Showing posts with label Terrorist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terrorist. Show all posts

Sunday, March 20, 2016

Polarization in Egypt

The ISIS affiliate in Sinai known as Wilayat Sinai or Sinai Province launched a suicide attack on an Egyptian checkpoint followed by an ambush. The Egyptian security forces, made up mostly of conscripts, suffered their heaviest casualties in several months. The reaction of the Egyptian opposition, after the customary expression of sadness for the fallen, centered around attacking Sisi and his regime. How terrorism  is viewed is one manifestation of the sorry state of Today's Egypt.

Some from the Islamist camp clearly have more sympathy with those carrying out terrorist acts than they do with the victims of these acts be them civilian, conscripts or regular security personnel. However, the majority of Islamists appear to find justifications for terrorism. Conversations rapidly move to definitions of terrorism: USA and Iraq, Israel and Palestine, and of course the violence of the Egyptian Government itself: "Isn't the government itself the bigger terrorist anyhow?" is a standard phrase. 

The so called Pro Democracy camp encompassing secular, leftists and liberal opponents of the Egyptian regime tend to blame all terrorism on the state itself. Many cogently discuss terrorism in Iraq, Syria or Libya and routinely condemn ISIS attacks in the west. But when it comes to Egypt, they absurdly blame the Egyptian Government for ISIS terrorism. The Egyptian Government, not the terrorists are blamed for the collapse of tourism. Admittedly, the Government inept handling of the downing of the Russian plane last year didn't help, but botching up PR is hardly to blame, terrorism is!

The hatred for the Sisi regime by its opponents is so intense that the opposition has lost its sense of balance. Most opposition of the regime can see before their very eyes the threat of terrorism but chose to blame Sisi for it when it comes to Egypt. The fact that the regime uses the threat of terrorism to suppress dissent is met by the opposition with denial of the the existence of the threat!

The George W. Bush doctrine of "you are with us or with them" dominates the discourse in Egypt on virtually all matters. The Egyptian Central Bank's long awaited currency devaluation and liberalization are viewed the same way. To the opposition: it is a disastrous set back, wrong move, badly timed and managed with lots of allegations of corruption and incompetence. The fact that the country's foreign reserves are growing and GDP growth is the highest in the region are dismissed because of an inability to see anything beyond their hatred for Sisi.

The net result is that the Egyptian regime which is essentially a junta that is establishing a totalitarian 60's style nationalist state operates without credible opposition. The popularity of the regime, even though has waned some, drives the opposition into an isolated angry zone. The opposition is angry at ordinary people for supporting the regime. Self hate and depression dominate the Pro Democracy camp. Meanwhile the regime goes on curtailing freedoms and sidelining competing Mubarak era apparatchiks who have become its only viable opposition. 

It's hard to think of places where there could be more polarization than the USA in 2016. Hard until you get to Egypt where polarization has become the normal theme of life. The center, or the middle ground, is nowhere to be found; some sort of a no man's land where few of us stand between angry warring factions. 

Ayman S. Ashour

Thursday, February 12, 2015

On Hate Crimes, War Crimes and Terrorism

Words and classifications help us understand the many events before us. In the Middle East especially, words are of extreme importance and people often get stuck on words as we attempt to make sense of a the chaos that has become the norm the region is living through. The word terrorist is used to describe violence, that many times people identify with its perceived causes. The Palestinian struggle for freedom and dignity, along with the underlying hate for Israel and racist hate of Jews often expressed as hate for Zionism but not Jews, are primary examples where millions of people find the label terrorist applied to acts they either understand,  justify or actively support.

Many of these people look at the brutal bombing of Gaza or the Iraq war of 2003 and subsequent killing of innocent people and cry out "this is terrorism, Israel is terrorist, USA is terrorist" they can't understand why this ugly painful label is applied one way but not the other. 

I would never actually label a state as a terrorist, it may sponsor terrorism or provide material aid to terrorism but a state can't actually in my view be a "terrorist". What escapes many people in the Middle East is that War Crimes, is actually a more serious accusation than terrorism, for war crimes such as the disproportionate use of lethal destructive force by Israel on Gaza is a more serious charge than terrorism. Israel is a state, that has a representative government and an organized army. Clearly the responsibility, it must carry must be far more than a lone terrorist or a mere terrorist gang, even one as powerful as Hamas. For in the case of Gaza, it's Israel that has the obligation to protect the civilians under its occupation. Israel has refused to recognize an independent Palestine State and it no longer disputes any land in Gaza, so under International Law, Gaza is occupied, therefor the civilian population of Gaza must be protected by Israel. The war crimes here are very serious indeed. This is well beyond terrorism, this is war crime!

