt might have its first democratically-elected president in
July. While some will celebrate the official rise of a ‘new Egypt’, others
will mourn the demise of the revolution and its prospected achievements. But
there can be no perfect revolution with positive outcomes unanimously agreed
on by all sectors of society. This doesn’t mean that the Egyptian revolution
has failed. It has succeeded in engaging many new participants in the
country’s political life, which had been controlled for so long by an
authoritarian government. Tahrir Square has revised the rules of the game -
partially for now, but maybe fundamentally in the future. Jean-Paul
Sartre believed that society needed to position itself in a permanent state
of revolution in order for freedom to take root and flourish. His support of
the French youth revolt in 1968 was a testimony to his strong belief in
freedom as a collective quest. “What’s important is that the action took
place, when everybody believed it to be unthinkable. If it took place this
time, it can happen again,” he wrote in 1968. “It is not
uncommon…that the revolution by the masses turns upon itself and starts
feeding upon its own to protect itself against a conceived
counter-revolution or internal dissension,” wrote Ayman El-Amir in Egypt’s
Al Ahram Weekly. He further claimed that the “Arab Spring has gone berserk,
devouring its friends and foes alike, not so much because of fear of the
counter-revolution but because one faction wants to steer the nation in its
own direction. As a consequence, an environment of chaos is deliberately
incited and revolutionary change is disrupted or misdirected.”
There is much truth to that, but El Amir too is falling into the pit of
generalization. Syria is not Egypt, and a Tunisian may not think that her
country’s revolution is ‘devouring its friends and foes.’ The Arab Spring is
only confusing and strange when we insist on calling it an ‘Arab Spring.’ It
is much more cogent when understood within its local contexts. Egypt is in
turmoil simply because it is undergoing a process that is restructuring a
society that was made to cater to the whims of a small, corrupt class of
rulers. Syria is positioned in a much more difficult geopolitical
intersection, where countries throughout the region are all ‘investing’ in
the violence to ensure that the outcome suits their interests. The Syrian
people’s relevance to the struggle there remains strong, but, unlike Egypt,
they are not the dominant party anymore. Egypt is not Syria, and
Yemen is not Bahrain. However, while we need to remain wary of generalized
and reductionist discourses, this does not indicate a need to disown
collective identification with other people’s struggles. To the contrary, a
truer understanding of what is now taking place in various Arab, and also
non-Arab countries, is a more conducive way of offering solidarity. “We will
freedom for freedom's sake, and in and through particular circumstances. And
in thus willing freedom we discover that it depends entirely upon the
freedom of others and that the freedom of others depends upon our own,”
Sartre argued. It is from this value as a point of departure that one can
speak of Yemen, Syria, Egypt, and yes, Greece in the same sentence. Any
other interpretation is lacking at best, suspect at worst. -
RamzyBaroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
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