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Palestine Media Roundup (February 11)

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[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on the Arabian Peninsula and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Arabian Peninsula Page Editors or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week's roundup to ap@jadaliyya.com by Monday night of every week.]

The Occupation Forces

The Israeli Forces Have Ransacked A Palestinian Publishing House In Ramallah
Besides destroying much of the equipment at the al-Nour Publishing house; Israeli forces also stole printers and a computer. The reason for the raid was that they were publishing 'materials being used for incitement of terrorism'.

A New Video Is Challenging The Israeli Forces' Claims About The Killing At Umm Al-Hiran The footage may prove that the math teacher killed by Israeli forces, Yaqoub Moussa Abu al-Qian did not in fact speed up towards the checkpoint, the quoted reason for Israeli gunfire, until after he had been shot by Israeli forces.

Domestic Politics

Prime Minister Netanyahu And His Right Wing Cronies Are At Odds Over How Fast They Can Steal Palestinian Land With Prime Minister Netanyahu wanting to wait until his state visit with new American president Trump, and the rest of his ultra-right wing cohorts wanting immediate action, there is tension over this so called "legalization bill" that will essentially legalize the annexation of Palestinian-owned land.

Foreign Policy

In An Attempt To Divert From Illegal Settlement Activity, Netanyahu Focuses On Iran During Talks With UK PM Theresa May While thousands around the world protest the continued and escalating development of illegal settlements in the occupied territories, the Israeli government is hoping to hide their crimes by aligning with the cowardly governments in London and Washington, D.C. against a mostly imaginary enemy.

The Palestinians Should Be Afraid Of Being Sidelined By The New White House Administration The repeated attempts made by the Palestinian Authority and President Abbas to reach out to Trump's administration have as yet gone unanswered.

The Palestinian Liberation Organization Has Claimed That It Would Revoke Recognition Of Israel If American Embassy Is Moved To Jerusalem Seeing the possible move as a fait accompli annexation of East Jerusalem, chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat has warned that if the embassy is moved to Jerusalem there will be immediate consequences.

It Appears That Perhaps Britain Will Side With Israel In Their War Against The Palestinian People In her desperate attempts to woo relations with Israel, Turkey and Trump's America, Theresa May is showing that she is choosing devious alliances over human rights and ethical behavior.

Settlers and Illegal Settlements

Palestinians Are Demanding Action After The Passing Of Recent "Land-Grab" Law By Israeli Knesset The law enables Israel to annex privately-owned Palestinian land in most of the West Bank, and would be the death knell of the two-state solution for Palestinians. The Palestinians are demanding an international response that is more than Facebook "likes" and good vibes. They need immediate action.

Israeli Bulldozers Have Returned To Beit Hanina To Finish Their Job Of Destruction The new tools in Israel's war against the Palestinian people have returned to destroy the Palestinian-owned building that was still under construction in occupied East Jerusalem. The building's construction had begun years earlier but had been discontinued because of an Israeli municipal order.

Israeli Rights Groups Are Protesting The New "Land-Grab" Law Passed Recently By The Knesset Israeli human rights groups are expected to petition the Supreme Court to dismantle the new law that legalizes the past annexation and future expropriation of Palestinian land. The United Nations, the European Union and the Arab League all have condemned the law, and even Israel's Attorney General has called the law unconstitutional.

Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions

How Did A London Theater Become A Battleground For The BDS Movement? When the Tricycle Theater in London decided not to accept Israeli funding for the UK Jewish Film Festival, they didn't know that it would embroil them in an international tiff.

A Palestinian Group Has Called For The Boycott Of Hyundai For Their Role In Illegal Settlements The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Committee of Palestinian Citizens of Israel (BDS48) has called for the boycott of the vehicle manufacturer after the company has failed to prevent the usage of their equipment by Israel to destroy Palestinians' homes.

Major European Pension Funds Are Profiting Massively Off Israeli Banks That Finance And Support Illegal Settlements According to the Danish-based research group Danwatch, the top five European investors hold at least three hundred and fifty million dollars in Israeli banks that are involved with the occupation and colonization of the West Bank.

Law

Leaders From Israel And Hamas Have Reached An Agreement To Stop 'Escalations' Against Palestinian PrisonersThe Israeli Prison Service and Hamas have agreed to pull back the 'escalations' or the stepped up punitive measures that were implemented in the wake of an attempted stabbing at Ktziot detention center.

An Israeli Court Has Frozen The Demolition Orders For Four Homes Of Palestinian Citizens Of Israel Following an appeal by the homeowners and a large protest in Tel Aviv, the Israeli court froze the demolition orders for four homes in the Wadi Ara region of Northern Israel.

An Israeli Military Court Has Sentenced A Palestinian Woman To 20 Months In Prison For Alleged Attempted Stabbing Twenty nine-year-old Abir Tamimi was detained while allegedly on her way to a mosque "with a knife in her hand," leading Israeli forces to surround and detain her. Witnesses report seeing her bound and beaten, "tied up in chains with blood on her face".

Journalist Mohamed Al-Qeq Has Begun A New Hunger Strike After Being Handed A New Six Month Extension Of His Administrative Detention The journalist had just ended a ninety four-day hunger strike back in November. Al-Qeq is being held without charge or trial, and will not end his hunger strike until he gains his freedom, however that manifests.

Economy and Development

Palestinian Israelis And Jews Protested The Demolition Of Arab Palestinians' Homes Around one thousand protestors joined in the demonstration, as they marched through central Tel Aviv carrying signs that said "Jews and Arabs Together" in both Hebrew and Arabic.

Arabic 

قوات الاحتلال

قوات الاحتلال تعتقل 590 فلسطينيا خلال الشهر يناير
قالت مؤسسات تعنى بشؤون الأسرى وحقوق الإنسان فى الأراضى ألمحتلة إن سلطات الاحتلال اعتقلت خلال شهر يناير المنصرم (590) فلسطينياً من الضفة الغربية وقطاع غزة والقدس، بينهم (128) طفلاً و(14) سيدة ونائب في المجلس التشريعي وصحفي واحد.

الاحتلال يواصل قمع الأسرى الفلسطينيين في سجني النقب ونفحة
تواصل سلطات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي منذ أمس الأربعاء قمعها للأسرى ألفلسطينيين على إثر إقدام أسيرين من حركة "حماس" في سجني النقب ونفحة، بطعن سجانين إسرائيليين يوم أمس، احتجاجاً على المعاملة المهينة التي يتعرض لها الأسرى، على أيدي إدارة مصلحة سجون الاحتلال.

قوات الاحتلال تمنع ادخال غاز التخدير لمستشفيات قطاع غزة
وأوضح الناطق باسم وزارة الصحة في قطاع غزة، الدكتور أشرف القدرة، أن الاحتلال يمنع إدخال الغاز المستخدم في العمليات الجراحية للمرة الثالثة على التوالي.

الاحتلال يهدم منزلا بالقدس ويعتقل 9 بالضفة
أقدمت جرافات تابعة لسلطات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي صباح الأربعاء، على هدم منزل المواطن أيمن أبو ارميلة في بلدة بيت حنينا بالقدس المحتلة، فيما قام جيش الاحتلال باعتقال 9 مواطنين فلسطينيين من مناطق بالضفة الغربية.

قوات الاحتلال تهدم قرية العراقيب بالنقب للمرة الـ 109
هدمت آليات وجرافات السلطات الإسرائيلية، صباح اليوم الأربعاء، قرية العراقيب مسلوبة الاعتراف في النقب، للمرة الـ109 على التوالي. وتزامن الهدم مع جلسة محاكمة شيخ العراقيب، صياح الطوري، في محكمة الصلح ببئر السبع، حيث يجري النظر في التهم الموجهة له، وهي نضاله العنيد والمستمر في العراقيب و'الاستيلاء على أرض الدولة'.

قوات الاحتلال تستهدف الأراضي الزراعية والصيادين شمال غزة
هاجمت زوارق الاحتلال بنيران أسلحتها الرشاشة الصيادين ومراكبهم في بحر شمال القطاع، دون اصابات، بالتزامن مع تحليق مكثف لطائرات الاستطلاع في أجواء القطاع، وعلى ارتفاعات ومختلفة، مصدرة اصوات عالية.

قوات الاحتلال تسلم جثمان شهيد محتجز منذ 10 أيام
سلمت قوات الاحتلال الإسرائيلية، مساء السبت، جثمان الشهيد حسين أبو غوش، الذي أعدمته قبل 10 أيام واحتجزت جثمانه بزعم محاولته تنفيذ عملية دهس عند حاجز شمال القدس المحتلة. وقالت عائلة أبو غوش مساء السبت، إن السلطات الإسرائيلية سلمتها جثمان ابنها حسين (24 عاما)، وهو من مخيم قلنديا، بعد أن احتجزته لمده عشرة أيام.

السياسة الداخلية

التهمة: فاسد.. متظاهرون وسط تل أبيب يطالبون نتنياهو بالاستقالة
تظاهر المئات من الإسرائيليين، وسط تل أبيب، الخميس 2 فبراير/شباط 2017، مطالبين رئيس الوزراء بنيامين نتنياهو بالاستقالة على خلفية تحقيقات الشرطة معه في شبهات فساد. المتظاهرون، الذين تجمعوا في ساحة "رابين"، رفعوا لافتات تحمل عبارات من قبيل "نتنياهو استقِل"، حسب صحيفة "يديعوت أحرونوت".

لجنة حكومية إسرائيلية توافق بشكل مبدئي على تصدير "الماريجوانا الطبية"
وافقت لجنة حكومية إسرائيلية بشكل مبدئي، الأحد، على تصدير الماريجوانا الطبية "من أنواع المخدرات". وقالت الحكومة الإسرائيلية، في بيان، إن إقرار التشريع في "الكنيست" قد يستغرق عدة أشهر.

تحريض كل 46 ثانية على العرب بالسوشال ميديا
نشر مركز حملة- المركز العربيّ لتطوير الإعلام الاجتماعيّ، نتائج مقلقة لبحث أجراه يرصد العنصرية والتحريض في منشورات الناشطين الإسرائيليّين على الشبكات ألاجتماعية وتظهر النتائج تفاقم العنصريّة وتفشّي الكراهيّة والتحريض ضد العرب والفلسطينيين.

نتنياهو طلب إكسسوارًا بقيمة 10 آلاف شيكل من ميلتشين
وبحسب الصحيفة، طلب نتنياهو الإكسسوار من ميلتشين كهديه بمناسبة عيد ميلاد زوجته، سارة، وميلتشين متورط في القضية 1000 التي تحقق بها الشرطة، والتي تشتبه فيها بأن نتنياهو تلقى هدايا تبلغ قيمتها مئات آلاف الشواقل من أصدقاء له، مقابل خدمات مختلفة.

مسرحية إخلاء "عمونا" المتقنة
منذ صباح يوم الأربعاء، بدأت مسرحية متقنة تحمل عنوان 'إخلاء عمونا'، يلعب دور البطولة فيها ثلاثة أطراف مختلفة، الحكومة الإسرائيلية متمثلة بعرابي الاستيطان من الليكود والبيت اليهودي، عناصر الأمن التي أتقنت دورها واختارت أزياء مختلفة هذه المرة والمستوطنون الذين أتقنوا دور الضحية، تارة بـ'مقاومة الاقتلاع العنيف' وتارة بالبكاء واللعب على المشاعر أو باستعمال الطريقتين سويًا.

الكنيست يقر قانونا يسمح بسلب أراضي الفلسطينيين
أقرّ الكنيست الإسرائيلي بصفة نهائية ما يسمى بقانون تبييض المستوطنات في الضفة الغربية المحتلة، المعروف لدى سلطات الاحتلال بقانون التسوية. وقد سحبت المعارضة الإسرائيلية جميع تحفظاتها على القانون كخطوة احتجاجية بوصفه قانونا غير دستوري وغير ديمقراطي، ويضفي شرعية على سرقة أراض فلسطينية ذات ملكية خاصة. 

حركة فتح: حل مشكلة الانقسام بيد حماسأكدت حركة فتح اليوم الثلاثاء، أن حل مشكلة الانقسام بيد حركة حماس، لأنها هي من تسببت به وخلفته، بعد انقلابها على السلطة الفلسطينية بالقوة عام 2007.

مسؤول إسرائيلي: المفاوضات حول صفقة مع حماس "غير ناضجة"
قال مسؤول إسرائيلي، صباح اليوم الأربعاء، إن المفاوضات مع حركة حماس بشأن إجراء صفقة تبادل أسرى غير ناضجة للتوصل إلى اتفاق. وأكد المسؤول في تصريحات لموقع واللا العبري، وجود اتصالات لمحاولة التوصل إلى اتفاق، لكنّها لا زالت بعيدة عن التحقق. وتأتي التصريحات الإسرائيلية بعد أن قالت مصادر في كتائب القسام إن الكتائب تلقت عروضًا إسرائيلية عبر وسطاء لإتمام صفقة تبادل أسرى جديدة.

السياسة الخارجية

الخارجية الألمانية: الثقة بالحكومة الإسرائيلية تزعزعت
نشرت الخارجية الألمانية بيان إدانة شديد اللهجة لـ'القانون التسوية' الذي يصادر أراضي فلسطينية خاصة بهدف شرعة البناء الاستيطاني عليها. وقال المتحدث باسم الخارجية الألمانية إن المصادقة على القانون في الكنيست تسببت بزعزعة الثقة في ألمانيا بالتزام إسرائيل بالسلام.

توبيخ السفير البلجيكي إثر لقائه "بتسيليم" و"يكسرون الصمت"
أوعز رئيس الحكومة الإسرائيلية، بنيامين نتنياهو، الأربعاء، باستدعاء السفير البلجيكي لتوبيخه، بعد لقاء رئيس حكومة بلجيكا بممثلين من منظمتي 'بتسيلم' و'يكسرون الصمت' الإسرائيليتين، اللتان يتهمهما نتنياهو بالعمل ضد الجيش الإسرائيلي.

إدانات دولية لقانون المستوطنات الإسرائيلي والأمم المتحدة تعتبره "تجاوزا لخط أحمر"
لقي قانون إسرائيلي أقره الكنيست ويشرع مصادرة أراض فلسطينية خاصة لصالح المستوطنين إدانة دولية واسعة، حيث اعتبره المدافعون عن حل الدولتين "سرقة" وخطوة إضافية لضم كامل الضفة الغربية المحتلة، بينما رفضت الإدارة الأمريكية التعليق.

تحريض إسرائيلي ضد الأمم المتحدة
وحسب الصحيفة الإسرائيلية فإن الأونروا "ليس لها تاريخ إيجابي مع إسرائيل، بسبب ما تنشره كتبها التعليمية من تحريض ضد إسرائيل، وتشغيل موظفين معادين لها، لكن السلوكيات المعادية من قبل الأونروا تجاه إسرائيل لم تغضب إدارة أوباما كثيرا، بل إنه زاد من قيمة الدعم المالي السخي الذي قدمه لها".

واشنطن ترفض التعليق على قانون "تسوية الاستيطان" الاسرائيلي الجديد
يثير القانون الاسرائيلي الجديد جدلا واسعا في مختلف الاوساط سواء في اسرائيل او خارجها بينما تلتزم واشنطن الصمت رفضت الولايات المتحدة التعليق على اقرار الكنيست الاسرائيلي مساء الاثنين قانونا يشرع آلاف الوحدات السكنية الاستيطانية في الضفة الغربية. مستوطنة معاليه افرايم في الضفة الغربية مستوطنة معاليه افرايم في الضفة الغربية "جعفر اشطية (اف ب)" وقال مسؤول في وزارة الخارجية الاميركية لوكالة فرانس برس مشترطا عدم نشر اسمه ان "الادارة بحاجة الى فرصة للتشاور مع جميع الأطراف بشأن الطريق الواجب سلوكها للمضي قدما"

الخارجية الفلسطينية: الإدانات لا ترتقي إلى خطورة قانون التسوية
قالت وزارة الخارجية الفلسطينية إنها تتابع باهتمام بالغ ردود الفعل الإقليمية والدولية على إقرار الكنيست لما يسمى 'قانون التسوية'، الذي يتيح شرعنة آلاف الوحدات الاستيطانية التي أقيمت على أراضٍ فلسطينية خاصة، وسرقة المزيد من الأرض الفلسطينية.

قانون

الأسير دقة يعاني العزل وحملة دولية لإطلاق سراحه
كانت آخر مرة التقت سناء سلامة بزوجها الأسير وليد دقة في التاسع والعشرين من كانون الثاني/ يناير الأخير. صحيح أن إدارة السجون سمحت لزوجته بلقائه، لكن التضييقات على الأسير دقة صعبة وقاسية وجدية، خاصةً بعد قضية اعتقال شقيقه أسعد، إذ تم وضعه في العزل، وبعد أن كان في سجن النقب تم نقله إلى سجن رامون وعوقب بالبداية بالمنع من الزيارات وزيادة حجم الضغط الكبير عليه.

قانون التسوية: تمهيد لفرض السيادة على الضفة الغربية
ويحمل سن القانون توجهات سياسة عديدة، منها ضرب الرأي العام العالمي عرض الحائط، خاصة أن سنه جاء بعد تبني مجلس الأمن مشروع قرار يجرم الاستيطان، وبعد أن أدان مؤتمر باريس توسيع المستوطنات الإسرائيلية في الضفة الغربية المحتلة.

منظمات حقوقية تلجأ للمحكمة الإسرائيلية العليا لإلغاء قانون يشرع البؤر الاستيطانية
قدمت منظمتان حقوقيتان بالنيابة عن 17 قرية وبلدة فلسطينية طلبا إلى المحكمة العليا الإسرائيلية الأربعاء لإلغاء قانون واجه انتقادات شديدة يضفي الشرعية بأثر رجعي على نحو 4000 منزل للمستوطنين بنيت على أراض فلسطينية مملوكة لأفراد في الضفة الغربية المحتلة، وإصدار أمر قضائي لمنع تسجيل أي أراض فلسطينية على أنها تحت ملكية المستوطنين.

قراقع: الأسرى سيخوضون إضرابا جماعيا عن الطعام في نيسان القادم
أفاد رئيس "هيئة شؤون الأسرى والمحررين"، عيسى قراقع، بأن الأسرى الفلسطينيين في سجون الاحتلال الإسرائيلي ينوون خوض إضراب جماعي عن الطعام في نيسان/ أبريل المقبل، ضد سياسات إدارة السجون بحقهم.

قراقع: الاتفاق على وقف التصعيد في سجني النقب ونفحة
أكد رئيس هيئة شؤون الأسرى والمحررين عيسى قراقع، أنه تم الاتفاق مع إدارة السجون الإسرائيلية لوقف التصعيد ضد الأسرى في سجني النقب ونفحة الصحراويين، اليوم الجمعة.

عنف المستوطنين

إسرائيل تخير المستوطنين بين 3 مناطق لبناء مستوطنة جديدة بديل "عمونا"
طرحت الحكومة الإسرائيلية مؤخرا على مستوطنى مستوطنة "عمونا" ثلاثة خيارات لبناء المستوطنة الجديدة، التى أعلن عنها رئيس وزراء إسرائيل نتنياهو فى أعقاب إخلاء المستوطنة، والخيارات الثلاثة تقع شمال شرق مدينة رام الله.

أريج: توقعات بازدياد أعداد المستوطنين في الضفة بـ2017
كشف معهد الأبحاث التطبيقية– القدس (أريج) ومركز أبحاث الأراضي أمام ممثلي وقناصل الاتحاد الأوروبي والدول العربية المعتمدين لدى السلطة الفلسطينية، أن أعداد المستوطنين الذين يعيشون في الضفة الغربية المحتلة سيتضاعف مع ازدياد وتكاثف البناء الاستيطاني.

نابلس: مئات المستوطنين يقتحمون المقامات التاريخية في عورتا
اقتحم مئات المستوطنين فجر اليوم الجمعة، المقامات التاريخية في بلدة عورتا جنوب مدينة نابلس شمال الضفة الغربية، ونظموا طقوسا دينية داخل المقامات وخارجها بمشاركة عدد من الحاخامات، وتحت حماية مشددة من قوات الاحتلال.

اقتصاد و تنمية

الصادرات المصرية إلى غزة تشير لتحسن العلاقات مع حماس
خففت مصر القيود على الحدود التي تخضع لرقابة مشددة مع غزة في علامة على تحسن العلاقات مع الحركة الفلسطينية التي تحكم القطاع الساحلي. ودخلت القطاع شاحنات محملة بسلع وبضائع تتراوح من الحديد إلى الأسماك في الأسابيع الماضية.

فرض رسوم جديدة على مواد البناء في غزة
رفض العديد من التجار وموردي الإسمنت قرار وزارة الاقتصاد الوطني في غزة فرض مزيد من الرسوم على مواد إعادة الإعمار التي يجري إدخالها إلى قطاع غزة عبر معبر كرم أبو سالم التجاري

موظفو غزة قلقون على رواتبهم بعد قرار الاتحاد الأوروبي
يساور موظفو قطاع غزة التابعون للسلطة الوطنية مخاوف من تأثير قرار الاتحاد الأوروبي الأخير بوقف توجيه أموال الدعم الأوروبي لصالح صرف رواتب موظفي السلطة الوطنية الفلسطينية في القطاع. واثار القرار الأوروبي قلق هؤلاء الموظفين كون غالبيتهم العظمى ليسوا على رأس عملهم منذ سيطرة حركة حماس على قطاع غزة بالقوة العسكرية في منتصف عام 2007.

النقد: تسارع النمو في الاقتصاد الفلسطيني
ويشير التقرير إلى تسارع النمو في الاقتصاد الفلسطيني إلى نحو 5.2% على أساسٍ سنوي في الربع الثالث، مقابل 3.5% على نفس الأساس في الربع السابق. وتعكس هذه التطورات تسارع النمو في الضفة الغربية إلى 3.9%، مقارنةً مع 3.1% في الربع السابق، على خلفية انتعاش عدة قطاعاتٍ اقتصادية وأهمها النقل والتخزين، والصناعة، والتجارة، والخدمات.

أرقام "خطيرة" ومستقبل قاتم بسبب الفقر والبطالة بفلسطين
قال وزير العمل الفلسطيني، مأمون أبو شهلا، إن عدد العاطلين عن العمل في الضفة الغربية وقطاع غزة يتجاوز 400 ألف شخص، أي ما يشكل نحو 27% من إجمالي السكان، وهو ما يتزامن مع دراسة رسمت صورة متشائمة لمستقبل سوق العمل والفقر في فلسطين قد يؤدي إلى تنامي العنف وسط انعدام للأمن الغذائي.

الحركة العالمية لمقاطعة إسرائيل وسحب الاستثمارات منها وفرض العقوبات عليها

دراسة: الإسرائيليون يعتبرون حركة المقاطعة تهديدا وجوديا
قالت دراسة إسرائيلية إن الإسرائيليين يعتبرون حركة المقاطعة العالمية المعروفة باسم "بي دي أس" تشكل تهديدا وجوديا عليهم، مشيرة إلى أن من بين أهداف هذه الحركة تحقيق ضغط دولي على تل أبيب، ووضع حد للاحتلال. وقالت دراسة إسرائيلية إن حركة المقاطعة ضد إسرائيل تركز جهودها بالمجالين الأكاديمي والاقتصادي، من خلال تحالف يضم ما يزيد على 170 منظمة فلسطينية ودولية غير حكومية، تطالب بفرض مقاطعة وعقوبات على إسرائيل.

حركة "BDS" تُطالب بمقاطعة منتجات شركة "هيونداي"
دعت لجنة مقاطعة إسرائيل وسحب الاستثمارات منها (BDS)، لمقاطعة منتجات الشركة الكورية "هيونداي"، بسبب مشاركتها في بناء المستوطنات الإسرائيلية وهدم المنازل الفلسطينية. وقالت اللجنة في بيان لها اليوم الأربعاء 8-2-2017، إن سلطات الاحتلال تستخدم "بشكل مكثف" معدّات شركة هيونداي في جرائم هدم البيوت الفلسطينية على طرفي الخط الأخضر.

مشروع قانون إسرائيلي لمقاطعة من يقاطع المستوطنات
ذكرت صحيفة"هآرتس" العبرية، أن حزب "البيت اليهودي" يسعى لإعداد مشروع قانون لمقاطعة المصالح التجارية لأي مؤسسة إسرائيلية تقرر مقاطعة المستوطنات. وبيّنت الصحيفة العبرية في عددها الصادر اليوم الإثنين، أن النائب في البرلمان الإسرائيلي الـ "كنيست" شولي معلم (من البيت اليهودي) يسعى لإعداد قانون يلزم وسم المصالح التجارية التي ترفض تقديم خدمات للمستوطنات.


Last Week on Jadaliyya (February 6-12)

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This is a selection of what you might have missed on Jadaliyya last week. It also includes a list of the most read articles and roundups. Progressively, we will be featuring more content on our "Last Week on Jadaliyya" series.

 

Egypt Media Roundup (February 13)

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[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on Egypt and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Egypt Page Editors or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week's roundup to egypt@jadaliyya.com by Sunday night of every week.] 

Muslim Brotherhood’s Terrorist Designation Threat

White House Weighs Terrorist Designation for Muslim Brotherhood President Trump’s advisers are debating an order intended to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a foreign terrorist organization, targeting the oldest and perhaps most influential Islamist group in the Middle East.

The Muslim Brotherhood and Trump's terror list Outlawing the Brotherhood reflects a total failure to understand the historical complexities of the group's evolution.

Calling the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group would hurt all American Muslims Reports suggest that the White House is considering an executive order directing the State Department to assess whether the Muslim Brotherhood should be designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization, a decision that will have ramifications far beyond the Middle East, where the group primarily operates. The result is likely to be intimidation, harassment and smears of Muslim and Arab groups here in the United States.

Designating the Muslim Brotherhood a “terrorist organization” puts academic researchers at risk There is a hidden danger for academics and journalists lurking within congressional legislation introduced by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) to designate the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization.

If Trump or Congress Decides the Muslim Brotherhood is a Terrorist Organization, Brace for the Blowback The Muslim Brotherhood is many things—including a U.S. partner in some countries. What happens if Congress or the Trump administration calls them a terrorist organization?

Could President Trump Use the Treasury Department to Go After the Muslim Brotherhood? As a legal matter, the short answer is almost certainly yes. But doing so would pose some constitutional questions the government will need to consider seriously.

Political Rights

Authorities forcibly close Al-Nadeem headquarters A sizable police force converged on Al-Nadeem Center for the Rehabilitation of Torture Victim’s headquarters in downtown Cairo on Thursday and forcibly closed the building, according to the center’s co-founder Aida Seif al-Dawla.

Activist forcibly disappeared after being arrested in security raid Activist Amr Mohamed Mahmoud, known as Amr Sokrat, was forcibly disappeared on Wednesday night after being arrested during a raid on a cafe in downtown Cairo.

After 3 years in prison, student searches desperately for her missing fiancé Out of jail after three years in prison, Asmaa Hamdy is not celebrating, but desperately searching for her fiancé, who was forcibly disappeared just one week before her release.

Sinai’s al-Arish families to begin civil disobedience after killing of 6 men Families in North Sinai’s al-Arish have decided to enter into civil disobedience as of next Saturday, citing the interior ministry’s “intransigence” in punishing those behind the murder of six young men, according to a member of a committee formed by those families.

Infinite eyes in the network: Government escalates attack on secure communication The Egyptian government has intensified efforts in the last six months to bolster its ability to intercept and monitor messages and data sent over the internet, interfering with the digital security tools that facilitate secure communication channels.

Egypt’s public prosecutor to summon everyone on 'terrorist list' for investigation Egypt’s public prosecutor Nabil Sadek decided on Tuesday to summon everyone named on the “terrorist list” for investigation regarding their alleged involvement in funding the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood.

Egypt’s prosecution refers defendants in State Council bribery case to trial Egypt’s Public Prosecutor Nabil Sadek referred the defendants in the State Council bribery case to criminal trial on Sunday, according to a statement by the prosecution.

Egypt court sentences two to death over violence near U.S. embassy in 2013 The Cairo Criminal Court sentenced two to death and twenty others to life imprisonment on Tuesday in a case concerning violent clashes that erupted between security forces and protesters near the U.S. embassy in 2013.

Tensions arise between Al-Azhar and presidency over verbal divorce debate Recent calls by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to reduce Egypt’s escalating divorce rate by ending verbal divorce have been met with resistance from Al-Azhar, feeding into an ongoing standoff between the state and the country’s largest Islamic institution.

The assembly law’s fate: What are the implications of the challenge to the British colonial-era statute Human rights activists filed a lawsuit in front of the Court of Administrative Justice on 31 January, contesting the existence of Law 10 of 1914, otherwise known as the assembly law. Introduced under British rule, the law functioned as an emergency measure during World War I and has been used by post-independence Egyptian governments to restrict assembly and provide license for the arrest of protesters.

Cabinet approves organic farming bill The government has approved Egypt’s first draft law regulating organic farming, which the Cabinet hopes will enhance its chances of marketing organic products abroad. The bill will be passed to Parliament for ratification.

Economy

Financial support to the poor: Does it really work? Question marks surround two government funds' ability to alleviate poverty with current austerity measures.

Mahalla textile workers initiate partial strike, warn of comprehensive industrial action More than 2,000 workers at the Misr Spinning and Weaving Company in the Nile Delta City of Mahalla initiated a partial strike on Tuesday, and warned of a comprehensive strike starting on Wednesday which could potentially involve all of the company’s factories and nearly 17,000 workers.

Mahalla textile workers temporarily call off strike, 5 strike leaders face disciplinary hearings Over 2,000 workers from the state-owned Misr Spinning and Weaving Company in Mahalla called off their partial strike on Wednesday. Five of the strike leaders, all women, are currently facing a disciplinary hearing and face potential suspension or sacking.

