فرسان القلعة التعليمية الشاملة
هل تريد التفاعل مع هذه المساهمة؟ كل ما عليك هو إنشاء حساب جديد ببضع خطوات أو تسجيل الدخول للمتابعة.

فرسان القلعة التعليمية الشاملة

أهم الأخبار بالعربية والانجليزية ☞ اسلاميات ☞ لغات ☞ مراجعات نهائية ☞ مناهج مصرية وسعودية ☞ ملازم ☞ ابحاث وموضوعات تعبير ☞ معاجم وكتب ☞ توقعات ليلة الامتحان ☞ اخبار التعليم ☞ صور وبرامج ☞ كن أحد فرسان القلعة ☞
 
الرئيسيةالبوابةأحدث الصورالتسجيلدخول
ختم الله شهركم بالرحمة والغفران والعتق من النيران، وتقبل الله صيامكم وقيامكم وصالح أعمالكم، وجعلنا وإياكم من عتقائه من النار. وكل عام و انتم بخير. تقبل الله طاعاتكم جميعاً.
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 Egypt: The revolution that shame built

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مُساهمةموضوع: Egypt: The revolution that shame built   Egypt: The revolution that shame built Empty2012-01-25, 9:48 pm

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Egypt: The revolution that shame built 20121231554840734_20
The call to meet at Tahrir Square on January 25, 2011, was spread by online social media and word-of-mouth [EPA]
Irvine, CA - They were two "new media" events that
changed history, unalterably shifting its course into uncharted waters -
not merely in the Arab world, but globally as well. And yet their very
impact points to two of the most important weaknesses underlying the
past year's worth of revolutionary protests across the region.


The first, an image shot by a cell phone camera, is heartrending to
view, as it shows a young man completely on fire, like a still from some
bad horror film. Today the world knows the pain behind the grainy image
of 26-year-old fruit seller Mohamed Bouazizi's self-immolation, which
lit the Arab world on fire. A young man, struggling to survive in an
economy that had made him and so many young Arabs expendable, suffers
one too many indignities, and is driven - or inspired - to stage a death
that would give life to the hopes of his generation.


Today, revolutionaries across the Arab world circulate his supposed
final words on Facebook: "Maybe by setting myself on fire, life can
change".

Egypt: The revolution that shame built 201212310745434734_20
Bouazizi's last Facebook entry was a plea for forgiveness from his mother: "Blame the times and not me."

"Living in a land of treachery," he explained, had driven him out of
his mind. It was a mental state that was shared by so many of his
friends - indeed, for the past decade it has been impossible for me to
count how many young Arabs have told me they feel schizophrenic or
mentally ill, just from living their daily lives in a system that only
crushes them down and offers little hope for the future. And so several
young men from Sidi Bouzid told me that, when they heard the news about
what he'd done, their first reaction was: "Why wasn't I brave enough to
have been the one to do it?"


A call to action

Across North Africa, in Egypt, pro-democracy activist Asmaa Mahfouz,
also 26 years old, watched the unfolding revolution in Tunisia with
great anticipation. Bouazizi's hometown of Sidi Bouzid was a relative
backwater, without much of a robust or well-developed public sphere or
civil society network to channel his frustrations into more positive
action. Mahfouz, however, was a founding member of the April 6 movement,
which itself emerged out of the struggle for jobs and dignity by
Egyptian workers in the previous half decade.

Egyptian activists in the information war
She well understood the despair and the circumstances that drove
Bouazizi to take his own life; but, crucially, she also had the
training, vision and networks to take the energy unleashed by Bouazizi
in Tunisia and attempt to translate it into concrete political action -
not merely one time, but multiple times, until her words broke through
the wall of fear that had long kept most Egyptians, such as their
counterparts in Tunisia, away from political protest. If Bouazizi acted
alone and in desperation, her actions were the product of years of
preparation, even if the speech on the video was ad-libbed.


And so, if on December 17, 2010, Bouazizi addressed his final
Facebook posting only to his mother, almost one month later to the day,
on January 18, 2011, Mahfouz put up a video on Facebook addressed to the
entire Egyptian nation. "Four Egyptians have set themselves on fire to
protest humiliation and hunger and poverty and degradation they had to
live with for 30 years," she declared, setting the context for her call
to Tahrir.


"[They were] thinking maybe we can have a revolution like Tunisia,
maybe we can have freedom, justice, honour and human dignity. Today, one
of these four has died, and I saw people commenting and saying: 'May
God forgive him. He committed a sin and killed himself for nothing.'"


