Ramadan, Tariq - Islam and The Arab Awakening (2011, Oxford University Press, USA) - 12-16
Ramadan, Tariq - Islam and The Arab Awakening (2011, Oxford University Press, USA) - 12-16
Ramadan, Tariq - Islam and The Arab Awakening (2011, Oxford University Press, USA) - 12-16
Analysis in the heat of the action is never easy, especially as events unfold
and their causes—and the future itself—remain clouded with uncertainty.
This book makes no claim to reveal secrets, to unveil what may be strategic
goals, and even less to predict the future. To do so would be madness, a combi-
nation of presumption and vanity. It would also be futile. Today, as terms like
“Arab Spring,” “revolutions,” and “upheavals” are thrown about to describe
what has happened across the Middle East and North Africa, I seek only to
reexamine the facts, study the realities, and suggest some lessons, not only for
the Arab world and the Muslim majority countries, but also for observers of
these startling and unexpected developments.
What really happened in Tunisia and in Egypt? What is happening in the
broader region that makes up MENA (Middle East and North Africa)? Why
now? These are the first questions that spring to mind. To answer them we
must submit the recent past and the personalities involved to fresh scrutiny
and evaluate the available political, geopolitical, and economic data. Only a
holistic reading that encompasses these three dimensions can provide the keys
needed for us to begin to understand what lies ahead. As huge shock waves
shake the Arab countries, such an approach is essential if we are to make sense
of the issues, if we are join hands with those societies in their march toward
freedom, democracy, and economic autonomy.
As vital as it appears to give the Arab uprisings a name, we should be cau-
tious about rushing to define them. Not knowing exactly what the components
of these nonviolent, transnational mass movements are, we know even less about
their eventual outcome. Like people around the world, I rejoiced at the fall of
the dictators and their regimes. But after a close analysis of the facts and the
objective data available, I prefer to take a position of cautious, lucid optimism.
Recent history has by no means yielded all its secrets; the analysis I offer in this
volume will most certainly have to be revised, refined, and perhaps challenged.
2 I s l a m a n d t h e A r a b Awa k en i n g
The uprisings that swept the Arab world did not come from nowhere. As
early as 2003, as will soon become clear, there had been talk of democratiza-
tion in the MENA zone. It had, in fact, become then-president George W.
Bush’s key argument for intervention in Iraq. One year later, young MENA
cyber-dissidents were signing up for training courses in nonviolent protest.
Institutions funded by the American administration and/or major private
firms organized lectures and seminars and set up networks that would provide
training for young leaders who were given instruction in the use of the Internet
and social networks. How deeply were Western governments involved? What
did they know? What are we to make of the fact that the governments of
Tunisia and Egypt arrested cyber-dissidents or subjected them to questioning
on their return from training sessions abroad? These are facts that just won’t
go away; they must be studied and put in context if we wish to gain a better
understanding of the dynamics and issues involved.
Are we to conclude, as some believe, that the protest movements that
emerged in 2010 were designed and manipulated from abroad; that ultimately,
the “West,” the United States and Europe, control everything? I think not.
There is a huge gap between determining what was known, monitored, and
sometimes planned and concluding that history can be reduced to attempts
to influence the course of events. Certainly it does seem clear that the United
States and Europe had decided to change their policies in the two regions.
Unconditional support for dictators could no longer be a viable or effective
option, especially in the presence of emerging political and economic players
such as China, India, Russia, and South Africa. Reform had become imper-
ative. What could not be controlled, however, were the breadth of the phe-
nomenon and the extent of the sacrifices the region’s peoples were prepared
to make to assert their thirst for freedom.
The protest movements that erupted first in Tunisia, then in Egypt—the
high-spirited tumult of Liberation Square (Midan at-Tahrir)—released forces
and energy that no one could have anticipated. In countries as diverse as
Yemen, Syria, Morocco, Bahrain, and Libya, women and men showed that
although they could sometimes be manipulated, the mass movements they
created could not be totally controlled. A barrier has been breached in the
Arab world: a fact that must be acknowledged with lucidity, and without
illusion. This means steering clear of both the idealism and the wide-eyed
optimism of those who are blind to the behind-the-scenes maneuvers of the
politicians and the conspiratorial paranoia of those who have lost their faith
in the ability of human beings to assert themselves as the subjects of their own
history. Such is my position throughout this study. The people of the Middle
Introduction 3
East have proven that dictators can be overthrown without weapons, by sheer
force of numbers, by a nonviolent, positive outlook. Taken together, these
events tell us that something irreversible has occurred.
The moment is a historic one, as are the opportunities that will emerge as
the era of dictatorships draws to an end. The outcome is unclear; the uprisings
are not yet revolutions. From Tunisia to Yemen, by way of Egypt, Libya, Syria,
and Bahrain, nothing can be taken for granted: democratic processes are only
beginning to emerge; security is shaky while armies remain fully armed and
on alert. No one can foretell the future: the tensions that followed the events
in both Tunisia and Egypt show that more time will be needed before the
past can be forgotten and open, pluralistic, democratic societies can emerge.
