New York Times

 
____________________________________
October 29, 2011

The Arab Intellectuals Who Didn’t  Roar
By _ROBERT F.  WORTH_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/robert_f_worth/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 
 
IN mid-June, the Syrian poet known as Adonis, one of the Arab world’s most  
renowned literary figures, addressed an open letter to the Syrian 
president,  Bashar al-Assad. The stage was set for one of those moments, 
familiar 
from  revolutions past, in which an intellectual hero confronts an oppressive 
ruler  and eloquently voices the grievances of a nation.  
Instead, Adonis — who lives in exile in France — bitterly disappointed 
many  Syrians. His letter offered some criticisms, but also denigrated the 
protest  movement that had roiled the country since March, and failed even to 
acknowledge  the brutal crackdown that had left hundreds of Syrians dead. In 
retrospect, the  incident has come to illustrate the remarkable gulf between 
the Arab world’s  established intellectuals — many of them, like Adonis, 
former radicals — and the  largely anonymous young people who have led the 
protests of the Arab Spring.  
More than 10 months after it started with the suicide of a Tunisian fruit  
vendor, the great wave of insurrection across the Arab world has toppled 
three  autocrats and led last week in Tunisia to an election that many hailed 
as the  dawn of a new era. It has not yielded any clear political or economic 
project,  or any intellectual standard-bearers of the kind who shaped 
almost every modern  revolution from 1776 onward. In those revolts, thinkers or 
ideologues — from  Thomas Paine to Lenin to Mao to Vaclav Havel — helped 
provide a unifying vision  or became symbols of a people’s aspirations.  
The absence of such figures in the Arab Spring is partly a measure of the  
pressures Arab intellectuals have lived under in recent decades, trapped 
between  brutal state repression on one side and stifling Islamic orthodoxy on 
the other.  Many were co-opted by their governments (or Persian Gulf oil 
money) or forced  into exile, where they lost touch with the lived reality of 
their societies.  Those who remained have often applauded the revolts of the 
past year and even  marched along with the crowds. But they have not led 
them, and often appeared  stunned and confused by a movement they failed to 
predict.  
The lack of such leaders may also be the hallmark of a largely  
post-ideological era in which far less need is felt for unifying doctrines or  
the 
grandiose figures who provide them. The role of the intellectual may be  
shrinking into that of the micro-blogger or street organizer. To some, that is  
just fine. “I don’t think there is a need for intellectuals to spearhead any  
revolution,” says Sinan Antoon, an Iraqi-born poet and novelist who has 
written  extensively on the Arab Spring and now teaches at New York University. 
“
It is no  longer a movement to be led by heroes.”  
That belief may soon be tested. As revolts continue in Syria, their  
leaderless quality — so useful in deterring crackdowns by the secret police —  
has become a liability. Organizers in and out of the country are now 
struggling  to shape a set of shared political goals, and intellectual 
coherence and  
leadership is increasingly seen as important in that process. “No one wants 
to  be accused of hijacking the revolution,” says Sadik Jalal al-Azm, a 
Syrian  philosopher and advocate of greater civic freedoms. “This excessive 
fear is  becoming a hindrance.”  
To some extent, the intellectual silence of the current uprising is a  
deliberate response to the hollow revolutionary rhetoric of previous  
generations. The Arab nationalist movement began in the 1930s and ’40s with  
idealistic young men who hoped to lead the region out of its colonial past,  
backwardness and tribalism. The Syrian political philosopher Michel Aflaq and  
other 
young writers and activists found inspiration in 19th-century German  
theories of nationalism, and envisioned their Baath Party as an instrument for  
modernization and economic justice.  
But the party and its misty ideas were soon hijacked and distilled into  
slogans by military officers in Syria and Iraq, whose “revolutionary” 
leadership  was really just the old tribalism and autocracy in a different 
guise. 
In Egypt  too, Arab socialism soon became little more than a pretext for 
dictatorship and  reckless policies at home and abroad. Arab nationalism 
reached 
its zenith — or  its nadir — in Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, who saw himself 
as a godlike  intellectual, publishing his own fiction and imposing his 
delusional Third  Universal Theory on Libya’s hapless people. Everything in 
Colonel Qaddafi’s  Libya was styled “revolutionary.” When the rebels overthrew 
his government this  year, they found it difficult to separate the names of 
their own revolutionary  councils from the ones they were overthrowing.  
The protesters who led the Arab Spring had grown tired of the stale  
internationalist rhetoric of their forebears, which had achieved little for the 
 