Report: World Bank policies in Egypt may exacerbate climate change The World Bank’s development policies are contributing to increased carbon emissions in Egypt and exacerbating risk for some of the country’s most vulnerable communities, according to a report recently issued by the Bank Information Center, a nongovernmental organization that monitors the policies of the World Bank, along with those of regional development banks.

Rising temperatures may cause decline in Egypt’s crop production Egypt is likely to witness a decline in the productivity of a number of crops in the next ten years as a result of rising temperatures due to global warming, according to a study released by the Central Authority for Public Mobilization and Statistics on Tuesday.

Egypt's urban inflation jumps to 28.1 pct in January Egypt's annualized urban consumer price inflation jumped to 28.1 percent in January from 23.3 percent in December, the Central Authority for Public Mobilization and Statistics statistics agency said on Saturday, its highest level since central bank records began in 2005.

Foreign Relations

Egypt's defence minister discusses combatting terrorism with US Congress delegation Egyptian Defense Minister Sedky Sobhy has met with a US Congress delegation currently visiting the country and discussed a number of points of strategic interest, including combatting terrorism, an army spokesman statement issued Sunday read.

Egypt’s Foreign Ministry backs Trump’s attack on western media Egypt’s Foreign Ministry praised a statement released by the White House, claiming that Western media has underreported seventy-eight terrorist acts.

Trump presidency heralds new era of closer ties with Egypt Friendly phone calls, an invite to the White House, a focus on Islamic militancy and what Donald Trump called "chemistry" have set the tone for a new era of warmer U.S.-Egyptian ties that could herald more military and political support for Cairo.

FCO says 'restrictions on civil society worsened' in Egypt in 2nd half of 2016 UK's Foreign and Common Wealth Office updated on Wednesday the "Human Rights Priority Countries Report" to cover the period between July and December 2016, during which "restrictions on civil society worsened significantly" in Egypt.

Three British trade missions visit Egypt to explore investment opportunities UK Prime Minister’s Trade Envoy Sir Jeffrey Donaldson and over forty delegates from British companies arrived to Egypt this week “to assess new trade and investment opportunities and identify potential Egyptian partners.”

Suspect in Louvre attack placed under formal investigation - source A man who attacked soldiers with machetes at the Louvre museum in Paris was placed under formal investigation on Friday, a judicial source said.

Egyptian national suspected in Louvre attack refuses to speak with investigators Abdallah al-Hamahmy, the Egyptian suspected of attacking a soldier outside the Louvre Museum in Paris, is refusing to speak with investigators in the hospital where he’s being treated, according to a source at the French prosecutor’s office. 

Sudanese president threatens to resort to UN Security Council over Halayeb, accuses Egypt of harboring opposition members Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir reasserted claims of Sudanese sovereignty over the contested Halayeb triangle, threatening to resort to the United Nations Security Council, in an interview on Sunday.

Egyptian exports to Gaza signal better ties with Hamas Egypt has eased restrictions at a tightly-controlled border with the Gaza Strip in a sign of improved relations with the Palestinian territory's Islamist rulers.

Domestic Security

Egypt court declares Hasam movement a ‘terrorist’ group The Cairo Court for Urgent Matters banned and declared on Saturday the recently emerged group known as “Hasam” as a “terrorist movement.”

Civilian shot dead at North Sinai checkpoint Thirty-year-old Abdul-Latif al-Nasayira was shot dead at the Raysa military checkpoint in Arish, North Sinai on Tuesday, less than a day after he was released from police custody.

Egypt army kills 14 militants in central Sinai - Army spokesman Egypt’s army killed fourteen militants in an exchange of fire during a raid in central Sinai, the military spokesman said in a statement on Monday.

From Jadaliyya Egypt

تقاسيم صيّاد الشعر وجنيّاته في العتمة Seyid Elsisi examines and exhibits the revolutionary poetry of the late Seyid Hijab, who passed away on the sixth anniversary of Egypt’s ‘unfinished’ revolution.

Arabic

زيادة ديون مصر الخارجية.. حل للأزمة أم عقدة جديدة؟ Egypt’s foreign debt is expected to increase up to eighty billion dollars by next June—a forty-three percent increase in one year.

محكمة مصرية تحظر حركة مرتبطة بالإخوان المسلمين An Egyptian court banned a movement affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood.

تقرير حقوقي: 112 حالة انتهاك ضد صحفيي مصر في شهر واحد  Arab Media Freedom Monitor documented 112 violations against journalists during January 2017.

الإعدام والمؤبد لـ22 متظاهراً من أنصار محمد مرسي  Twenty-two pro Morsi defendants accused of violence near the American embassy in Cairo in 2013 received life and hard labor sentences on Tuesday, according to a judicial source.

قبائل سيناء تعلن عصياناً مدنياً  The Popular Committee declares civil disobedience in Al-Arish on 11 February.

"الخميس.. استئناف إعادة محاكمة 156 متهماً في قضية "مذبحة كرداسة Cairo Criminal Court resumes the retrial of 156 defendants over killing eleven police officers in the “Kerdasa Massacre” case.

الطلاق الشفهي: صدام جديد بين السيسي والأزهر Sisi’s call for restrictions on verbal divorce raises objections from Al-Azhar.

"البرلمان في مواجهة الشعب: عشرات الآلاف مهددون بفقد الرعاية الصحية بموجب "الجمعيات الأهلية Al Manassa sheds light on the repercussions of the state’s ban on civil society associations.

تشمّيع مركز النديم.. بعد عام من محاولة إغلاقه  Security forces shut down Al-Nadeem Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence on Thursday.

"محكمة تقضي بحظر حركة "حسم" واعتبارها "جماعة إرهابية Cairo Summary Court bans Hasm Movement and declares it a terrorist group.

أعلى معدل ارتفاع أسعار منذ 30 عاما  The annual inflation rate of January 2017 reached twenty-nine percent—the highest in thirty years.

منظمة تدين تشميع النديم: النظام يواصل انتقامه من المنظمات الحقوقية ملاذ الضحايا.. ولن نتراجع عن فضح انتهاكاته15 Fifteen human rights organizations condemn the closure of Al-Nadeem Center and the arrest and interrogation of its doorkeeper by security forces on Thursday. 

الحملة الوطنية للضمان الاجتماعي في فلسطين: مقابلة لمجلة الوضع مع فراس جابر

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 أجرى ضياء علي لمجلة "الوضع" هذا الحوار مع فراس جابر، كاتب وباحث في القضايا السياسية والاجتماعية،  ومن الباحثين المؤسسين لـ"مرصد"، وهي مؤسسة بحثية مقرها رام الله/ فلسطين، ومتخصصة "بدراسة وتحليل نقد السياسات الاجتماعية والاقتصادية في فلسطين والمنطقة العربية على المستوى الكلي والإجرائي. بدأت عملها عام 2012، من خلال مجموعة من الباحثين المتخصصين في حقول التنمية وعلم الاجتماع والاقتصاد". 

حصل فراس جابر على بكالوريوس في علم الاجتماع من جامعة بيت لحم، وعلى ماجستير في علم الاجتماع كذلك من جامعة بيرزيت. وحملة رسالة الماجستير عنوان: "السجن "الإسرائيلي" كمفهوم زماني ومكاني: دراسة في المفهوم والأثر". كما له عدة منشورات وكتب متعلقة بالقضايا السياسة والاجتماعية منها خصخصة فلسطين ضمن كتاب "وهم التنمية" وله أبحاث منشورة عن التنمية والاقتصاد وغيرها. 
تركز المقابلة على الحركة الاجتماعية والحملة الوطنية للأمن الاجتماعي في فلسطين.

خطوات مرحة في شارع البهلوان

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زينات صدقي فنانة تشكيليّة مهووسة بفنها وعاشقة لجمال الجسد الأنثوي العاري، أما لولا صدقي فمنقبة محافظة قليلة الكلام ومتزوجة من رجل متدين جداً .. زينات تجد في لولي الموديل الأنسب للوحتها القادمة نظراً لوجهها الجميل وجسمها الرائع الفتان. ولكن لولي ترفض أن تُرسم بدون البرقع والنقاب، فهي مخلصة لزوجها الغيور المتدين، فتقترح زينات عليها فكرة فنية متميزة وهي أن تكون الصورة بعنوان "الملاك المُحجَّب".

بعدها بلحظات، تظهر لولي بالنقاب لكن شبه عارية وتنزل الكاميرا من أعلي لأسفل من النقاب إلى
استعراض جسم لولي الرائع ثم تظهر زينات سعيدة وهي ترسم اللوحة.



تترك زينات الريشة والألوان وتعطي لولي "الملاك المحجب" سيجارة لحين عودتها للتسلية. ويدخل زوج زينات ليرى هذا الجسد المثير العاري ويُعجب بجماله وتتوالي الأحداث من لحظة الإغواء التي دبرتها يد
القدر.

تلك أحداث أحد مشاهد فيلم "شارع البهلوان" من إخراج صلاح أبو سيف عام 1949، والذي ألفه الكاتب
المجهول عبد الحيلم مرسي الذي أقتصر نشاطه الفني خلال فترة الإربعينيات.



في حواراتنا النخبوية المتعالية أو في حديثنا العادي نستخدم بكثافة تعبير "الازدواج" أو "الازدواجية" لكل ما يتبدى لنا غير متناسق أو متناغم، فنقول استسهالا "تصرفات فلان متناقضة لأنه مزدوج" وفي السياسة "إن الحزب الفلاني مزدوج في خطابه" أو "الرئيس مزدوج في تحالفاته." فالازدواج تعبير نخبوي / شعبوي يستخدمه الجميع في حديثهم اليومي ويصفون بعضهم البعض بدون أي تحليل أو محاولة للإقتراب من دواخل النفوس.

الأديان و الأساطير القديمة بصفة عامة رسّخت ثنائيّة الخير والشر وبرغم إعترافها في معظم الأحيان أن الإنسان الخيّر قد يفعل الشر والعكس صحيح، لكننا في نفس الوقت نرفض فكرة أن يكون إنساناً على الجانبين فالإنسان بالنسبة لنا إما بار أو شرير - من أهل الجنة أو من أهل النار.

والأديان الإبراهيميّة بشكل خاص تؤسس لرفضها لشخصية تسميها "المرائي" أو "المنافق" الذي يُظهر أنه متدين وعفيف وخيّر ويخفي حقيقة فساده ويتم الحكم عليه من أهل الدين بكونه إزدواجي.

ورغم ذلك يتحفنا صلب الدين نفسه ببعض الحالات التي يبارك فيها بعض أنواع النفاق والكذب للوصول لأهداف أسمى -من وجهة نظره- كالحصول علي منافع للأمة الدينية وإصلاح حالها بآليات الخداع والتدليس، أو الوصول للمال والسلطة لأحد أبناء الدين، ويضع لذلك عنواناً "التقية". ويتهم العلمانيون والمنتقدون للدين هؤلاء، بالازدواج وبأنهم مراؤون ومنافقون، مستخدمين تعابير دينية.

الثقافة السينمائية في كثير من الأحيان لا تقل تسطيحاً في تصورها للشخصيات المزدوجة والتي تكون شريرة بالضرورة او نموذج سيء، بل يبالغ التصور السينمائي الشهير لمزدوجي الشخصية أو المصابين بالفصام النفسي حيث يقوم البطل أو البطلة بأفعال متناقضة ومتعارضة في شخصيتين وحيايتين متوازيتين ويتمتع المشاهد بهذه الصور المبسطة للعالم والإنسان.

 متي نستطيع أن نتخلص من ذلك المصطلح "الازدواج" الذي يظهر كمقولة عميقة، ولكنه يوقع بنا في فخاخ التبسيط والتسطيح؟ متي نتوقف عن وصف الماء بالماء فنعقد حاجبينا ونقول عن شخص يقوم بفعلين أو قولين غير متسقين أنه مزدوج وكأننا نقول حكمة الزمان مكتفيين بإتهام الأفراد والجماعات دون تحليل أبعد، أو محاولة لفهم الثنائيات والمتعددات المتجاورة داخل النفس الانسانية وسلوكها وبالتالي نعيق قدرتنا في نقد الذات وفهم الآخر.

عن الله والكارينا والفيزون

في مصر التجاورات السلوكيّة غير المتسقة عند مستهلكي الدين دائماً مصدر سخرية. ولا توجد محاولة متأنيّة لفهم من نطلق عليهم إزدواجيين. فالمرأة المصريّة في المدن كمستهلكة للدين برغم تبنيها للحجاب بشكل أساسي والنقاب بشكل أقل، اشتهرت بتبنيها لموضات مثيرة خلال السنوات السابقة وأصبحت فكرة الفتاة المنقبة أو المحجبة المثيرة اللعوب فيتش (رمز له شحنة جنسية) شعبي.

المرأة المصرية (وفي هذه الحالة المسلمة) دائماً ما ينظر لها كمفعول به، فحين تبنّت الحجاب وقبلت بها كفريضة دينية وحين تبنّت الموضات الليبرالية -إن جاز التعبير- فقد كانت أيضا غير فاعلة، وطالبها بعض أبناء" الليبرالية والدين "معاً بالإختيار مما بين الاقواس كما يطلب المعلم من الطالب في إمتحان آخر العام، حيث ممنوع تجاور هذان النوعان من الأزياء، وإلا سقطت فيما اسموه الازدواج، وأدعوا التجاور مثير للإشمئزاز لمجرد أنه لا يتماشي مع مرجع واحد ولا يمثل نمط معروف.

قد تؤدي القراءة الأولى لما حاولت أن تفعله المرأة المصرية بالجمع بين الحجاب والملابس الشفافة / الضيقة / الكاشفة للجسم علي أنها محاولة للتوفيق بين الدين والدنيا، فهي تسعى أن تكون مطيعة للإله وأوامره الذي يمكن إرضاءه بغطاء للرأس، ومحاولة البحث عن الجمال والحرية كمساحة للتنفس. و بصورة سلوكية بعيدة عن الأزياء فهي تقبل أن تصلي وتصوم من جهة وتقيم علاقات خاصة أو مفتوحة من جهة أخرى، لأنها ترغب في إرضاء السلطة الاجتماعية والدينية للوصول للجنة وترغب في إرضاء جسمها وشعورها بالأنوثة والإنسانية بإقامة علاقة عاطفية أيا كان شكلها. فالسلوك هنا يظهر برجماتي، فهي تسكت الله ورجاله بقطعة القماش هذه وبعض الطقوس البسيطة وتتطلق العنان لجسدها و نفسها وأنوثتها.

وهناك قراءة ثانية عن أن المرأة هنا متذبذبة بين العالمين، حائرة ومقهورة تارة ترضي هذا وتارة ترضي ذاك، و هي في شعور بالذنب والخوف دائم لأن الله غاضب منها وسينتقم من أنوثتها، ولأنها حزينة علي موت أنوثتها خلف تلك الاقمشة والقيود.

ولكن أدعيّ أن هناك قراءة أبعد لكننا نميل لإنكارها لأنها صادمة. فبعض الحالات تكون الجمع بين الحجاب والأزياء المتحررة صارخ وملفت إلي أقصي درجة والجمع بين السلوكيات الدين والدنيا يكون فجاً، وتصبح قراءات التوفيق والقهر غير كافية لفهم المشهد، فالسلوك يحمل ببساطة في طياته إعلان عن كراهية ومحاولات للتمرد وتحطيم المقدس. فقطعة القماش ذات المدلول الإلهي تربطها المرأة المصرية عنوة بالإغواء وتفجر الأنوثة والرغبة وبإطلاق حرية الجسد، فهى بتجاور الاثنان تُعطي كل إشارات أحتقار المقدس و تضع المقدس في حجمه الطبيعي الضئيل والتافه أمام الجسد والحرية والأنوثة. فلا مانع عندها أن تمارس العشق مع محبوبها بالحجاب والنقاب، مستمتعة بتلك اللحظة بالذات في اللاوعي حينا، وفي الوعي حينا آخر، ليسقط المقدس كصنم ويتفتت على فراشها وهي ضاحكة وثابتة وقوية.

وهذه القراءة قادرة على إحتواء القراءات الأخرى. فبالرغم من كراهية المقدس ورفضه وأحتقاره، تسعى برجماتيا وتناور السلطة للخروج بأقل الخسائر. يصيبها الخوف تارة وتعتريها مشاعر الذنب تارة أخرى. تسعى لسماع صوتها الداخلي المفقود ولا تستقبل أذنها سوى خطابات السلطة بأنواعها وآخرها خطاب السلطة الثقافية بأنها مزدوجة. لكنها لا تهتم بهذا الأخير، كما أنها لا تهتم إن كان الحجاب من آل سعود أم من السماء، و لا يشغلها إن كان الفيزون عربيٌ عريق أم هو تصدير لثقافات ما بعد الإحتلال الغربية، لأن كل المنتجات معظمها غير أصلي، و"مضروب"، كله "صيني" وقابل للكسر بسهولة ولا يعيش طويلا كما أدركت من خبرتها وذهابها اليومي للأسواق.

عن مطبخ الدين و الإشارات الأخرى

عادة ما يُتهم منتجي أو مروجي الدين، أو كما يسميهم البعض رجاله، خاصة الأكثر قوة وشهرة وسلطة بالازدواج، وذلك بسبب السلوكيات المنافية للدين التي تصدر عنهم من فساد مالي وسعي للنفوذ السياسي والمجتمعي فوق القانون والإنفتاح الجنسي المقنن وغير المقنن. و يباري بعض المخلصين القلائل للدين لمحاولات إخفاء تلك المعلومات وتكذيبها.

آخرون يؤكدون أن هؤلاء فسدوا عن صحيح الدين وأغوتهم الدنيا والشيطان. ولكن هنا كرجال دين آخرين في مكان ما غير معلوم، ربما في بلاد لم نزرها أو في غياهب التاريخ القديم، الذي لم يكن لدينا الحظ الكافي لنحيا فيه.

بينما تجد هؤلاء العمالقة من منتجي الدين قلما يجتهدوا لتفنيد تلك الحقائق عن أنفسهم بل يتباروا في الفساد أكثر وأكثر. ولهذا أيضا قراءات ليبرالية ويسارية متعددة أشهرها أن الدين بالأساس تم بناءه كوسيلة للقوة والسلطة والنفوذ على أيدي جماعات تسعي للسيطرة والتحكم والمال وأن رجال الدين بالأساس ساعين للسلطة والنفوذ. وهذا التفسير ليس عار من الصحة ولكنه يعجز عن فهم أسباب عدم إخفاء هؤلاء لسياراتهم الفارهة وغناهم الفاحش، القراءة قاصرة عن شرح اظهارهم فسادهم المالي وتواطؤهم مع السلطة من أجل المصالح، بل و احيانا يظهروا بغرائبية علاقتهم الماجنة - من وجه نظر الدين المحافظ- ويمارسون علاقات جنسية مفتوحة علناً وفي أماكن عامة ويتزوجون الراقصات. وهذا يجعل التحليل "العلماني" غير كافي لتفسير ما يحدث.

إن الدخول في مطبخ الدين مغامرة غير محسوبة، فأن تكون منتِج للروحانيات والمقدسات ووكيلا للسماء علي الأرض وخليفة لرب العزة، ينكشف أمامك ليس فقط فساد المطبخ الديني وتحكم الأهواء في عمليات الإنتاج، ولكن الصدمة تكون في سهولة إنتاج المقدس وأعتماده أولا أسباب مادية ونوايا ومنافع بشرية وثانياً أعتماده الصدف والعشوائية.

هذا الإكتشاف يضرب صميم فكرة الأصل والجذور، لأنك تختبر الحالة الاولى التي عاشها مؤسسو الدين فيموت أمامك سحر الاسطورة، فتقديس الناس لما تقوله وتفعله يزيد من تعميق الكشف وتصبح أمام حقيقة لا مفر منها. لذا فكبار منتجين الدين تتفاقم لديهم تلك الازمة وتلح عليهم حالة من رفض للمقدس وأحتقاره، فتكون تلك اللحظات التي يعلنوا فيها فسادهم بشكل بين لاواعي وواعي، بمثابة إشارات يعلنون فيها مشاعر الكراهية والرفض مما يؤدي بالضرورة لأن ينفر مستقبلو تلك الإشارات من مستهلكي الدين من الدين ومقدساته.

ولذا يصبح أصحاب الدعوات من مستهلكي الدين المخلصين التي تطالب رجال الدين بأن يلتزموا موقع القدوة في موقف صعب، فهي لا جدوى منها لأن تلك الإشارات تكون رغما عنهم نابعة من جرح عميق وغضب غير محتمل بل وتظهر كلحظة صدق غير مقصودة للجماهير المخدوعة.

أما العلمانيون والليبراليون واليساريون الذين دائماً وأبداً يتباروا في الحديث عن فساد رجال دين بالاساليب المباشرة و الهجومية فهم يشوشون على تلك الرسالة الصادقة ألا تصل لمستقبليها، كمن يقاومون البشارة المفرحة .فهؤلاء الذين ينعتون عمالقة الدين بالازدواج لا يمهدون لحوار مجتمعي بل لثرثرة.

وستظل الثرثرة حول الازدواج التي تمنعنا من التفكير مستمرة إلى أن أن نشطب هذا المصطلح الذي استهلكناه حتي انتهت صلاحيته وخرجت رائحته الكريهة من مطبخنا الثقافي.

Arabian Peninsula Media Roundup (February 14)

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[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on the Arabian Peninsula and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Arabian Peninsula Page Editors or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week's roundup to ap@jadaliyya.com by Monday night of every week.]

Regional and International Relations

Somaliland agrees to UAE military base in northern port The United Arab Emirates is planning to establish a naval base that would be used to attack Houthi fighters in Yemen. 

Boris Johnson urged UK to continue Saudi arms sales after funeral bombing“Boris Johnson pressed Liam Fox to continue exports of weapons to Saudi Arabia after the bombing of a funeral in Yemen last October that killed more than 140 people.”

Saudis to raise $10 billion ahead of Aramco IPO Aramco has picked HSBC Holdings to advise it on the sale of riyal-denominated Islamic bonds before the end of the first half this year.

Qatar spending $500m a week on World Cup infrastructure projects According to human rights groups, the hundreds of thousands of migrant workers brought in on these projects have been exploited and forced to work under dangerous conditions.

'Islamophobia' is fuelling terrorism, UN chief Guterres says in Saudi“UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres made the comment to reporters after talks with Saudi King Salman.”

Saudi social media users break silence on violence against women A hashtag, #Break_Your_Silence_Speak_Up, has gone viral among Saudi women who shared their bitter stories that often go untold.

CIA awards Saudi crown prince with medal for counter-terrorism work Bin Nayef and Pompeo discussed security with Turkish officials in a move to reinforce ties between Riyadh and Washington under the Trump presidency.

Clashes in Bahrain Amid Protests Denouncing “Deliberate Killing” of Al Ghisra and his Companions Angry protesters clashed in different areas with regime forces.

Thousands Rally in Symbolic Funeral Processions for 3 Martyrs Killed by Authorities at Sea Bahrainis took to the streets in symbolic funeral processions for Rida Al-Ghisra, Mahmoud Yahya, and Mostafa Yousef, who were killed while trying to flee Bahrain.

OPEC reports big Saudi oil cut, boosting compliance with deal The move is expected to lead to a revival in US shale drilling.

Saudi Arabia planning to sell 49% of Aramco, says report Saudi Arabia has been planning the share sale as part of an effort to generate revenue and reform its economy.

Ministers came 'within hours' of suspending UK arms exports to Saudi Arabia The Campaign Against Arms Trade has accused the government of unlawfully failing to suspend the sale of UK arms to Saudi Arabia.

Reports and Opinions

Saudi Arabia Is Unlikely to Sell Planned Islamic Bond“Saudi Arabia is unlikely to sell a planned Islamic bond in the first quarter after the head of its debt management office left.”

Saudi Arabian princess sued by her agent over British property deals which 'enriched' her Mr. Hussein said he is owed more than £3.4m in expenses and remuneration and an unpaid rent of £30,000 on a property near Windsor Castle.

Saudi Arabia to address cyber security at the national level Security Matterz, BT, Fortinet, Innovative Solutions, Kaspersky, Northrop Grumman, PhishMe, Darktrace, Paloalto Networks, Protection Group International, Symantec and Virtual Forge will be holding private one-on-one meetings.

Helicopter bombs vehicle amid power struggle in Yemen's Aden“The attack struck troops loyal to the airport's chief of security, who had refused to accept a government order that he be replaced.”

Number of Injuries after Security Forces Attacked Protests in Bani Jamra & Mourning Procession in Diraz Police forces fired shotguns and tear gas at peaceful protesters, leaving ten injured.

Saudi Arabia ‘deports 40,000 Pakistani workers over terror fears’“The alleged mass deportations come after a year of strikes and other unrest in the kingdom due to unpaid wages following the oil market’s decline and subsequent blow to the Saudi economy.”

UAE says expects higher compliance with OPEC, non-OPEC deal OPEC is cutting its crude output by about one million barrels per day to sustain oil prices and reduce a supply glut.

Crisis in Yemen

Britain has blood on its hands over Yemen“No wonder Oxfam has labelled Britain’s weapons sales a serious violation of humanitarian law.”

Will international community help avert Yemen famine? According to the United Nations, over seven million Yemenis do not know where their next meal is coming from.

Yemen's food crisis: 'We die either from the bombing or the hunger' The Saudi-led war and blockade on Yemen are causing a large-scale hunger crisis that the United Nations has warned could turn to famine this year.

Saudi-led strikes on Yemen port, fears for civilians: U.N.“‘Civilians were trapped during the fighting (in al-Mokha), there are real fears the situation will repeat itself in the port of Hodeidah where air strikes are apparently already intensifying.’”

Yemen: As food crisis worsens, UN agencies call for urgent assistance to avert catastrophe“Rates of acute malnutrition were found to have passed the ‘critical’ threshold in four governorates, while agricultural production is falling across the country.”

Yemen on the brink of famine Hisham al-Omeisy, a resident of Sanaa, talks of chronic shortages of food, medicine, and electricity.

Saudi-backed forces fight each other at Aden Airport in southern Yemen A southern brigade, led by Saleh Al-Amiri, refused to hand over Aden’s airport to Hadi loyalists, which resulted in violent clashes.

Yemen: In the Shadow of Death“How did Nawar al-Awlaki, an 8-year-old child, die at the hands of a Navy Seal during last month’s night time raid in Yemen?”

Yemen: Escalating Conflict - Yemen's Western Coast Flash Update | 07 February 2017 Over 34,000 people have had to flee their homes in Taiz.

Yakla residents speak of US raid that killed civilians“[L]ocal journalist Mujahid al-Selalee said Abdulraouf al-Dhahab, a tribal leader whose house was attacked in the raid, had repeatedly denied being a member of the armed group.”

Gulf-backed Yemeni forces capture Red Sea coast city - agency Yemeni forces backed by Saudi-led coalition troops have advanced to the Red Sea coastal city of Al-Mokha.

Insecurity in Yemen threatens incoming refugees and migrants More than 117,000 are estimated to have escaped across the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea last year.

U.N. seeks $2.1 billion to avert famine in Yemen“Nearly 3.3 million people—including 2.1 million children—are acutely malnourished.”

Yemen 'withdraws permission for US ground raids' after Donald Trump’s first botched military operation Neither Yemen nor the United States have announced the decision, which was reported by the New York Times citing unnamed US officials.

Waiting for Justice بانتظار العدالة A human rights documentary by Mwatana for Human Rights sheds light on civilian victims of US targeted killings conducted through drone strikes in Yemen.

Yemen war causing world’s worst food crisis A de-facto blockade on imports, imposed by the Saudi-led coalition, has had a devastating impact on the Yemeni economy.

Yemen cancer patients struggle to survive war shortages"Most people seek charity—some give and others say they can't help. Now, some people seek help from mosques. I'm one of those people.”

U.N. chief affirms full support for Yemen peace envoy On Friday, an official of the Ansarallah-led government opposed the renewal of Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed’s position as UN envoy, explaining that he had shown a "lack of neutrality."

Yemen shelling kills Pakistani in southern Saudi Arabia A rocket hit Arda, a town of the southwestern region of Jizan.

Coalition airstrike kills 6-member family in Yemeni port city Mokha The Saudi-led coalition killed a six-member family in an air strike on their house in the Red Sea port city of Al-Mokha on Sunday.

Saudi aggression deprives Yemen of oil supplies“The US-backed Saudi-led coalition held five oil tankers heading to Hodeida province, an official told Saba on Monday.”

Yemen UNHCR Flash Update, 10 February 2017 Thousands of Yemeni civilians are fleeing or caught up in the intensified fighting in Taiz governorate.

Houthi forces launch decisive counter-offensive in west Yemen Houthi forces began their counter-assault on Saturday morning in an attack that resulted in a fierce battle between the two opposing parties.

Video: Yemen says the Saudis intentionally bomb farms“Yemen says the Saudis intentionally bomb farms to get the starving nation hooked on food imports.”

Human Rights

‘Poet of Sensations’ jailed for three months Saqr Al Shehi, known as the Poet of Sensations, has been sentenced to three months in prison for posting a poem on social media.

Qatar: Travel ban imposed on prominent human rights lawyer Najeeb Al-Nuaimi Al-Nuaimi, a well-known human rights lawyer, voluntarily defended poet Mohamed Rashid Al-Ajami who was handed a life sentence in 2011.

Yemen: Call for investigation into the suspicious death of journalist Mohammed Al-Abbsi The suspicious death of Mohammed Al-Abbsi is part of the on-going persecution of journalists, media workers, and human rights defenders in Yemen by all parties to the conflict.

Saudi Arabia: One human rights defender released while another is still in prison According to the Gulf Center for Human Rights, one human rights defender has been released in Saudi Arabia, while another who was arrested at the same time in a separate case is still in prison.

A new campaign to support human rights defenders and freedom of expression This campaign aims to shed lights on human rights defenders and freedom of expression in all Arab regions.

