Arab liberals debate - Lebanese Pierre Akel hosts the popular Web site Middle East Transparent, which receives 50,000-60,000 hits a day. While the Paris-based site is trilingual (Arabic, English, French), its particular value is that it has become a forum for Arab liberals who would otherwise have no outlet for their writings.
from metatransparent (English version)
No Red Lines
A Reason interview with Middle East Transparent's Pierre Akel
Lebanese
Pierre Akel hosts the popular Web site Middle East Transparent, which receives 50,000-60,000
hits a day. While the Paris-based site is trilingual (Arabic, English, French),
its particular value is that it has become a forum for Arab liberals who would
otherwise have no outlet for their writings. Akel himself has written for
Arabic newspapers in London and Paris. He moved to France in 1976, after
studying economics at the American University of Beirut and philosophy at the
Lebanese University. He also took history at the University of Paris, Sorbonne.
He finances the site himself, and for the moment, only the enthusiasm of his
readers and writers keeps him going.
reason: Describe your Web site, Metransparent.com.
Pierre Akel: In the
aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, it seemed to me that Arab liberals
had to take a stand against the barbarian wave threatening to engulf the region.
The danger was imminent. Only, no one could provide a comprehensive definition
of Arab liberal currents. Americans tended to rely on English-speaking
analysts, many of whom live in the United States and Europe. My friend Barry
Rubin has written extensively on Arab liberals. However, Barry does not read
Arabic and has what I call a "pro-Israel bias." He tends to shed a
negative light on Arab liberals. I myself was much more familiar
with the Islamic fundamentalist movement than with liberal currents. I had
talked to the "Londonstan" leaders, read their writings and explored
the many fundamentalist Web sites in Saudi Arabia.
Metransparent
was an attempt to explore such liberal currents as exist inside the Middle East.
I discovered the different strains of Arab liberalism along with my readers. An
independent Web site was necessary in order to allow people to write what they
really had in mind, not merely what they were allowed to write. It was also
necessary as a forum for the diverse currents in the region.
To
understand Arab liberalism, one has to understand not only what it now
represents but where it emerged from: In Syria, it mostly comes from the
remnants of the communist or Marxist left—just like the Eastern European
dissidents of 30 years ago. In Saudi Arabia, it comes from the very heart of
Islamic fundamentalist culture, but also from the orthodox Sunnis originating
in the Hijaz, where the cities of Jeddah, Medina and Mecca are located. Hussein
Shobokshi is a good example. It also comes from the Shiite minority in the oil
producing Eastern Province. In Tunisia, it comes from the reformed Islamic university
Al-Zaitouna. In Egypt, liberals are inspired by the great liberal tradition
that was crushed by the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser.
reason: What's your average day like when it comes to finding articles? Whose
articles do you tend to run?
Akel: We get our
articles by email from practically every Arab country. Right now we have too
many opinion pieces and are late in publishing what we receive. Most of the
authors—we have more than 200—write exclusively for us; some send their
articles to Arabic newspapers and to us, and we publish complete, uncensored
versions. I believe we have something like 25 opinion articles from Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates per week, a bit more from
Egypt, and many more from Syria, which has a formidable civil society movement.
Tunisians also contribute quite a bit, as well as Moroccans, especially Berber
intellectuals, and Yemenis, Algerians, etc.
I
am especially proud to say that, soon, half of our writers shall be women. Usually,
I receive letters from potential authors asking what "our conditions"
are for accepting contributions. We answer back that we are a democratic and
liberal Web site, with no censorship or red lines.
The
Web site also has a reputation as a forum for liberal Shiites, both Saudi and
Lebanese. But, most importantly, I believe we are the most daring site in
advocating an Islamic Reformation, as represented by such writers as Gamal
Banna [the brother of the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hassan al-Banna], Judge
Said al-Ashmawy, and Sayyid al-Qimny, all from Egypt; and by many writers in
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Islamic reformers are part and parcel of the Arab
liberal movement. Egypt and Saudi Arabia are the two countries where calls for
an Islamic Reformation are the most advanced.
reason: Is there room for Middle Eastern liberalism today, between
dictatorships and Islamists?
Akel: Remember the
novel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, The Autumn of the Patriarch, where people open
the palace doors to discover that the dictator has been dead for a long time?
