Speaking out
By Mowahid Hussain Shah

 

During a discussion seminar in Washington, a Muslim lady queried an elderly Egyptian academic what to do when Muslims are being constantly denigrated. The response was terse: Speak out. This has not been done well enough and often enough.

The year 2011 has seen the epic unfolding of the Arab Awakening. The fervor and fever of the Arab Street crossed the Atlantic and ignited also the Occupy Wall Street movement, which denounces corporate greed in the US. Similar was its impact on the anti-Putin agitation in Moscow. Former US Presidential contender Senator John McCain sent out a message on Twitter telling how the Arab Spring was galvanizing Russia, infuriating Putin who lashed out that McCain had lost his mental balance due to his years as a POW in Hanoi during the Vietnam conflict.

The uprising against oligarchy is basically a fight for core human dignity values. Fittingly, then, TIME magazine has picked the protestor as its “Person of the Year.”

According to the magazine, the protestors are reacting to “sham democracies rigged to favor the rich and powerful and prevent significant change.” Elections are inherently polarizing. They can lead to bitter divisions, as they indeed did 40 years ago leading to the Dacca debacle.

Western polity, too, has been infected by the contagion of obscurantism. America is witnessing a decline of civility in society. For example, Presidential candidate Newt Gingrich had the gall to say that the Palestinian people are an “invented people” (without realizing that the same reasoning may apply to the American people.)

There are 57 members in the Islamic Conference plus a mammoth Muslim embassy presence in Washington, not to mention a US Muslim community larger in size than the Jewish and Hindu community combined. Gingrich got away with it because their over-careful mindset makes such outrageous utterances a cost-free exercise. In striking contrast, when Jimmy Carter ran for the US Presidency in 1976, he publicly endorsed a Palestinian homeland. Compared to King Faisal’s bold stance 38 years ago, the Muslim elites now are swayed more by cash than by conscience. Their docility has been the nest that hatched the egg of militancy.

Clouding the picture has been the Iraq misadventure that devastated the US economy to the tune of an estimated 1 trillion dollars, leaving thousands of US soldiers dead, tens of thousands maimed and wounded, and many others with mental health trauma. It contributed to the crushing federal debt, economic downturn, and diminished America. In 2011 – according to new statistics – one out of two Americans is now living at near poverty level.

The dissent of the Arab Street has accomplished what theArab Elite – with all its size and strength – could not. It has energized grassroots activism around the world. The upper tier may remain shackled and subdued with fear. But the youth-led lower tier by speaking out against despotism – in face of danger and death – is breaking the barriers of fear. It all started a year back when a Tunisian fruit vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, had enough of the humiliation and lit a spark whose flames continue to glow.

 


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Editor: Akhtar M. Faruqui
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