The Situation of Women Human Rights Defenders in Kuwait A report on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women was submitted at the United Nations to inform the list of issues for Kuwait.

Oman: Authorities prevent the family of blogger Mohamed Fazari from travelling; and Public Prosecutor appeals the verdict against “Azamn” Oman continues to target human rights defenders.

Arabic

 البحرين        

هروبات رضا الغسرة.. الخروج من جهنم ليس مستحيلا
"في كل مرة يهرب الغسرة، يضيف إلى زاد الهروب رفقاء جدد، حلم الحرية يتسع، فكرة الهروب من الجحيم ممكنة جدًا، معانقة شمس بلا خطوط ليست مستحيلة. يسبب ذلك هلعاً للسلطة"... 

مارك أوين جونز: دفن قتلى البحر يزيد الشكوك برواية وزارة الداخلية البحرينية
زعمت الدّاخلية أنّه تم إطلاق النّار عليهم في البحر أثناء محاولة هرب إلى إيران ولم تسمح الداخلية لأحد بالتقاط الصور أو بفحص جثث القتلى بشكل ملائم للمساعدة في تأكيد رواية وزارة الدّاخلية. 

إيزابيل وودفورد: بقايا الربيع العربي في البحرين
"طبيعة إعدامات كانون الثاني لن تكون حالة شاذة، ومن دون رد أكثر ديناميكية وجزمًا من الجناح الدبلوماسي البريطاني، من غير المرجح أن يطل فجر الربيع مرة أخرى."

البحرين: آلاف الغاضبين يتظاهرون في مسيرات تشييع رمزية لـ 3 شهداء قتلتهم السلطات في عرض البحر
ندد المتظاهرون الغاضبون بمنع السلطات البحرينية تشييع الشهداء وحرمان عوائلهم من إلقاء النظرة الأخيرة على وجوههم.

في بيت رضا الغسرة.. كان مهشّم الرأس
يخبر ياسين عائلته بما رآه مما لم يستطع قوله أمام النسوة: لقد رأيته مهشّم الرأس بثلاث رصاصات، لقد اضطررنا إلى تجبير رأسه كي نتمكن من غسله وتكفينه، وفي كتفه كانت تسكن رصاصة أخرى، وجسده مشرّح من أعلى الرقبة حتى أسفل الجسم.

بيان لعلماء البحرين يدعو إلى تشييع مهيب لشهداء الحرية في جميع مناطق البحرين هذا المساء
قال بيان العلماء "استجابة لصرخات عوائل الشهداء وأمهاتهم الثكالى، وإنكارا للقهر الوحشي والقمع والتعدي السافر على الحقوق الدينية والإنسانية لعوائل الشهداء المعظمة، في كل ما يتعلق بتجهيز ودفن أبنائهم وِفق إرادتهم الحرّة."

السلطات تدفن "شهداء الحرية" بحضور ممثلين اثنين عن كل عائلة "خلافا للتقاليد الدينية"
كانت قوات خاصة قد قتلت الغسرة ويحي ويوسف وأصابت اثنين عندما اعترضت قاربا يقلهم إلى وكانوا ينوون الخروج من البلاد.

الداخلية: تعلن إحباط تهريب هاربين من سجن جو عبر البحر ... وصحيفة حكومية تتحدث عن اشتباكات
قالت وزارة الداخلية البحرينية أنها تمكنت في «عملية مشتركة» فجر اليوم الخميس 9 فبراير/شباط 2017 من إحباط عملية تهريب عدد من الهاربين من سجن جو المركزي.

عدن ضحية معارك «الشرعية»... و«أنصار الله» تسترد مواقع في نهم
عن الصراع الخفي بين السعودية من جهة، وبين الإمارات العربية من جهة أخرى

الائتلاف: عوائل «شهداء المقاومة الحسينيّة» يتلقّون اتصالًا لحضور دفن جثامين أنبائهم قسرًا
شدّد الائتلاف على أنّ تسليم الجثامين حقٌّ لهم ولأسرهم وامتناع النظام عن ذلك يأتي للتغطية على جريمة الإعدام الميدانيّ.

انقطاع أخبار سيدة بحرينية استدعتها المخابرات للتحقيق منذ الصباح
استدعت السلطات فاتن حسين للتحقيق صباحا ولم ترد أي معلومات بشأنها.

توقيع 3 مذكرات تفاهم بين البحرين وتركيا أبرزها في الصناعات الدفاعية
"ووقع وزير الخارجية التركي «مولود جاوش أوغلو»، ووزير الداخلية البحريني الشيخ «راشد بن عبدالله آل خليفة»، مذكرة تفاهم تنص على إلغاء رسوم تأشيرة الدخول لمواطني البلدين." 

اليمن

عبد ربه منصور هادي... «أنطوان لحد اليمن»
"الحرب لم تنته بعد، بل هي الآن في ضراوة العمليات العسكرية على الساحل الغربي وبقية الجبهات، حتى وقع الاحتراب الداخلي بين الفصائل السلفية المحسوبة على الإمارات وحزب «الإصلاح» الإخواني المدعوم من السعودية في محافظة تعز".

الرئيس اليمني يصل الرياض في زيارة مفاجئة.. والخطوط اليمنية بالقاهرة تعلق رحلاتها إلى عدن لمدة 24 ساعة
"لا يُعرف أسباب الزيارة المفاجئة، لكنها تأتي في أعقاب توتر وأحداث عنف شهدها مطار عدن الدولي، في اليومين الماضيين، بين قوات حكومية تابعة للواء الحماية الرئاسية، وقوات تابعة لقائد حماية المطار السابق".

«أنصار الله» إلى «ما بعد الرياض»... ودفاعات جوية قريباً
التوعد بـ«قصف الرياض وما بعد الرياض»، وصولاً إلى الكشف عن دور جديد لطائرات بلا طيار تسيرها «أنصار الله»، والتجهيز لإدخال عناصر «الدفاع الجوي» في المعركة بعدما أظهرت «القوة البحرية» أداءً مقلقاً للسفن الأميركية والسعودية.

مقاتلات التحالف تشن غارتين على مواقع للحوثيين وقوات صالح بالقرب من ميناء الحديدة
الغارتين استهدفتا مبنى الانشاءات بالقرب من البوابة الشرقية لميناء الحديدة في شارع جيزان.

شهود: نجاة عميد كلية الإعلام السابق بجامعة صنعاء من محاولة اغتيال نفذها مسلحون
"قال المصدر إن محاولة اغتيال البريهي، كانت رسالة إلى الأكاديميين في جامعة صنعاء، الذين ينفذون إضراباً عن الدراسة للشهر الثاني على التوالي، احتجاجاً على عدم تسلمهم رواتبهم منذ خمسة أشهر." 

الإمعان بالحرب في اليمن: مقابلة لمجلة الوضع مع فارع المسلمي
يناقش فارع المسلمي في هذا الحوار معنى نقل البنك المركزي من صنعاء إلى عدن وعن الحرب المستمرة وإدارة العنف فيها واتهام من يرفضون الانحياز لأحد طرفيها بـ "الحياد".

السعودية

المملكة السعودية مغردون يطالبون بترحيل الاجانب
"المجموعة التي أيدت الفكرة أشارت إلى أعداد الوظائف التي يشغلها الأجانب في البلاد وأعداد السعوديين العاطلين عن العمل، بالإضافة إلى أعداد الجنايات "التي يرتكبها الأجانب بشكل يومي"."

السعودية تكثف القمع ضد الكتّاب والنشطاء
"قالت "هيومن رايتس ووتش" اليوم إن السعودية كثّفت الاعتقالات والمحاكمات والإدانات ضد الكتاب والحقوقيين المعارضين السلميين عام 2017".

نشر تغريدات عصام الزامل
 عن بيع أسهم أرامكو، التي كان قد حذفها لأسباب مجهولة بعد مدة من نشره.

فيديو: نتنياهو:
"لا نحتاج إلى إنشاء تحالف مع السعودية لأنه موجود بالفعل"

فيديو: قبل فوات الآوان.. تقرير خطير يجب أن يسمعه جميع الشعب السعودي حول بيع شركة أرامكو
التقرير يسلط الضوء حول الكارثة الكبرى التي ستحل بالسعودية وهي بيع شركة أرامكو تحت مسمى طرحها في الأسهم.

بوليتيكو: دعوى قضائية تتهم «ترامب» بتلقي أموال بشكل غير مباشر من السعودية بعد تنصيبه
"قال «نورم إيسن»: "المشكلة مع الدفعات النقدية وغيرها من الفوائد من حكومة أجنبية ليس فقط لأنها ممنوعة دستوريا ولكنها مع دونالد ترامب ليست دفعة واحدة بل مشكلة منهجية". 

سعوديون لا يعترفون بالعلم بلا حجاب.. عدنان إبراهيم ينتقد
"عبر إبراهيم عن خيبة ظنه بعدد المتابعات والمشاهدات التي تتحدث عن إنجازات العالمة، وقال عبر تويتر: "بعض التعليقات تتحدث من قبيل: تبًا لعلمها.. تبًا لاختراعاتها. أين نقابها؟ أين حجابها؟" 

متفرقات 

قاعدة عسكرية للإمارات في "أرض الصومال"
"ووفق بعض الخبراء، فإن تحويل هذه المدينة إلى ممر لوجستي بديل، يصلها بإثيوبيا، سيكسر احتكار ميناء جيبوتي لحركة السفن، ما يشكل نقطة تحوّل اقتصادية وسياسية وعسكرية مهمة في القرن الأفريقي." 

الإمارات تتصدر قائمة الدول الأكثر استثمارا في إفريقيا والشرق الأوسط
"وتستحوذ صناديق الثروة السيادية المملوكة للدولة على نحو 75% من هذه الأصول، علما بأن غالبية الصناديق تستثمر أموالها في أمريكا الشمالية وأوروبا، وفي السندات والصكوك بشكل عام."

قطر: فرض حظر السفر على محامي حقوق الإنسان البارز نجيب النعيمي
أكدت التقارير الواردة إلى مركز الخليج لحقوق الإنسان إلى أن النائب العام القطري علي المري، قد وضع الدكتور النعيمي على قائمة الأفراد الذين لا يسمح لهم بالسفر خارج الدولة. 

روحاني يزور الكويت الأربعاء ضمن جولة خليجية للمرة الأولى لإجراء مباحثات مع أمير البلاد تتناول تعزيز العلاقات بين البلدين والتطورات الإقليمية والدولية
تعد زيارة روحاني للكويت، في حال إتمامها، هي الأولى منذ تسلمه منصبه قبل اربع سنوات، فيما زار أمير الكويت إيران في حزيران 2014

معتمرون غريبون.. وشؤون الحرم: لا ينفع إلا الإرشاد
الأشخاص يٌعتقد بأنهم من المذهب الصوفي، وهم يطوفون بالكعبة المشرفة بشكل غريب، حيث بدؤوا يصدرون أصوات آهات قوية بشكل جماعي، وتحريك رؤوسهم، مما أثار استغراب الكثيرين.

The Price of Love: Valentine’s Day in Egypt and Its Enemies

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[This Valentine’s Day, Jadaliyya is proud to republish Aymon Kreil's article "The Price of Love: Valentine's Day in Egypt and Its Enemies" from the Fall 2016 issue of the Arab Studies Journal. This month the Arab Studies Journal is offering discounted subscriptions through 28 February: 15% off 1-year individual subscriptions and 20% off 2-year individual subscriptions. Head over to TadweenPublishing.com and subscribe today!]

Bi-fatha, ba, bahibbak
Bi-kasra, bi, bi-shidda
Ru-damma, ruhi ruhi gambak

I lo-, lo-I love you
Wi- wi- with strength
My, my soul my soul is beside you[i]


In the 1963 film The Soft Hands (Al-Aydayy al-Na‘ima), by director Mahmud Dhu al-Fiqar, a ruined aristocrat played by Ahmad Mazhar learns how to live in the new Egypt after the 1952 revolution. He falls in love with a woman, played by the famous actress and singer Sabah, who teaches him to forget his class prejudices and makes him work. He also has to learn written Arabic. Like many members of his class at the time, his mastery of French and English was superior to that of his native tongue. Sabah answers his demand of marriage in a cryptic letter, whose meaning she later explains in a song. She wrote down the first two phonemes in the three phases “I love you,” “with strength,” and “my soul” in order to convey that she shares his feelings. The film promotes love ideals that reflect the socialist projects of Gamal Abdel Nasser’s presidency. According to this vision, love and the common struggle to work should build the core of marriage. In this film, companionate marriage appears as a key feature of Nasserite modernity.[ii]

Today, what I call “love modernism,” the linking of love marriage with imaginations of progress,[iii] is still a living ideal in Egypt. Egalitarian ideals, however, are no longer part of state ideology. Two wars and four decades of economic reform dislocated the remains of Nasserite socialism. Consequently, economic constraints often jeopardize marriage plans. Most people have to live in extremely precarious conditions. Since marriage is a costly endeavor, long delays in courtship and engagement are common. While income disparities widened, the broad availability of imported goods as well as raised expectations of consumer goods, such as furniture, added to the financial pressure on couples hoping to get married.[iv] The political turmoil following the 2011 uprising further deepened the economic hardships facing the majority of Egyptians.

In this article, I discuss the place in Egypt of Valentine’s Day, a holiday whose broad success in the country dates back to the 1990s, as a way of exploring love and marriage in times of dire social inequality. Valentine’s Day was one of the first event-marketing holidays to arise in the United States and Britain during the nineteenth century.[v] The celebration of romantic love on 14 February has since become a worldwide phenomenon. Millie Creighton describes its successful promotion in Japan in the 1950s through a brand of chocolates.[vi] The spread of Valentine’s Day seems to have taken a steadier path during the last twenty years. In accordance with a general scholarly focus on transnational circulations since the 1990s, recent works have studied its reception in Ghana and China.[vii] This scholarship balances the study of transnational imaginations with an engagement of specific meanings that such an event takes on in different contexts.[viii]

This research also shows the need to historicize the dichotomies emerging around existing conceptions of love. Lynn Thomas and Jennifer Cole argue that in Africa conflicts between generations often took the form of opposite conceptions of love. In many cases, elders condemned the idea that love is a sound basis for marriage, while the young had love affairs with no aim other than the fulfilling of passion. With the onset of colonial rule, however, according to Thomas and Cole, these intergenerational tensions became part of broader dynamics. Some people, for instance, started to associate romantic love and companionate marriage with Western modernity.[ix]

In Egypt, historians observed parallel moves. There is a rich corpus of love poetry in Arabic.[x] Starting in the nineteenth century, however, debates about reform of the family came to be at the core of the nationalist project.[xi] Since then, for many Egyptian intellectuals, the establishment of companionate marriage and the nuclear family in a wide social strata became important markers of progress. Education played a key role in reform endeavors. Around the 1920s, the new urban educated middle class appeared as the main carrier of the national project.[xii] Cities were also the laboratory of new consumption styles that shaped the imaginations of love and of modernity. The cinema and popular music industries were powerful conveyors of these imaginations. The Soft Hand, the film evoked above, is just one example from the Nasserite period of this cultural production about love. There is a rich genealogy of discourses on love in Egypt.

The success of Valentine’s Day reveals structural elements that shape imaginings of love. Valentine’s Day shows the impact of the progressive growth of the trade between Egypt and China starting in the 1990s.[xiii] Some commodities became affordable to larger segments of Egyptians, compared, for instance, to the earlier period that Lila Abu-Lughod examined in her study on television dramas. Abu-Lughod shows that Egyptian soap operas appeared as distant dreams to most people because of the prohibitive cost of the luxury commodities linked to this universe.[xiv] Nowadays, even though most such commodities remain out of reach, gifts for lovers are available everywhere in Cairo for a few Egyptian pounds. Hence, China became an actor in the circulation and reshaping of transnational imaginations of love and modernity.[xv]

Many people who purchase gifts for Valentine’s Day engage in love chat on the Internet with boys and girls from different countries. There are also many opportunities to engage in flirtation at schools and universities, workplaces, and coffee shops, as well as in neighborhoods. These practices afford spaces for couples to practice and imagine love. As I will show, however, at the moment of marriage, with its heavy financial burdens and economic uncertainties, the involvement of lovers’ families becomes unavoidable. With this involvement comes the danger that what people consider realistic choices will crush romantic aspirations.

This study follows Eva Illouz’s analysis of romantic love as a phenomenon deeply linked to the emergence of a consumer culture emphasizing leisure and enjoyment, shaping imaginations of encounters at places like restaurants, movie theaters, or deserted beaches. For Illouz, a sense of privilege is hidden in romantic dreams, since these dreams are, for most people, difficult to realize. This romantic imagination parallels the urge to communicate feelings as a way to explore the self and attain happiness.[xvi] Illouz’s study is relevant to cases outside of Europe and Northern America. It underscores the importance of economic factors in the success of romantic discourse on love, compared to cultural and religious factors.

The financial burdens of marriage are the major hindrance to the success of romantic dreams, probably more than repressive interpretations of Islam, Christianity, or Egyptian tradition. Even if it should be obvious, it sometimes seems necessary to underscore that, like elsewhere in the world, people living in countries with Muslim majorities do not act exclusively according to religion. Most romantic situations are blurry, in this regard. People act according to principles that are neither antagonistic to Islam nor necessarily expressive of piety.[xvii] In Egypt, as in many other places, love is a major reference for the formulation of intimate expectations. It fuels attempts to describe individuals’ “inner truths.” For this reason, it is particularly useful to understand how individuals try to reconcile sometimes contradictory demands. Valentine’s Day provokes tensions between romantic ideals, conjugal strategies, interpretations of religion, and commercial imperatives.

In order to discuss these issues, I describe Valentine’s Day in Egypt, its history, and how people celebrate it. Valentine’s Day focuses on imaginaries surrounding heterosexual bonds. “True love” designates either pre-conjugal passion or, on the contrary, the silent relationship that develops over time after marriage. These contrary conceptions of love serve as a first axis of analysis. I then focus on the expressive love that Valentine’s Day promotes through its merchandising and in the context of the frequent assessment in Egypt that the event is a celebration of sweet talk. During my fieldwork, my interlocutors emphasized the expressive aspect of the event: it is a day where you have to show your feelings to the beloved. What is “true love,” then, in this context? Is it to be found before of after marriage? In conclusion, I explore the conditions of possibility of romantic love in Egypt, and how it is related to class and availability of capital.

My material was collected mainly during a two-year period of fieldwork in Cairo from 2008 to 2010.[xviii] Since then, Egypt has gone through a major political upheaval, starting with the 25 January 2011 uprising. The revolutionary moment has triggered a deep questioning of authority patterns for a significant proportion of the country’s youth. This questioning of authority could encourage defiance of institutional attempts to regulate love and marriage.[xix] But the impact of these events on larger segments of the population is still difficult to assess and needs further inquiry.

Valentine’s Day, Egyptian Style

As in the rest of the world, Valentine’s Day is celebrated in Egypt on 14 February. Egyptians call it “the holiday of love (‘id al-hubb)” or an Arabized version of the original name: al-falantayn. On this day, many couples meet at the spots in the city that most people consider romantic. Lovers stroll along the Nile’s shores and in public gardens. Red is the main color associated with the celebration, and women are often clad accordingly. I saw young girls, for instance, wearing headscarves emblazoned in bright letters with the English word “LOVE.” Many Valentine’s Day items display English words. On 14 February, people also send phone calls and messages to their beloved. And in the evening, restaurants and concert venues hold special events.

The large-scale celebration of Valentine’s Day is recent It is difficult to date its beginnings precisely. The broad salience of the event regionally is evident in a fatwa that Sheikh Muhammad bin ‘Uthaymin issued in Saudi Arabia in February 2000 in the name of the Permanent Committee for Scientific Research and Fatwa (al-Lajna al-Da’ima li-l-Buhuth al-‘Ilmiyya wa al-Ifta’), a religious body in the kingdom. The fatwa condemns the celebration. The sheikh’s main argument is that the holiday is a bad innovation (bid‘a sayyi’a) that promotes passion and desire, and occupies the mind with shallow thoughts. In Egypt, testimonies of consumers and shop owners describe the start of the 2000s as the beginning of Valentine’s Day.

An earlier attempt to establish a “holiday of love” took place in 1978. A journalist at the government newspaper Akhbar al-Yawm, Mustafa Amin,[xx] proposed fixing 4 November as a day to celebrate love.[xxi] As a result, Egyptians distinguish between the “international holiday of love” (‘id al-hubb al-dawli) and the “Egyptian holiday of love” (‘id al-hubb al-misri). Amin’s emphasis was on love for God, nation, family, neighbors, and even passing strangers. Romance was not an essential part of it. Nowadays, people celebrate the Egyptian holiday of love in the same way as Valentine’s Day. One shop owner wrote on his vitrine “Happy Valentine’s Day 4.11.2010.” But the November version has less success than its February counterpart. “This holiday is no good (al-‘id da ta‘ban)!” as one vendor put it.

Valentine’s Day carries with it notions of intimacy, passion, and tenderness, bound to stereotypical places and situations. For instance, a couple having a walk on the shores of the Nile, sitting on a bridge, going to a restaurant or movie theater, and men offering flowers or perfumes are all practices that people portray as “romantic.” Even if gifts and messages are also exchanged between family members and friends, romance has a central place in the media depiction of the celebration. US movies, the Internet, and satellite television channels help spread such conceptions of love. The production of affordable Chinese products also has a hand in promoting these notions. These commodities have spread the celebration to all the neighborhoods of Cairo, rich and poor alike.

Offering special gifts is a central ritual. Flower shops earn a sizable component of their yearly income on 14 February, according to a survey of newspapers on Valentine’s Day between 2008 and 2015. Stuffed animals, particularly red teddy bears, are a favored present. Stuffed hearts displaying phrases in English and Arabic are also popular. These gifts are often wrapped in complicated gift boxes, sprayed with glitter and perfume, or simple decorated paper bags. Store fronts and kiosks are crammed with these items on that day in February. Most of these products are imported from China and distributed by wholesalers in the Muski neighborhood, on the edge of Cairo’s old Fatimid city. People celebrate Valentine’s Day in most of the major cities of northern Egypt. Shops in smaller rural centers have also started to carry special items.[xxii]

Thus, the celebration is significant for the yearly sales revenue of many shop owners, including those who are hostile to it. Valentine’s Day is now an established marketed holiday, alongside Ramadan, and in some wealthier areas Halloween and the Western Christmas of 25 December.[xxiii] At the Muski market, for instance, some Salafi sellers display Valentine’s Day gifts, sometimes alongside religious items. Even if most Salafi sheikhs condemn the celebration, financial considerations often outweigh convictions.[xxiv] Derogatory comments on the celebration are often audible in this context, but they do not interfere with the imperative of sales.

Criticism of Valentine’s Day draws on overlapping religious, nationalist, anti-consumerist, and moral arguments. Many Islamic scholars in the Middle East have issued fatwas condemning Valentine’s Day along the model of bin ‘Uthaymin’s fatwa, mentioned above. These scholars argue that there are only two feasts in Islam, ‘id al-fitr at the end of Ramadan and ‘id al-adha commemorating the sacrifice of Abraham. Opponents of Valentine’s Day condemn it for inciting debauchery among youth, often portraying it as a Christian celebration despite historical evidence to the contrary. The nationalist register insists on the imported nature of Valentine’s Day. “Why should I celebrate an American holiday?” a student once asked me. In a similar register, some opponents of the celebration expressed admiration for Upper Egypt, where, in the eyes of many Cairenes, such an event could not happen. Southern Egypt appears to many Egyptians as a stronghold of tradition.[xxv] The anti-consumerist argument insists on the celebrations useless expenses. One coffee shop owner based in the Muski market, condemning the holiday, said Egyptians spend ten million pounds on communication that day. “They love useless ostentatious spending,” commented a man selling teddy bears on the street when I asked why Egyptians like to celebrate Valentine’s Day.

Some religious scholars are less stern in their condemnation. They argue that if the intentions are pure, there is no harm in celebrating Valentine’s Day. They tend to condemn unmarried couples celebrating the holiday, but not the holiday itself. ‘Abd al-Mu‘ti al-Bayumi, former dean of the Faculty for Islamic Theology at al-Azhar University, warns of the dangers of alienating people from religion by forbidding events that help them enjoy their relationships, especially if there is no explicit condemnation in the Qur’an or hadith. Religious and political groups have tried to redefine the meaning of the holiday of love. In the mid-2000s, for instance, Muslim Brotherhood students tried to organize a holiday of love of God (‘id al-hubb fi Allah) and later a Muhammad Day[xxvi] on 14 February. In a different but parallel vein, on 14 February 2009 the newspaper al-Misri al-Yawm ran the headline, “We love Egypt . . . and want her to change,” illustrated with a heart-shaped Egyptian flag.

Sweet Talk Institutionalized

The women and men celebrating Valentine’s Day tend to blur its origins, insisting on the universality and beauty of love. None of my interviewees evoked religion as linked to the holiday, either positively or negatively. “If a holiday is beautiful, it doesn’t matter to me if it is of Indian, Chinese, or Western origin,” stated a woman wearing a headscarf in her forties from a rich southern Cairo family. Proponents of Valentine’s Day often understate the place of romance to legitimize the holiday. Although most of the press and literature evoking Valentine’s Day in Egypt focuses on lovers, many of my respondents stated that Valentine’s Day has an ancient history in Egypt. It is only the kind of gift that now differs, they argued. Today, teddy bears have replaced flowers, perfumes, and poems of generations past. Some invoked the ritual calendars on Pharaonic temples to claim Egyptians’ eternal love for celebrations. These claims contradicted the testimonies of older respondents, who dated the emergence of the holiday in Egypt to around the early 2000s, as mentioned above. Once, for instance, I saw parents contradict their astonished son, a hairdresser from a poor area, who had just asserted how ancient Valentine’s Day was in Egypt. The name of the celebration itself, the “international holiday of love” rather than the “Western holiday of love,” could be a way to counter nationalist arguments that the celebration does not belong to Egypt, as it makes it a common product of all countries.

All of my respondents, whether supporting or condemning Valentine’s Day, emphasized the event’s expressive aspects. It is a day during which you have to show your feelings to the beloved. Likewise, on Valentine’s Day, women’s and youth magazines dedicate special issues to definitions of love and romantic stories of celebrities and commoners alike. These depictions invariably underline the importance of expressing love on 14 February. Advertisers and journalists make great efforts to convince married people that the holiday concerns them, although most people see it as a celebration for lovers who have yet to marry. Advertisers and journalists portray Valentine’s Day as the opportunity to revive a love that daily worries consume. Hence, Valentine’s Day appears as a mode of institutionalizing sweet talk on a yearly basis.

An article by journalist Dina Munib in the Arabic-language women’s magazine Flash, specialized in covering social events, titled “The Holiday of Love Is for All Ages,” indicates the importance of compelling self-expression:

Days follow each other, years of daily life, and routine is permanent. Each of us has work duties, and they usually create a kind of routine that eventually dominates our lives. With a slight change in our life, however, we are able to break and overcome it. Happy occasions (munasabat) are an important means of getting rid of this daily routine, and among the most important is the “holiday of love.” Some consider it a normal day and describe it as “superficial”—they are even ashamed of celebrating it. But isn’t it true that we often need love, that without love, we can’t live? Who among us doesn’t love?

There are different kinds of love. The holiday of love is not only for passionate lovers (‘ushaq), but can be meaningful for all ages, even those married for a long time. They need these occasions to revive sweet and beautiful feelings and move away from the daily routine with all its boredom, which erases everything, even feelings and a dreamy romanticism. Such an occasion revives love and hearts, increases happiness between husband and wife and makes life pleasurable, full of taste and color. Thanks to it, married people and lovers are joyful together. Without this occasion, hearts don’t live and life never changes. It is a beautiful occasion for everyone!

The most beautiful thing is love!
And even more beautiful than love is to celebrate it![xxvii]

This excerpt present love declarations as a way to revive marriage. This expressive dimension travels up and down the class ladder. One Valentine’s Day, I assisted at a wedding party in a poor middle-class Cairo street. The couple chose the date on purpose. One of the invitees sent a kiss to her husband in front of all the people gathered. In response to someone’s surprised comment about this gesture, she answered energetically: “What’s the matter? Isn’t it Valentine’s Day? Why would I be dressed in red otherwise?” Here, too, the celebration is a happy occasion (munasaba) to foster love among married couples through explicit signs of affection, such as letters, gifts, sweet words, or a dress code.

Many challenge the exhortation to vocalize feelings at regular intervals, however. Some respondents, mostly older ones, saw these contemporary expressions of love as superficial chitchat. For them, true love only begins through harmonious cohabitation resulting from marriage. It is not surprising that these opinions were most common among older, married informants. They often considered everything preceding marriage as sexual “appetite” (shahwa) or ephemeral “appeal” (i‘jab). Evoking Valentine’s Day, a researcher in his forties explained to me that: “Today, it’s [sounds of kisses] all the time, and [the young man] doesn’t love her, not at all!” In previous times, the man added, people loved each other but never uttered the phrase, “I love you.” These debates about the right way to express love lead to questioning Valentine’s Day’s salience by exploring how love is linked to marriage, class, and progress.

True Love and Impossible Love

Samuli Schielke points to the influences of Western stances, as well as Indian and Turkish films, as inspirations for Egyptians’ conception of “virginal love” (hubb ‘udhri), a love impossible to consummate. The very fact that it is an unreachable ideal defines true love. Its impossibility becomes a crucial part of the evidence of its strength. This ideal, in return, makes realistic adjustment difficult when it comes to stabilizing coupled life on a daily basis.[xxviii] Schielke’s approach hints at the complex genealogy of conceptions of love and is particularly relevant to describing the stances of unmarried lovers, both men and women. Many people take an opposite stance, however, and explicitly oppose true love to impossible relationships, with marriage seen as the necessary condition of love. In both cases, the marriage is a stepping stone.