This applied to the Soviet Union and now to Arab dictatorships as well. Dictatorships
are dead; they lost the ideological and moral high ground years ago. The battle
is between fundamentalists and liberals. Liberalism is the wave of the future. The
Middle East is not like Afghanistan, if only because of oil, and cannot be
allowed to turn into a Taliban-led region. Since 9/11 both Afghanistan and Iraq
have been liberated. This is the trend.
reason: Who do you feel are the liberal heroes in the region? Who do you find
most interesting among political commentators?
Akel: You can find
liberals in unexpected places. Ahmad bin Baz, the son of the late mufti of
Saudi Arabia, is certainly a liberal. He wrote stunning articles in Al-Sharq al-Awsat
newspaper, but then was shelved. He was probably "advised" by the
religious scholars to stop writing. Mansour al-Nogaidan and the great Wajeeha
al-Huweider, the best Arab feminist nowadays, are brilliant Saudi liberal
examples. Ali Doumaini is another. In Egypt, I already mentioned a few names,
and can add to them Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Abdel Moneim Said, Ali Salem, and
others.
Of
course, in Syria Riad Turk is a brilliant example of Arab liberalism. Though he
spent some two decades in prison for his communist convictions, I talked to him
for four hours and he never once mentioned Marx or Lenin. He even criticized
the Lebanese Democratic Left Party, with which I am close, because for him
being of the left is not necessary at this historical moment; a democratic
movement, he told me, was enough and more adequate.
The
Tunisian Lafif Lakhdar is another radiant example. The Lebanese Shiite Sheikh
Hani Fahs is a liberal writer. And of course the late Samir Kassir, whose
assassination last June was a terrible blow to us all, both in Lebanon and in
Syria. Kassir was the intellectual most aware of the organic relationship
between the modern democratic movement in the contemporary Levant and the 19th-century
Arab liberal renaissance known as Al-Nahda.
reason: How has the Internet been able to affect political attitudes in the
Middle East? Or has it?
Akel: In the Arab
world, much more than in the West, we can genuinely talk of a blog revolution. Arab
culture has been decimated during the last 50 years. Arab newspapers are mainly
under Saudi control. The book market is practically dead. Some of the best
authors pay to have their books published in the order of 3,000 copies for a
market of 150 million. This is ridiculous. Even when people write, they face
censorship at every level—other than their own conscious or unconscious
censorship. Meanwhile, professional journalism is rare.
In
the future, I would like Metransparent to promote tens (or even hundreds) of
blogs representing human rights and activists groups in many Arab cities. This
has already started. Just to clarify a
point about the Arab cultural scene. Freedom House writes a yearly report about
the Arab world. It never mentions books. I have published official Iraqi
censorship documents for the 1990s. Emile Zola, Agatha Christie, Shakespeare,
Alexander Dumas, and tens of 19th-century Western writers were banned by Saddam
Hussein. The list even included Learn English in Five Days. The whole of
classical literature was banned by the Baathists.
reason: In recent years the Middle Eastern satellite media has gained much
prominence. How does the Internet compare to it, in your experience?
Akel: When it comes to
satellite television in the region, Al-Jazeera is controlled by the Muslim
Brotherhood, while many of the rest are under Saudi control. Al-Arabiya, for
example, is owned by the Al-Ibrahim, the brothers-in-law of the late King Fahd.
Even the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation cannot cross certain Saudi red lines.
Yes, you can hear a liberal point of view here and there. But, to take one
example, both Abdul Halim Khaddam, the former Syrian vice president who turned
against the regime of President Bashar Assad, and Riad Turk, the Syrian
dissident, have been under a Saudi ban from Al-Arabiya for the last month,
because the Saudi leadership does not now want to annoy the Assad regime. For
once, Al-Jazeera has also banned them, but for Qatari political reasons. Qatar
is lobbying on behalf of the Syrian regime in Europe.
On
the Internet, people can publish whatever they want: no red lines. They can use
pen names if they want. People read, send comments, and they transmit information
to their friends by email and fax, etc. The regimes' monopoly on information
has been broken. Remember: Three months ago a Libyan writer was assassinated
and his fingers cut for writing articles on an opposition Web site. The
Internet is a historical opportunity for Arab liberalism.
