December 18, 2014
We have learned much about
the Arab world in the last four years, including a combination of heroism and
criminal deviance that both dwell deep within our societies. In fact, we have
learned more about ourselves in these four years than we did in the preceding
century — because this has been the only stretch of time in which history in
the Arab region has been driven heavily, even primarily, by the actions and
sentiments of its own ordinary men and women, rather than only by its narrow
elites or foreign powers.
Those elites and foreign powers were caught off
guard four years ago today, on December 17, 2010, when Mohammad Bouazizi set
himself on fire in the rural Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid, when he became
exasperated by the mistreatment he experienced within hours at the hands of his
local police and governor’s office. His action sparked demonstrations of
support by hundreds of rural Tunisians who immediately understood what had
driven him to his suicidal act. His frenzied exasperation was also a dramatic,
reckless self-affirmation announcing that, in fact, he was not helpless,
voiceless and without any sentiments or citizen rights. He turned out to be the
most powerful Arab of all time — for he sparked the greatest simultaneous
citizen uprisings ever known in this region.
When the protests quickly spread to the capital
Tunis and demanded the overthrow of the regime, hundreds of millions of Arabs
instinctively followed the events on satellite television. They knew in their
hearts and felt in their bones the sentiments that Bouazizi and a demeaned
Tunisian population expressed in rebelling against the regime that had
mistreated them for decades on end.
That was four years ago, and in the interim we
now know much more about ourselves and our world, because only in this period
of time have we seen unleashed in our countries the many forces that had been
bottled up in the strange circumstances of our past century — circumstances of
manufactured statehoods, compounded and conflicting identities, breezy
nationalisms, and an increasingly desperate race by tens of millions of
families to keep their children and their own humanity alive. Those unleashed
forces have included the most noble aspirations for democracy, pluralism,
citizenship and dignity, alongside the darkness and demons of criminal minds
who destroy their countries and kill their own people by the tens of thousands
to perpetuate their authoritarian control.
I remain convinced, as I have been from the
start of the uprisings and revolutions four years ago, that the most important
lesson of this process has been the unquestioned desire by the vast majority of
Arab men and women to live decent, ordinary lives defined by dignity, equality,
liberty and opportunity, without the dictatorial mismanagement and corruption
that they had suffered for three generations at least. That noble desire — a
universal human characteristic — could not prevail and transform societies to
functioning pluralistic democracies, with the exception of Tunisia to date.
One major reason for the slippage of half a
dozen Arab states into violence, chaos and fragmenting statehoods has been that
those indigenous elites and foreign powers who had been taken by surprise in
early 2011 regained their footage that summer, and fought back viciously to
reassert control. Fear then took hold among tens of millions of ordinary men
and women who did not flee their countries and risk their lives. Fear
transformed otherwise normal people into fanatical killing machines that often
dealt death according to sectarian identity.
This was not the first time this had occurred in
our modern history, of course. We had killed, burned and looted like this
before — in Iraq, Lebanon, Algeria, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and other troubled
lands, where citizens and governments killed each other ferociously and
routinely in some years. Savage death squads, terror attacks, ethnic cleansing
and wholesale urban warfare scarred some of our cities and towns once again,
revealing a sick streak that we had seen only briefly among some Arab quarters.
This time, however, has been different, because
the killings were preceded by a rainbow. Death by devils was heralded by a
chorus of angels asking to live freely and fully. The noble aspirations of
those Arabs who non-violently rebelled against their dictators in early 2011
never had a chance, it now appears in retrospect. Some Arab governments and
foreign powers poured guns and money into other Arab countries, as old elites
and comfortable generals with their backs to the wall lashed out mercilessly
and killed everything in sight in order to remain in power. We learned about a
dark side of ourselves that we never imagined could exist. We know today, though,
about both our angels and our devils, and they will battle for our souls for
some years to come. We have become normal countries, in the early years of our
painful birth.
Rami G. Khouri is published twice weekly in
the Daily Star. He was
founding director and now senior policy fellow of the Issam Fares Institute for
Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut. On
Twitter: @ramikhouri.
Copyright © 2014 Rami G. Khouri—distributed by
Agence Global