Come to tragedy of the execution style killing of three young Muslim Americans in Chapel Hill, NC and again people in the MidEast want to see it called terrorism, for this has become the ugliest word one must use. Many voices from the racist right wing in the USA have started crying out, this is just a dispute between neighbors over parking, while millions of others, like me, see it as an abhorrent and blatant hate crime of the type born out of the bigotry and racism espoused by the likes of Ann Coulter and her friends. Hate Crime or a dispute over parking is the battle that is going on in the US social media; for a simple parking dispute would wash the blood off of the hands of the heroes of Islamophobia from across the USA political spectrum from the Bill Mahers to the Coulters and fanatical white supremacists and Christian nation types. Hate crime is a serious charge against the savage killer personally and the discourse created by the likes of Bill O'Riley and Fox News and its  principal owner Mr. Rupert Murdoch.

Was the Chapel Hill tragedy terrorism? Linguistically speaking because it frightens people, for it is terrifying indeed to see people getting killed, so in a way we can see the link to the word terror. Yes it aimed to terrify the Muslim and Arab American community of course, so there can be an argument for application of the terrorist label. However, I see the label Hate Crime, here, carrying far more weight than terrorism, for in terrorism the choice of victims is often arbitrary, accidental where, the very deliberate nature of this heinous crime was no accident. An hate crime, the deliberate selection of three beautiful young people at the prime of their lives, this is hate, in its worst and ugliest form, perpetrated by a human being whose heart and brain were blinded with bigotry. The ugly killer did not aim to change government policy, nor did he have an obvious political goal, he simply aimed to exterminate those he hated. This is a hate crime and to call it anything else would lessen its ugliness.

I wish there is a way the kind of work I've witnessed first hand, and played a small part in, by the Massachusetts Governor Task Force Against Hate is adopted elsewhere and possibly by the Federal Government. The discourse of Fox News, whose hands now are soaked in blood, must be challenged as an urgent national priority and effective US style campaigns against hate must be extended to cover all hate. It must no longer be acceptable for the likes of Bill Maher and Ann Coulter to go spreading hate and bigotry with no financial accountability, for had they espoused their same venom towards other racial or religious groups, they and their sponsors would have been in financial ruins.

Ayman S. Ashour

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Je suis Charlie

I have not seen any of the cartoons of Charlie Hebdo, I will not see them, I don’t want to see them. What Charlie Hebdo has to say about my religion doesn’t interest me in the least. They can mock my faith all they want, it does not matter to me, they can have their heartfill lampooning my religion; I’m not angered and my faith, Islam, isn’t impacted by their words or cartoons. The terrorists who carried out the butchery in Paris and those who hailed or even merely  justified their cowardly act damage Islam more than any of the cartoons at Charlie Hebdo ever can.


By contrast, the so called American Freedom Defense Initiative anti Islam posters spark a completely different feeling in me, they offend me, I feel insulted. The courageous Egyptian American journalist Mona Eltahawy, in an act of civil disobedience, sprayed the ugly hateful posters with pink paint, she was arrested. The New York Metro is used by tens of thousands of Muslims daily, people use it to get to their places of work, kids use it to get to their schools and colleges: here the freedom of expression of hate for my faith interferes with my right not to be subjected to such hate, I can chose not to buy Charlie Hebdo, but I have to use the Subway, it is my subway, my public space, my infrastructure! Eltahawy’s used pink spray paint to signify her rejection of the laws that permitted the hate speech in a public infrastructure, she stood there, elegantly dressed peacefully spraying pink, while a woman associated with the bigoted ad attempted to use her umbrella as weapon against her. Eltahawy was taken into custody and faced a long legal battle for breaking the law, she received wide support from Muslims and non Muslims alike, thousands of people joined her cause, civil disobedience campaigns confronted the hateful ads wherever they appeared. Eltahway refused to pay even one dollar and was prepared to go to prison for her defiance of the unjust application of the laws that permitted hate speech in a public space.


My native country Egypt has blasphemy laws banning the belittling and disrespect of religions. Yet, Egypt has only three sanctioned, officially recognized religions, Islam, Christianity and Judaism. Islam, in Egypt means only Sunni Islam, so Shia’a Islam, which is the faith of well over 100 million people is publicly discredited and belittled. Shia’a mosques are not allowed in Egypt. While Judaism is an officially sanctioned religion in Egypt, anti semitism is rampant and Jews are talked of often with words like impure, filthy and pigs. Former President Morsi lectured his adherents publicly to teach their children to hate Jews, while Morsi is currently facing several charges ranging from spying to jailbreak, there are no charges against him for belittling or disrespecting Judaism. Such charges will never get filed because they would surely bring Morsi only sympathy. In Egypt, the State itself launches campaigns against what it deems to be false religions such as the Baha'i faith. In short, we only ever hear of the anti blasphemy laws being applied when it comes to Sunni Islam and Christianity. Blasphemy, disrespect and belittling of other faiths is tolerated and often encouraged as matter of state policy.