Of
course, liberals cannot compete with Al-Jazeera. We do not have the financial
means to start a liberal satellite channel. Hundreds of Arab millionaires are
liberals. Only, they cannot stand up to their regimes. Arab capitalism is
mostly state capitalism. If you are in opposition, you are not awarded
contracts by states. So, for the near future, we do not expect much help from
these quarters.
reason: How is Metransparent funded?
Akel: We are not funded
and are surviving by personal means. I have been paying all the expenses,
because promises from a number of Arab businessmen never materialized. On many
occasions I have thought of calling it a day and ending Metransparent. The
burden is getting heavier every day. We are trying to get financial support
free of political conditions, but that is not easy. The advertisement market is
smaller when you are mostly an Arabic-language Web site. What keeps the site
alive is the amazing reaction from the readers. Metransparent has 50,000–60,000
hits per day, with no publicity and no mailing campaigns on our part. This
means there is demand. Plus, I find it hard to disappoint all those generous
writers who have been with us for two years. Some of the Syrian writers do not
even own a computer. They have to beg friends to type and email their articles.
We shall keep on as long as possible. There is,
probably, a light at the end of the tunnel. Or, we will close down.
reason: Liberals have been among the most severe critics of the war in Iraq. However,
one might say that for the first time the U.S. has rejected alliances with
regional despots; that Iraq was a start; and that liberals have missed an
opportunity by so vocally opposing the U.S.? How would you respond?
Akel: Most liberals, at
least among our writers, favored the U.S. military intervention in Iraq. I
myself have written articles in support, before and after the invasion. I
didn't support it because of Iraqi WMD, however, but for democracy. We would
have liked President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair to say openly
that they were invading to liberate the Iraqi people. Remember, even Riad Turk
was not against the U.S. intervention. A Syrian, Abdul Razzaq Eid, who spent
most of his life in the doctrinaire Syrian Communist Party of Khaled Bekdash,
even wrote articles welcoming it.
Things
changed with the disaster that was Paul Bremer. The U.S. should have turned
things over to the Iraqis immediately after liberation. Former Pentagon
official Richard Perle was absolutely right about this point. Most liberals
still believe the U.S. is serious about democracy, for reasons explained by
Bush in his second inaugural address. Democracy in the Middle East has become a
vital American interest. It's either democracy or many future Osama bin Ladens
striking against U.S. interests.
I
admit some liberals took longer to overcome the Arab-Islamic taboo against
approving foreign intervention. This is increasingly behind us. Yet, what Iraq
proved was that the U.S. could not do the job alone. Internal democratic forces
had to be mobilized. We are part of this "internal" process. I should
add that outside intervention should not only be military. Ideally, we would
like something like the Helsinki Accords, where the international community's
relations with the Arab world involve spreading democracy, defending Arab
dissidents, human rights, women's rights and minority rights. Syrian dissidents
have been calling for this for years. Last year, Metransparent circulated a
petition asking the United Nations to create an International Court to judge
the authors of fatwas condemning people to death.
reason: If you had to cite in one sentence the major challenge for Arab
liberals in the coming year, what would it be?
Akel: Managing
relations with the Islamists. They are the liberals' adversaries but also, in
certain cases, their necessary partners. To take an example from a completely
different context: In the 1980s, French President François Mitterrand co-opted
the French Communist Party and accelerated its implosion. Saad Eddine Ibrahim
in Egypt and Riad Turk in Syria are wagering on a similar development in the
Middle East. You bring Islamists into the open, encourage them to take part in
the political life of a country, and they are bound to disintegrate into their
various component elements. For example, the leader of the Syrian branch of the
Muslim Brotherhood, Ali Sadruddin al-Bayanouni, recently opted for peaceful
negotiations with Israel and even for a possible recognition of Israel. This
would not go down well with other Syrian Islamists. Dissension shall occur over
issues like this one and others. It is either this or the Assad and Mubarak
regimes will last for a long time. The same applies tto Hamas. Co-opting
Islamists is a risky proposal, of course. Where liberals should never make
concessions is where Islamists tend to be harshest: the status of women. In
that domain no concessions must be made.
Reason
contributing editor Michael Young is opinion editor at the Daily Star
newspaper in Beirut.