Hence, there is on one side an ideal of true love built against marriage, an impossible but inescapable passion (‘ishq). Marriage, most of the time, puts an abrupt end to it. Sometimes parents do not consider partners as well suited for each other because of finances or social conventions. Sometimes feelings die out under the pressure of family responsibilities. True love goes along with a constant verbalizing of feelings.

On the opposite side, some see true love as the silent bond produced by daily interaction, mutual knowledge, and tenderness. In this conception, feelings prior to marriage are just transient expressions of lust, the ephemeral “appetite” and “appeal” mentioned above. Consequently, true love (‘ishra) is equated with the only possible love. Contrary to the passionate model that emphasizes the constant reasserting of love through verbalizing affects, this version of true love can only flourish in a complicit silence full of implicit understanding.

Of course, this opposition does not reflect behavior, which cannot fit such a simplistic dichotomy. The dichotomy reflects another common opposition in Egypt: “love marriage” (zawaj hubb) as opposed to “traditional marriage” (zawaj taqlidi). In the first kind of union, lovers marry regardless of their parents’ opinion. In the second union, the partners are not in a relationship before marriage, and parents play a decisive role in their choice.[xxix] It is easy to grasp the alternative modes of partner choice between passionate love, on the one hand, and silent love, on the other. In the first, no outside person should intervene in the partners’ mutual choice, as their bond originates in a feeling that resists all worldly pressures. This love benefits from the spaces of transgression offered by urban anonymity and the Internet. In the second model, parents can heavily influence the partners’ choice, as true love grows only after the wedding. Accordingly, some consider feelings predating marriage as dangerous for true love.

This opposition between different kinds of love and marriage are ideal types along a continuum. Most unions take place somewhere in between a marriage against the parents’ will and one in disregard of the future partners’ preferences.[xxx] In Egypt, the arranged-cum-love marriage is common. Partners already involved in a romantic relationship often receive approval for their marriage from their parents. In other cases, after a formal first encounter at the house of the future bride’s parents, mutual feelings of attachment develop during the engagement. The intermediary periods between engagement (khutuba), the signing of the marriage contract at the mosque (katb al-kitab), and the public wedding are often long, due to financial reasons. People generally consider the time following engagement as the most appropriate period for expressing romantic feelings. At the same time, this period is at a particularly dangerous moment. Couples need monitoring, as they could be tempted to have sex together, which would be unacceptable before the public wedding.

For most Egyptians, a stable marriage requires the spouses’ relative equality in status. Status can include the social origins of the family, as well as the family’s access to money, valued job positions, housing, furniture, and commodities.[xxxi] The need for status makes marriage a costly endeavor, as most parents fear a mismatch and set high conditions for possible partners of their children. Expensive weddings are another financial hurdle before marriage. Long negotiations often ensue, where parents discuss each family’s share in the costs. To marry without their help is almost an impossible task. Diane Singerman and Barbara Ibrahim consider marriage as the major moment of intergenerational transfer of wealth, especially for women.[xxxii] Respectability and physical appearance also play important roles when one is choosing a partner.[xxxiii] One of the results of Valentine’s Day’s salience is that romantic style becomes part of a class habitus and consequently a bargaining chip in determining status.

Love and Status

The opposition between “love marriage” and “traditional marriage” sheds lights on some of the issues at stake in the determination of status. There is a deep ambivalence about “tradition.” Some see it as a source of “backwardness” (takhalluf) and others as a source of “authenticity” (asala). Likewise, some consider change as “progress” (taqaddum) while other perceive change as endangering “habits and customs” (al-‘adat wa-l-taqalid). The mainstream reformist agenda combines national and religious “authenticity” with “progress” through a complex process of selection.[xxxiv]

The public discourse in Egypt portrays the middle class as able to reform the country without betraying its authenticity. This class, it appears, is free of the corruption and Westernization of the rich as well as unburdened by the ignorance of the poor. Educational capital and commitment to the reformist project appear as key features of middle-class belonging.[xxxv] Most of those who work in charities claim to belong to the middle class, for instance. They often depict their mission as educating the poor, reaffirming the value they assign to educational capital.[xxxvi]

Love modernism is also a feature of the middle class. The linking of romanticism and education was a recurrent feature of discussions with most of my respondents, regardless of their background. In this regard, love modernism appears as the opposite of sexual harassment, an issue that has shaken debates in Egypt since 2006, if not earlier.[xxxvii] Indeed, the dominant discourse in the country attributes sexual harassment to the substandard education of denizens of poor neighborhoods, even if the practice is far from confined to these social strata. This categorizing along class lines does not reflect individual demeanors but marks imaginary positions on the country’s social scale. The mastering of romantic codes is one example, and love behaviors appear as an important feature of distinction in Egyptian visions of the class order.[xxxviii]

The middle class (al-tabaqa al-wusta) is itself an imprecise category. It does not describe a well-defined socioeconomic stratum, but rather constitutes what Luc Boltanski calls a “weak aggregate.”[xxxix] According to Boltanski, the cohesion of weak aggregates rests on representation, both in the theatrical and political sense of the word. Being middle-class involves a stereotypical way of living. At the same time, different sectors of the political field compete to represent the middle class, as its position in the “middle” (wasat) allows claims of social centrality[xl] and makes the “middle class” the core bearer of Egyptian modernism.

Love modernism means expressing one’s feelings and obtaining emotional fulfillment within the institution of marriage. In a religious framework, many sheikhs emphasize the need to talk sweetly with one’s wife and the importance of the couple as a place of intimacy. As mentioned before, some support Valentine’s Day in the name of love. In a nationalist framework, romanticism helps to emphasize Egyptian superiority vis-à-vis Arab Gulf countries, which people often describe as backward and repressive, as well as Western countries, which they describe as having lost sight of all restraint in values and practices. Hence, migrants coming back from these regions are often accused of bringing in “un-Egyptian” family behaviors into the country.[xli]

In this regard, romanticism and its correlate, the mastering of proper ways to express feelings with gentleness, are tools of distinction. This process is reminiscent of Pierre Bourdieu’s more general analysis of ways of talking as social classifiers of the people using them. In Bourdieu’s view, this hierarchy is shared even among speakers unable to express themselves in a refined style. Hence, social codes push them to acknowledge their deficiency.[xlii]

Through the spread of formal education since the 1950s, an increasing number of Egyptians have become able to identify themselves as part of the “middle class.” As educational facilities at high schools and universities are a major place for romance, love expectations linked to the middle class are more viable. This configuration carries specific models of masculinity related to love modernism. The gentleness of the educated contrasts with the rougher style of manhood attributed to lower-class areas, with a direct impact on love projects.[xliii] Romanticism thus becomes an issue of status and a part of the bargain around marriage evoked above.

With its celebration of romantic love, Valentine’s Day is a possible aspirational track for class mobility. The fact that so many inscriptions on Valentine’s Day commodities are in English, for instance, indicates a strong correlation between the celebration of the holiday and access to “cosmopolitan capital,” which Anouk de Koning describes as “those forms of cultural capital that are marked by familiarity with and mastering of globally dominant cultural codes.”[xliv] Currently, English is an important part of this cosmopolitan capital. The correlation even appears in slogans opposing the celebration. One Facebook image that makes the rounds on 14 February features a hand gesturing refusal with the caption: “Sorry Valentine’s Day, I am Muslim.” Likewise, the Muslim Brotherhood student group, discussed above, that proposed a counter-holiday called it “Muhammad Day” in English. As an international event, Valentine’s Day thus becomes a valued sign of modernity and urban belonging.

An interlocutor claimed to enjoy the holiday without fear because he lives in a city. He despised the inhabitants of Upper Egypt, who according to him would not allow for such an event. Hs position opposed other interlocutors who valorized maintaining the tradition that they attributed to the inhabitants of the country’s south. Thus, the appeal of cosmopolitanism is not the only track of aspiration for the middle class. Some defend love modernism while loudly resisting models they see as Western, such as Valentine’s Day. Criticism of the celebration also largely originates from people claiming to belong to the middle class. Furthermore, in a country where so many families get by on very limited resources, romantic aspirations often run up against other major requirements in a good partner, especially decent work and sufficient capital.

No Money, No Honey: The Economic Limits of Romanticism

Valentine’s Day appears as an incentive to talk, in accordance with an image of the modern subject as an individual authentic to himself. The constant expression of feelings is the best means of attaining authenticity. Love gets its own kind of agency, reflecting individuals’ inner truths. Such possible signs of a growing individualization face structural constraints, however, especially given the family’s importance in validating a person’s choice of partner.

The high price of marriage, as already mentioned, makes it almost impossible for couples to marry without parents’ financial help. These conditions mean that many young people come to cling to realism and abandon ideas of romantic involvement that survives against the will of their families. This kind of realism gives a hint at the strength of kinship institutions in a country with a very weak system of social insurance, and where the family remains the core of solidarity networks.

These structural constraints partly explain why people attribute the celebration of Valentine’s Day to a youthful indulgence in romanticism. Models of romantic love have a long history in Egypt. Hence, the intergenerational tensions around status considerations in the choice of conjugal partner reflect a constant redistribution of age roles rather than a linear change in conceptions of marriage.

Can it be said that there is a gap between ideals and pragmatic norms here? The issue is more complicated and better explained by the importance of common-sense definitions of what collective practices are in the very process of shaping majority values. This self-relational character of common practice is especially relevant when people relate it to identity. The very fact that silent love after marriage appears as a majority practice can serve to legitimize it as a norm.

Thus, following Illouz, romanticism bears hidden privileges. Affordable commodities have done a lot for the success of Valentine’s Day today. The event has become an ‘id, a celebration eliciting expectations from partners, as an accountant in his forties coming from a popular area put it once. The same man added that he himself does not celebrate it because he is already married. Even if married people sometimes celebrate it, Valentine’s Day still does not seem to have shaken the ways in which people get married. Hence, it appears clear that economic constraints as much as cultural conceptions are central to understanding how people in Egypt refer to love—and romantic love, in particular.

Luc Boltanski, in a recent work, describes what he calls “the reality of reality” as the capacity of given settings to impose themselves as obvious to agents. These agents, in turn, impose restrictions on themselves, adjusting their expectations to the limits they consider realistic.[xlv] By this very logic, financial constraints on marriage appear to tame romantic aspirations, which nevertheless remain part of the love imaginations of many Egyptians. Young people, still hoping to attain ideals of romantic love, clash with older people who have felt it necessary at some point to adjust to the constraints of what they perceive as reality. But the power of desire should not be underestimated, shaping aspirations, opening side routes for individual experience, and sometimes corroding the most established evidence.[xlvi] By connecting love to transnational imaginations, Valentine’s Day and its yearly institutionalization of sweet talk offers new paths to the experience and disciplining of intimate aspirations around romantic consumption.


[Republished with permission: Aymon Kreil, "The Price of Love: Valentine's Day in Egypt and Its Enemies,"
Arab Studies Journal XXIV, no. 2 (Fall 2016), 128-147. © All rights reserved.]

 


[i] My translation.

[ii] On family politics during this period, see Omnia S. El Shakry, The Great Social Laboratory: Subjects of Knowledge in Colonial and Postcolonial Egypt (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007), 213-18; Laura Bier, Revolutionary Womanhood: Feminisms, Modernity, and the State in Egypt (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2011).

[iii] For other examples of the linking of love and modernity, see Holly Wardlow and Jennifer S. Hirsch, Modern Loves: The Anthropology of Romantic Courtship and Companionate Marriage (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2006).

[iv] For macro-statistics on marriage in Egypt, see Philippe Fargues, Générations arabes: L’alchimie du nombre (Paris: Fayard, 2000); Diane Singerman, “The Economic Imperatives of Marriage: Emerging Practices and Identities Among Youth in the Middle East,” in The Middle East Youth Initiative Working Papers (Washington, DC: Middle East Youth Initiative, 2007); “Marriage and Divorce in Egypt: Financial Costs and Political Struggles,” in Les Métamorphoses Du Mariage Au Moyen-Orient, ed. Barbara Drieskens (Damascus: Presses de l’IFPO, 2008).

[v] Leigh Schmidt, “The Fashioning of a Modern Holiday: St. Valentine’s Day, 1840-1870,” Winterthur Portfolio, 28, no. 4 (1993), 209-45.

[vi] Millie Creighton, “Sweet Love’ and Women’s Place: Valentine’s Day, Japan Style,” Journal of Popular Culture, 27, no. 3 (1993), 1-20.

[vii] Astrid Bochow, “Valentine’s Day in Ghana: Youth, Sex, and Fear Between Generations,” in Generations in Africa: Connections and Conflicts, ed. Erdmute Alber, Sjaak van der Geest and Susan Whyte (Hamburg: Lit, 2008), 418-29; Roberta Zavoretti, “Be My Valentine: Bouquets, Marriage, and Middle-Class Hegemony in Urban China,” Working Papers 150 (Halle/Saale: Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, 2013).

[viii] Mark B. Padilla et al., Love and Globalization: Transformations of Intimacy in the Contemporary World (Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press, 2008).

[ix] Jennifer Cole and Lynn M. Thomas, Love in Africa (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2009), 15-16.

[x] Andras Hamori, “Love Poetry (Ghazal),” in ‘Abbasid Belles-Lettres, eds. Julia Ashtiany, et al. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990); Michael Sells, “Love,” in The Literature of Al-Andalus, eds. María Rosa Menocal, Raymon Scheindlin, and Michael Sells (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000); Fédéric Lagrange, Islam d’interdits, Islam de jouissance (Paris: Téraèdre, 2008), 185-97; William Chittick, “Love in Islamic Thought,” Religion Compass 8, no. 7 (2014).

[xi] El Shakry, The Great Social Laboratory; Hanan Kholoussy, For Better, For Worse: The Marriage Crisis That Made Modern Egypt (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2010); Kenneth M. Cuno, Modernizing Marriage: Family, Ideology, and Law in Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Egypt (New York: Syracuse University Press, 2015).

[xii] Lucie Ryzova, The Age of the Efendiyya: Passages to Modernity in National-Colonial Egypt (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).

[xiii] Elena Aoun and Thierry Kellner, “La pénétration chinoise au Moyen-Orient: Le cas des relations sino-égyptiennes,” Monde chinois 44, no. 4 (2015).

[xiv] Lila Abu-Lughod, Dramas of Nationhood: The Politics of Television in Egypt (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), 47-51, 220-23.

[xv] Lisa B. Rofel, Desiring China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007); Judith Stacy, Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (New York: New York University Press, 2011); Jean-Baptiste Pettier, “The Affective Scope: Entering China’s Urban Moral and Economic World Through Its Emotional Disturbances,” Anthropology of Consciousness 27, no. 1 (2016).

[xvi] Eva Illouz, Consuming the Romantic Utopia: Love and the Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997); Eva Illouz, Les sentiments du capitalisme (Paris: Seuil, 2006).

[xvii] Samuli Schielke, “Second Thoughts About the Anthropology of Islam,” ZMO Working Papers 2 (2010); Farha Ghannam, Live and Die Like a Man: Gender Dynamics in Urban Egypt (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2013), 63-64.

[xviii] The fieldwork involved interviews and observations about coffee shop conversations, Valentine’s Day, and sexual harassment, as well as in-depth research at a counseling center. My respondents on the topic of Valentine’s Day were of all backgrounds and generations, with a focus on men visiting coffee shops in the neighborhoods of ‘Abdin and Sayyida Zaynab, upper-class women in Helwan, and vendors of items linked to the holiday in the areas of ‘Abdin and Heliopolis. I was able to conduct the fieldwork thanks to a grant from the Centre d’études et de documentation économiques, juridiques et sociales (CEDEJ).

[xix] Shereen El-Feki, Sex and the Citadel: Intimate Life in a Changing Arab World (New York: Pantheon Books, 2013).

[xx] Mustafa Amin (1914-1997) is a famous Egyptian journalist. His twin brother ‘Ali Amin (1914-1976), also a journalist, created the Egyptian Mother’s Day.

[xxi] Mustafa Amin, 100 fikra wa fikra (Cairo: Akhbar al-Yawm, 1989), 88-89, 94-95, 126-27, 175-76. This book gathers Amin’s chronicles. Though they are undated, a study of their content shows that all described events happened between 1978 and the start of 1979. Further, the “holiday of love” is announced as “Saturday, the fourth of November”—and in 1978, this date was indeed a Saturday.

[xxii] Unfortunately, I lack evidence for the cities of Upper Egypt, as I was unable to conduct fieldwork around the topic in this region.

[xxiii] The Coptic Christmas is on 7 January. On the marketization of Muslim holiday, see Walter Armbrust, “The Riddle of Ramadan: Media, Consumer Culture, and the ‘Christamtization’ of a Muslim Holiday,” in Everyday Life in the Muslim Middle East, eds. Donna Lee Bowen and Evelyn A. Early (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2002).

[xxiv] Salwa Ismail, “Piety, Profit, and the Market in Cairo: A Political Economy of Islamisation,” Contemporary Islam 7, no. 1 (2013).

[xxv] On stereotypes about the inhabitants of Upper Egypt, see Fançois Ireton, “Les quatre relations d’incertitude d’un construit identitaire collectif à référence territoriale: l’exemple des Sa‘idis,” in Valeurs et distance: Identités et sociétiés en Egypte, ed. Christian Décobert (Paris: Maisonneuve et Larose, 2000), 319-61.

[xxvi] English original.

[xxvii] My translation.

[xxviii] Samuli Schielke, Egypt in the Future Tense: Hope, Frustration, and Ambivalence Before and After 2011 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2015), 83-104.

[xxix] It is also called “living room marriage (zawaj salunat)” because the future partners meet for the first time in the living room of the apartment of the bride in the presence of her parents.

[xxx] Robert Springborg, Family, Power, and Politics in Egypt: Sayid Bey Marei--His Clan, Clients, and Cohorts (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1982), 29-30.

[xxxi] Samuli Schielke, “Living in the Future Tense: Aspiring for World and Class in Provincial Egypt,” in The Global Middle Class: Theorizing through Ethnography, ed. Carla Freeman, Rachel Heiman, and Mark Liechty (Santa Fe, NM: School for Advanced Research), 31-56.

[xxxii] Diane Singerman and Barbara Ibrahim, “The Costs of Marriage in Egypt: A Hidden Dimension in the New Arab Demography,” Cairo Papers in Social Sciences, 24, no. 1-2 (2001), 80-116; Diane Singerman, “Marriage and Divorce in Egypt: Financial Costs and Political Struggles.”

[xxxiii] Andrea Rugh, Family in Contemporary Egypt (Cairo: American University of Cairo Press, 1988), 121-47.

[xxxiv] Lila Abu-Lughod, “The Marriage of Feminism and Islamism in Egypt: Selective Repudiation as a Dynamic of Postcolonial Cultural Politics,” in Remaking Women: Feminism and Modernity in the Middle East, ed. Lila Abu-Lughod (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998), 243-69.

[xxxv] Walter Armbrust, “Bourgeois Leisure and Egyptian Media Fantasies,” in New Media and the Muslim World: The Emerging Public Sphere, eds. Dale Eickelman and Jon Anderson (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999), 106-32; Assia Boutaleb et al., “Dire les classes moyennes: Quand des citoyens égyptiens en parlent,” Carnets de Bord 10 (2005).

[xxxvi] Janine Clark, Islam, Charity, and Activism: Middle-Class Networks and Social Welfare in Egypt, Jordan, and Yemen (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004); Aymon Kreil, “Science de la psyché et autorité de l’islam: Quelles Conciliations?” Archives de sciences sociales des religions 170 (2015).

[xxxvii] Paul Amar, “Turning the Gendered Politics of the Security State Inside Out?” International Feminist Journal of Politics 13, no. 3 (2011); Perrine Lachenal, “Beauty, the Beast, and the Baseball Bat: Ethnography of Self-Defense Training for Upper-Class Women in Revolutionary Cairo (Egypt),” Comparative Sociology 13, no. 1 (2014); Aymon Kreil, “Dire le harcèlement sexuel en Égypte: Les aléas de traduction d’une catégorie juridique,” Critique Internationale 70 (2016).

[xxxviii] Aymon Kreil, “ Love Scales: Class and Expression of Feelings in Cairo,” La Ricerca Folklorika 69 (2014).

[xxxix] Luc Boltanski, The Making of a Class: Cadres in French Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987), 291.

[xl] Assia Boutaleb et al., “Dire les classes moyennes,” 24-45.

[xli] Lucile Gruntz and Delphine Pagès-El Karoui, “Migration and Family Change in Egypt: A Comparative Approach to Social Remittances,” Migration Letters, 10, no. 1 (2013), 71-79.

[xlii] Pierre Bourdieu, Language and Symbolic Power (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1991), 54.

[xliii] In this regard, it is reminiscent of Bourdieu’s depictions of the difficulties in finding a wife endured by men who grew up in a rural environment because of their lower-class background (Pierre Bourdieu, Le bal des célibataires: Crise de la société paysanne en Béarn (Paris: Seuil, 2002). See also Ghannam, Live and Die Like a Man, 59-84.

[xliv] Anouk de Koning, Global Dreams: Class, Gender, and Public Space in Cosmopolitan Cairo (Cairo: American University of Cairo Press, 2009), 9.

[xlv] Luc Boltanski, On Critique: A Sociology of Emancipation (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2011), 33-37.

[xlvi] Aymon Kreil, “Territories of Desire: A Geography of Competing Intimacies in Cairo,” Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies 12, no. 2 (2016).

 

Media on Media Roundup (February 14)

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This week’s Jadaliyya “Media on Media” roundup addresses several issues affecting the MENA mediascape. Iran marked the anniversary of the 1979 revolution this Friday, and theNew York Times showcased some memorable posters from the procession, some of which thanked Americans who opposed the “Muslim ban.”

According to Human Rights Watch representatives, Saudi Arabia intensified its attacks on journalists and activists in 2016. Also in Saudi Arabia, young women are taking to social media to report experiences of sexual harassment and abuse, using the hashtag #Break_Your_Silence_Speak_Up.

Al-Monitor takes on Turkey’s television industry, analyzing whether digital streaming will revolutionize viewing practices and content creation in the country. On the cultural front, Tunisian artist Sarroura Libre marries past and present with a pop art exhibition that gives homage to the country’s icons.

All of these stories and more are available below in further detail.

Media and Politics

A sarcastic response to Syria's militants
Source: BBC
The manager of Syrian radio Fresh FM has challenged jihadist group Jabhat Fatah al-Sham by broadcasting sarcastic responses to the group’s demands. He has also refused their requests to monitor the radio staff’s behavior.

Iran celebrates its revolution, and thanks some Americans
Source: New York Times
Iranians took to the streets to mark the anniversary of the 1979 revolution. This article examines the memorable posters from the rallies, noting a few which thanked American protesters for standing against Trump’s “Muslim ban.”

Egypt backs Trump claim that media did not cover terror attacks
Source: Middle East Online
A spokesman from the Egyptian foreign ministry supported U.S. president Trump’s claims that Western media outlets have not reported on many “terrorist” attacks, calling for a shift in the way the international community deals with the phenomenon of terrorism.  

Infinite eyes in the network: Government escalates attack on secure communication
Source: Mada Masr
The Egyptian government has increased its efforts to intercept and monitor messages sent over the internet. The article highlights the paradox in the state’s efforts to develop its telecommunications sector and gain control over the internet, raising questions on digital freedoms.

When discussing Trump's Muslim ban, cable news excluded Muslims
Source: Media Matters For America
MediaMatters has conducted a survey of coverage of US primetime news, and as detailed in the article, found there to be a paucity of Muslim commentators on the topic

Privacy critics assail U.S. plan to collect travelers’ social media details
Source: Seattle Times
Privacy advocates in the U.S. criticized the White House plan to collect visa-bearing travelers’ social media information, noting that is unlikely to deter terrorist activities and may encourage other countries to adopt it.

Media Industries

Will digital platforms revolutionize Turkish TV series?
Source: Al-Monitor
Reports on Turkey’s TV sector note that two local platforms, BluTV and PuhuTV, will soon stream their shows online and produce original works. The report contends that the challenge remains in providing diversified content that attracts viewers given a competitive environment.

Lovin Dubai buys 7Days’ social media handles
Source: Campaign Middle East
This report indicates that holding company behind “Lovin Dubai” has purchased all social media channels belonging to the now-defunct UAE newspaper 7Days, in an attempt to acquire a broader audience.

Snapchat firm opens first Middle East office in Dubai
Source: Arabian Business
The photo and video application, Snapchat, opened its first Middle East office in Dubai with the aim of targeting regional markets.

إغلاق قناة "العرب" نهائياً بعد فشل إعادة إطلاقها
المصدر : العربي الجديد
أغلقت قناة «العرب» بشكل نهائي بعد أن تعثرت مشاريع إعادة إطلاقها في البحرين و قطر. تأسست القناة في عام 2014 و بدأت البث في العام التالي، لكنّهت أُغلقت بعد ساعات على انطلاقها بسبب تجاوزات قانونية بحسب السلطات البحرينية.

Freedom of Journalists/Expression

Saudi Arabia: Intensified repression of writers, activists
Source: Human Rights Watch
According to Human Rights Watch reports, Saudi Arabia has increased its arrest and prosecution of dissident writers and human rights activists in 2017 despite ratifying the “Arab Charter on Human Rights” which guarantees the right to freedom of expression.

Egypt detains almost 100 journalists
Source: Middle East Monitor
A new report by the ‘Arab Media Freedom Monitor’ reveals that around 100 Egyptian journalists are currently held in custody as a result of the increased systematic repression against the press since 2013.

Haunted by jail ordeal, Turkish novelist Asli Erdogan won't stay silent
Source: Middle East Monitor
Acclaimed novelist Asli Erdogan insists on remaining in Turkey despite her four month-long imprisonment, stating that the real danger in the country is totalitarianism, not sharia law.

MADA Report: 383 media freedoms violations during 2016
Source: International Middle East Media Center
In its most recent report, the Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms, “MADA” noted 383 recorded violations against Palestinian media organization and professionals, 65% of which were committed by Israeli occupation forces.

Mahmoud Hussein detained for more than 50 days
Source : Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera called for the release of its journalist, Mahmoud Hussein, after being detained for over fifty days in Egypt. The Qatar-based network also condemned the inhumane conditions Hussein is currently kept under.

الصحافي القيق يضرب عن الطعام بعد تحويله للاعتقال الإداري
المصدر: العربي الجديد
أعلن الصحافي المعتقل، محمد القيق، عن إضرابه عن الطعام بعد أن قررت السلطات الإسرائيلية تحويله للاعتقال الإداري لمدة ٦ أشهر. يتعلق إعتقاله بقضية حرية الرأي و لكن لا توجد أي مستندات أو وقائع قانونية تبرر حبسه.  

 

Social Media

Saudi women use social media to expose harassment
Source: Middle East Monitor
A social media campaign using the hashtag #Break_Your_Silence_Speak_Up was started to encourage Saudi women to speak about their experiences of sexual abuse and harassment, given the minimal familial and societal support they often receive.

‘Cycling girls’ ride for freedom
Source: Arab News (AFP)
A group of women gather regularly to cycle in Baghdad, encouraging women and men to challenge post-war trauma through cycling. What started off as an art-project-turned-social-media-phenomenon is now a civil society movement in Iraq.

تحذيرات للملحقين القضائيين الجدد من استعمال مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي
المصدر : المفكرة القانونية
وجه وزير العدل والحريات التونسي كلمة لفوجٍ جديد من الملحقين القضائيين تجاوزت إلى كيفية التعامل مع الوسائط الإجتماعية. أثارت كلمته جدلاً كبيراً حيث اعتبر الكثير أن مهمة السلطة القضائية لا تتضمن المدونة الأخلاقية.  

Media Practices

"At least 60,000 anti-Arab Facebook posts in 2016," says Israeli NGO
Source: Middle East Monitor
The Arab Center for Social Media Advancement has published a study which finds a strong correlation between racially-charged remarks made by Israeli officials, and the rise in anti-Arab content by the Israeli public on social media, with Facebook posts reaching 60,000 in 2016.

"ناشطو" جو معلوف
المصدر : المدن
ينتقد كاتب المقال برنامج الإعلامي جو معلوف والمعايير الغير واضحة بإنتقاء ضيوفه «الناشطين»، قائلاً أنّ "الناشط" الحقيقي عليه أن يتمتع بثقافة شاملة  و لا يستطيع الإعلام تعميم المصطلح من غير أن تكون له حيثية فعلية.

Culture

For Kurds in Syria, world novels finally speak their language
Source: Your Middle East
A French novel was the first international literary work to be translated into Kurdish, as part of a broader project in Qamishli, Syria. The project aims at a linguistic cultural revival in light of previous constraints placed on Syrian Kurds.

Family Album
Source: Al Jazeera
The short film "Family Album" looks at the important role old photography studios played in the Middle East and the influence of those photos on contemporary regional struggles.

Photo exhibit explores Middle East culture
Source: Met Media
A photo exhibition at the Center for Visual Art in Denver is showcasing work displaying the diversity of Middle Eastern culture. The artists hope that the photographs provide an avenue for empathy given the current geopolitical climate.

Israeli racist chic comes to New York Fashion Week
Source: Electronic Intifada
Fashion label Ovadia & Sons debuted a menswear collection inspired by the Israeli military and football team, Beitar Jerusalem. The article condemns the designers for glamorizing Israel’s occupation of Palestine.

L’exposition «Mémoire de Tunisie en Pop Art» de passage à Tunis
Source: Jeune Afrique
A pop art exhibition by Tunisian artist Sarroura Libre gives homage to the personalities that have shaped her country’s history since the late 1930s. Libre hopes her work gives Tunisian youth a sense of optimism in a tense political climate.

فيلم «محبس»: الضحك على العنصرية
المصدر : حبر
تروي المخرجة اللبنانية سوفي بطرس في فيلمها «محبس» قصة رومانسية-كوميدية عن العلاقة اللبنانية- السورية. تمدح الكاتبة الفيلم لقدرته على تناول موضوع مهم بشكل طريف و عميق.  