For Egyptian Christians, like most Christians, a fundamental belief is that Jesus Christ was crucified to offer salvation to those who believe in him. Yet Muslims strongly reject every word in this notion, Jesus was never crucified and there is no such a thing as Salvation through belief in his crucifiction. Muslims claim to respect Christianity but, in fact, what is respected in Islam, is an Islamic Christianity, entirely different from that the Christians themselves actually believe. Muslims believe the bible was corrupted and Christians have essentially been misguided..... well if that is not belittling and disrespectful, I am not sure, what is. Similarly Christians do not believe Islam is a religion of the same God and those Christians who politely concede that Mohammad was a Prophet, use the word prophet to mean a sage, a wise man, a man with blessing but not a messenger of God. Manifestly, the belief in Islam is a disbelief in Christianity and the belief in Christianity is a disbelief in Islam. To belief in one faith we reject the other. To Christian ears the Friday Muslim sermon blaring out on loud speakers addressing Christianity is disrespectful of the Christianity actually practiced by the Christians, it is blasphemous to them.  


Back to the West and France in particular, where secularist values dominate; the laws and cultures grant people the total right to chose, and to change, their faith, to state it publicly or keep it private, to practice their faith or not, to gather for worship etc. We, Muslims in the West have gained from this freedom, we enjoyed it and lived it and were able to build our mosques and schools.  In our mosques, we teach that Christians believe in a corrupted bible and Jesus was not divine, thoughts and ideas contrary to Christianity. We teach that Jews have deviated from God and exasperated Moses, what we teach is, in reality, offensive to most non Muslims.
Words such as ‘I am not afraid of retaliation….It perhaps sounds a bit pompous, but I’d rather die standing than live on my knees.’ These were the words of Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Stephane Charbonnier, they carry a religious zeal to them. Just like a Muslim magazine in France has the right to ridicule and belittle and disrespect the beliefs, morality and values of a large percentage of the population around them, others have similar right. Muslims wish to offer sermons and write articles on the evil of homosexuality, a practice that is permitted in the west, why would gays not be allowed to respond. Do I wish for the Law in the USA or France to ban me from reciting Quran Surah 112 in mosques because it is blasphemous to Christianity, for it categorically states that God has no sons.  In order for Islam to exist as a minority religion in the West, it requires the very freedom that Stephane Charbonnier was willing to die for. Like him, I too, I am prepared to give my life for my right to recite my Holy Quran and will not allow any authority to censor me from it. The religious notion that morality is only a product of faith is challenged, not only by the atheists’ acts of charity but also by their willingness to die for the values they believe in.  


Honest condemnations of the terrorist attacks in Paris came fast and furious, the #JeSuisCharlie hashtag dominated social media.  Many Muslims saw the offensive cartoons for the first time and were offended by the work of the dead cartoonist. The #JeNeSuisPasCharlie (I’m not Charlie) hashtag emerged, aided by some non Muslim writers as well. We, as Muslims, need to confront a simple fact; not an insignificant number of us believe that the killing of those who insult the Prophet, be they Muslim or not, is their just comeuppance.  Recall the Salaman Rushdi Fetwa, indeed the death penalty or life in prison would be the likely outcome in most Muslim countries for publishing less offensive material than what appeared in Charlie Hebdo.


Condemnations with "but" or allocation of any level of blame on the victims come across to my ears as indecent and frankly are more disturbing than silence ….  for I’m Charlie because Charlie stood for my freedom to practice my religion as I want to, to recite my Quran without fear of the majority culture around me.


I’m Charlie because I want to practice my beliefs in my mosques, the way I choose, with no censorship by others and I want for others to practice what they believe in away from me, even if it is offensive to my eyes and ears.


I’m Charlie for Charlie’s courageous stance for freedom is actually far closer to my faith than the cowardly act of those terrorists who butchered Charlie


I’m Charlie and Je suis Charlie with no reservation!