But the key players involved in each society will have no choice but to face up
to the real challenges and to avoid the trap of polarization, of sterile debate
between “secularists” and “Islamists.” More than a few fundamental ques-
tions remain to be clarified: the nature of the state, the role of religion, the
basic principle of equal rights for all citizens, equality of women and men,
to name a few. But the debate cannot be reduced to a confrontation between
two approaches, both of which are in crisis, as I will attempt to demonstrate
in this book.
The task of construction that lies before intellectuals and politicians is to
identify the key issues, to define and prioritize the ways and means for carry-
ing out social and political reform, and to foster the rise of a true civil society,
far removed from warped, paralyzing, and petty quarrels. As covetous glances,
both geopolitical and economic, focus on the MENA zone, such is the radical
and comprehensive process of renewal for which I call.
The time has come to stop blaming the West for the colonialism and
imperialism of the past or for today’s attempts at manipulation and control.
Arab and Muslim majority societies must jettison their historic posture as
victims and reconcile themselves with the course of history that millions of
women and men accelerated so massively by coming out into the streets. Their
responsibility is a historic one: they must entertain no illusions about what is
at stake, be wary of attempts at manipulation, and be determined to carry out
essential reforms with the full participation of all citizens, women and men,
from all social classes and religious and cultural backgrounds.
The uprisings have created a multiplicity of new perspectives. Choices
must now be made. The timeworn “Islam versus the West” dichotomy is now
giving way to multipolar relations, in which the Global South, the Islamic
Orient, and Asia are assuming new and innovative roles. Though fascinating
in itself, the new dynamic does not automatically guarantee more justice and
4 I s l a m a n d t h e A r a b Awa k en i n g
more democracy. The rise to prominence of China, Russia, and India obvi-
ously does not ensure respect for human rights and pluralism. Some people
are quick—too quick—to rejoice at the collapse of American power. The
same people may be unaware that what might replace it (given China’s new
predominance and the emergence of India and Russia) could well lead to a
regression in social and human rights, and to new forms of dependency. These
are issues of crucial importance that call for in-depth debate over which socio-
political models are to be developed and what new economic relations should
be established. They lie at the heart of this book’s overarching concern: as the
Arab awakening unfolds, what role will religious references play? How should
Islamic principles and ultimate goals be (re)thought? Can divergent aspira-
tions for reform be unified, or must Muslim majority societies be restricted to
the opposition between secular and Islamist ideologies? What is, today, the
role of political Islam? Can Turkey be seen as a model? How are we to pro-
mote an autonomous civil state?
I will be addressing these issues, with particular emphasis on the preroga-
tives of civil society. In the closing section, I will analyze the ethical challenges
that lie ahead and examine possible alternatives. Social and political ques-
tions, as well as those touching on the economy, on culture, and on relations
with the West, will continue to be determinant and will require close exami-
nation in the light of cultural and religious references. I will suggest avenues
of approach, all the while rejecting the twin temptations of oversimplification
and polarization. For the Arab uprisings to flourish and to lead to toward
radical change that embodies real—and realistic—hopes, we will need all the
intellectual effort, all the close, constructive criticism and emancipation from
Western domination we can muster.
The final section of the book consists of a series of appendices bringing
together articles I wrote published in European (including Turkish) and
American newspapers, in the Arab press, and also on my website, as events
unfolded.1 In them the reader will encounter a wide range of viewpoints at
differing points in time, coupled with analyses that have not necessarily been
developed in the first four chapters. The appendices thus form a useful and
informative supplement, in the form of ongoing commentary, to the text.
The upheavals we are witnessing in the Middle East and North Africa con-
firm much of what I have long maintained, investigated, and repeated for several
years. Readers familiar with my work on Muslim majority societies, on the pres-
ence of Muslims in the West, and on Islamic theological and legal references will
be able to pinpoint the intuitions and propositions whose relevance has been
confirmed by recent events. The same holds true for questions of democracy,
Introduction 5
culture, art, shared values, and ultimate goals (in both the Islamic Orient and
the West), but also for the critical importance of the experiences of Western
Muslims. My recent thinking on applied ethics and on the crucial importance of
overcoming binary thinking has not only been confirmed but has also gathered
strength and energy as we act to seize the historic occasion that lies before us.
Seen in this light, the double emancipation—of the mind and of society—must
be our primary goal. The Arab awakening must not succumb to self-alienation
or be subverted by a new form of colonialism that would shatter the hopes of
millions of women and men. There can be no turning back; now we must hope
that the peoples of the region will find their way forward, in full freedom.