مخرج و منتج "مولانا" للLBCI...و صدمة سقوط الحريات في بيروت
المصدر : LBCI
حُذفت بعض المشاهد من فيلم "مولانا" قبل عرضه في  الصالات اللبنانية  بحسب قرار أصدره دار الفتوى اللبناني. في المقتطف الملحق بالمقال، يبدي منتج الفيلم المصري صدمته بسقوط حرية التعبير في بيروت، المدينة التي لطالما اعتبرها أم الحريات لا تقمع.     

Other

Video Game sees Daesh beaten by a female Kurdish fighter
Source: Middle East Monitor
A new video game has an unlikely lead, a Yazidi Kurd female fighter taking on Daesh, whose character was influenced by the many Yazidi and Kurdish women fighting against the extremist group.

Is Rumi an antidote for the post-truth America?
Source : The Express Tribune
Muhammad Tahir responds to aNew Yorker article on Rumi’s poetry, noting that the "erasure" of Islam from his work may not make a difference to anti-Muslim views. Tahir goes on to contextualize Islamophobia within Western thought.

From Jadaliyya Media Roundups

Israeli forces raid Palestinian publishing house, trashing equipment, confiscating printers
Source: Jadaliyya Palestine Media Roundup
Israeli forces ransacked al-Nour publishing house in Ramallah, which is a common practice in the Occupied Territories. Some rights organization took the event as further evidence of the Israeli government’s hostility to Palestinian freedom of press.

Fermer sa ligne téléphonique, un message citoyen aux autorités
Source : Jadaliyya Cities Roundup
L’Orient Le Jour reports on a civic campaign in Lebanon that called for the one-day boycott of telecom companies in protest of high tariffs and obscure billing practices.

The "Media On Media Roundup" is an initiative to survey published material in the news and broadcast media that deals with journalism, coverage, or mass communication practices about the region. These roundups are produced and curated in collaboration with the American University of Beirut's Media Studies Program. The items collected here do not reflect the views of Jadaliyya or the editors of the Media Page.

 


اليأس كسلاح للاستبداد

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«الراديكاليّة الحقّيقيّة هي أن تجعل الأمل ممكناً، لا أن تجعل اليأس مُقْنِعاً.» 

ريموند وليامز 

تحل هذه الأيّام الذكرى السابعة لانطلاق الثورات العربيّة، والتي تسمّى أحياناً «الربيع العربي». ومهما اختلفنا حول كونها «ثورات» أو «انتفاضات»، فيستحسن  العزوف عن استخدام مصطلح «الربيع العربي». وذلك لأنه إشكاليّ ويرتبط بفرضيات خاطئة وبخطاب معيّن تترتب عليه تبعات سلبيّة سنتطرق لها. فلم يختر صانعو هذه الثورات هذا المصطلح ولا أطلقوه هم على ما قاموا به. بل جاء، عموماً، من «مراقبين» أجانب لم يفهم معظمهم جذور هذه الثورات ووقعها وآثارها. ولم يتعب هؤلاء أنفسهم بقراءتها ووضعها في سياقها التاريخي المحلّي الصحيح. وكان معظمهم قد شكّكوا، أصلاً، مثلهم مثل غالبية الأكاديميين والـ «خبراء» المختصّين، ولعقود، بإمكانية قيام ثورات كهذه في بلادنا. البلاد التي قيل لنا مراراً وتكراراً في كتب ومؤتمرات ودراسات ومقالات وبحوث شتّى أنّ تركيبتها الاجتماعية وثقافتها السياسيّة، وموروث دين الأغلبية فيها، مجتمعة كعوامل، مع غلبة الأخير، تجعلها أكثر تعايشاً مع الاستبداد، وغير مؤهلة، بل طاردة، للتحرّر بكافة نسخه، باستثناء تلك التي ترتبط بالدين وبالماضويّة. وبذلك ليست نزعات التحرّر الفاعلة هذه إلا انتقالاً من سجن الحاضر إلى سجن الماضي. كما أنّ مصطلح «الربيع» الذي سارع هؤلاء لإلصاقه بالثورات العربيّة يضع سلالة ومرجعيّة هذه الثورات في سياق تاريخي آخر ويجيّرها لصالح سرديّة رثّة، لكنها تظل تعمل بقوة. تُرجِع هذه السردية أصول كل انعطافة تاريخيّة، أو تغيّر مفصلي، أو حدث يقع أو سيقع في أي بقعة في العالم، إلى «غرب» جغرافيّ أو خطابيّ. وهكذا فإن الثورات العربيّة تفقد خصوصيتها باستعمال هذه المصطلح وتصبح محض «استكمال متأخّر» أو «لحاق» بركب التاريخ (الذي بدأ أوربيّاً، والإشارة هي إلى «الربيع» الذي أعقب انهيار الاتّحاد السوڤييتي)، وهي فكرة خاطئة بالطبع. ويجب أن نتذكر كيف كانت هناك محاولات لإسقاط وتهميش دور المواطنين الذين فجّروا هذه الثورات واختزال تاريخ من النضال وذاكرة ثورية متجذّرة بعزو هذه الثورات إلى الأدوات التي استخدمت فيها وخلطها بها وبالتكنولوجيا التي أنتجها وطورها «الغرب» (الفيسبوك، بصورة رئيسية، والتويتر). حتى أصبح طقس تبجيل وشكر مارك زوكربرغ فرض.اً وكأن الثورات لا تستخدم في كل عصر ما تيّسر من وسائل وأدوات. قد يقول قائل: ما أهميّة التوصيف الذي نستخدمه لهذه الثورات، والآن بالذات، بعد أن لم يبق منها شيء وبعد أن هُزِمت وتحوّلت إلى حروب أهليّة شردت الملايين ودمّرت المدن ومزّقت الخرائط، وأطلقت عنان داعش وأخواتها، أو قادت إلى عودة دكتاتوريّات عسكريّة أكثر تغوّلاً من الأنظمة التي أسقطتها، وصار «الربيع» خريفاً، بل شتاء طويلاً كما يردد البعض؟

للتوصيف أهميته الكبرى. فالكيفية التي نستوعب فيها أي حدث مفصلي، والسردية التاريخيّة التي سيتموضع فيها، ستحدّدان معناه في القاموس السياسي ومكانه في الوعي والذاكرة الجمعية. وبالتالي ما ينتج عن استعادته، والدور الذي يؤديه رمزياً كحدث ملهم أو بذرة لتغيير مستقبلي، مهما كان الحاضر معتماً. يستدعي الحديث عن الثورات بالضرورة الحديث عن نقيضها: الثورات المضادة. وانتصار الأخيرة، المؤقت، امتد من الميادين والشوارع إلى الحقل الخطابي ليتغلغل فيه. خطاب الثورات المضادة هو الذي يهيمن الآن على المشهد العام. ويمكن أن نرى ونقرأ أعراضه في كل مكان. لا يتّسع المجال هنا للاستفاضة، لكن يكفي أن نشير إلى ثيمات رئيسيّة يعاد تكرارها واجترارها. وهي تنتمي إلى ذات الخطاب الرثّ (أعني بذلك الخطاب الذي كان يؤكد استحالة قيام ثورات لأسباب ثقافويّة متهافتة) بل هي تنويعات عليه. ومنها القول الآن إن الثورات في هذه المنطقة لا تؤدي إلا إلى كوارث و«ليتها لم تكن» (وكأن الخيار كان متاحاً: ثورات أم لا!) أو أنه لا يمكن لها أن تنجح أبداً (لذات الأسباب التي ذكرت أعلاه). أو أنّ كل الثورات في هذه المنطقة تقود بالضرورة إلى الحروب الأهليّة وتطييف المجتمعات (المطيّفة أصلاً منذ زمن) أو إلى سيطرة الحركات الأصولية، أو إلى عودة أكثر شراسة للأنظمة الاستبداديّة. ويضاف إلى كل هذا خلاصة مفادها أن هذه الثورات لم تكن إلا مؤامرات حيكت في دوائر الاستخبارات الغربية لتدمير بلادنا. والمقولة الأخيرة تسخيف للواقع والتاريخ وكسل وعقم فكري. 

ليس سرّاً أن محاولة إحداث تغييرات ثورية في منطقة استراتيجيّة، واحتمال امتداد ووصول الموجة الثورية إلى ممالك النفط والغاز، بتحالفاتها المعروفة وأهميّتها الاستراتيجيّة الهائلة، شكّلت تهديداً بالغ الخطورة للنظام الاقتصادي العالمي السائد. وبذلك ليس سرّاً ولا مفاجأة أنه تم تجنيد كافة الوسائل المتاحة لإفشال المدّ الثوري منذ اللحظة الأولى. وذلك بهدف إضعافه، وكبح جماحه، وتشتيته، والتأثير عليه لتحويل زخمه وتمظهراته وتفاعلاته إلى فوضى، أو حروب أهلية يمكن التدخّل فيها والتأثير على مجرياتها. لكن هذا يختلف كثيراً جداً عن سرديّة المؤامرات الاختزاليّة. لست هنا في معرض التقليل من كارثيّة ما حدث من جراء قمع وذبح الثورات والدماء التي سالت والأرواح التي أزهقت، كما المعاناة البشرية المستمرة من جرّاء هزيمة المد الثوري. لكن اعتبار التوق الطبيعي إلى حياة أكثر عدالة ومساواة، والذي يبلوره الشعار الخالد: «خبز، حريّة، عدالة اجتماعيّة» وإلى تغيير أنظمة استبدادية مجرمة، اعتبار ذلك هو السبب في ما آلت إليه الثورات ليس إلا كسلاً فكرياً في أحسن الأحوال. فوحشيّة هذه الأنظمة ووحشيّة شبكة المصالح الاقتصادية الإقليمية والعالميّة التي تساندها في مواجهة هذه الثورات والتآمر عليها هي السبب الرئيسي  في ما آلت إليه الأحوال. لا يعني هذا، بالطبع، عدم توجيه النقد الضروري ودراسة الأسباب المعقّدة للإخفاق والفشل في استغلال اللحظة الاستثنائية وترجمتها إلى مكاسب سياسية. ولقد بدأ هذا وهو بالغ الضرورة للاستفادة مستقبلاً. ومن المهم أن نتذكّر أن الانتكاسات والهزائم، التي تعقب الثورات غالباً، لا تعني بالضرورة موت المثال الثوري الذي تجذّر في الذاكرة الجمعية، مهما بدا وكأن تراب الثورات المضادة وإعلامها وخطابها قد غطّاه كليّاً. من المهم أن نستعيد معنى هذه الثورات كأحداث هائلة حملت بذور التغيير الجذري وبشّرت بإمكان حدوثه وزرعت الأمل. وألّا ندع المنتصرين يزوّرون التاريخ ويفرضون روايتهم. اليأس، في النهاية، عتاد لأسلحة الاستبداد، بكافة أنواعه وتمظهراته، لإقناع المواطنين بأنّ التغيير مستحيل أو أنّه يقود دائماً إلى الأسوأ.   

Specters of Palestine: Syrian Refugees in Lebanon

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There are at least 1.5 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon, a number that represents a quarter of Lebanon’s total population. This is the highest concentration of Syrian refugees in the world. Syrians are not the only refugee population in Lebanon. When considered alongside Palestinian, Iraqi, Kurdish, and Sudanese refugees, the total refugee population easily represents a third of Lebanon’s current residents.

Lebanon had no revolution, or sustained uprising, to contribute to the regional fervor that began in 2010 and swept Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, Libya and Syria. Revolutions beget counter-revolutions; in Egypt a new military-authoritarian regime consolidated—and in Syria, a peaceful uprising was brutally put down by the Asad regime, and a brutal and multivalent transnational civil war took its place. In the killing fields of divided and besieged Aleppo, the promise of what over-eager journalists and analysts called “Arab Spring” unceremoniously died.

In Lebanon, the indelible mark left by the Arab uprisings quickly became the terrorized and brutalized bodies of Syrian families and individuals crossing the border into the ironic “safety” of that country. In previous wars, most notably the 2006 Israel-Lebanon war and the 1975-1990 civil war, Lebanese citizens had sought refuge in Syria.  Due to their sheer number, Syrian refugees have and will continue to change and articulate the social, political, and economic fabric of Lebanon. Thus far, the Lebanese government has responded to this reality with securitization and criminalization, threats of forcible “return,” and the pilfering of funds meant to help aid refugees. The state has also enacted a series of laws and practices that make Syrian refugee labor and bodies exploitable and expendable. These laws and "reforms" echo and form a citational pattern with previously enacted laws that produce both the conditions of Palestinian refugee life and that of foreign racialized domestic labor in Lebanon. These laws help produce Lebanese citizenship as a seductive set of economic, political, and spatial/mobility rights precisely by witholding them from abject others within the nation state. The "abject" here, as it is in Julia Kristeva's work, represents the terrifying breakdown between self and other, and the force and desire with which we produce and enforce difference in order to rescue our sense of self. It is the refugee that is is the condition of possiblity for the citizen, not the other way around. 

There are overlapping Lebanons occupying the same borders. Like the characters in China Miéville’s “The City And The City,” we are trained, coerced, and work to unsee each other. So many Beiruts, for example, exist together—the partying and consumptive Beirut frequently extolled in gawking foreign media, the Beirut that lives in cardboard boxes under bridges and dives into trash receptacles for sustenance, the Beirut where people walk by refugee families on blankets on Hamra street and stumble, surprised, by a child’s leg.  This unseeing is classed, raced, and gendered. It requires even more training, desire, and work to see the multiple life-worlds that co-exist and engender each other within one space, city, or country.


[Nahr al-Barid refugee camp in 1952. Photo by gnuckx via Flickr]


[Syrian refugee children overlooking an informal settlement in the Beqaa Valley, Lebanon.
Image by Russel Watkins via Department of International Development]

In Lebanon, the Syrian refugee is never herself alone. She is always already refracted through the specter of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon.  The fears, anxieties, violence, and xenophobia that she inspires in Lebanese political leaders (many of whom cut their political teeth in anti-Palestinian militias during the civil war) cannot be understood without attention to the experiences of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. In fact, this phenomenon is regional—the specter of Palestine follows every refugee population fleeing from one Arab country to the next. How could it not? 1948 is not (only) a year or an event. It is an intergenerational trauma, experience, and force that extends itself indefinitely into the present and future of the Middle East and indeed the world. Palestinian refugees are not only the human stain of Israel, the cost of maintaining Israel as a Jewish state in violation of an internationally recognized legal “right of return.” They are also the human stain of the Lebanese nation state. 1948 happened only five years after Lebanese independence from the French mandate—only five years after the existence of Lebanese nation-state passports. Palestinians in Lebanon played a role in defining who Lebanese were and are—they were and are not Palestinian. The wealthy and Christian among them have largely been nationalized, re-made Lebanese, or have left. In fact, Lebanon has long welcomed and even nationalized refugee Christian populations and separated them from their Muslim historical counterparts in ways that now seem strangely prophetic. The (mostly) poor and Muslim Palestinian refugees were and are shaped into dangerous, sequestered, refuse bodies that live in camps and impoverished urban zones and camp/urban threshholds. They are the national alibi for the Lebanese civil war, a demographic threat said to endanger “Lebanese diversity,” and fertile grounds for populist and sectarian economic and political rhetoric by corrupt politicians and their supporters. By and large political rhetoric on Syrian refugees in Lebanon has followed the same itinerary. 

The terrifying specter of the permanent refugee, the Palestinian, haunts both refugees themselves and the host countries that they flee to. How could it not?  International law crumbles, its artifice visible, before the permanent refugee. The idea of an Arab community fractures at checkpoints leading into decades old Palestinian refugee camps. The expectation of sustenance—of schools and food and medical care—is thwarted by lack of international and regional funding, lack of regional and international interest. More forgetting, more unseeing. Syrian refugees today, and Lebanese refugees before them, understand the political economy of unseeing and the fragility of return precisely because they have engaged and born witness to it themselves.  They know that law is fiction backed and broken by force, that crisis is not a temporally bounded state—they carry the meaning and threat of refuse, of excess, the condition of possibility for the nation state, with them on their journeys.

When images and articles began emerging evoking the Jewish Holocaust in Europe alongside the movement of Syrian refugees in Greece, Hungary, and Germany—I thought about Palestine, about 1948, and about the history of the Lebanese nation state.

I thought about how ironic and yet strangely fitting it was that the ghosts of both Palestinian ethnic cleansing and the Jewish Holocaust followed the same national bodies into different but tragically joined historical contexts. Nowhere, it seems, is the Syrian refugee herself alone. Everywhere, she evokes the infinite extension of the past—the brutal terrains of the past— into the present. Her body is a palimpsest, a rupture in the myth of historical teleology, a lesson we are sure to forget in time for the next refugee "crisis".

In this way, her body is always already about us—the human capacity for terrifying violence, negligence and un-seeing. Our capacity to sever the human from humanity, the past from the present, and the citizen from the non-citizen. The smallness of our concerns and pre-occupations, the seduction of the alibi, the frailty of outrage.

Doubling Down: Jordan Six Years into the Arab Uprisings

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The political economy of Jordan today is characterized by greater degrees of authoritarianism and neoliberalism than was the case in 2010. Yet two trends in knowledge production on Jordan seem to claim otherwise. The first of these trends privileges narrowly defined security concerns. The second assumes the best of intentions by a core group of those in power. Whether through reporting or analysis, authors of either suasion typically ignore the machinations of authoritarianism and neoliberalism in Jordan, their varied effects on sociopolitical dynamics, and forms of resistance against both.

Jordan did not feature the types of anti-regime mobilizations many of us followed so closely in Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Libya, Yemen, and Syria. Yet it did feature a series of weekly demonstrations, an attempted Tahrir-like occupation, labor agitation, impromptu rioting, and more. Such mobilizations did not feature the numbers we saw elsewhere, whether in absolute or relative terms. Nor did they coalesce around a demand for the fall of the regime, even if that demand surfaced episodically and in isolation. There are reasons of this state of affairs, and there is no need to rehash them here. Suffice it to say that they have little to do with the alleged benevolence of the monarchy or the loyalty of the population. Rather, they can be found in the same sets of historical, institutional, sociopolitical, and strategic factors that help explain the divergent trajectories of those countries that did feature anti-regime mass mobilizations. Equally important, the regime in Jordan has since 2011 engaged in a set of measures designed to (1) consolidate control over possible sites of resistance to its agenda and (2) further intensify its pre-existing revenue-generating strategy. The counterrevolution, so to speak, is in full effect.

Initially, the regime in Jordan sought to limit the potential growth of existing mobilizations for genuine change, which included undermining the very existence of those mobilizations. Such an immediate—if evolving—strategy awaits researchers and/or analysts who are willing to look beyond the palace and explore both formal and informal processes of negotiation, coercion, and competition that undergirded that strategy. Yet beyond this strategy, the regime and its allies implemented a series of substantive shifts that sought to limit speech and affiliation, concentrate political authority, and deepen the exclusivity of the economic development model underway in the kingdom. This is to say nothing of the post-2010 role Jordan has played in the regional counterrevolution, nor the pre-2010 history of all these practices. 

Legal and Practical Restructuring in the Wake of the Uprisings

What follows is a brief outline of some of the more salient ways in which the regime has actively sought to double down on its authoritarianism in the wake of the uprisings, and their reverberations in Jordan.

The regime in Jordan heavily regulates speech, and it has utilized specific legal and bureaucratic techniques to intensify that regulation. The combined effect has been to further chill speech across the Jordanian public sphere, in research and analysis collectives, political organizations, independent activists, and laypersons.

Since 2010, but particular once the threat of mass mobilization was mitigated, the regime increasingly prosecuted those individuals that intentionally or unintentionally crossed red lines. Jordanian law has historically criminalized speech that can be deemed critical of the king, government officials, state institutions, religion, and foreign governments and states. The mechanism for criminalizing and prosecuting such speech has shifted over time, and the regime has several options when doing so. The net effect has been a series of arrests, prosecutions, and convictions of dissidents, activists, journalists, editors, and laypersons. Many of these charges were based on public criticisms of official foreign or domestic policy as well as public debate and discussion about pending laws and initiatives in the kingdom. Some of these charges were based on existing civil and criminal laws. However, the regime prosecuted the bulk of them through the State Security Court on the basis of the Anti-Terrorism Law (modified in 2014) and Ministry of Information gag orders (issued frequently in 2015 and 2016).

In addition to prosecuting individuals, the regime has pursued a policy of stricter control over media outlets—specifically websites that offer analysis, commentary, and opinions. This was most effectively accomplished through modifying the Press and Publication Law in the wake of the uprisings to define online news outlets as any “electronic publication that engages in publication of news, investigations, articles, or comments, which have to do with the internal or external affairs of the kingdom.” Such outlets are now required to register with the Ministry of Information. On the one hand, failure to register can and did result in the regime issuing a blocking order to Jordanian internet service providers. On the other hand, registration requires that websites have an appointed editor-in-chief who was a member of the Jordanian press syndicate for at least four years. It is worth noting that this syndicate is part of a legacy of the regime’s corporatist control over interest representation, and thus longstanding pillar of regime control over journalists. This is to say nothing of how difficult attaining membership in the syndicate is for journalists whose work experience is limited to online outlets or for non-journalists who are nevertheless qualified to run such websites.

The regime also regulates public affiliation. Whether it is through the Political Parties Law (passed in 2015) or the Law of Association (passed in 2006), the regime has set very specific definitions for legally-sanctioned types of public meetings and efforts at community organizations. The net effect has been to bring activists and others under closer scrutiny of the Ministry of Political and Parliamentary Affairs and Ministry of Interior. The creation of new laws and modifications of preexisting laws has enabled the regime to more effectively break up informal and formal groups/meetings by concerned citizens seeking to educate themselves, debate current affairs, and mobilize to advocate for their particular vision of Jordan.

In 2014, the regime reinstated capital punishment after what many human rights organizations considered an eight-year moratorium. The eleven men executed in December of that year were already convicted and serving sentences due to their affiliation with al-Qai‘ida in Iraq. Yet in retaliation for the Islamic State’s capture and murder of Jordanian air force pilot Mu‘ath al-Kassabeh, the moratorium on capital punishment was ended and the regime executed the eleven men.

Such restrictions on speech and affiliation, along with the reinstatement of capital punishment, are occurring within a historical legacy of authoritarianism and contemporary context of unaccountability. Despite several documented allegations of corruption, excessive force, and violence by members of the police and gendarmerie, not a single member of either two coercive institutions has been found guilt of such violations. In all such cases, investigators and prosecutors are internal to these forces. Furthermore, thee-judge panel responsible for ruling in such cases (referred to the police court) is comprised of two “police judges,” meaning individuals drawn from the institutions they are being asked to giving a ruling about. 

In such contexts, talk of guaranteed freedoms and accountability borders on the absurd. Yet perhaps of equal concern are the set of constitutional amendments enacted in the context of the uprisings. Central to these amendments is the addition of a paragraph giving the king exclusive power to appoint a broad array of positions. These are: the crown prince, the regent, the speaker and members of the senate, the head and members of the constitutional court, the chief justice, the commander of the army, as well as the heads of the General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI) and the Gendarmerie. Previously, such appointments required the approval, however formulaic, of the prime minister and relevant cabinet ministers. An additional amendment allows those with dual nationalities to run for parliament and/or hold cabinet positions. Yet another allows for cabinets to continue to “govern” in case of a prime minister’s death, under the leadership of the deputy prime minister. If public statements in the early days of the Arab uprisings claimed to be managing a transition toward a constitutional monarchy, the combined effects of actual changes indicate the concentrations of powers in already centralized monarchy.

Lingering Questions

Despite the above legal and institutional shifts, mainstream media outlets and many researchers and scholars continue to discuss the regime in Jordan through the adage of being stuck between a rock and a hard place. Such characterizations minimize the intentionality and effects of a broader set of measures designed to concentrate power and undermine oppositional discourse and mobilization. At the same time, little to no attention has been given to what is undoubtedly two of the most significant macro-level developments since the uprisings: the fiscal transformations in the government budget (including subsidy cuts and foreign loans/grants disbursements); and the attempted evisceration of the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood (which has featured specific participation by various state institutions). This is to say nothing of other developments such as the assassination of Jordanian dissident Nahed Hattar and the implications of his case for broader questions of freedom of speech and incitement to violence; the Jordanian-Israeli gas agreement; or any other number of issues.

During the initial stages of the uprisings, and attempts at opposition mobilization in Jordan, the frequent refrain of “forever on the brink” was used to describe politics in the kingdom. At the time, some of the more critical analysts claimed that such statements were premature and designed to hedge one’s bets. Today, in what some claim to be the post-uprisings moment in Jordan, many cling to the term “between a rock and a hard place” to describe the regime. Jordan as a state and population has for too long been problematically described as dependent and complacent, respectively. Yet if anything, the last six years reveal most of the knowledge produced on Jordan to be precisely that: dependent on regime statements and complacent with its doubling down. All the while, sociopolitical and institutional dynamics continue to shift in specific ways, betraying the reality of popular desires of meaningful change, regime policies of counter-revolution, and a regional-international context that complicates the rational choices of those seeking more accountability, transparency, and social justice.

Starting Points

We often write in critique of, or out of frustration with, existing reporting and analyze. In the coming years, knowledge production on Jordan is sure to surge due to a range of factors—prominent among them the shifting calculus among prospective researchers concerning fieldwork option. It is in this spirit that I would like conclude this article with a listing of three articles that I think are worth highlighting as critical analysis and scholarship in Jordan during the uprisings.

No consideration of critical knowledge production on Jordan would be complete without acknowledging the work of the 7iber Collective (among others). They are an example of how the uprisings transformed certain individuals and organizations in such a way as to continue its possibilities. Whether journalists, researchers, or analysts, we would do well to take draw some inspiration if not take some queues from them.  

A Preface to A Critique of Instant Analysis and Scholarship on the Arab Uprisings

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Much of the writing on the Arab uprisings continues to suffer from the new think-tank-ish, self-important, semi-casual, sloppy-analysis syndromes. It is as if having a platform and a mandate are sufficient to produce sound knowledge. For the most part, the proof is in the pudding. Follow platforms and individuals across time and space and this becomes clear: zig-zagging and pendulum-swing judgements and analysis, driven more by events and politics than by historical and analytical depth. Worse still, this sloppiness has extended to scholars who frequently opine on social media and electronic publication platforms that seek content quantity over quality in a mutually beneficial exercise. Rigorous analysis that stands the test of time suffers.

Extending beyond quick platforms, the deluge of books on the uprisings is staggering and qualitatively inconsistent across publications, with some coming out within the first year of these protracted events, yet they do not consciously address their own temporal (premature?) shortcomings. Other books are published within months of the emergence of new phenomena (e.g., ISIS) and extrapolate from that particular phenomenon to all cases that experienced an uprising. Finally, as I already shared, a continuing trend of erroneously addressing the uprisings, or the odd title “Arab Spring," as one event lingers, with insufficient attention to the vast variance across cases. For the most part, the best work on the uprisings has not been written yet, and for good reason.

To make things more complicated for sound knowledge production on the uprisings, tragically contentious cases such as Syria have caused seismic schisms that continue to undermine even serious discussion, let alone publications, on multiple levels, namely, politically, analytically, and socially. I will take them up in reverse order below. This essay is intended to serve as a starting point for a more comprehensive and annotated review of literature on the uprisings, with emphasis on the seemingly intractable Syrian case.

The “Social” 

Protracted uprising cases have entered the social and discursive realm in an unprecedented and largely unproductive manner, even if quite instructive at times. Family and friends have been broken up both by diametrically opposed positions or even slight differences, signaling that the stakes are that high, although no one is sure what exactly these are. The Syrian case has had a particularly personal dimension, whereby the locus of contention between opposing observers almost shifted from differing on interpreting the conflict to simply differing with each other, often without keeping pace with developments on the ground. It is as thought the conflict was transformed from the actual battleground to social spaces and media, a phenomenon that requires more attention in due time. Often, such differences recall earlier frustrations, contradictions, and pent up resentments that have been severely exacerbated by particular cases, notably Syria. 

More structurally, we can also observe a return in the social realm to the secular-religious debate or “tool,” as well as an odd resort to primordialism regarding the Sunni-Shi‘i divide, even if often based on politics and not an intrinsic commitment to sectarian content. While the former has been influenced by the Egyptian case as well as the emergence of the lslamic State (IS), the latter is mostly a continuation of regional political rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The politicization of identities, tribal, ethnic, or otherwise, has also played a role across the region, particularly in Syria, Libya, Iraq, and Yemen. While one can view some of these developments simply as a function of primordialism or even politics, it is important to recognize the new, often more independent, and less repressive context within which they are emerging. In some, not all, cases, it could very well be the beginning of perhaps the same long dialogues, debates, or conflicts under less restrained circumstances. However, the writing on such issues has been unnecessarily dominated by a negative view that essentialize and naturalize this politicization.

Another issue that receives little or parasitic attention is the impact of the slow collapse of states amid protracted violence on the fate of those who depended most on public sector employment and/or other forms of protection by the state, including women and other vulnerable communities. While this does not apply equally across the board, it is a reminder of one of the seldom addressed functions or contributions of state public sectors. To elucidate a conservative take-away in the form of “order at any cost” from this observation is to miss the point: it is but one reason that helps us understand (shifting) positions and attitudes within protesting polities in relation to the state and its potential collapse, especially as uprisings turn sour, reviving the lesser evil argument.

The “Analytical” 

Analytically, there seems to be strong and similar divides across microcosms as a result of calamitous escalation, counterrevolutions, and/or authoritarian retrenchment (with the potential exception of Tunisia). In academia and beyond, one sees a rather clear split between those who would like to interpret the uprisings as a first phase among a few, or many, to come, while others have, after a brief elation, restored their default culturalist lenses. Yet others were simply exhausted and disappointed, and gave in to generic pessimism fueled by an endemic feeling of powerlessness at several levels (personal, political, and/or ideological).