Ayman S. Ashour

Sunday, August 03, 2014

The War Against Palestine

The ongoing tragedy of Gaza ignites a mixture of feelings of deep sadness and anguish. Israel’s daily demonstration of brutality and military ferocity fills our screens with images of the sufferings of innocent, helpless people. Civilian casualties are facts of war; however, the ratio of civilian deaths and injuries caused by Israel’s highly trained and well-equipped military is mind numbingly high. While the Israeli Government is indeed entitled to launch war to protect its citizens, it seems conveniently to forget that it also has the ultimate responsibility for protecting the citizens of the occupied territories. Israel, with the support of the USA and the international community, has refused to accept an independent Palestinian State without a comprehensive peace agreement and, accordingly, Israel, is responsible for protecting the civilians of Palestine. Hamas, a terrorist organization, actually has no legal standing and no responsibility towards the people of Gaza, Israel does! What ratio of inadvertent civilian deaths does the Government of Israel consider acceptable? And if, Hamas is indeed using innocent civilians as human shield, the question remains the same, what ratio of civilian deaths does Israel consider acceptable, remembering, that Israel, not Hamas, who holds the responsibility for protecting the lives of the non combatants in the occupied territories.

Naturally, when a defenseless population is being so ruthlessly attacked, any force fighting back is seen as righteous and courageous resistance. While the resurgent anti Islamist wave has caused many in the Arab World to turn a blind eye towards the suffering in Gaza and blame Hamas for it, indeed a small loud minority has actually been voicing support for Israel. Yet, the majority of Arab and Muslim people have again been seduced by the daring of Hamas, they are seen as the only force in the Arab World actually standing up to Israeli aggression and defending the defenseless. Once again, Hamas have become heroes and are now being labeled the Resistance. Alas, it is not the State of Israel that Hamas and the so-called Palestinian and Islamic Resistance are resisting, indeed it is Palestine, the State of Palestine is resisted by an unholy alliance of both Hamas and the Israeli right wing Government of Benjamin Netanyahu.

The days of armed resistance against Israel were the days when Israel said there was no such thing as Palestine, when Israeli spin was all about Jordan being the Palestinian state, when Golda Meir told the world, it was she, who was indeed a true Palestinian, but just didn’t like the name Palestine.  All of this came to an end with the Oslo Accords; Israel recognized the Palestinians as people and the road towards the Two State Solution commenced. The Israeli right wing never liked the Two State Solution and neither did Hamas, both rejected it, both for their own distinct reasons. The Israeli hawks fundamentally believe that any sacrifices made by Israel would endanger it needlessly and they believe that time is ultimately, on their side, much like it has been since the Arab rejection of the 1947 UN Partition Plan.  Benjamin Netanyahu articulated his positions over the years, from the days of his youth, when he went by Ben Nitay, to his years in the opposition as a Likud leader; his acceptance of peace in Government has been nothing but mere lip service, his actions speak of his strict adherence to his earlier beliefs.

Moreover, Hamas, unwittingly but with full diligence, does aid the Likud in achieving their objective of thwarting the establishment of a Palestinian state. It is indeed such a sad irony that the military wing of Hamas, named after Izza’din Al- Qassam, a man whose violent anti Jewish hate in the twenties and thirties contributed to the ascent of Jabotinsky and his more exclusive brand of Zionism; Hamas follows in his very same disastrous footsteps. It is hard not to wonder what the shape of Palestine would be today had it not been for the massacre of Jews in Hebron and Safed. For it was only following these tragedies that Nationalist Zionism dominated the Jewish agenda in Palestine. Likud co-opts Hamas’s words and actions again and again to achieve its racist exclusionary goals.

Hamas leadership is keenly aware of the impossibility of eradicating a state that enjoys vast military and technological superiority and has wide backing from world powers. So, what drives Hamas to continue in a winless fight?  Ultimately it is hate! Hate both for the injustice and for those who it sees as responsible for that injustice and hate for Jews.  Hamas leadership has redefined short-term victory to mean the ability to fight submission to the will of Israel; sadly at the expense of the defenseless people of Gaza. Moreover, under Hamas’sdoctrine, no peace is possible without eradicating Israel, so with the current power disparity, the struggle must continue for hundreds of years if need be. Neither side must know or live in peace and normalcy the conflict must remain open-ended. Today, Hamas’s immediate struggle is against the Two State Solution. Such a strange set of goals for a war and, Hamas’s long-term resistance to Israel translates into immediate resistance for the establishment of a Palestinian State!

Many Arabs and Muslims dream of the re-establishment of Palestine in its full historic boundaries and remain invested in the idea of reversing the gross injustice that befell the people of Palestine. Yet, the sons and grandsons of the those Israelis who massacred the Palestinians in 1948 and burnt their villages following their flight are hardly responsible for the crimes of their fathers and grandfathers. Fact is absolute justice is, not only not attainable, but it is also impossible to define and achieve without new major new injustices.