And then she uttered the words that would bring her generation into the streets: "People, have some shame!" ("Ya gama', haram 'aleyku!")
"The
idea of shame is crucial in the history of the Arab Spring, and not, as
the Bush administration's torture masters would have had us believe,
because ... Arab men are uniquely preoccupied with shame."


The idea of shame is crucial in the history of the Arab Spring, and
not, as the Bush administration's torture masters would have had us
believe, because Arab culture and Arab men especially are uniquely
preoccupied with shame. Rather, because Mahfouz understood that she had
to shame her compatriots out of their pmindivity in order to awaken a
level of political consciousness, and through it agency, necessary to
create a powerful, mmind-based protest movement against the Mubarak
regime.


In simple, yet elegant words, she described how only days before
she'd posted another video calling on people to join her in Tahrir, only
to wind up joined by "only three guys, and three armoured cars filled
with police", who violently pushed them out of the square, before trying
to convince them that those who had set themselves on fire were
"psychopaths". She refused to accept such a characterisation - even
though the term evoked precisely the feeling of being "out of one's
mind" that Bouazizi described in his final Facebook posting. But she
also understood that while self-martyrdom could launch a revolution in
Tunisia, it wouldn't be enough to do the same in Egypt. Instead, a much
more sophisticated discourse and strategy would have to be deployed.


A challenge to a country

Like Bouazizi, she began with the simple declaration that the whole
system was "corrupt". But then she went on to point out the basic flaw
in the logic of self-immolation in the Egyptian context:


"These self-immolators were not afraid
of death but were afraid of security forces. Can you imagine that? Are
you going to kill yourselves, too, or are you completely clueless? I'm
going down on January 25th, and from now 'til then I'm going to
distribute flyers in the streets. I will not set myself on fire ...
Instead of setting ourselves on fire, let us do something positive ...
Sitting at home and just following us on the news or on Facebook leads
to our humiliation."


The time for pmindivity, for faux-Facebook revolts, was over. Facebook
could help spread the word, as her own video would show, but it was no
substitute for direct political confrontation in the real world. It was
time to take the streets, to take the square. "If the security forces
want to set me on fire, let them come and do it," she added, almost
daring the Mubarak government to unleash its fearsome violence against
her.

Revolution through Arab Eyes - Tahrir Diaries
With this direct challenge to the Mubarak regime and its loved
security forces, Asmaa Mahfouz helped to jump-start the process of
Egyptians reclaiming their most basic rights - "our fundamental human
rights", as she described it a few sentences later - against a
government that for decades ruled at base through the power it displayed
to deny those rights to any Egyptian at any time.


At the same time, her challenge wasn't just to the rulers, it was to
the ruled. Setting yourself on fire could be a profoundly political act,
but there could, by definition, be no encore. But protesting and
demanding one's rights, by having the courage to die, but the strategic
vision to use that courage to challenge the regime over and over again,
protesters could move from merely criticising the status quo towards
setting an example for a different future and the way to achieve it.


Your rights, my rights, our rights

Most important, Mahfouz understood that shaming her countrymen - and
her message, as a young, hijab-wearing woman, was aimed directly, if not
exclusively, at Egyptian men - had to be accompanied by a strategy both
to convince Egyptians that no-one could any longer escape the violence,
while at the same time breaking through the wall of fear that burning
oneself to death was a preferable form of protest to risking arrest and
torture at the hands of the security services.


"Don't be afraid of the government. Fear none but God. God says
He will not change the condition of a people until they change what is
in themselves. Don't think you can be safe anymore. None of us are. Come
down with us and demand your rights, my rights, your family's rights."


With these words, Mahfouz was helping to lay the groundwork for
Egyptians across the political, economic and generational spectrum to
see themselves in the same boat; to bring together yuppies and Ikhwanis,
young businessmen (who saw with the brutal torture and death of Khaled
Said the reality that they could face a similar fate at any moment).
They were joined by ageing leftists, the dirt poor of the Bula'
neighbourhood (near Tahrir) and the comfortably bourgeois of Zamalek,
just across the Nile.


"None of us" are safe anymore, because the system has become so
corrupt that the old boundaries - which at least created zones of
relative safety for those not directly engaged in politics - had
disappeared. No more could Egyptians "live like animals", she declared,
when they could have "freedom, justice, honour and human dignity".

