http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/980/op4.htm

7 - 13 January 2010
Issue No. 980
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

How to protest
By Salama A Salama
European protesters took over our streets last week. In a show of solidarity 
with Gaza's inhabitants and to protest against all sorts of injustices and 
blockades, European demonstrators marched through our streets, picketed our 
public squares and told us what they thought of the wall we're building on 
Gaza's borders. 

Several hundred protesters came from 42 European countries to take part in 
pro-Gaza protests. So what did we do? We sent our security forces to contain 
them. We also prevented them from going to Gaza. Interestingly, the protesters 
refused to be intimidated. Instead, they picketed the French Embassy, they 
marched around the Giza Zoo, and they even stood guard at the famous steps of 
the Press Syndicate.

Curiously enough, the police did not prevent them from demonstrating in front 
of the Israeli Embassy. But clashes took place, and in some instances the 
Europeans had a taste of what Egyptians regularly experience at the hands of 
the police and their karate- trained auxiliaries.

During the past few days, Egyptians had proof that our police can act humanely, 
but only with foreigners. In front of the French Embassy, I saw a foreign man 
standing alone, surrounded by three circles of policemen. He was carrying a 
picket sign, but the police refrained from harming him in any way.

The Europeans came all the way to express their views, peacefully and orderly. 
In doing so, they gave us a rare glimpse into the working of peaceful 
resistance. And they stood for what they believe in. They vented their anger at 
a policy of blockade into which some Arab countries have become actively 
involved, either out of fear or desire to placate the Israelis.

The demonstrators slept in the streets and the squares. They occasionally 
obstructed traffic. And they sent to the Egyptians, Arabs, and the world a 
clear message, one which television stations relayed without delay across the 
world. 

In this country, we don't have a culture of protest. In this country, protest 
is treated as an act of sabotage, as a challenge to law and order. This is why 
we missed a rare opportunity to expose Israel's crimes. How hard would it have 
been to let the European demonstrators walk into Gaza? Why did we fail to give 
them the chance to come face to face with an Arab nation living under 
occupation?

In Egypt, we don't know how to encourage protest marches against Israel. But we 
know how to come up with lame excuses for building a controversial wall on our 
borders with Israel. Are we really worried about our own security, or are we 
protecting Israel?

In this country, it is wrong to protest. It is even wrong to be different. This 
is why our government gets so angry when opposition parliamentarians demand an 
explanation for the wall. Even in a parliament that prides itself on being a 
leader of all Arab parliaments, the opposition is demonised and abused for 
asking the right questions.

Worse still, our Islamic Research Council found itself pressured into issuing a 
statement in support of the wall. You would think that Sharia has nothing to do 
with security walls, but no. Our leading clergymen have decided to call anyone 
who opposes the wall an apostate. Don't ask me why.

Many may ask what's the point of it all. Did the Europeans achieve anything by 
marching in our streets? If you ask me, they achieved a lot. For starters, they 
sounded the alarm bells for the entire world, which is more than what our 
governments and nations have done so far. The protesters not only put Israeli 
actions on the line, but also underlined our own failings.


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