Despite of their difficult lives as refugees, in the 1970’s the Palestinians used to pride themselves for being the most educated amongst Arab people and boasted about having higher percentages of advanced academic degrees than most Arabs. These days are long gone; the refugee camps are over filled and today Palestinians face crises in education, in employment and in healthcare. Today, the Palestinians suffer a great deal for basic human dignity and are becoming poorer every year.  For Palestine from the River to the Sea is a luxury dream, only the ordinary people of Palestine pay for. It is time for the Arab and Muslim intellectuals to speak up for the people of Palestine, whose lives today are ultimately more important than the land and the historic justice.

Rather than counting the number of rockets from Hamas, Israel should be looking at the ratio of explosive power and destruction and ask itself for how long it can escape international justice and accusations of war crimes and genocide, how long can it work to evade the establishment of a Palestine. Hamas cruelty towards the people of Palestine today, resisting the establishment of an independent Palestine in the West Bank and Gaza to keep the conflict going, hoping that future generations can eradicate Israel, is a crime against the people of Palestine who deserve the best they can have now, today!

Ayman S. Ashour
August 3, 2014



Tuesday, June 24, 2014

In Search of Balance: Al Jazeera Verdict In Egypt Today

A strange mix of feelings of sadness, dismay and anger arise in me as I read seemingly endless attempts from many Egyptians to justify and defend the court ruling against the Al Jazeera journalists in Egypt, here are some of my reflections and thoughts on this:

1. I don't view Al Jazeera Arabic as normal media or press, I view it as enemy state propaganda outlet, it reminds me so much of the Soviet Radio during the years of the cold war, it is pathetic, cheap, non relenting propaganda.

2. Al Jazeera English has many top notch reporters and professionals who have been trying to do a credible job and seem to have more professional more balanced overall editorial management, but they have been used by their Arabic Language sister company mentioned above.

3. I don't believe Al Jazeera English correspondents and other professionals working in Egypt are affiliated with Muslim Brothers, work for them or conspire with them and I don't believe that the evidence against them, I read about in the press, has shown them to be enemies of Egypt.

4. I believe that Egypt is right to arrest, deport and fine those who break its laws.

5. I acknowledge that there are thousands of Egyptian and foreign reporters reporting and writing at times negative and / or highly critical news and analysis of Egypt, yet appear to have not been interfered with, which is good and is indeed a legitimate argument to defend Egypt's position, being focused on Al Jazeera. Yet, the Dutch Journalist, who was being tried in absentia with Al Jazeera staff, appear to have no affiliation with Al Jazeera.

6. It is also very clear that the space for dissent in Egypt is narrowing and we see many Egyptians voices silenced from Bassem Youssif to Belal Fadel and many others. It is hard to deny this as a fact.

7. I have a great deal of sympathy with the view that Egypt is facing a very serious war with a very difficult enemy and that combating the threat of violent terrorism is a TOP priority for Egypt. I do believe that this would naturally have an impact on freedoms. Years in the security industry have taught me the difficulty of balancing issues of security with privacy, convenience and freedoms in general; true in Egypt as it is in USA or Australia.

8. I have a great deal of sympathy with the view that Egypt has always had authoritarian and totalitarian tendencies and desire to curb dissent and the government has had a history of using the worst means to silence liberal non Islamist opposition to protect the ruling regimes, often at the expense of the country itself and its future.  Accordingly, using terrorism as an excuse to suppress freedoms should not be just allowed to happen with no opposition.

9. I do believe it is critical for Egypt, as a state to avoid the collapse that can be witnessed in so many failed states in the Middle East, the examples of Libya, Yemen, Syria and Iraq are chilling and frightening and I have sympathy with the tens of millions of ordinary Egyptians, who are willing to turn blind eye to suppression of freedoms to preserve the State from collapsing.

10. Sadly, I believe that insensitivity by some of the liberal forces in Egypt to the grave Islamist threat that Egypt is facing, is causing them to challenge the State authority. With tens of millions of tired and frightened ordinary Egyptians wanting the State to reestablish its authority, the ill timed courage is resulting in deeper suppression of freedom, with popular consent, this is most distressing of all. My hope is that the vigilance against the excesses of the State would be confronted through means other than the hated and futile street protests.

AA
June 24, 2014

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Sinai .. on my mind!





