Posted on 05/14/2006 10:17:59 AM PDT by wagglebee
The most controversial incident in the colourful life of Lawrence of Arabia was made up by the celebrated hero, according to new forensic evidence.
The brutal sex attack on Lt Col T E Lawrence by Turkish soldiers, which allegedly took place while he was serving as the British liaison officer during the Arab revolt, was considered so contentious that it was covered up by the British Army.
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But now, a new history of the Arab revolt is to claim that Lawrence invented the attack in order to smear political opponents and fulfil his own sado-masochistic urges.
The supposed rape on November 20, 1917, at the Syrian fortress town at Deraa has been the subject of much speculation over the years.
Although he recounted some detail of the attack in his 1922 memoir, Seven Pillars of Wisdom, the pages of Lawrence's diary covering the period when the incident is meant to have taken place, have been ripped out.
Until now, scholars have been unable to ascertain Lawrence's whereabouts during those crucial days from November 15-21, when he claimed that he had been captured by the Turkish governor, Hajim Bey, then whipped and raped by guards.
The incident was graphically depicted in David Lean's classic 1962 film, Lawrence of Arabia, directed by David Lean and starring Peter O'Toole.
Yet evidence uncovered by James Barr, the author of Setting the Desert on Fire: T E Lawrence and Britain's Secret War in Arabia 1916-1918, suggests that Lawrence never went to Deraa.
In order to discern what might have been written on the missing pages, Barr submitted Lawrence's diary for electrostatic data analysis.
The technique uses static electricity and fine carbon powder to reveal indentations made by a pen or pencil through an absent page on a surviving sheet of paper below.
The tests revealed the imprint of a capitalised "A" on November 18 - almost certainly the A of Azrak, a tumbledown castle in a wild oasis 60 miles south-east of Deraa, where Lawrence had already spent several days.
Barr suggests that, instead of setting off to Deraa, Lawrence stayed put - a contention supported by a letter he wrote to his mother on November 14 1917, in which he claimed to be "staying here (at Azraq) a few days".
Lawrence first mentioned the alleged rape in June 1919, midway through writing his memoirs and Barr argues that he fabricated the event in order to discredit Arab militants in the precarious post-war climate.
The French government had, by 1919, offered to recognise the Arab leader, Feisal, as king of Syria if he accepted French influence in return. Feisal, however, was under pressure from Arab militants, who refused to bow to French pressure.
Barr said: "It was one of these most prominent militants whom Lawrence claimed had betrayed him to the Turks at Deraa.
"Lawrence's biographers have argued over whether or not he was raped at Deraa. But until now no one has been able to produce evidence from his diary, which is an accurate, contemporary record of what he did.
"The tests produced three grey transparent films which didn't look promising. When I got them home I noticed there was a faint capital letter 'A' in Lawrence's handwriting, in the entry for November 18. I realised I had found significant new evidence.
"The 'A' from the missing page provides strong evidence from Lawrence that he did not leave Azraq until November 19 at the earliest. It suggests Lawrence removed that page because its contents did not tally with the story he would later tell the world."
The evidence resurrects the claim, made by some Lawrence scholars, that he had sado-masochistic urges and elaborated on the rape scene for his own delectation.
Signs of Lawrence's alleged sexual deviancy first emerged when he admitted in letters to a friend that he paid a man to beat him with birches, to the backdrop of Beethoven playing on a gramophone.
The electrostatic data films will now be passed onto the British Library, for examination by other scholars.
It's my understanding that there may be lots of oil in places difficult to extract for political and technical reasons; such as off the SE coast of the USA and off the West coast of Africa.
The diary began each entry with the dateline. It was customary to write down where you were:
Eg: Azraq, Oct. 14
Thus, its odd that the dateline begins with an "A".
I do wish 'conservatives' would make up their minds about the causes of Gulf Police Actions I+II. Again, a threat does not necessarily exist if one nation or many nations are the suppliers of oil
Most of the easy finds are exhausted
Really? I can think of several places in the Western Hemisphere where oil has been found. However, pandering to an environmentalist mindset has prevented oil drilling
Just seems like an awful lot to hang on the letter 'A'.
Is this a "battery" joke?
Ottoman Empire...online.
That said, I find it distressing that folks continue to discredit Lawrence. The guy was brilliant and weird in a way that people are not brilliant nor weird anymore. His translation of The Odyssey (under the name T.E. Shaw) is probably the most entertaining I've read. The Mint is a terrific odd read and so is Seven Pillars.
I did kinda assume that; and in that regard, it may have more meaning than many of us are giving it.
I'll check it out, but this book was loaned to me (out of print now) and it is very well researched. Michael Yardley even went to the middle east for his research and was able to uncover new material including unpublished letters. One can write a biography & be more honest than one who is writing about himself....especially in this case. T.E. Lawrence is a fascinating man.
Of course, after a long night of his kinda sex, he might of thought it was April?
Amazing. I didn't think they even had gramophones back in Beethoven's day.
Another guy you might want to check out -- if you're into brilliant/weird brits -- is Sir Richard Burton (not the actor). There's a book called Devil Drives.
Still doesn't negate what he was able to accomplish though.
Still doesn't negate what he was able to accomplish though.
It does in the minds of many. In the Middle East he's routinely painted as an "employee" of the British gov't simply doing his job.
Well they can sugar coat it all they want, but the man definitely was able to accomplish what no other white man had before.
For better or worse he changed the course of human history...
How? By tying down a few Turks in the middle of nowhere?
The Ottoman Empire was defeated the old-fashioned way: by hard-fought campaigns in the Caucasus, Mesopotamia and Palestine. Moreover, the Turkish Army was simply unprepared for a serious war (for example, see Edward Erikson's "Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War", which is probably the best English account of the Ottoman Army in World War One). Lawrence only merits a single reference in the book, so trivial was the Arab revolt.
Lawrence was definitley a remarkable guy, but "Pillars of Wisdom" is a blatant bit of self-promotion. It should not be taken as an objective evaluation.
That would barely registor on the Kink-O-Meter in San Francisco.
He also planted the seeds of Arab nationalism.
If by Arab nationalism you mean the existence of multiple Arab states that are not united, this is preferable to a united Arab caliphate.
yep
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