However, more refined analytical disagreements that did not descend to the level of unproductive or personal contention have proliferated: these are the most productive and enduring ones that will survive the wave of Facebook and Twitter “activists” and “trolls,” most of whom will eventually find their way back either to their pre-uprisings political coma or to their parochial echo-chambers. This does not mean that well-meaning observers who rise above pettiness and personalization are immune to producing analytical faux-pas. What continues to be in short supply is a systematic and historically informed analysis of the factors that brought various societies to a boil, more or less, at that particular moment. A corollary objective is to identify the factors that influenced the trajectories of different cases. The fact that the human cost of the uprisings, their diversions, and their suppression has been calamitous is all the more reason to take analytical pause in judgement.

Finally, there is an increasingly pressing need for the uprisings to be conceptualized more broadly in historical terms lest we peg analysis on empirical developments: for instance, as this path can take many forms, what is the relationship between repression, state institutions, (de)development, societal divisions, class and gender relations, external foreign policies, and mass discontent/mobilization? What kind of historical eras, periods, or junctures might be eclipsed by what sort of new configurations? How best to characterize the uprisings from a longue durée vantage point? Both the aforementioned micro and macro levels of analysis, respectively, should help us understand and account for the variance among the cases in which mass uprisings erupted and between them and the other Arab countries—if this categorization is at all relevant.

For those taking stock of writing at the academic, journalistic, policy-oriented, and even social media levels, it has become clear that the uprisings (at different times depending on the case in question) have been encumbered by politics and polemics. Once more, it is arguable that the better analysis is yet to come, not least because of emerging opportunities for research and local initiatives for data gathering: it is also significant that new balances of power, begotten by ample violence, displacement, and the loss of life and limb, are curiously spurring more sober reflection and reconsideration.

The Political

Politically speaking, the state of writing on the uprisings is becoming increasingly dire. Early on, hopes were built and partially fulfilled. They were then gradually and, in some cases, brutally shattered, ushering in what I have called “the pessimistic turn” in 2012-2013. Eventually, the breaking points that crystallized views were 2013 and 2016. With war dragging in Syria and Yemen, where some external protagonists of rebellion in one case curiously reversed positions in the other; with Libya in tatters; and with a full re-entrenchment of authoritarian rule in Egypt and, much earlier, Bahrain, we began to see the beginning of the end of the first phase of the uprisings.

Whether writers were following all or some of the uprisings, and whether they were following closely or sporadically based on news cycles, it was late 2016 that culminated in a new phase of divisions in the uprising, with the exception of Tunisia. Indeed the ostensible crushing of the last remaining metropolitan stronghold of the rebels in Aleppo in December 2016 was a critical juncture in the Syrian uprising, one that many considered to be an ostensible end of the first phase of the conflict.

Spurious analysis, marked by defeatism, blame games, and political jockeying masquerading as moral criticism and righteousness became the order of the day in the last months of 2016. The conceptualizations and convictions that were discussed in previous years became axioms to many: “lesser evil” dictatorships vs. Islamist unknowns, “rebellious” imperialism vs. “reactionary” resistance, Sunnis vs. Shi`is, and everyone vs. “terrorism” won the highest marks. The lack of a long view and analysis of slow-moving factors over extended periods of time gave way to instant scholarship that was produced and reproduced based on events and even particular battleground outcomes. 

Significantly, we all observed how the uprisings became arenas for settling political scores, for inhabitants and observers, regardless of whether or not they involved direct external intervention. This phenomenon should not be dismissed quickly, no matter how ugly, petty, and absurd some of these practices were. It reflects unresolved issues and deep-seated convictions from the pre-uprising period as well as new contradictions, uncertainties, and the rebalancing of power in the regional and global arenas. Even though it is easy to condemn the internecine spitefulness and smearing that especially characterized the Syria debates, this heightened emotional state is a function of the aforementioned unresolved issues and contradictions/changes. The final blow that intensified this state of analytical and political environment is empirical: i.e., the profound notion of powerlessness vis-à-vis the retrenchment of despotic orders, however each case is colored by its own peculiarities. People/observers took to the most raw and half-baked forms of opining, as the polemics surrounding the crucial Syrian case informs us.

Contentious discussions and writing on the Arab uprisings abound, but perhaps most polemical debates are the by-product of the Syrian case.  One dominant source of polemics is the consistent, if largely superficial, attack on “the Left,” proceeding mostly from a liberal camp with ostensible leftist vocabulary. Those attacks imagined the Left as both the arbitrators and decision-makers in conflicts where they somehow betrayed the people (e.g., Syrians) by siding with dictators, particularly in Syria. At the same time, some leftists were also held to account by what can be dubiously labeled leftist hardliners for siding with imperialist efforts and countries such as the United States.

This discursive myopia/confusion should not be dismissed nor taken too seriously. It should not be dismissed because it does raise the issue of ample contradictions within what can be patently considered leftist voices. On the other hand, in most cases it should not be taken too seriously because it emanates less from a genuine concern about leftist politics and much more from a political standpoint that is too often indifferent to such politics. Though this is a topic worthy of a separate treatment, the bottom line is that, for good reason, a superficial understanding of the left dominates discursive debates, and self-proclamations about who and what is left are unaccountable, especially while conflict is underway. After all, the “left” is not one political party with a restrictive platform.

In all cases, a new dubious taxonomy emerged to depict variants of the left that are hierarchically categorized based on levels of guilt and complicity (either in reference to imperialism, rebels, or dictators). Besides the obvious contradictions that any cursory observation can spot (e.g., support by known “leftists” of patent dictatorships like Syria, or of US policies/patronage), this entire exercise is largely ephemeral as the coming years will reveal. It is odd that otherwise well-regarded writers partook in this amorphous fad of lamenting the left.

This is not because the left, however conceptualized, should not be critiqued. On the contrary, it should be, and any serious rebuilding of revolutionary or emancipatory fervor in the coming years must include such diligent self-criticism. Rather, it is mainly because many of those who are being critiqued and, amusingly, the equivalent proportion of those who are critiquing, often do not have a record of commitment, or paper trail, or legacy that can be considered “leftist” in the most classical senses. Both have substituted classless anti-imperialism and even reactionary nationalism for leftist principles. The farce became that liberals and “progressives” (in a Trump world, this category is especially stretched/distorted) are standing in as gate-keepers of the left: a temporary concern for populism, vague notions of social justice, and lip-service support for the poor stood in for robust class analysis at the local, regional, and international levels. The end result is that these attacks were misplaced and inconsequential.

Predictably, this disfiguration of the left under its new liberal gatekeepers invited analysts who never identified with the left to join in. In that space, everyone and their mother and uncle from multiple and contradictory positions chimed in on indicting the left, while consistently exaggerating its actual impact (on anything, really) and ignoring the fact that regional and global powers that have long ago considered the “left” a cute little discursive toy do not effectively recognize its existence.

Yet, the “left” is portrayed as the problem for renegade reactionaries and liberals: a perfect diversion from engaging in comprehensive criticism and self-criticism of the actual conditions, actors, relations, and positions that animated the outcomes of the uprisings, particularly in Syria. Interestingly, in that debate, debaters claim their sharp views represent most Syrians and that their opponents do not know Syria or proceed from axioms alien to the concern of Syrians: i.e., that they oppose imperialism at the expense of the Syrian revolution, or that they support a revolution that represents imperial interests. Both dominant views obscure more than reveal in the case of the Syrian uprising as I have tried to illustrate elsewhere.

Back to Square One

Not only has the spurious writing on the uprisings persisted, but it has also regressed in quality, paralleling the regression of conditions in the Arab world. Generally speaking, there is talk of corruption, unemployment, and other negative indicators often hand-picked from something like the United Nations’ Arab Human Development Report. Almost all ills are pinned squarely on authoritarian rulers, as though they exist in a vacuum. One finds very little about the political connections of these rulers with their regional and international supporters/bankrollers. Nor is there much about the institutions that rewarded the adoption of neoliberal-like policies no matter the cost to the larger population.

In effect, there is little to no consideration that the Arab uprisings were also a voice of protest for those whose life-chances have been devoured by their local elites and the politics the latter pursued as individuals (moguls), groups (with external connections), networks (informal economic cliques between business and state officials), and/or institutions (e.g., the army in Egypt). It is as though the youth bulge, unemployment, and opposition politics are completely detached from the development policies that autocratic darlings adopted, imposed, and pursued. To be sure, data such as arms purchases in contrast to spending on development are thrown around as though they are detached from questions of accountability (if not worse) on the supplier’s/seller’s side—instead of recognizing at the very least the complicity involved. The cursory words/homage that are sometimes presented to address measures of complicity of external actors, states, and processes are actually problematic because they do not figure in the final calculus—we end up with lip-service liberal critique of elitism.

Additionally, as time goes by, the uprisings are somehow collapsed into a negative monolith, just as they were from the diametrically opposite euphoric angle early on, under the dubious banner of the “Arab Spring:” both characterizations are caricatures of reality. We increasingly see little mention of the diversity of cases and peoples, except in passing, as though it is a detail. It turns out that premature perceptions of both success and failure dull analytical vigor.

Once more, instead of historical depth, analytical and empirical fads informed by “policy-oriented” politics and fortunes came to the fore: suddenly, the depiction of the generic desire for democracy of everyone in the Arab world is substituted by the catch-all “Sunni anxiety” factor. This trending variable side-steps or eliminates all other divisions, including those between ruler and ruled, in which the majority of Sunnis in the Arab region were actually primarily suppressed by “Sunni” elites that belong to a different class, long before conspiracy theories about Shi`is trying to take over the region. Moreover, one finds that the countries that are often depicted as causing this anxiety are Shi`i majority countries, including Iran and Iraq, where similar claims of “Shi`i anxiety” can be made.

Also gone is the talk of the delayed stances and actual positions of the US and UK governments vis-à-vis the six uprisings (e.g., whose side they were on, and when): late comers to Tunisia and Egypt’s peoples’ side, against the people in Bahrain, wary of the Yemeni uprising and far more interested in profits than people in Libya. Such stances reinforce the historical external accountability, yet both the stances and the accountability are deleted or reduced to details. The case that demonstrates the lack of attention to external (specifically western) factors is Syria. Syria’s dictatorship was never Europe’s or the United States’ cup of tea. After initial hesitation very early on, they actually supported the uprising, directly or indirectly. Curiously, external support to prop up the Syrian regime, whether it is Iran, Russia, or Hizballah, is not jettisoned. While all these regimes—not to mention the other dictatorships that western powers continue to support—deserve more than overthrow for their decades-long crimes, the writing and opining/analysis is increasingly comporting with pre-uprisings foreign policies of western governments. None of this portends well for the future of democracy or even accountability in the region.

Finally, and in relation to presenting a monolithic social blob (with the exception of talk of Sunni anxiety), often not a word is uttered about gender, bodies, and space. In short treatments, even if it is unreasonable to dwell on everything in detail, it is incumbent on analysts at least to address the issue areas, and leave readers with a need to explore, not an artificial sense of satisfaction that re-catapult us to the culturalist-authoritarian boogeyman/framework. It is almost like everyone has lost their mind. As the prosecutor in the Egyptian play, A Witness Who Saw Nothing, says after the witness disclosed that he was not paying attention, “the case is to be re-opened”, (يعاد افتتاح المحضر), or back to square one.

Why Space Matters in the Arab Uprisings (and Beyond)

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Many non-scholarly and scholarly accounts on the societies, culture, and political economy of the Middle East post-“Arab Uprisings/Spring” still deal with cities and regions as mere repositories of social, cultural, political, and economic action—despite the spatial turn that has informed social sciences and humanities more three decades ago now. Indeed, they often overlook the shaping roles of the built and natural environments in the production of events unraveling in cities and regions of the Middle East. We thus read about cities and regions as backgrounds and contexts for processes and practices, rather than environments that have determining impacts on these.

Since its launch in September 2013, Jadaliyya’s Cities Page has been committed to produce such informed, empirical, and integrated knowledge, where the spatial engages and intersects with historical, political, economic, technological, legal, social, and cultural analysis. These are some of the questions we committed to address three years ago: “How and why does urban space contribute to public action and social movements? What is the relationship between power, space, and resistance? How do different groups utilize space to mobilize and facilitate collective action? Which forces that shape space (physical and technological, as well as social, historical, political and economic) are combined to guide this action? More broadly, how do specific historical, national policies, and global forces shape cities? How are different inequalities constituted by urban life and how do they reconstitute the city? How do the ordinary practitioners of the city negotiate, navigate, appropriate, resist, and transform urban forms?” While most other electronic outlets have been scratching the surface of such questions, focusing on formal aspects and general descriptions of urbanism, we pride ourselves at Jadaliyya Cities to have been contributing to critical urban scholarship, which has been informing reflective practice and urban activism.    

Indeed, while readers rarely know why, for instance, East Aleppo remained the last section of the city under a variety of armed forces’ control, we feature urban geography and history studies that provides a plausible explanation to how this part of the city has been more durably mobilized in the conflict. And, while readers only hear about Baghdad as the theatre of bombings and explosions, we care for featuring its historically plural urban geography, which is still materialized, albeit weakly, in its parks along the river, bringing together young men and women, families, and elderly to enjoy magsuf and hookah under the summer breeze. Additionally, while others merely mention public squares as repositories of political action, we unravel how and why Tahrir square is a heterotopic space that has been embodying protests for decades. While we document and denounce Israeli settler-colonialism in Palestine, we also are keen on recalling Jerusalem’s plural model of urban governance in the 1900s, as well as Ramallah’s contemporary diverse urbanity. Moreover, we do not suffice with labeling urban dynamics and processes with generic statements condemning neoliberal urbanism. Instead, we publish in-depth interviews with leading urban theorists on the issue (e.g. David Harvey, Timothy Mitchell, Ananya Roy), as well as contributions that empirically examine how the circuits of capital are gentrifying and commodifying cities’ spaces and increasing socio-spatial inequalities and urban poverty in sites as varied as Cairo, Beirut, Mecca, Istanbul, or Morocco. In addition to debunking structures of the urban political economy, we insist on producing informed knowledge on the meso- and micro- scales of spatial production. These could be ranging from how an array of stakeholders (local governments, mukhtars, private developers, housing corporations, banks, trade unions, informal builders and merchants, informal and formal service providers, donors and NGOs) make city neighborhoods and urban landscapes, to how a diversity of urban dwellers navigate, practice and experience spaces and places (e.g., queers and ordinary dwellers in Beirut, joyriders in Riyadh, flâneurs in Doha, pious trendy young women and men in Tehran and Beirut).  The Page also unravels the complex socio-spatial dynamics through which refugee camps have been produced decades ago from Rashidiye and Ain el-Helwe (Lebanon), to al-Wihdat and Zaatari (Jordan), as we frame the discussion on “camps” theoretically, as “a site of political invention.” 

Thus, while other outlets mention uncritically projects and endeavors, such as Morocco’s solar plant, Cairo’s gated communities, Mecca’s redevelopment, or Ramallah’s Rawabi, we feature authors who expose how these projects are also about financialization of nature and land, at the expense of a shared, livable, and inclusive urbanity. And, while many outlets deplore an alleged depoliticized youth across the Middle East region, lament the end of the Arab Uprisings in swiping gestures, or invite us to cling to the hope of an evolutionary trajectory of change modeled along Eurocentric examples, we remain committed to identify, document, and feature instances of mobilization and collective action who contest and challenge such hegemonic political economic forces—even if such resistances are transient, short-lived, co-opted, or crushed, such as in Imider (Morocco), Beirut, Bahrain, or Djerba (Tunisia). 

Indeed, while many other outlets produce stories that hold readers hostage to generic stereotypes where things happen because of Islam, ideology, culture, sectarianism, and/or neoliberalism, we work on making sure our readers get complex, intersectional, relational and multidisciplinary narratives that do not reduce realities to simplistic formulations. We make curate a platform that produces critical knowledge on how and why economic geography determines places and regions, how urban politics and service provision territorialize and distinguish spaces, how legacies of land tenure systems inscribe hierarchies and power, and how cultural geography and gendered socio-spatial practices transforms city’s neighborhoods. With such knowledge, we hope to inform and contribute to reflective urban practice and activism, and to cultivate the right to the city towards a “possible urban world.”

The ‘Arab Spring’ Never Happened (in English)

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To investigate the trials and tribulations of the phrase “Arab Spring” for English-language audiences since 2010, it may be useful to start with a Google search—or, rather, a quick history of Google search results. If one looks at the top results for English-language searches using the term “Arab Spring” from 2010-2012, here is what you get:



 

A few things jump out, foremost among them the celebratory tone, accompanied by the desire to locate and attribute the credit for this “year of revolution,” as National Public Radio, hardly a hotbed of revolutionary desires, dubbed it. Was it Wikileaks that started things rolling? Should Facebook or Twitter get the laurel? How long would it be before Mark Zuckerberg was handed his Nobel Peace Prize?

In a more serious vein, what should also be noted via this short exercise in time travel is the extent to which readers at this point in time wanted to understand the chronology and, to some extent, the genealogy of events related to the uprisings (thus the popularity of interactive timelines). It is worth remembering that this was also the moment when various iterations of Occupy movements had come to prominence in North America and Europe. These movements very directly declared that the Arab Spring was a guiding inspiration for their tactics and actions; indeed, the defining statement released by Occupy Wall Street at its inception declared the movement’s debt to what it understood as the “Arab Spring”: “We are using the revolutionary Arab Spring tactic to achieve our ends and encourage the use of nonviolence to maximize the safety of all participants.”

If these initial responses betrayed a lack of nuanced understanding of the full depth and complexities of the popular uprisings and revolutions throughout the region that had come to be known as the “Arab Spring,” they nevertheless suggested a hopeful sign: young English-language audiences were beginning to shed their stereotypical views of “the Middle East” and find in these popular movements a set of interlocutors and inspirations for their own struggles.

Moving ahead to the top Google searches for 2012-2014, one immediately notices the major shift that has begun to occur.

There are still attempts here to understand the roots of the uprisings, some quite serious (a study of the relationship between the Arab Spring and climate change), others still tied to the obsession with social media (“Twitter Revolution”; “Facebook, Twitter Help the Arab Spring Blossom”). But more significant in this phase is the suggestion that the time had come to identify what the final outcomes of the Arab Spring were. “Who Are the Winners and Losers from the Arab Spring?” asked the BBC; and, in a more negative mode, the Economist asked: “The Arab Spring: Has It Failed?” Beyond the idea of judging the success or failure of this thing called the “Arab Spring,” the most important thing to note here is the temporality of such articles. The Arab Spring, we were made to understand, was a thing that has happened; it is now, for purposes of analysis, over, and so the post-mortems can begin in earnest.

The most recent top Google searches confirm that “post-mortem” is the correct analogy here, at least for the dominant strand of English-language publications.

Some of the strongest voices came from the left end of the spectrum. “What Happened to the Arab Spring?” asked Jacobin. The Guardian’s most-read piece on the topic has the title: “‘I Was Terribly Wrong’: Writers Look Back at the Arab Spring Five Years Later.” From a more mainstream angle, CNN was more direct: “Arab Spring Five Years On: Corruption Increased, Says Report.” The Arab Spring, in this reading (which continues to color the views of many English-language audiences today) may have actually made things worse (says report).

It should be noted that the forces of commerce still, in spite of it all, want a piece of the action—CustomerThink, “a global online community of business leaders striving to create profitable customer-centric enterprises,” featured a report on the “Arab Spring” in May 2016 that focused on “value co-creation” and the transformation of “service systems,” with a view to how such knowledge could help “the business world”). But for the most part, the consensus appears to be that the “Arab Spring,” a thing that had happened once upon a time, had not, for the most part, turned out very well at all. Far from a site of inspiration and information for popular movements, it had been turned into a warning: be careful what you wish for.

Why worry at all about such online ephemera? Surely scholars and activists—particularly those who have themselves been involved in the uprisings—have produced far better accounts, many of them here on Jadaliyya? And surely those are the ones we should pay attention to, rather than getting caught up in the question of what got the most clicks among English speakers over the past six years?

Of course. But this battle over the meaning—or, better said, the appropriation and re-positioning—of this term “Arab Spring” nevertheless matters. It matters, first of all, for English-language audiences concerned with addressing their own governments’ role in the counter-revolutionary violence that has resounded since 2010. The role of the US and its allies—not to mention that of international financial institutions pushing the neoliberal line of structural adjustment—in unleashing counterrevolutionary violence in the region has not received nearly the attention it deserves to, nor has it been sufficiently resisted by the left in North American and Europe. This is one reason for the shocking and inexcusable silence, even among the left, regarding the continuing slaughter occurring daily in Yemen, for example. If this was all true for US-based audiences in 2010, it is even more so today, in the era of Trump’s travel and refugee ban and the more general administration policy, so well named by Zaid Jilani: “If we bombed you, we ban you.”

But the struggle over the meaning of the “Arab Spring” also matters for English-language audiences in terms of both solidarity and inspiration. From the viewpoint of solidarity, it needs to be said that, as against the idea that the “Arab Spring” is over, popular struggles in the region of course continue, and deserve our support. Early reactions to the Arab Spring, which suggested that the West’s Orientalist stereotypes might be in the process of being overthrown, have been effectively replaced by a simplified narrative by which those living in the region can be understood only through the lens of fear (“the terrorist”) or pity (“the refugee”). The battle against Orientalism, in other words, continues.

From the viewpoint of inspiration, it is important that both of the differently simplified versions of the “Arab Spring”—the first idea that it represented a brief, completely non-violent, telegenic, social-media-based revolution that achieved its ends in about the period of time necessary to binge-watch a TV series; and the second idea that the “Arab Spring” names a noble but misguided failure that has brought the region nothing but death, destruction, and ISIS—be once and for all destroyed.

To do so, we need to fight for a different framework for understanding revolutions in the moments of their unfolding. As Behrooz Ghamari-Tabrizi has recently and brilliantly argued in his book Foucault in Iran, our analytical struggle, in the case of the popular uprisings and revolutions such as those of the “Arab Spring,” is “to save the integrity of the revolutionary movement from its later outcomes.”[1]

To do so means insisting, once and for all, that the “Arab Spring,” as popularly understood, never actually happened; nor has it, once and for all, ended. Others who are taking part in this roundtable are better equipped to describe, with the necessary complexity and commitment, what did in fact happen. As for what happens next, that is, to a great extent, up to all of us.

NOTES

[1] Behrooz Ghamari-Tabrizi, Foucault in Iran: Islamic Revolution after the Enlightenment (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2016), 75. 

Six Years: Roundtable on Arab Uprisings

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The Arab world has been fundamentally transformed in the past six years, as part of ongoing processes that are certain to continue for some time to come. Throughout this period Jadaliyya has been providing analysis of the Arab uprisings, in their vaired manifestations and in all their dimensions. This has included the events and people who set this train in motion, and the struggles and aspirations the many that participated. Also covered were the new forms of governance that came out the ensuing struggles, and the ways in which regimes have sought to preserve, resurrect, or recalibrate the status quo. This is to say nothing of regional and international powers that have intervened to shape the outcomes in accordance with their interests.

The following contributions by a number of Jadaliyya Co-Editors represent efforts to take stock and reflect on these momentous developments:

 


Remembering Husayn Muruwwah, the ‘Red Mujtahid’

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On 17 February 1987, during one of the bloodiest periods of the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990), the prominent journalist, literary critic, intellectual, and activist Husayn Muruwwah (or Hussein Mroué[i]) was assassinated at his home in Ramlet al-Baida, West Beirut. Muruwwah left Lebanon at the age of fourteen to train at the Najaf hawza (seminary) in Iraq. He intended to follow in the footsteps of his father, who was a respected religious scholar and cleric. Yet after a multifaceted intellectual journey that spanned several decades and multiple locations, Muruwwah went on to become a celebrated Marxist philosopher and senior member of the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP); “a Red mujtahid who was at once proud of the cultural heritage of Islam and politically committed to the cause of social justice, political freedom and emancipation from foreign domination along Communist lines.”[ii]


["Shame on the murderers of the great thinker and freedom fighter, Husayn Muruwwah."
Iraqi Communist Party poster, 1987.
Signs of Conflict Archive, Zeina Maasri Collection]

A prolific writer, Muruwwah once declared, “I cannot endure life without writing.” [iii] He wrote several books and hundreds of articles in his lifetime. Sadly, aside from selected extracts, none of this important and diverse body of work has ever been translated into English. This lack of translations has limited access to his work primarily to native Arabic speakers and academic specialists. This perhaps explains why Muruwwah has remained largely unknown outside of the Arab world. On the thirtieth anniversary of his murder, this essay intends to introduce Muruwwah’s life to a broader audience and encourage greater interest in his history and work. It is indebted to the small existing body of English-language scholarship already written on Muruwwah, details of which can be found in the reading list below.

Beginnings: “Born a Shaykh”

Muruwwah was born in 1908 or 1910 in the village of Haddatha in the Bint Jbeil district of the Nabatieh province of South Lebanon.[iv] The broader area, known as Jabal ‘Amil, is home of one the oldest Shi‘a communities in the Muslim world. Muruwwah was descended from a line of religious scholars and from a young age, his family groomed him to succeed his father, Ali. In Muruwwah’s own words, Ali was a “prominent and esteemed religious leader.”[v] In his autobiography Wulidtu shaykhan wa-amutu tiflan[vi] (I was Born a Shaykh and I’ll Die a Child), Muruwwah recalls a strict, almost non-existent childhood in which he was forced to wear the black robes and turban of a Shi‘a religious scholar from the age of eight, something for which his peers ridiculed him. Revealing the enormous pressure that was placed on him by others, Muruwwah remarked that as a boy, “my dream was to become a distinguished Shaykh like my father . . . no sorry, actually . . . that was the dream of my father, and then my mother, our family, our extended family, and all of Jabal ‘Amil.”[vii]

Men from Jabal ‘Amil had received religious schooling in Najaf for centuries. From the 1880s onward, this connection intensified as a group of local clerics returning to the region from Iraq led a renewal of its religious institutions and opened a number of new schools in villages and small towns.[viii] This trend served to strengthen links between Jabal ‘Amil and Najaf and ensure that from a young age Muruwwah was destined to study there. However, despite his father’s prestige, the family’s financial situation was not secure. Indeed, in 1912, Muruwwah’s brother, Hassan, like many thousands of other Lebanese at this time, had left the country and emigrated to South America in the hope of a better future. In 1920, Muruwwah’s father died suddenly, leaving the family in an even more precarious financial situation and jeopardising his chances of being able to pursue his religious studies at all. Eventually, in 1924, following the intervention of Shaykh ‘Abd al-Husayn Sharraf al-Din, enough money was gathered from members of his family to send Muruwwah to study in Iraq.

Once in Najaf, the young Muruwwah was quickly surrounded by a host of intellectual influences in addition to those that were required by his loosely structured religious studies. Many of these were frowned upon or even forbidden by his teachers. In the city’s book market, Muruwwah was exposed to modern literature and poetry through issues of cultural and political magazines such as al-‘Usur, al-Thaqafah and al-Hilal. He was heavily influenced by the work of the Egyptian writer, Taha Husayn and other members of the nahdah movement, as well as the older Islamic reformist works of Muhammad ‘Abduh and Jamal al-Din al-Afghani. Muruwwah was also introduced to the concepts of atheism and Darwinism through articles by Shibli al-Shumayyil. Muruwwah had his first encounter with Marxism during this period too, through a novel by Farah Antun. As a result of these wide-ranging, often conflicting influences, Muruwwah began to have doubts about  the traditional clerical education offered in Najaf and to question where his future lay.


[Members of al-Shabiba al-‘Amiliyya al-Najafiyya (the Najafi-‘Amili Youth) c. 1927. Sitting from right to left:
Husayn Murruwah, Muhammad Husayn al-Zein, Muhsin Shararah, and Muhammad Shararah.
Standing from the right: unknown, Hashim al-Amin, ‘Ali al-Zein. With thanks to Ghassan Nasser]

However, Muruwwah was not alone and in 1925, he joined a group of like-minded students that came together to form al-Shabiba al-‘Amiliyya al-Najafiyya (the Najafi-‘Amili Youth). One member of this group, Muhsin Shararah, strongly criticised the ‘ulama (religious scholars) of Najaf in an article published in the modernist Shi’a journal al-Irfan. Shararah’s criticism caused something of a scandal, but undaunted, Muruwwah subsequently published an article in al-Irfan that supported his friend’s stance.He argued that “[i]t is about time…that we demand of those people who wish to protect religion and persuade the people in its truthfulness that they become men of culture; the culture of their compatriots and their contemporaries”.[ix] His decision to publicly support Shararah led to Muruwwah being rejected and censured by his teachers and many of his fellow students.

The spiritual and intellectual turmoil of this period evidently took its toll, for in 1928, Muruwwah suffered a nervous breakdown and returned to Lebanon. After a brief stay in his home country during which time he met his wife, Fatima Bazzi, Muruwwah then travelled to Syria to study law and literature at the University of Damascus with the financial assistance of a relative living in Argentina.[x] After his studies in Damascus, Muruwwah then lived and taught in Beirut, al ‘Amarah and Baghdad. In 1934, Muruwwah was persuaded to return to Najaf and complete his religious education, and he eventually did so in 1938 thus formally becoming a mujtahid.[xi]


[Husayn Muruwwah with his children, Nizar, Ahmad and Hassaan, 1936. With thanks to Ghassan Nasser]

Political Activities in Iraq

Muruwwah then took a role as a teacher of Arabic Language and Literature at a government secondary school in al-Nasiriyyah, Southern Iraq. According to his son Ahmad, it was at this time that Muruwwah took off his religious garb and began to wear layman’s clothing. He stayed in this role until 1941, when he moved to Baghdad to continue teaching and writing. It was during this period that he became more directly exposed to Marxist texts and explicitly Communist positions. He associated with members of the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP), and one of its founders, Husayn Muhammad al-Shabibi (who had also trained at the hawza in Najaf), gave him a copy of the Communist Manifesto and Lenin’s TheState and Revolution.[xii] Although he expressed an affinity with Communist ideals, at this point, Muruwwah did not yet consider himself a Communist and did not join the ICP, preferring the Pan-Arab-orientated Hizb al-Istiqlal (Independence Party). The tumultuous political and economic conditions in Iraq at this time, notably after the events of the Second World War, during which Britain had invaded and re-occupied the country, pushed Muruwwah to engage in more overt political activities.