I have traveled extensively for most of my life and visited dozens of countries from Chile and Argentina to South Africa to Australia and New Zealand in the South and from Japan, Korea in the north to Canada and virtually all countries in between. I have never experienced anything that rivals my journey into the Sinai desert. I'm at a loss for words as to how to begin and to how to describe, as closely as, possible the various aspects of my Sinai experience. I have visited Sinai many times over the last 20 years; so I'm well beyond the initial fascination with the Sinai landscape, this is no passing infatuation. I will attempt to dissect my experience into several strands, the sights, the cultural, historical, political and also the personal and spiritual. The coming together of these strands over a six-day period was intense, I fear losing the intensity and complexity of my feelings should I opt for waiting to be able to write something that is more thoroughly thought through, that could come across more coherently.


I have been to Arizona and Utah in the US many times and have always loved the Grand Canyon, the Colorado River, Zion Canyon and Lake Powell. There is a certain majestic beauty to the desert, the colors of the desert, beauty in the ruggedness and the hard edges and in the quality of light and shadows. In Sinai, deep in the high deserts of Sinai, to the north of Catherine City, one gets similar beauty to the US Southwest but with the added richness in colors, the reds and browns are similar, but there, in addition, are intense black, green and surprisingly sand dunes high up in the mountains. There is not a single canyon, as vast as the Grand Canyon, but there are numerous canyons with unexpected twists and turns. There is no river, but rather massive floods that devastate and rejuvenate. The vastness, that feeling of immense nature around us one experiences in the Grand Canyon is there as one looks to the horizon, but what's more is the intimacy of being fully enclosed within a mountain, this was similar to my own experiences hiking down the Grand Canyon and being on boat in Lake Powell where I felt the canyon walls close to me, and I could see the lines and shades in the rocks and different shapes and shadows surrounded me. I always enjoy wide vistas, but feel more beauty in something closer where I could have that enclosed feeling, see different sides of a canyon, the top and the base of the mountain, all from the same vantage point. In a city, we like the narrow old alleys because we get the intensity of the place, the measure of it, a similar thing for me with the desert and mountains in general.



Sinai, largely, remains an undiscovered place and probably will never be fully discovered, it is interesting to note that in six full days, we only came across other tourists twice. Imagine having Monument Valley or Lake Powell all to yourself for few days and imagine that no one has been down a specific mountain pass before you. Imagine walking on sand dune, high up in the middle of a rocky mountain and see no other footsteps before yours. The ongoing massive floods, earthquakes and the effect of the wind on massive mountains of sandstone mean that Sinai is ever changing, all the time.


Shadows of the mountains before dawn, after the moon has set, with only the light of the stars are breathtaking, I move the warm coarse blanket from my face and become fully awake, shifting my eyes between the stars; the shooting stars distract me, I see them every few minutes. The silhouettes of the mountains and big rocks near by are, crisp before my eyes, beautifully haunting. I cover my head again from the cold and fall asleep, I get too hot, I move the blanket, open my eyes to a new sight, a very different view, only the brightest of the stars are now visible but I could see more of the distant mountains, still no sun, but brighter horizon and almost a clear black line separating the night from dawn, not yet day. The sunsets are amazing but familiar, the predawn, dawn and sunrise are just breathtakingly magical.

Most people think of Sinai as an empty desolate place with little history save for the biblical, and the stories of the Hebrew tribes and Moses. In reality, Sinai has vibrant and long history predating the time of the pharos. Sadly, in Egypt, with post colonial mindset dominating much of academia, there is not a separate field of study of any part of Egypt's history that is not of interest to western universities. So I witnessed, perhaps ten thousand year old inscriptions that no one seems to know much about and receive no interest from Egyptians historians and archeologists, zero interest, none! The Nawamees or those ancient 6000-year-old family graves, predating the pyramids stand totally unprotected from commercial exploitation, alone in total darkness, away from the Egyptian intellectuals and educational consciousness. I feel a strange gratitude for the hated Israeli occupation of Sinai that lasted from 1967 to 1982 for recognizing the importance of Sinai's history. To this date, it is the maps that Israel produced of the history, topography and sights of Sinai that most desert safaris still use!

Sinai stands as the intersection between Egypt, the Levant and Arabia, it had an ancient population that created no temples, no beautiful statues but managed to create a highly advanced legal code that remains in use today.  In their wisdom the people of Sinai, knew that their land do not lend itself to great man made architectural projects that could be wiped out in minutes by flash floods. Today most of the natives of Sinai speak a unique form of Arabic that borrows from ancient Egyptian languages and from present day Egyptian Arabic, most of Bedouins also know another language, not a spoken one; perhaps the oldest sign language in the world, a necessity in a society with an unusually high percentage of deaf and mute. In a country like Egypt with huge pyramids, temples, churches, and mosques, archeologists have their hands full ... who has time or inclination to look for this oral, this living yet ancient history and culture, all needing so much research and substantiation! I wonder if a single Egyptian institution of higher learning has dispatched a single expedition to understand the legal code of the Bedouins, their language or the history of Sinai!

