The video and the Arab Spring
East Meredith, NY
The California
video mocking the Prophet Muhammad threatens the empowerment process of the Arab
Spring. The uprisings of the past 20 months have ousted four Arab dictators by focusing on
internal problems, not the foreign “imperialist West” or “Zionism”.
The character
of Arab resistance must not regress. Street demonstrations continue to disrupt normal
life in one Muslim capital after another. The inspiration to confront glaring social
and political ills is being diverted to rhetoric and violence against the
outsider: US embassies, the American flag and Kentucky Fried Chicken. While outsiders are not blameless, priorities
must dictate strategy of struggle for justice.
The
disproportionate response to the insulting film has given the extreme Islamic groups,
the Salafists, those least likely to advance the cause of reform, an opportunity
to gain access to power through violence. Using the video as a pretext, the
Salafists assaulted the US embassy in Libya. The Libyan, Tunisian and Egyptian regressive
groups are threatened by the newly elected secular or moderate Muslim parties.
Overreaction
to the video reinforces Western prejudice against Muslims and play into the
hands of the film producers who may wish to see Arabs and Americans in constant
conflict.
Arabs cannot
afford distraction from the struggle for democratization. They are being taken.
This video is not an isolated incident. There
is a cumulative record of prejudice against Islam in the US. Religious leaders like Pat Robertson, John
Hagee and the late Jerry Falwell have for years proclaimed or implied that
Islam “is not a religion”, or “our Christian God is not the same God as the
Muslim God”. But let us remember that “my-religion-is-better-than-yours”
opinion makers in America have their counterparts among Muslim preachers in
Cairo, Tehran and elsewhere. Prejudice is a global commodity.
This crisis -
of street violence confronting images of incitement- will gradually dissipate.
But the underlying causes of tension remain, and they should be identified. Three
issues undermine US-Arab relations: mishandled political conflicts, US military
presence on Arab land and growing religious prejudice across cultures. Direct
measures to address these causes of Arab-American tension are urgently needed. Progress in the Arab Spring is bound to
contribute to the resolution of these issues.
The anger
displayed in response to the video is connected with a neglected central
Mideast problem: Palestine. The Israeli occupation of the West Bank makes
Israel an adversary to 1.6 billion Muslims and the symbiotic partnership
between Washington and Jerusalem frustrates Arabs immensely.
The Iran nuclear
crisis is another souring problem. This problem has currently replaced
Palestine as the most sensitive source of regional tension. Israel has managed
to shift international concern about its occupation of the West Bank to the “existential”
Iranian threat. Middle Easterners prefer their region to be a nuclear-free zone.
Israel has the nuclear arsenal. Neither Iran nor Israel should have the nuclear
bomb.
The second issue
is about America’s dominance. US presence in the Arab world is resented. A biased
US Mideast policy makes America feels perpetually insecure. Unfair US foreign policy
goes with excessive military and diplomatic presence in the Middle East. The US is deeply involved in the national
security and politics of Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Arabian Gulf.
Washington is still involved in Iraq after twelve exhaustive years of war and
counterproductive “nation building”. At
high cost America “fights terrorism” in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen.
There are
better alternatives to the current US Mideast policy. If Washington places priority
on statehood for Palestinians, peace for Israel and support for Arab democratization
throughout the region, with no exceptions, there will be less need for US military presence in the area. There will also
be no reason to sell massive arms to Arab Kingdoms and Emirates. A region in
peace would need no atomic weapons.
To radically
improve US-Arab relations creative attention to political conflicts and soft
diplomacy are not enough. A third vital component is missing: good will among
religious communities across the globe.
Islamophobia
is shifting from the fringe to the mainstream of Western society. The same
trend of growing intolerance is happening in the Middle East. Muslim societies
ignore the spread of anti-Semitism and the literature of cultural and religious
triumphalism.
Some Arab and
Muslim leaders are calling for UN sponsored legislation against hate speech.
But Americans and most Europeans are not ready to limit what they consider sacrosanct
freedom of speech.
An
interconnected world community should explore ways to spread tolerance, sharpen
sensitivity to injustice and celebrate religious and cultural diversity. An
international conference to combat religious prejudice in the media and the
school curriculum may generate new ideas for dealing with growing tension among
religions and cultures.
The Arab
Spring is too precarious to be distracted by battles over religious symbols
across cultures.
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