People & Power - Egypt: Return to Tahrir
These issues were precisely what the Egyptian workers who inspired
the April 6 movement, long the guinea pigs of the process of
neoliberalism that also immiserated Mohamed Bouazazi and so many other
Tunisians, well understood. And because Mahfouz looked so much like
anyone's daughter, or sister - she could not easily be mistaken either
for a Westernised secular activist or a fully veiled Salafi woman, yet
could communicate with both ends of the social spectrum - when she
talked about "us" and asked viewers to "talk to your neighbours,
friends, colleagues and family and tell them to come", a large share of
Egyptian society could feel a connection to her and thus consider
heeding her call.


Waiting for Act II

The year since Mohamed Bouazizi's and Asmaa Mahfouz's revolutionary
outbursts have not gone quite as either of them might have planned.
After being hailed as the spark of the revolution, Bouazizi's family
became the source of envy and anger among other poor people in Sidi
Bouzid, who resented that his mother accepted a new home in a seaside
town and money from Ben Ali. As one friend explained it: "Today hardly
anyone talks about Bouazizi anymore."


But wlovever the fate of his memory, the revolution he launched
produced the only clear success story of the Arab Spring. For her part,
Asmaa Mahfouz and the April 6 movement has struggled to maintain a
leading role in a post-Mubarak political landscape that has seen Egypt's
deep state and its well-funded and deeply rooted Islamist movements
carve up the emerging political space between them. Mahfouz herself
stood up to attempts by SCAF to prosecute her for supposedly inciting
violence against the military, but her popularity has been diminished as
a result. Her fellow April 6 activists continue to be harminded and
charged with such crimes as "attempting to overthrow the regime" and
"trying to destabilise the country".

"If
the emerging political system begins to look and feel too much like the
one so many Egyptians thought they'd helped topple a year ago, the
calls to Tahrir will again go out and the 'couch party' will again be
shamed onto the streets."


They will no doubt find themselves between SCAF's crosshairs again if the "Liars" (Kazeboon)
campaign launched against the military begins to show results. At the
same time, as most Egyptians have laid aside wlovever revolutionary
mantle they'd taken up and attempted to normalise their lives, the
defenders of Tahrir have increasingly come from the poorest and most
marginalised sectors of society - from fanatic football "hooligans" to
street kids - who, while representing the majority of Egyptians
demographically, are the view in the mirror most Egyptians want to see
when confronted by the ongoing violence and repression of the system
they'd sought to tear down - beginning a year ago today.


Many commentators have described the ongoing repression and violence
deployed by SCAF in the past year as bumbling or incompetent. However,
given the extremely weak hand dealt to the military by the revolution,
the fact that it has managed to retain a firm grip on power, negotiate
an entirely new and seemingly productive relationship with the rising
religious political forces, and simultaneously repress the core
revolutionary forces - while convincing millions of Egyptians to buy
into the new political environment through elections - can only be
described as an accomplishment.


But the sparks of inspiration generated by the words, music and
images of activists and artists such as Mahfouz, Wael Ghonim or Ramy
Essam have yet to go dark. They remain at the heart of the revolutionary
impulse that still animates Egyptian politics, wlovever the setbacks of
the past few months, and no matter who leads parliament when it is
seated on January 25.


If the emerging political system begins to look and feel too much
like the one so many Egyptians thought they'd helped to topple a year
ago, the calls to Tahrir will again go out and the "couch party" - the
majority of Egyptians who either sat out the first phase of the
revolution or were too quick to leave the square once Mubarak was gone -
will again be shamed onto the streets. If not by Asmaa Mahfouz, then by
someone who today is as unknown as she was 53 weeks ago. And that is
reason enough to celebrate January 25, without reservation and with hope
for the future.


Mark LeVine is a professor of history at UC Irvine and
Distinguished Visiting professor at the Centre for Middle Eastern
Studies at Lund University in Sweden. His most recent books are
Heavy Metal Islam (Random House), Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989 (Zed Books) and the forthcoming The Five Year Old Who Toppled a Pharaoh (University of California Press).
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الجنسية الجنسية : EGYPTIAN
عدد المساهمات : 1282
العمر العمر : 39
المهنة المهنة : HOUSEWIFE
الابراج الابراج : الثور
الأبراج الصينية الأبراج الصينية : الثور
نقاط : 30462
السمعة : 65
تاريخ الميلاد : 22/04/1985
تاريخ التسجيل : 26/11/2010
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العمل/الترفيه العمل/الترفيه : TEACHING CHILDREN
المزاج المزاج : FICKLE

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