[Husayn with Ahmad Muruwwah and his sons Karim and Muhammad Husayn, 1945. With thanks to Ghassan Nasser]

Muruwwah’s engagement with Iraqi politics culminated in January 1948, when he actively participated in the mass uprising against the Portsmouth Treaty known as al-Wathba. He took part in street protests against the treaty (which contained a number of stipulations that infringed upon Iraq’s sovereignty to Britain’s benefit) and wrote critical articles in al-Ra’i al-Amm on a daily basis. During the government’s suppression of the uprising, in which the ICP had played a central role, several communists that Muruwwah knew personally were killed. This violence had a profound impact on him and acted as “the tipping point that pushed Muruwwah towards Communism”.[xiii] Events in Palestine at this time, notably al-Nakba, also served to heighten Muruwwah’s political consciousness and cemented his life-long commitment to the Palestinian cause. It is interesting to note that in the late 1940s, Muruwwah worked at a Jewish high school in Baghdad and left a strong, positive impression on a number of his Jewish Iraqi students. One such student, Albert Khabbaza, remembered Muruwwah as a “progressive gentleman” who “showed no ethnic discrimination” and was a “nationalist who hated the influence of the British in Iraq”.[xiv]Following the events of al-Wathba, the long-serving pro-British Prime Minister, Nuri al-Sa’id, returned to office. Subsequently, the ICP was brutally suppressed by the government and several members of its leadership, including al-Shabibi, were hanged in February 1949. The dead body of al-Shabibi was displayed publicly, something which Muruwwah himself witnessed. Not long after, Muruwwah was stripped of his Iraqi nationality and, together with his family, expelled from the country by al-Sa’id’s government.

A Return to Lebanon and Travels to Moscow

Following his expulsion from Iraq, Muruwwah returned home to Lebanon and settled in the capital, Beirut. Affected deeply by his experiences in Iraq, Muruwwah decided to become a Communist and in 1951, joined the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP).[xv] At this time, the LCP was the largest Communist party in the Middle East with approximately 12,000 members and 50,000 sympathisers.[xvi] Muruwwah began to write for al-Hayat and acquaint himself with other members of the LCP. The following year, in collaboration with Muhammad Dakrub and Faraj Allah al-Hilw, Muruwwah launched a cultural newspaper called al-Thaqafa al-Wataniyya for which he wrote regularly, as well as for al-Tariq.


[Husayn Muruwwah with his wife, Fatima at their son Ahmad’s graduation from the American University of Beirut, 1956.
With thanks to Ghassan Nasser]

In December 1954, Muruwwah attended the Second Congress of Soviet Writers in Moscow as a representative of the Lebanese branch of the Arab Writers’ Association. This first trip to Moscow impressed and deeply affected Muruwwah. He remarked that the relationship between the people and literature that he had witnessed there constituted “a unique interaction unprecedented in the history of humanity”[xvii]. He was struck by how Soviet writers were “of the people” and therefore their essential style was that of realism. Thus began Muruwwah’s long engagement with Socialist Realism, elements of which he began to apply to his writings on Arabic literature. In both al-Thaqafa al-Wataniyya and then al-Tariq, Muruwwah and his peers became involved in heated ma’arik adabiyyah (literary battles) that “redefined the sources of intellectual authority and invested literary criticism with a new sense of purpose”.[xviii] Simultaneously, in a reflection of the tense political climate in Lebanon (and throughout the Middle East) at this time, Muruwwah also prepared for battle more literally, carrying out military training and taking part in armed LCP patrols in Beirut against the CIA-backed government of Camille Chamoun and US Marines that – after the revolution in Iraq in 1958 – had landed in Beirut.

In August 1968, Muruwwah travelled to Moscow to begin writing his doctoral thesis, a historical materialist interpretation of Arab-Islamic turath (heritage) that brought together many decades of study. He returned to Lebanon in May 1970, before returning to Moscow again in 1971, followed soon after by his wife, Fatima. The couple stayed in Russia until mid-1974, by which time he had successfully completed his thesis. Muruwwah’s son, Ahmad recalls that upon his father’s return to Beirut, he gave a bust of the Marxist poet and playwright Vladimir Mayakovsky as a gift to another of his sons, who then displayed the statue in his home.

The study that Muruwwah wrote while in Russia was to develop into his magnum opus and his most well-known work: al-Nazaʿāt al-māddīyah fī al-falsafah al-ʿArabīyah al-Islāmīyah (Materialist Tendencies in Arab-Islamic Philosophy) which has had multiple printings since its first publication in 1978 and been the subject of several book-length commentaries itself. Epic in both length and scope, this enormous two-volume work is the most complete expression of what Muruwwah had described in 1954 as Mashru’ al-’Umr (Project of Our Lifetime), namely a comprehensive re-invention and re-reading of Islamic history from a Marxist perspective.[xix] Through studying the turath from this viewpoint, Muruwwah wanted to “uncover indigenous sources of radicalism to more firmly root the Arab liberation movement in a cultural context of its own”, in his own [translated] words:

Understanding the Arabo-Islamic cultural tradition, in light of [historical materialism], will bring forth the breadth and dynamism of the Arabo-Islamic intellectual tradition. By ‘dynamism’ I mean the power to change and develop. To grasp the heritage this way allows us to grasp its social origins and thus to identify the intellectually and materially productive forces in our history and their struggle with the exploitative classes.[xx]

The book contains a dizzying array of information and analysis that display not only Muruwwah’s immense knowledge of turath but also his detailed familiarity with the contributions Soviet orientalists made to the study of early Islamic history. An editorial by the Moroccan Communist group, al-Tawaju al-Qa’idi, published on the twenty-seventh anniversary of Muruwwah’s death in 2014 aptly described the work as a “scientific weapon in the face of reactionary ideology in all its forms”.


[Husayn and his wife, Fatima on the banks of the Litani River, 1959. With thanks to Ghassan Nasser]

The Lebanese Civil War

When the Lebanese Civil War began in 1975, the LCP was allied to the Lebanese National Movement under the leadership of Kamal Jumblatt, and the party’s militia, the Popular Guard, took part in the early fighting. It supported the Palestinian resistance and believed that Lebanon was a capitalist country in need of a democratic foundation in order to “prepare the ground for the transition to socialism”.[xxi] Muruwwah believed that the crisis in Lebanon was fundamentally one of class struggle. He argued that despite the country’s ostensible independence, it remained subject to a new kind of imperialism, because “the general economic laws that rule in the frame of global imperialism” had not changed.[xxii]

Like most LCP intellectuals, Muruwwah chose to stay in Beirut throughout the civil war. Following the Israeli invasion of 1982 and subsequent siege of the city, Muruwwah was involved in distributing aid to the besieged and continued to write vociferously, documenting the resilience of the city’s inhabitants amidst dire circumstances in a daily column in the LCP’s newspaper, al-Nida’. In the words of the Lebanese poet and playwright, ‘Issam Mahfouz, he became a symbol of Beirut’s sumud (steadfastness and resistance) during the Israeli siege.[xxiii] According to Mary Nassif al-Debs, Muruwwah was also involved in the establishment of the Lebanese National Resistance Front (LNRF) in 1982. The LNRF was a coalition of groups that – until Hezbollah effectively established a monopoly of resistance in the late 1980s – was one of the principal armed resistance groups to Israel active in Lebanon.

Muruwwah’s Assassination

In the middle of the 1980s as the civil war entered its second decade, the LCP was drawn into a bloody conflict with the Syrian-backed movement, Amal. In this context, on 17 February 1987, two men armed with silenced pistols knocked on the door of Muruwwah’s home in the Ramlet al-Baida area of Beirut. Muruwwah’s wife, Fatima answered the door and told the men that he was ill in bed. Regardless, one of them entered Muruwwah’s bedroom and shot him dead. At the time of his assassination, although he was in his late 70s and suffering from Parkinson’s disease, Muruwwah was still a central committee member of the LCP and editor of al-Tariq (positions he had held since 1965 and 1966 respectively). He was also working on the third volume of Materialist Tendencies that he was to never finish.[xxiv]


[Husayn with his wife, Fatima, 1980. With thanks to Ghassan Nasser]

Muruwwah’s murder was far from an isolated incident; on the contrary, it came at a time when, following the Israeli siege of Beirut and the PLO’s forced departure from the city in 1982, reactionary forces in Lebanon had begun to systematically target leftist movements in the country and the LCP in particular came under sustained attack. According to the LCP, in the ten days that followed Muruwwah’s killing, over 40 other party members were killed. Three months later, on 18 May 1987, Mahdi ‘Amil (real name Hassan Abdullah Hamdan), a close friend of Muruwwah’s and another towering intellectual figure in the LCP—dubbed "the Arab Gramsci" by Vijay Prashad—was also murdered. It was a period of systematic violence against the Lebanese left from which it has never recovered. There are differing theories as to who was responsible for Muruwwah’s murder—the LCP itself blamed Amal—but like so many events of the Lebanese civil war, the truth has not been established and his killers have never been brought to justice.

The painful reverberations caused by Muruwwah’s assassination and the associated violence of this period, both specifically within his family and more broadly, are explored in the artwork of two of his grandsons, Rabih and Yasser Mroué (who was himself shot by a sniper in Beirut on the same day as his grandfather’s death and left permanently disabled).

Muruwwah’sLegacy

Muruwwah’s ostensible ‘conversion’ from Shi’ism to Communism has unsurprisingly been a topic of great interest. As recently as 2015, a simplistic and inaccurate account of Muruwwah’s supposedly instantaneous ‘conversion’ after reading the Communist Manifesto in 1948 (in which he is said to have immediately shaved his beard and threw off his religious clothes) was published.[xxv] Before that, Silvia Naef asked “[h]ow do members of…religious families break with this sometimes ancient tradition and commit themselves to an ideological line of thought which is, or at least which appears to be, in total contradiction with this tradition?”[xxvi] Yet, as appealing as thoughts of some kind of eureka moment or a dramatic ‘break’ from ancient traditions may be, the reality of Muruwwah’s life is more complex. Ultimately, throughout his intellectual journey, Muruwwah resolutely “insisted on integrating multiple religious, cultural and ideological stances into a new postcolonial intellectual project”, the linchpin of which was a “relentless quest for cultural authenticity in times of modern rupture”.[xxvii] As Di-Capua eloquently concludes, Muruwwah “was not a deserter of ‘religion’ and an embracer of ‘secularism’ or Communism. If anything, his life renders such categories completely obsolete.”[xxviii] Indeed, when one considers that Muruwwah was at once—among many other things—a Shi’a mujtahid, a Soviet-trained Socialist Realist literary critic and a committed Communist revolutionary, one-dimensional categories are swiftly rendered meaningless.


["The great scholar and thinker, Husayn Muruwwah lives on. The martyr of Lebanon, Palestine and the Arab Liberation Movement.
The martyr of emancipatory, democratic and progressive thought." Palestine Liberation Organisation poster, 1987.
Signs of Conflict Archive, Zeina Maasri Collection]

Muruwwah’s murder was met with genuine shock and he was widely mourned in Lebanon and around the Arab World. The following day, the newspaper al-Safir commented that if the inhabitants of Beirut were already living in moments of great tragedy, then Muruwwah’s assassination was a “tragedy of tragedies”. The LCP’s official announcement remarked defiantly that Muruwwah’s ideas and books would remain a drawn sword in the face of his killers. In an eloquent and moving obituary, his friend and comrade, Mahdi ‘Amil, wrote that Muruwwah was a symbol of the conflict between “the forces of oppression and the forces of freedom, between reason and ignorance”. The Lebanese-American journalist and diplomat, Clovis Maksoud, paid tribute to Muruwwah as a man who had fought tenaciously for over half a century in the name of freedom, unity and equality.[xxix] In the months that followed Muruwwah’s assassination, the Tunisian Marxist, Shukri Bil’id, who in a sad twist of fate was himself assassinated by reactionaries in February 2013, wrote a poem in his comrade’s honour. A short extract from Bil’id’s poem, a fitting tribute to Muruwwah and his legacy, is translated into English (by Nariman Youssef) for the first time:

You are not dead
Author of our journey
Destroyer of sects
And treacherous beards 

The shame of the lie
And the lifeless vision
Have spread across the horizon 

Qarmati - say a prayer
For the umma of oil and masks
Rise
Hussein of the flag
While we - the tired ones
The ashes of the land
With the soul’s permission
Bid farewell to your body

Let darkness
Have its time


[Note: The secondary literature written on Muruwwah contains a number of contradictory claims regarding the key events of his life and their chronology. With the kind assistance of Ahmad Morowah and Ghassan Nasser, I have attempted to present an accurate account in this article, but any errors that remain are my fault alone.]

Further Reading on Hussein Muruwwah

Abisaab, Rula Jurdi “Deconstructing the Modular and the Authentic: Husayn Muroeh's Early Islamic History” Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies, 17:3 (2008) pp. 239-259

Abisaab, Rula Jurdi & Abissab, Malek The Shi’ites of Lebanon: Modernism, Communism and Hizbullah’s Islamists (New York: Syracuse University Press, 2014)

al-Majlis al-Thaqafi li-Lubnan al-Janubi, Husayn Muruwah: fi masiratihi al-nidalyhah fikran wa-mumarasah (Bayrut: Dar al-Farabi, 1997)

Barakāt Qāsim, Husayn Muruwah, kalimat hayyah (Bayrut: Dar al-Farabi, 2012)

Barhūmah, Mūsá al-Turāth al-ʻArabī wa-al-ʻaql al-māddī : dirāsah fī fikr Ḥusayn Murūwah (Bayrūt: al-Muʾassasah al-ʻArabīyah lil-Dirāsāt wa-al-Nashr, 2004)

Di-Capua, Yoav “Homeward Bound: Husayn Muruwwah’s Integrative Quest for Authenticity” Journal of Arabic Literature 44 (2013) pp. 21-51

Gran, Peter “Islamic Marxism in Comparative History: The Case of Lebanon, Reflections on the Recent Book of Husayn Muruwah” in Stowasser, Barbara Freyer, The Islamic Impulse (London: Croom Helm, 1989) pp. 106-120

Mervin, Sabrina “The Clerics of Jabal ‘Amil and the Reform of Religious Teaching in Najaf Since the Beginning of the 20th Century” in Brunner, Rainer & Ende, Werner (eds.), The Twelver Shia in Modern Times (Brill, 2001) pp. 79-86

Naef, Silvia “Shi’i-Shuyu’i or: How to Become a Communist in a Holy City” in Brunner, Rainer & Ende, Werner (eds.), The Twelver Shia in Modern Times (Brill, 2001) pp. 255-267

Staif, A. N. “The Soviet Impact on Modern Arabic Literary Criticism: Husayn Muruwwa's Concept of the "New Realism"” Bulletin (British Society for Middle Eastern Studies) Vol. 11, No. 2 (1984), pp. 156-171

Tamari, Steve “Reclaiming the Islamic Heritage: Marxism and Islam in the Thought of Husayn Muruwah” Arab Studies Journal Vol. 3. No. 1 (Spring 1995) pp. 121-129

Yāghī, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Duktūr Ḥusayn Murūwah, adīban nāqidan (ʿAmmān: Dār al-Bashīr, 1998

Younes, Miriam “A Tale of Two Communists: The Revolutionary Projects of the Lebanese Communists Husayn Muruwwa and Mahdi ‘Amil” Arab Studies Journal Vol. 14 No. 1 (Spring 2016) pp. 98-116

Bibliography of Husayn Muruwwah:

Ma’a al-Qāfilah (Bayrūt: Dār Bayrūt, 1952)

Qaḍāyā Adabiyyah (al-Qahira: Dār al-Fikr, 1956)

al-Thawrah al-‘Irāqiyyah (1958)

Dirāsāt naqīyah fi ḍaw' al-manhaj al-wāqiʻī (1965)

al-Nazaʿāt al-māddīyah fī al-falsafah al-ʿArabīyah al-Islāmīyah (Bayrūt: Dār al-Farābī, 1978)

Dirāsāt fī al-islām (Bayrūt: Dār al-Fārābī, 1980)

Fī al-turāth wa-al-sharīʿah (ʿAdan: Dār al-Hamdānī, 1984)

Turāthunā, kayfa naʿrifuh (Bayrūt: Muʾassasat al-Abḥāth al-ʿArabīyah, 1985)

Wulidtu shaykhan wa-amūtu ṭiflan: sīrah dhātīyah fī ḥadīth ajrāhu maʿahu (Bayrūt: Dār al-Farābī, 1990)

Dirāsāt fī al-fikr wa-al-adab (Bayrūt: Dār al-Fārābī, 1993)



[i] There are several other transliterations of his name used including Morowah, Mroue, Mroueh, Murawwa, Muruwah, Mrowa, Muroeh and Mrouweh.

[ii] Di-Capua (2013) p. 37.

[iii] Husayn Muruwwah, “Husayn Muruwwah ‘an ayyam al-harb wa-l-hisar: lam ‘ustati’ al-hayat dun ‘an aktub” al-Nida’, 7 November 1982. Quoted in Miriam Younes, “A Tale of Two Communists: The Revolutionary Projects of the Lebanese Communists Husayn Muruwwa and Mahdi ‘Amil” Arab Studies Journal Vol. 14 No. 1 (Spring 2016) p. 100.

[iv] 1910 is his official date of birth but according to Muruwwah, his father told him that he had actually been born in 1908. Husayn Muruwwah, Wulidtu shaykhan wa-amūtu ṭiflan: sīrah dhātīyah fī ḥadīth ajrāhu maʿahu (Bayrūt: Dār al-Farābī, 1990) p. 21.

[v] Husayn Muruwwa, “Min al-Najaf dakhala hayātī Marx” in al-Majlis al-Thaqāfī li-Lubnān al-Janūbī, Ḥusayn Murūwah: fī masīratihi al-niḍālīyah fikran wa-mumārasah (Bayrūt: Dār al-Fārābī, 1997) p. 89.

[vi] The intentional play in words in this title is lost in English, for in Arabic, as well as a man of religion, Shaykh can also refer generically to someone old.

[vii] al-Majlis al-Thaqāfī li-Lubnān al-Janūbī  (1997) p. 90.

[viii] Sabrina Mervin, “The Clerics of Jabal ‘Amil and the Reform of Religious Teaching in Najaf Since the Beginning of the 20th Century” in Brunner, Rainer & Ende, Werner (eds.), The Twelver Shia in Modern Times (Brill, 2001) pp. 79-86.

[ix]al-Irfan (November 1928), quoted in Di Capua (2013) p. 31.

[x] Di-Capua presumes this was Muruwwah’s brother, but Murruwah’s son Ahmad states that it is not known who the money was from and it was not his brother as he had returned from Argentina by that point in time (Email correspondence with Ahmad, January 2017).

[xi] Di-Capua (2013) p. 32.

[xii] Muruwwa (1990) pp. 95-96

[xiii] Di-Capua (2013) p. 36

[xiv] Albert Khabbaza, The Last Tango in Baghdad (Bloomington, IN: Authorhouse, 2010):

102-105.

[xv] Muruwwah (1990) pp. 108, 112.

[xvi] The National Archives, Cabinet Office, CAB132/3: ac (o) (50) 18: report (annex by JIC 'Communist Influence in the Middle East', 21 Apr 1950.

[xvii] Husayn Muruwwah, Qaḍāyā Adabiyyah (al-Qahira: Dār al-Fikr, 1956) pp. 73-74.

[xviii] Di-Capua (2013) p. 24.

[xix] Husayn Muruwwah, Qaḍāyā Adabiyyah (al-Qahira: Dār al-Fikr, 1956) p. 48.

[xx] Tamari (1995) p. 123.

[xxi] Younes (2016) p. 106.

[xxii] Younes (2016) p. 105.

[xxiii] Barakat (2012) p. 110.

[xxiv] Muruwwah (1990) p. 126.

[xxv] Laura U. Marks, Hanan al-Cinema: Affections for the Moving Image (MIT Press, 2015)  p.121.

[xxvi] Naef (2001) p. 255.

[xxvii] Di-Capua (2013) p. 24.

[xxviii] Di-Capua (2013) p. 52.

[xxix] Barakat (2012) contains a selection of obituaries and statements that followed Muruwwah’s death (pp. 103-140).

Palestine Media Roundup (February 18)

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[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on Palestine and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Palestine Page Co-Editors or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each roundup to Palestine@jadaliyya.com.]

The Occupation Forces

The Israeli Forces Have Closed Off A Critical Roadway In The Bethlehem Area
Closing off the route used by thousands of commuters daily was allegedly due to a "significant increase in terror activities against civilians" in the area, most likely stone-throwing.

Israel Has Explicitly Attempted To Get A Palestinian Heart Patient To Spy For Them In Exchange For Treatment Seventeen-year-old Ahmed had a congenital heart defect and had undergone numerous procedures to help fix his heart. The operation was delayed multiple times because he could not get out of Gaza to enter the West Bank for treatment. While at the Erez crossing from Gaza, the boy was explicitly petitioned by Israeli forces to spy on his compatriots for access to treatment. He refused. Ahmed passed away last month.

Israeli Forces Have Destroyed The Home Of A 100-Year-Old Palestinian Woman In The Southern Negev Bringing bulldozers and police officers, the Israelis ran through two "unrecognized" villages in the southern Negev desert, demolishing numerous homes, including that which is owned by the centenarian and her daughter.

Domestic Politics

Israeli Ministers Have Endorsed A Bill That Would Silence The Morning Call To Prayer For Muslims, Claiming Noise Ordinance Violations The bill will soon go before the Knesset, then back to committee, then back to Knesset and back and forth a few more times. This delaying of the inevitable is just another way in which Israel is able to feign democracy.

An Arab Citizen Of Israel Was Almost Beaten To Death By Crowd Of Israelis After Shouting In Arabic To Warn Others After Shooting In Petah Tikva According to the news outlet Ynet, Maed Amar was attacked after yelling "Watch Out! Take Cover!" in Arabic, which led to some believing he must have been a terrorist, prompting the violence.

Foreign Policy

Qatar Has Accused The Palestinian Authority Of Interfering With Their Projects In Gaza The Qatari Ambassador Mohammad Al-Emadi is convinced that the PA in the West Bank have been "hindering" Qatari energy projects, and the resolution to the electricity crisis in Gaza. Israel and Qatar are allegedly cooperating as the PA, once again, can't get over their politics to do what is right for the Palestinian people.

Will Donald Trump's Election Be Netanyahu's Golden Ticket For The Ultra-Right Wing State He's Always Wanted? With all fear of outside restraint on his projects of destruction and murder now waning with the rise of the Trump administration, Bibi is licking his chops over the prospects of the next three years. With the recent revealing of plans for a further 6000 settlement homes, and the signing of the recent settlement legislation, it is evident that the Israeli administration has totally forsaken any hope for the two-state solution.

A Summit Between Germany And Israel Has Been Postponed Because Of Recent Settlement Law The high-profile summit that was scheduled for May has been cancelled because of Angela Merkel's dissatisfaction with the new legislation enacted by Israel's Knesset and Netanyahu's cronies.

Palestinians Are Condemning The Recent Comments Made By American Administration On The Future Of A Two-State Solution A US official made comments that put the future of a two-state solution, long the stated policy of both Israel and the United States, in final jeopardy. The Palestinian Authority Ministry of Foreign Affairs has called the comments a "very dangerous shift" in US policy.

Settlers and Illegal Settlements

The Annexation Of The West Bank May Be Nearing Completion With The Signing Of A New Settlement Law The new law creates a mechanism for the first time for the Israeli government to directly make rulings on the occupied territories, when historically those decisions were made by the Israeli military, and will also help to appropriate privately-owned Palestinian land throughout the territories.

Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions

Palestinian Activists In Spain Could Face Prison Time Over A Call To Boycott Matisyahu Two Years Ago According to Spanish media, one activist could face up to four years in prison just for posting five tweets criticizing a music festival for inviting the American musician to perform. Matisyahu has actively campaigned for the Israeli army and against the Palestinian cause.

The University Of Vienna Is Being Urged To Cancel A Talk That Is To Be Given By Genocide Advocate Ayelet Shaked Shaked has been notorious since 2014 when she called for a genocide of the Palestinian people, which occurred just days before a fifty one-day rampage on Gaza which killed over two thousand Palestinians, with a large number of the victims being children. It seems reasonable that she should not be given even a soap box to shout from.

Law

Israeli Prosecutors Have Accused A Palestinian Prisoner Of Attempting To Bribe A Prison Guard A Palestinian prisoner serving six life sentences and his cousin have had bribery charges filed against them, after a prison guard (who is a Palestinian citizen of Israel) was directed to entrap the prisoners in the bribing scheme.

Israeli Prosecution Has Accused Two Palestinian Prisoners Of Attempting To Stab Prison Guards The two separate incidents took place in both the Nafha and Ktziot prisons. The former incident stemmed from an alleged stabbing during a cell inspection, while the latter occurred in reaction to a prison raid by the Israeli Prison Service.

Economy and Development

Israel Is Dead Set In Their Effort To Erase Palestinian History And Culture Ben Ehrenreich, author of "The Way to the Spring," which chronicles heroic resistance in a Palestinian village, has called Israel's treatment of the Palestinian people an "incremental genocide."

Qatari Doctors Have Been Carrying Out Cochlear Implant Procedures For Children In Gaza At least eighteen deaf Palestinian children can now hear thanks to Dr. Khalid Abdul Hadi the head of the Hearing and Balance Department at Hamad Medical City in Qatar. According to the Palestinian ministry of health, this is the first time that these procedures have been conducted in Gaza, and as Palestinian doctors are being trained to perform the new operation, they hope to conduct many more in the future.

Arabic 

قوات الاحتلال

قوات الاحتلال تعتقل 20 مواطنا من الضفة الغربية والقدس المحتلة فجراً
.وأفاد بيان لجيش الاحتلال، أن قواته اعتقلت 20 فلسطينيا في حملات دهم وتفيش في الضفة والقدس، وزعم أنهم “مطلوبون”، ولم تعرف هوية جميع المعتقلين

الاحتلال يداهم العيساوية وجبل المكبر ويعتقل 9 مقدسيين
اعتقلت قوات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي، اليوم الإثنين، تسعة مقدسيين خلال اقتحام منازلهم في بلدتي العيساوية وجبل المكبر بالقدس المحتلة، على أن يتم عرضهم على محكمة الصلح للنظر في طلب الشرطة تمديد اعتقالهم.

الاحتلال يهدم منشأة فلسطينية شرق القدس
هدمت آليات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي، فجر الثلاثاء 14-2-2017، منزلًا فلسطينيًا قيد الإنشاء شرق مدينة القدس المحتلة، بحجة البناء دون الحصول على التراخيص اللازمة.

قوات الاحتلال تقتحم بلدة بيت امر في الخليل
اندلعت مواجهات بين الشبان الفلسطينيين وقوات الاحتلال، فجر اليوم الأحد، عقب اقتحامها بلدة ‘بيت أمر’ شمال مدينة الخليل بالضفة الغربية. وبحسب ما ذكرت مصادر محلية لموقع ‘العهد’ الإخباري، فإن قوة احتلالية داهمت منزل عائلة الشهيد عمر عرفات الزعاقيق وأقاربه في البلدة، وصادرت صورا للشهيد.

توتّر في سجن "ريمون" إثر اقتحامه من قبل قوات الاحتلال
اقتحمت وحدة "اليماز" العسكرية الإسرائيلية المتخصّصة بقمع الأسرى الفلسطينيين، اليوم الاثنين 13-2-2017، أحد أقسام سجن "ريمون" الإسرائيلي، جنوب الأراضي الفلسطينية المحتلة.

بيت لحم: إصابات خلال مواجهات مع قوات الاحتلال في تقوع
أصيب عدد من المواطنين في بلدة تقوع شرق بيت لحم، ظهر اليوم الأحد، بالاختناق خلال مواجهات مع قوات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي.

طالت العمال- الاحتلال يفرض عقوبات على حوسان
فرضت قوات الاحتلال الاسرائيلي، إجراءات عقابية على أهالي قرية حوسان غرب بيت لحم، ومنعت اليوم عمالا من البلدة من الدخول الى مستوطنة "بيتار عليت" للعمل، كما صادرت سيارات من الاهالي.

إصابة طالبتين وآذنة مدرسة بالاختناق من قنابل الاحتلال بقلقيلية
أصيبت اليوم الأربعاء، طالبتان وآذنة مدرسة الشارقة، غرب مدينة قلقيلية، بالاختناق نتيجة إلقاء قوات الاحتلال قنابل الغاز داخل المدرسة.

توتر في الاقصى وإجراءات مشددة لقوات الاحتلال على دخول المصلين
يشهد المسجد الأقصى توترا شديدا منذ ساعات صباح اليوم الاثنين، اذ شددت قوات الاحتلال من إجراءاتها على دخول المصلين وطلبة مدارس الأوقاف إلى باحات المسجد.

الاحتلال يقتحم مدرسة بسلوان بحثًا عن راشقي الحجارة
اقتحمت قوات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي الأربعاء، مدرسة سلوان الإعدادية للبنين في حي رأس العامود في بلدة سلوان، بحجة البحث عن راشقي الحجارة.