I had the privilege of the company and leadership of a great Egyptian, in my eyes, a true hero of Egypt who is totally focused on the beauty of Sinai and its strong historic ties to Egypt. Samer Samuel Makarious believes that the Nawamees tombs prove a strong link to present day Egyptian culture, from the rush to the burial of the dead, to the annual visits of the dead to the concept of family plots, all of these rituals remain very much in use and are the norm in today's Egypt. Makarious sees the language and the calendar of today's Sinai Bedouins borrowing so much from Ancient Egypt and he chases the inscriptions and the pre Islamic carvings of the ancient travelers of Sinai with a contagious passion. My last two days in Sinai were full of Nabataean carvings and of much earlier simplistic paintings and later Islamic era, perhaps dating to the Saladin expedition across the Sinai to face the Crusades and the Richard the Lion Heart in Palestine. Touring Sinai, or on my case, a tiny part of it, on foot and on the back of camels, is almost a prerequisite for understanding how the ancient people, thousands of years ago, lived and traveled the Sinai. A house is not a house, it never has been, it had perhaps been only a collection of stones to form a shelter, a low height shelter, not more than 20 inches or half a meter above the ground, to protect from the winds during the cold night hours, much like we did during our journey, placing our cloth sacks on their sides, behind our heads, copying what the Bedouins did. Why build something more elaborate that could house snakes or get washed away in the floods. The inscriptions sometimes can only be seen from the height of a camel back or on foot, you'd miss them in a jeep! Makarious confused me, at times, I believed he had a built-in time machine, he could see those ancient people, taking for the shade in the hot early afternoon sun and passing the time, with their little playful carvings, or carving a blessing for one of the ancient gods to secure a mountain pass or performing some sort of religious rites in these strange houses with no roofs! Makarious knew that only one side of the valley would have inscriptions, because that’s where he sought the shade from the hot burning sun in the middle of the day, this is what the ancient travelers would have done too. 

Bedouins to me, have meant those nomadic people that have always been fiercely independent, that never considered themselves Egyptian, even though the Egypt propaganda machine waxed lyrically about how intensely Egyptian they felt, I felt somewhat apprehensive around them, never understood them fully, somewhat inaccessible. Reading Leila Abu Lughed's book about the Bedouins of the North West of Egypt opened my eyes to this amazing society. Abu Lughed's, a Palestinian American woman, lived with Awlad Ali tribes for some two years to produce her wonderful work, Veiled Sentiments. Makarious spoke to the Bedouins in their language; blue in Egyptian is black in their tongue, a word that sounds like to hallucinate in Egyptian Arabic actually means to speak or discuss! It was fascinating to observe how privately religious and observant each of our three Bedouin guides were, it was also amazing to see their discipline and non stop hard work, their keen desire to be back with their families for the Eid celebration, their cleanliness and hygiene, their speed. Makarious took deep personal interest in the Bedouins, loved them and respected them and it showed in their interactions, they reciprocated and that too showed in their care for him. Makarious relationship with the Bedouins was not of the patronizing type; it was genuinely that of an extended family type, a multi generational bond. Makarious more than twenty-year life experience with the Bedouins gave his observations a certain depth, his was not an outsider or a mere tour guide, but rather, was man of deep passion and understanding for the people and the place. While a vegetarian, I had no regrets being part of the Eid of Sacrifice lunch celebration, just seeing how four generations of the same family interacted, their simple ways, their generosity with the little they possess and above all, their dignity. 


I never liked the expression drinking out of a fire hose, but in many ways, understanding the history of Sinai and the culture of today's tribes as Makarious explained them felt just like that. The Bedouins have clear laws and rules that govern their lives. Makarious explained to us how to choose a place for our bodily needs, avoid any flat sandy patch that could be used for rest or sleep, instead always opt for a place that no one would choose for their rest or camp, avoid trodden pathways. Makarious taught us how the Bedouins greet as they come into a place or someone, but not as they leave. Makarious pointed at a small pile of kindling by a thorn brush, to my eyes, it looked totally random, but to Makarious it revealed that a young woman was nearby tending her sheep or goats, so we couldn’t take our lunch break in the area. Suitors of the young woman would leave her gifts near by the kindling, not unlike the ancient carvings of a woman’s foot print, with a man’s near by as perhaps their way of courting thousands of years ago. My brother, a deeply religious Muslim had on-going discussions with Makarious, who is a Coptic Christian about certain appreciation he developed for the stories of the Prophet Mohammad in light of his new understanding of the lives of the Bedouins and of the stories of their travels and habits.  Makarious, frequently, quotes at length from the Quran and Hadith to illustrate subtleties of present day Bedouins and my brother quotes from the New Testament. Stripped to their core, much of the religious teachings are reaffirmations of basic human decency. 