Palestinians and had deepened the divisions among Arab states rather than  
unifying them. They wanted to focus instead on the failures of their own  
societies. “Previously, everything was reduced to the exterior: are you pro- or 
 
anti-American, what is the role of Israel, and so on,” says Hazem Saghieh, 
the  political editor of the London-based Arab newspaper Al Hayat. “This 
revolution  is entirely different.”  
The shift in emphasis to civil rights and democracy at home did not come 
out  of the blue. Some Arab intellectuals began speaking this language long 
ago,  including Mr. Azm, the Syrian philosopher, who after the humiliation of 
the 1967  war with Israel published a groundbreaking book called “
Self-Criticism After the  Defeat.” Others followed suit gradually, and during 
the 
short-lived “Damascus  Spring” a decade ago, Syrian intellectuals signed the 
Declaration of the 99, a  call for greater civil rights and openness. Many 
were jailed afterward. The  bravery and persistence of these intellectuals — 
and others like them in Egypt —  may have quietly prepared the ground for the 
uprisings this year.  
But in recent years their voices often went unheard, because their secular  
language had little resonance in societies where political Islam was 
becoming a  dominant force. Nor did Islamic reformers fare much better when 
they 
tried to  cast their political critique in religious terms. The Egyptian 
scholar Hassan  Hanafi, for instance, in the 1980s began calling for the 
creation of an “Islamic  Left,” a socialist ideology rooted in religion. He was 
branded a heretic and had  to seek police protection after receiving death 
threats from jihadists. His work  gained an audience in Indonesia, but not in 
his own country, said Carool  Kersten, a lecturer at King’s College London 
who has written on Islamic  reformers.  
Not all Arab intellectuals fell into these traps. Alaa al-Aswany, the  
Egyptian novelist, became a fierce critic of the government of Hosni Mubarak in 
 
recent years, protected from arrest by his celebrity. He was among the 
first  writers to speak to the protesting crowds in Tahrir Square in January, 
and in  March, he delivered a punishing performance during a televised debate 
with Ahmed  Shafiq, the prime minister appointed by Mr. Mubarak. The 
following day Egypt’s  ruling military council fired Mr. Shafiq, and many 
credit 
Mr. Aswany with the  achievement.  
But Mr. Aswany made clear from the first that his only real goal was to 
serve  as a bullhorn for the demands of the protesters in Tahrir Square. He 
offered no  ideas of his own.  
Inevitably, and perhaps unfairly, the current Arab tumult has been compared 
 with the uprising against Communism in Eastern Europe in 1989, the last 
great  social upheaval of comparable scale. Intellectuals played a much more 
prominent  role in those movements. In Poland, for instance, “the unification 
of  intellectuals and labor unions was really important,” said Anne 
Applebaum, a  columnist and the author of an authoritative book on the Soviet 
gulags. “They  helped shape the movement and ran its publications. They 
facilitated  conversations between various workers’ groups. They functioned 
like the 
Facebook  page of their era.”  
The dissident Czech playwright Vaclav Havel wrote an essay, “The Power of 
the  Powerless,” that became a kind of blueprint for how to survive with 
dignity in a  totalitarian country, and later emerged as a champion of his 
country’s Velvet  Revolution.  
It may be that the connecting role these figures played is less needed 
today.  It may also be that the ideological platforms of earlier revolutions 
are 
 obsolete, given the speed of communications and the churn of new 
perspectives.  “It is too fluid, too fast-moving, too complex,” says Peter 
Harling, 
a senior  analyst with the International Crisis Group. “It is too difficult 
to come up  with a paradigm. People are looking for short pieces that 
illuminate some aspect  of what they’re going through, not grand theories.”  
Still, Mr. Harling added, among Syrian intellectuals, “none of them has  
articulated any kind of forward-looking political platform,” and that failure  
has contributed to anxieties about the protest movement’s direction.  
To the extent that any ideas have arisen from the Arab Spring, they relate 
to  the “Turkish model” — the often-heard hope that Turkey’s blend of 
mildly  Islamist ideology and democratic governance can inspire similar success 
in Arab  lands. But this analogy is a facile one, and may well yield 
disappointment in  the months and years to come.  
Turkey’s experience is hard to replicate, in part because the country has 
had  the kind of thoroughgoing revolution against tradition that Arab 
intellectuals  of the 20th century only talked about. Starting in the early 
1920s, 
Turkey’s  great autocrat, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, overhauled the country’s 
education  system, bringing over the American reformer John Dewey to advise 
him. He  abolished the caliphate and gutted the country’s legal system, 
instituting a  strict separation of church and state. The first elections took 
place in 1946,  and only after decades of struggle (and several coups d’état) 
did Turkey start  earning applause for its democratic ways.  
Without that punishing preparation, the Arab world’s new revolutionaries 
may  end up repeating history, even if they do study it. Last week, amid the 
euphoria  over Colonel Qaddafi’s death, a few skeptical voices could be heard 
in the din  of triumphant Internet messages in Arabic.  
“Let the killing of Qaddafi be a lesson to the revolutionaries as much as 
to  the rulers,” one Arab Twitter user wrote. “And let revolutionaries 
everywhere  remember that Qaddafi came to power by making his own revolution 40 
years ago.” 

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