Posted on 11/28/2001 3:38:10 AM PST by Mr. Mulliner
Because of the Americans
FrontPageMagazine.com | November 28, 2001
MANY OF MY CONVERSATIONS with Arab acquaintances about the recent war in Afghanistan have forced me to revisit an issue that has always mystified me.
There is a consistent theme that I tend to hear from many Arabs: that Americans are behind most if not all of the problems in the Middle East. Americans are even behind the problems that hurt their own interests.
I couldnt count how many Arab taxi drivers have explained to me that the Americans themselves orchestrated the 1979 Iranian Revolution, Husseins invasion of Kuwait, and so on and so forth. The argument is always that the Americans control everything and that they create enemies and their own misfortunes to legitimize their imperialism and military build-up.
In my latest conversation with an Arab friend, it was explained to me that the Americans were themselves behind the Sept. 11 tragedy.
As we have lately become aware, this mysterious fantasy has a large-scale popularity in the Arab world. Why?
There are a few phenomena that we might want to consider in searching for some answers to this enigma.
While there is obviously diversity in the Arab world, Arabs do accept a certain general feeling about themselves. They see the world through the perspective of all Arabs being brothers children of one single nation. And this is why Arabs strongly believe that there is such a thing as an Arab personality, which they call shakhsiyya.
In The Arab Mind, scholar Raphael Patai demonstrates how the Arab language is much more based on its poetic and musical quality than on the valid use of past and present tenses which are often mixed up. In the Arab culture, therefore, there is a great appreciation of gesture, but not necessarily an emphasis on logic, or on the relationship between cause and effect. When learning to speak, Arab children quickly adopt the specific and popular stylistic devices known as mubalagha (exaggeration) and tawkid (overassertion). There is often confusion in Arab society over the difference between words and action. Saying that you are going to do something can often become much more significant than actually doing it. Words serve as substitutes for acts.
Muslim fatalism blends with this cultural trait. It stresses that it does not make much sense for the Muslim to act in certain situations, since much is in "Allahs will" anyway. As a result, there is often little motivation for Arabs to take action for change or to evaluate critically their own circumstances.
In addition to this, there is a general aversion to manual labor in the Arab world, particularly to the kind that involves dirtying ones hands. While the Protestant work ethic sees work as a good thing, the Middle Eastern ethic sees work as a curse and something that should be avoided. The Arabian Nights, for instance, includes many examples of this belief system.
The result is that many Arabs often do not end up feeling a sense of responsibility for their own failures. To admit that a problem is ones own fault brings humiliation upon one's self and also shames the group's honor. Thus, the obsession with avoiding shame cancels out the possibility of truthful self-reflection and examination.
When a problem is confronted in the Arab world, a hidden enemy is often imagined. Consequently the inability of Arab countries to create democracies, let alone functional economic and social societies, are read by many Arabs as personal humiliations that are caused by enemies.
Many Arabs simply grow up believing that success in their societies is simply just supposed to materialize, even if no one is actually taking any individual initiative to bring it about. If problems develop (i.e. economic backwardness, dictatorship etc.), they are believed to be caused by enemies (i.e. the evil Americans). If there is a solution to these problems, it lies in destroying those causing the problems (i.e. the evil Americans). The idea that problems can be solved by Arab individuals themselves, and that the citizens must actually participate in solving their own societys problems, is an idea that is incomprehensible to significant portions of the Arab population.
It becomes understandable why anti-Bin Laden demonstrations are virtually non-existent in the Arab world today. Bin Laden is simply getting America back for all of the shame and humiliation that Arabs must live with everyday in despotic and impotent societies that have emerged not because of anything that Arabs have done, but because of what they view the Americans and obviously the Jews as having perpetrated.
As many have pointed out, the Middle-East is stuck in a time warp circa 600 AD. I scratch my head and wonder if this is a cultural or a religious phenomenon, considering that the Coptic Christians of Egypt seem to be just as stuck in the seventh century as the Moslems. But given the peaceful and loving nature of the Coptics compared to Islam's hatred and jealousy of the West - I'd have to say your analysis was dead on.
I don't have to read any further. I place all of my confidence in Arab taxi drivers. It has been my experience that not a one of them can get me from DFW airport to Lakewood (East Dallas) without a detour through Kansas City.
'Nuff said!!
Change out East Germany for Nazi Germany, or Imperial Germany, and the same ruminations have been around for a hundred years. Wilson & FDR both hated the Germans for the same reasons you cite. And, as history has shown, it was bigotry and little else.
A free press and a elections will not change everything overnight, but by giving them new incentives and new ways to resolve their grievances, I'm sure that within 20 years they'll take off, much as Taiwan and China did when they finally got leadership dedicated to making much of the country.
For the time they were in and for the actions of Germans, they were dead on. Just as we are dead on in our feelings about Muslims right now. Sure they may change, but they HAVN'T yet. You just don't give someone respect or put them on your level just because they want you to, it has to be earned. And Islam has burned all it's credit up with alot of people, and rightly so, for the time we are in and the actions of Islamic believers.
Even here in America, the only ones who seem to appreciate our rights and institutions are (1) those who have come here from nations where they had no rights in Eastern Europe or Asia or (2) descendents of those who fought in the Revolution or the Civil War. Most everyone else is a freerider.
Fortunately, most Arabs are far too lazy to actually proceed with destroying their enemies. We Protestants, however, have no problem dirtying our hands with hard work. (Tongue in cheek ... or is it?)
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