الاحتلال يعتقل ممثلاً فلسطينياً
وقال علي انخيلي والد عبد الله لـ وطن للأنباء، إن قوات الاحتلال اقتحمت المنزل عند الساعة 12.30 ليلاً، وعاثت فيه خراباً قبل أن تعتقل عبد الله، بزعم أنه لم يذهب لمقابلة المخابرات الإسرائيلية، بعد تسليمه استدعاءً مؤخراً على معبر الكرامة، عقب عودته من أداء مناسك العمرة.

السياسة الداخلية

الكنيست يرفض التحقيق بضلوع فلسطينيين في الحرائق
رفض الكنيست الإسرائيلي طلبا قدّمه النائب العربي يوسف جبارين لتشكيل لجنة تحقيق برلمانية في اتهامات رئيس الحكومة بنيامين نتنياهو ووزرائه للمواطنين الفلسطينيين بالضلوع في إضرام الحرائق التي اجتاحت إسرائيل في نوفمبر/تشرين الثاني الماضي.

النواب العرب يعيشون احدى اسوأ دورات الكنيست
يؤكد النواب العرب العالقون بين مطالبتهم بحقهم بتمثيل الفلسطينيين ومواقفهم الرافضة لسياسات الدولة الاسرائيلية انهم يعيشون "احدى اسوأ دورات" الكنيست بوجود حكومة بنيامين نتانياهو اليمينية التي تزداد تطرفا يوما بعد يوم.

الكنيست الإسرائيلي يصوت على قانون منع "أذان الفجر" بالمساجد الأربعاء
ذكرت صحيفة "يسرائيل هايوم" الإسرائيلية، أن الكنيست الإسرائيلي سيناقش قانون "منع الأذان" بعد غد الأربعاء، بعد تعديله من جانب اللجنة الوزارية لشئون القانون بالحكومة الإسرائيلية، التي صادقت عليه أمس الأحد.

حماس تدعو لضرورة توفير بيئة قانونية سليمة للانتخابات
اجتمع وفد من لجنة الانتخابات المركزية برئاسة رئيسها حنا ناصر اليوم الأربعاء مع قيادات من حركة المقاومة الإسلامية (حماس) في غزة لبحث إجراء الانتخابات البلدية التي سبق أن حددت حكومة الوفاق الوطني مايو المقبل موعدا لها.

«دحلان» يعلن انطلاق «تيار فتح الإصلاحى» من مصر الأربعاء
يستضيف فندق «الماسة» بالقاهرة، الأربعاء، والخميس، مؤتمرا إعلاميا وورشة عمل للقيادي المفصول من حركة «فتح»، محمد دحلان وأنصاره، لبحث آلية ترتيب البيت «الفتحاوى» الداخلي، ومناقشة عمل ما يسمى «التيار الإصلاحى» لـ«فتح»، خلال الفترة المقبلة والتعاون مع حركة «حماس»، لإجراء الانتخابات المحلية، وبحث عمل المجلس الشبابي.

السياسة الخارجية

حماس تشيد بدور قطر وتركيا في عمليات الإعمار وتصف انتقادات فتح لهما بـ «المغرضة»
يواصل السفير محمد العمادي، رئيس اللجنة القطرية لإعادة إعمار قطاع غزة، زيارته للمناطق الفلسطينية، التي تخللها لقاء مسؤولين كبار في السلطة الفلسطينية في مدينة رام الله، وافتتاح عدة مشاريع إعمار في القطاع. ودافعت حركة حماس عن دور كل من قطر وتركيا في دعم القطاع، وانتقدت بشدة بيانا لحركة فتح، وجه انتقادات للدولتين.

(فلسطين النيابية) تطالب بتعليق عضوية الكنيست الإسرائيلي بالبرلمان الدولي
وقال رئيس اللجنة النائب يحيى السعود انه على اثر قرار الذي اصدرته المؤسسة التشريعية الاسرائيلية مؤخرا والمتعلق باصدار قانون اسمته قانون تسوية الاراضي والذي يجيز للحكومة القائمة باحتلال اراضي الغير بالقوة والاستيلاء على ممتلكات فلسطينية خاصة، قامت اللجنة بتقديم مبادرة تتضمن قيام مجلس النواب وبالتنسيق مع المجلس الوطني الفلسطيني للمطالبة بتعليق عضوية «الكنسيت» بالبرلمان الدولي ووقف انشطته التشريعية، لحين إلغاء هذا القرار العنصري والمتعارض مع القرارات والقوانين الدولية.

قمة «ترامب - نتنياهو»: واشنطن تتراجع عن حل الدولتين.. وتبحث نقل سفارتها إلى القدس.. وإيران هدف مشترك
التقي رئيس الوزراء الإسرائيلي بنيامين نتنياهو أمس، الأربعاء، الرئيس الأمريكي دونالد ترامب، في أول لقاء يجمعهما بعد تولي ترامب رسميا مهام منصبه، الشهر الماضي، بعد ساعات من إعلان مفاجئ لمسؤول كبير في الإدارة الأمريكية أمس الأول، الثلاثاء، أن واشنطن لم تعد متمسكة بحل الدولتين كأساس للتوصل إلى اتفاق سلام بين إسرائيل والفلسطينيين، في تعارض مع الثوابت التاريخية للولايات المتحدة في هذا الشأن، ما أثار اعتراضات السلطة الفلسطينية والأمم المتحدة.

مستشار سابق لنتنياهو يقول إن نتنياهو سيركز خلال زيارته على الملفين الفلسطيني والإيراني
يجتمع رئيس الحكومة الاسرائيلية بنيامين نتنياهو الليلة في واشنطن مع وزير الخارجية الأمريكي ريكس تلرسون، قبل أن يجتمع الأربعاء بالرئيس الأمريكي دونالد ترامب في البيت الأبيض.

عودة: الخارجية المكسيكية دعت إسرائيل لإلغاء قانون التسوية
أكد رئيس دائرة امريكا اللاتينية، في مفوضية العلاقات الدولية بحركة فتح، الدكتور محمد عودة، أن وزارة الشؤون الخارجية المكسيكية دعت الحكومة الإسرائيلية إلى إلغاء "قانون التسوية"، والتصرف وفقا لقرارات الأمم المتحدة ذات الصلة، خاصة قرار مجلس الأمن 2334.

إسرائيل سحبت سفيرها من مصر لأسباب أمنية
أكد جهاز الاستخبارات الإسرائيلية الثلاثاء أن إسرائيل سحبت مؤقتا سفيرها في مصر ديفد غوفرين بسبب مخاوف أمنية، حيث يعمل السفير حاليا من مقر وزارة الخارجية الإسرائيلية في القدس.

الخارجية تدعو إدارة ترامب للتمسك بحل الدولتين
رأت وزارة الخارجية انه اذا ما صدقت التسريبات الصحفية التي نسبت الى مصدر مسؤول في البيت الأبيض بتراجع إدارة ترامب عن تبني حل الدولتين، فهذا يعني نجاح أول وفوري لنتنياهو حتى قبل بدء المشاورات مع الرئيس الأمريكي وحاشيته، ما من شأنه أن يعزز وضع نتنياهو في تلك المحادثات.

موغيريني: الاتحاد الأوربي لن ينقل سفارته إلى القدس
قالت مفوضة السياسة الخارجية في الاتحاد الأوربي، فيديريكا موغيريني، إن الاتحاد الاوروبي يدعم حل الدولتين دولة فلسطين ودولة اسرائيل، وسيبقي سفارته في تل ابيب ولن ينقلها إلى القدس.

الخارجية الفلسطينية يجب فرض عقوبات دولية على البنوك الإسرائيلية المتورطة في دعم الاستيطان
أدانت وزارة الخارجية الفلسطينية بأشد العبارات تورّط دولة الاحتلال في عملية إعطاء شركة «أمانا الاستيطانية» قروضاً مالية من أحد البنوك الإسرائيلية مقابل رهن أراضٍ فلسطينية خاصة في الضفة الغربية المحتلة، وذلك عبر توجيهات صريحة من وزارتي المالية والإسكان كما جاء في الإعلام العبري.

قانون

لجنة الحريات بالنقابة : 40 انتهاكا من الاحتلال وبداية خطرة على الصحفيين في غزة
كشفت نقابة الصحفيين الفلسطينيين عن اشكال وتنوعات حديثة في الانتهاكات التي ترتكبها قوات الاحتلال الاسرائيلي بحق الحالة الفلسطينية.

أسرى فلسطين: 51 أسيرة في السجون بظروف قاسية
وأوضح الباحث رياض الأشقر الناطق الإعلامي للمركز أن الاحتلال يعزل الأسيرات بشكل كامل في سجني "هشارون والدامون" في ظروف قاسية، وأنهن يتعرضن لكل أشكال الانتهاك والتنكيل، مشيرا أن الاحتلال أصدر مؤخرا العديد من الأحاكم بحقهن، ويوجد في سجن الدامون 9 أسيرات يقبعن في غرفتين، بينما في سجن هشارون يقبع 42 أسيرة.

هيئة فلسطينية لـ24: إسرائيل تمارس القتل ضد الأسرى
أكدت هيئة شؤون الأسرى والمحررين الفلسطينية، أن استشهاد الأسير الفلسطيني محمد الجلاد في سجون الاحتلال الإسرائيلي، تمثل جريمة ضد الإنسانية، تتوجب أن يسعى المجتمع الدولي لوضع حداً للجرائم الإسرائيلية بحق الأسرى.

فلسطين اليوم - أسرى "هداريم" يعانون من نقص الملابس والأغطية الشتوية
يعاني أسرى سجن "هداريم" من نقص في الملابس والأغطية الشتوية. واشتكى الأسرى لمحامي هيئة شؤون الأسرى والمحررين يوسف نصاصرة، من عدم سماح إدارة السجن لذويهم من إدخال الملابس والأغطية الشتوية لهم خلال الزيارات، حيث يعاني الأسرى في معظم الغرف من نقص فيها.

اقتصاد وتنمية

البحر الميت: “أملاح الضفة الغربية” تستقبل وفدا من “بال تريد”
زار وفد من مركز التجارة الفلسطيني “بال تريد”، مقر شركة “أملاح الضفة الغربية” في منطقة البحر الميت، حيث بحث مع ادارتها آفاق التعاون لجهة الاستفادة من برامج المركز في ترويج الصادرات الفلسطينية. وكان في استقبال الوفد، مديرها العام حسام الحلاق، ومديرها التسويقي منذر حمدان، حيث تم بحث عدد من المسائل ذات الاهتمام المشترك.

"إعمار غزة" تبدأ إعادة إعمار مستشفى الوفاء
بدأت الهيئة العربية الدولية لإعمار غزة مشروع إعادة إعمار مستشفى الوفاء للتأهيل الطبي والجراحات التخصصية، حيث سلمت صباح اليوم شركة المقاولات المنفذة لموقع المشروع الجديد في وسط مدينة غزة بمجمع أبو خضرة سابقا.

غرق 20 منزلاً في غزة بفعل الأمطار
تسببت مياه الأمطار الغزيرة التي تساقطت منذ الليلة الماضية، بغرق نحو 20 منزلا في مناطق متفرقة بقطاع غزة. وأفادت مصادر محلية جنوب القطاع، بأن طواقم الدفاع المدني عملت على إجلاء ثلاث عائلات غرقت منازلها قرب منطقة النجيلي غرب رفح، بسبب تجمع مياه الأمطار.

سلطة الطاقة تحذر من توقف محطة كهرباء غزة
حذرت سلطة الطاقة في قطاع غزة من توقف محطة كهرباء غزة بدعوى اعادة فرض كامل الضرائب على اسعار الوقود الخاص بالمحطة.

عنف المستوطنين

منح مستوطنين قروضاً مقابل رهن أراضٍ فلسطينية خاصة
منح مصرف إسرائيل أموالاً لشركة "أمانا" الاستيطانية، مقابل رهن أراضٍ بملكية فلسطينية خاصة، حيث استخدمت هذه الأموال لإقامة مبانٍ في البؤرتين الاستيطانيتين العشوائيتين "عمونا" و"ميغرون".

متطرفون يهود يواصلون اقتحاماتهم للمسجد الأقصى في القدس المحتلة
واصل متطرفون يهود اقتحاماتهم للمسجد الأقصى داخل البلدة القديمة من القدس المحتلة عن طريق باب المغاربة وبحراسة شديدة من شرطة الاحتلال الإسرائيلي وقواتها الخاصة بينما حاول عدد من المتطرفين إقامة طقوس تلمودية داخل المسجد. واقتحم المتطرفون المسجد بلباس تلمودي تقليدي فيما كان بينهم عدد من الحاخامات المتطرفين.

إصابة فلسطينييْن بعملية طعن في بئر السبع
أصيب فلسطينيان في مدينة بئر السبع جراء طعنهما في أحد شوارع المدينة من دون معرفة الأسبابغرد النص عبر تويتر. وقالت الشرطة الإسرائيلية إنها فتحت تحقيقا لمعرفة ملابسات الحادث، بينما أشارت مصادر إعلامية إلى أن مستوطنا نفذ الهجوم.

الحركة العالمية لمقاطعة إسرائيل وسحب الاستثمارات منها وفرض العقوبات عليها

حركة المقاطعة تستعد لتنظيم أسبوع مقاومة «الأبارتهايد»
تواصل حركة مقاطعة "إسرائيل" وسحب الاستثمارات منها الـ"BDS" بالتعاون والتنسيق مع كافة حركات المقاطعة المحلية والعربية والدولية، استعداداتها لتنظيم أسبوع مقاومة الأبارتهايد، وذلك في الفترة الواقعة ما بين الثامن والتاسع عشر من آذار المقبل.

ناشطون يقاطعون سفيرا إسرائيليا بجامعة أميركية
قالت صحيفة يديعوت أحرونوت الإسرائيلية إن ناشطي حركة المقاطعة العالمية "بي دي أس" قاطعوا السفير الإسرائيلي في الأمم المتحدة داني دانون أثناء محاضرة له في جامعة كولومبيا بولاية نيويورك، بينما نقل موقع إخباري إسرائيلي أن رئيس الحكومة الأسترالية الأسبق بوب هوك شن هجوما شديدا على تل أبيب بسبب سياسة الاستيطان.

فلسطينيون يقاومون قانون "التسوية" من خلال مقاطعة البضائع الإسرائيلية
رغم إعاقتها الحركية، أصرت بثينة أبو جراد (42 عاما) من سكان مدينة طولكرم شمال الضفة الغربية، على المجيء إلى مدينة رام الله وسط الضفة والمشاركة بتظاهرة ضد قانون التسوية وشرعنه المستوطنات الذي أقره الكنيست الإسرائيلي (البرلمان) أخيراً، وتجديد مقاطعة إسرائيل وبضائعها، والتي شارك فيها المئات من الفلسطينيين اليوم السبت.

قاطَعوا إسرائيل- نشطاء إسبان يواجهون أحكاما بالسجن
يواجه مجموعة من النشطاء الاسبان احكاما بالسجن الفعلي تصل مدتها الى اربعة اعوام أو اكثر بسبب مشاركتهم في فعاليات الحملة الدولية لمقاطعة اسرائيل وفرض العقوبات عليها المعروفة باسم (BDS).

Maghreb Media Roundup (February 19)

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[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on the Maghreb and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Maghreb Page Editors or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week's roundup to maghreb@jadaliyya.com by Tuesday night of every week]

Algeria

Algeria free of landmines Algeria has officially declared itself free of landmines, meeting the nation’s obligations from the Ottawa conference.

Un chercheur algérien fait une percée dans la lutte contre le cancer et… l’exploration de la planète Mars Algerian scientist Noureddine Melikchi has recently discovered a method of analysis using lasers, which may revolutionize research on the cure for ovarian cancer, as well as the exploration of the planet Mars.

Cinéma/Bientôt un film sur Matoub Lounes Algerian film director Bachir Derrais will be dedicating an upcoming film to legendary Amazigh singer Matoub Lounes.

Algeria's shale gas dreams are a nightmare for locals BBC contributor Kieran Cooke assesses the shale gas project in Algeria and the limits to developing its fracking industry.

هل عقد الإسلاميون في الجزائر صفقة مع النظام؟ Islamist parties in Algeria form strategic alliances ahead of upcoming elections.

الأحمدية في الجزائر.. خطر حقيقي أم تضخيم إعلامي؟ In 2016, Algerian security authorities uncovered Ahmadiyya networks and arrested many of the sect’s followers. The authorities have been monitoring Ahmadi sect members, who authorities believe are spreading radical religious ideology.

Libya

UN envoy: 'Inhumane things are happening in Libya' An interview with United Nations Special Envoy to Libya, Martin Kobler, on the conditions in Libya as well as possible solutions to the migrant crisis.

La Libye dans l'impasse six ans après sa révolte populaire Six years after their revolution, Libya has reached a dead-end with constant changes in government, a failing economy, and the reign of warlords.

Libye: 700 migrants interceptés Seven hundred refugees were stopped by the Libyan coastal guard on their way to Europe.

Is 'grand political bargain' in store for Libya? Russia’s increasing public support for Libyan National Army commander Hiftar has emboldened his offensive against militias in southwestern Libya.

واشنطن تعرقل تعيين فياض مبعوثا أمميا إلى ليبيا The United States objected to the United Nations Secretary-General’s choice of Salam Fayyad, former Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority, as Libya envoy.

أوروبا تستغل الصراع في ليبيا لتوطين المهاجرين A new clash between the Government of National Accord and the Libyan House of Representatives after the former signed a bilateral agreement with Italy regarding the fight against illegal immigration.

Morocco

Au Maroc, plus de la moitié des personnes actives n'ont pas de diplôme New statistics reveal that more than half of Morocco’s working force does not have a diploma.

Le festival Gnaoua fête ses 20 ans The annual Gnawa music festival will be celebrating its twentieth anniversary this year.

'Intimate' photos capture the daily life of Moroccan women A photo series by Ali Chraibi depicting the daily lives of Moroccan women behind closed doors.

قرى بدون رجال في المغرب Villages without men in Morocco: An Al Jazeera Documentary looks at the economic pressures facing families, and specifically women, in isolated towns of the Atlas Mountains.

تقرير: المغرب أحد أقوى المستثمرين بإفريقيا The Centre Marocain de Conjoncture predicts that development in infrastructure, energy, and services will fuel economic growth in Morocco and Africa more broadly.

Morocco Brings the Western Sahara Issue Back to the AU The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace reports on Morocco’s bid to rejoin the AU and its potential to enhance the Kingdom’s geostrategic goals.

Tunisia

Tunisie : Thala aura sa centrale électrique éolienne Wind power plants will be installed in Mateur, Sejnane, Joumine, and Béja this year.

Tunisie Poésie Ouled Ahmed : Promotion de la culture à l’école Tunisian Poetry Association Ouled Ahmed has signed an agreement with the ministry of education to help promote art and culture in schools.

UN condemns poor prison conditions in Tunisia Following his visit to Tunisian prisons, United Nations rapporteur Ben Emmerson raised concerns over abuses such as overcrowding and torture.

How Tunisia's young entrepreneurs are hoping to boost the economy Sarah Souli reports on co-working spaces in downtown Tunis and their potential to boost Tunisia’s entrepreneurship sector.

فيتش تخفض تصنيف تونس الائتماني لتراجع السياحة Fitch lowered Tunisia’s credit rating due to the retreat of tourism and slumping investment.

منصر يتهم بن تيشة بالوقوف وراء الحملة ضد المرزوقي Adnen Manser, former chief of the presidential cabinet under Moncef Marzouki, accuses Noureddine Ben Ticha, Essebsi’s policy advisor, of being behind the campaign against Marzouki.

Western Sahara

Tu navegador utiliza un bloqueador que impide que esta página funcione correctamente The stories of Sahrawi refugees, and the suffering inflicted upon them by the wall dividing the occupied nation.

Nous devons nous battre pour faire appliquer la loie The president of the Western Sahara Resource Watch Joanna Allan announces that their next challenge will be ensuring the application of the law which excludes the Western Sahara from the free trade deal between Morocco and Europe, therefore refusing to recognize the nation as part of Morocco.

By Letting Morocco Back In, The African Union Ignores Colonisation The readmission of Morocco into the African Union had led some to question the integrity of the Union, which pledged its solidarity to the Sahrawi Democratic Republic in 1966.

Moroccan police expels Spanish photographer from Western Sahara The Moroccan police force interrogated, detained, and expelled a Spanish photographer following his interaction with Sahrawi activists.

وقف الشركات الدانمركية واردات الملح من الصحراء الغربية انتصار للشعب الصحراوي The Danish salt importer Dansk Vejsalt declared that it will no longer be importing de-icing salt from the Western Sahara.

جدار من الرمال والألغام يقسم الصحراء الغربية ويفصل بين عائلاتها France 24 reports that the wall of sand and mines that separates the the Western Sahara also separates families.

Recently published Jadaliyya articles

لمحة من أحداث الحملة الانتخابية في المغرب: مجلة الوضع مع نبيلة منيب Jadaliyya co-editor Samia Errazzouki provides a glimpse of the Moroccan election campaign trail, featuring a speech from Nabila Mounib, head of the Federation of the Democratic Left and the first woman to lead a major political party in the country.

الذاكرة المجروحة Rachid Yamlouli comments on the Moroccan political experiment, the persistence of the Makhzen, and those who have made a lasting impression on the wounded national memory.

Why History Matters in Post-2011 Morocco Susan Gilson Miller offers a salutary reminder of the importance of historical memory to an understanding of the events unfolding in Morocco after the Arab revolts.

Imider vs. COP22: Understanding Climate Justice from Morocco's Peripheries In preparation for the COP22 in Marrakech, Morocco polished the most visible parts of the city and lifted its partial ban on social media, attempting to appear environmentally conscious and politically moderate. In reality, it was only hiding its social and environmental crimes in villages such as Imider, three hundred kilometers south of the environmental convention.

Why Is a Moroccan Professor Being Charged with "Endangering State Security?" An interview with history professor and 20 February Movement participant Maati Monjib, subject to a travel ban in August 2015.

Power, Sect, and State in Syria

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A. Maria A. Kastrinou, Power, Sect and State in Syria: The Politics of Marriage and Identity amongst the Druze. London and New York: I.B. Tauris, 2016.

How has Syria, a country that was deemed “stable” by analysts only years ago, become engulfed in an utterly brutal war? Under what circumstances does intercommunal cohesion turn into sectarian strife? Focusing on the fine line between violence and intimacy in a variety of different settings in pre-war Syria, Maria Kastrinou’s Power, Sect and State in Syria addresses these questions through a multifaceted ethnographic study of Syria’s Druze community, juxtaposed with an in-depth analysis of how the pre-war Syrian state governed its ethnic and religious minorities. Her work approaches marriage as a crucial rhetoric and practice for the making of sectarian and national identity in Syria and shows its centrality in state governance, specifically in the realm of cultural policy. By conceptualizing marriage as “a site of intimacy and confrontation” (xvii), Kastrinou establishes it as a fruitful conceptual lens for exploring issues of relating in pre-war Syria and compellingly mobilises the anthropological study of kinship for an investigation into the making of the political. Focusing on the ways in which intimate relations continuously tread the fine line between harmony and violence, her work powerfully illustrates how the political comes to be forged through intimate and embodied scenes of relating.

The author’s account is committed to deconstructing reified categories like “sect” or “state”; less in order to cast them aside as “mere” constructions than to investigate, within a Foucauldian conceptual framework, the historically contingent and socially situated nature of sectarian difference and national identity and to explore, on the basis of ethnographic data, the lived (and indeed often violent) reality of these notions. A preface, introduction and final chapter frame the analysis of the ethnographic material that Kastrinou collected between 2008 and 2010 and contextualise the findings in light of the 2011 uprising and the war that followed it. The introduction moreover advances a historically grounded conceptualization of sectarianism as a specific technology of governance and representation that is inextricably linked to the rise of the modern state, rather than constituting a primordial feature of Middle Eastern societies. The remaining chapters set out to explore how sectarian identity thus constituted comes to be (re)produced, coerced and contested in Syrian intimate and public life. The book’s first three chapters address this question through a detailed ethnographic account of ritual and everyday life amongst the Druze community in Jaramana, a working and middle-class suburb of Damascus. The second half of the book then moves towards considering how sectarian difference is performed and governed on the national stage, how it is negotiated in the lives of Damascene youth and, finally, how it becomes creatively adopted as an idiom of self-reflection and social critique in contemporary Syrian performance art.   

The rich ethnography of the book’s first half allows Kastrinou to demonstrate how life-cycle events and rituals, including births, marriages and funerals, all constitute crucial elements in the making of sectarian subjects because of the ways in which they physically and symbolically draw individual bodies into the collective body of the community. At the same time this means that the body inevitably becomes a site of struggle for the negotiation of belonging and identity. The discussion of Druze endogamy in Chapter Four brings this to the fore with particular force. By focusing on the ostracization on the part of family and community of a Druze friend who married outside the sect, Kastrinou illustrates how practices of endogamy – so central for the maintenance of sectarian boundaries – always remain at risk of being defied. Endogamy emerges from this case study as a social norm that requires, simultaneously, consent, compliance and active enforcement, and as such continuously straddles the boundary between intimacy and violence.

Chapter Five goes on to trace the ambiguity between intimacy and violence as it plays out on the level of the national. An ethnography of state-sponsored folklore festivals in Syria, the chapter provides an innovative analysis of marriage as a malleable idiom that regulates relations between the state and its citizens. Departing from the observation that most performances at folklore festivals are in fact performances of marriage rituals – generically similar yet nevertheless indicative of regional and ethnic difference – Kastrinou develops a cogent analysis of the Syrian state as what she terms a “state-of-empire” (151-153). Different from a classic nation-state, she argues, the Syrian state “does not attempt to homogenise its ethnic and religious heterogeneous make-up; on the contrary, it promotes heterogeneity and ‘difference’” (151). Her analysis of folklore festivals shows how the pre-war Syrian state indeed spent considerable efforts on nurturing and publicly celebrating ‘difference’ – a difference, however, that was embraced by the state only if framed as regional, while the pronunciation of religious or ethnic difference remained proscribed. Reified in this way, “difference” would be staged at state-sponsored festivals through a discourse of cultural harmony, allowing the Syrian state to pronounce itself towards its citizens as the necessary precondition and guardian of the harmonious coexistence of difference it worked so hard to perform.

The concept of empire allows Kastrinou to highlight the particular methods and tactics of governing difference that enabled the Syrian state to rule over its heterogeneous polity in productive contradistinction to the classic nation-state model. In her usage empire refers to an ideology and practice of governance that seeks not only to manage difference but that “renders difference possible only under its [the empire’s] patronage” (152). While nation-states seek to obliterate difference, the state-of-empire as conceptualized by Kastrinou thus “aims to command difference, a difference that it itself creates as its raison d’être and which it controls in the name of empire” (152). Kastrinou accordingly reads the recurring performance of marriage rituals on the stages of folklore festivals as the controlled performance of such imperially nurtured and reified difference. Through such performances the Syrian state effectively stages itself as the guardian and patron of all unions within the nation, she argues, and in this way reinforces its central position as the necessary and inevitable precondition of harmonious coexistence in a heterogeneous world of difference.

A more explicit discussion of how this quasi-imperial governance of difference articulates with the enforced Arab nationalism of the Baathist regime would have been welcome at this point. Nevertheless, Kastrinou’s “state-of-empire” provides a useful point of departure for conceptualizing the structures of legitimacy and coercion underpinning the Syrian state, particularly in light of the current war and the breakdown of the project of imperial harmony. As Kastrinou herself notes, the ideology of cultural harmony promoted by the Syrian “state-of-empire” effectively functioned like a self-fulfilling prophecy, according to which any challenge towards the state as the guardian of harmony inevitably has to lead to discord and rupture. In the final chapter, she applies this insight to the ongoing conflict in Syria, noting that the Syrian state is likely to continue to enjoy political and ideological legitimacy as long as the opposition forces do not find an answer to the state’s vision of unity: “The fragmented nature of the opposition in Syria demonstrates that the state’s myth of cultural harmony continues to define its relationship with its citizens in times of war, as well as times of peace” (232). Kastrinou’s analysis thus provides one explanation to what has often been framed as the astonishing ability of the regime to cling to power even after more than five years of devastating civil war.

The last two chapters of the book continue to trace the interplay between violence and intimacy at two further ethnographic sites. Chapter Six focuses on the politics of youth in Damascus, providing an account of how young Syrian men and women accommodate, negotiate and at times defy the authority of parents, communities and the state. Issues of marriage emerge here as a crucial point where such authority is both enacted and defied. Chapter Seven then moves on to investigate the critical appropriation of the idiom of marriage by the Syrian dance troupe Leish (Why). Kastrinou’s analysis focuses on one of the troupe’s performances, entitled Alf Mabrouk (Congratulations), which stages a gender-divided marriage ritual that explores the conflicts between personal desire and social obligation. In the play, endogamy is performed as a social and ritual convention that restricts bodies in their desire for others. Endogamy in this way emerges yet again as a process of boundary making where intimacy can breed violence as it forcefully restricts exogamous desires while enforcing endogamous intimacy. At the same time, the chapter also gives valuable insight into the funding mechanisms and hierarchies of the pre-war Syrian cultural scene.

The heterogeneity of the material covered by Kastrinou offers an ethnographically rich account of pre-war Syrian society, even if this compromises at times the conceptual and thematic coherence of the work. The breadth of theory that the author musters for her project is impressive, though the most central theoretical contribution of the work lies perhaps with the conceptualization of “state-as-empire” as a specific formation of power aimed at governing difference through harmony. Power, Sect and State in Syria thus represents an important work for anybody seeking to comprehend “the covert kinds of violence that pre-dated the current war” (3). By detailing the mechanisms that contribute to the reification of sectarian and national communities, Kastrinou opens up an innovative path for studying the governance of difference from within the intimate spaces of ritual and everyday life.

Last Week on Jadaliyya (February 13-19)

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