Mid October is the time when the high deserts start to get cold and the much feared sand viper disappears for the winter hibernation, our trip was at the time, where one still needed to be watchful for both vipers and scorpions. The two young Bedouin guides came across a viper in the bushes while gathering wood for our dinner, they trapped it in a mineral water bottle, will sell it probably for less than ten dollars. Seeing that the feared snake was still around, I became extra vigilant, watching for it around the bushes and trees; in the process I saw the variety of vegetation. Makarious knowledge was again encyclopedic, here is the tiny flower of the desert chamomile and here is "Lassef" fruit, which he called desert mustard or capers and here's another bush where the seeds are loved by the goats and the desert trees with their richness serving multiple purposes feeding the camels and warming the homes; the ancient Egyptians burned their wood to melt the copper they extracted from Sinai for the pharaohnic temples. 

The historic inscriptions we saw showed herons and multiple types of deer with long horns, showed what looked like men on camel back playing something like polo or could be warring, showed women dancing and also what looked like ancient Gods, at some point the Nabataeans
 appeared to use a combination of Nabataean and Arabic writing. The Nabataeans carvings were the most extensive, the older, more primitive painting and the newer Arabic dating to the middle ages were fewer.

On the last day, we stopped in what felt like an above ground cave, we climbed up the rocks to get what felt like a covered theater stage, a large area. Ancient people, well before the era of the Nabataeans brought their camels, sheep, goats and whatever other animals they settled with or were traveling through with, here to take shelter from the rains; layers, as much as three meters deep, of ancient animal manure. Recently much of the manure was removed for fertilizers for the nearby cultivation, but one could see the evidence of the depth, high up on the sides. How much history is buried within this manure, perhaps we will never know. High up on the walls of the cave and on the ceilings are ancient inscriptions. Makarious and my brother talked the politics of it all and how this should be protected, I wondered on, in silence unsure of what to think, I hold multiple conflicting thoughts without clear conclusions.

For centuries, successive Egyptian rulers have wrestled with how to deal with the Bedouins, be it in the North West near the Libyan borders, the South near Sudan and Nubia or in Sinai. The laws of Egypt in the modern era specifically excluded Bedouins from military conscription and they were generally recognized as distinct societies from Egyptians.  In the contemporary totalitarian state introduced by the late president Nasser, Arab nationalism became a state policy, so all Egyptians became Arab, Egypt became Arab, so a forced assimilation of the Bedouins into this new identity, a single identity became state policy. Nasser and his successors used the tools of a modern state to deal with the Bedouins and soon, the word Bedouin became almost always followed by the word problem. The tools of state naturally include the carrot and stick, spending on roads, schools and housing, designed in distant Cairo, with no knowledge of the destructive Sinai floods or the Bedouin way of life. In the years since the return of Sinai to Egyptian sovereignty Sinai tourism has seen unprecedented levels of development and many main land Egyptians have taken up residence in the coastal tourism centers, much wealth has been created.

I see the Government of Egypt aiming at improving control over the Bedouins by attempting to de-bedouinize them and it doesn't hurt if that allows for some big spending and the inevitable accompanying corruption. Today, as Egypt battles Islamist terrorism, it depresses me to think of how much of a struggle Egypt security apparatus, be it army or police, will have to go through to learn how to deal with the Bedouins of Sinai. I fear huge mistakes will continue to be made as most Egyptians fail to recognize the distinct culture, customs, laws and languages of the Bedouins, in short, the Bedouins as distinct people and identity. Egypt can learn from how other countries deal with their own indigenous people, Australia, Canada and the USA all present examples; all had their own shares of mistakes; we don’t need to repeat them. Israel next door deals with the Bedouin, perhaps in a more successful fashion than Egypt does, principally because it starts out recognizing the difference in culture and identity rather than living the false lie of one identity as Egypt does.  

It was hard not to think of the politics as we looked to the El Gunna plateau in the distance, separating South Sinai from its turbulent North and seeing some present day graffiti boosting of the power of a Bedouin tribal army, for some of the tribes do live on both side of these mountains. It is hard to not to be thinking of politics when some of the ancient nawamees have been totally destroyed and their stones used for building hotels and resorts, hard not to think of politics, when you can’t help feeling that the Sinai treasures and history are at risk under the control of Egypt. I also found it hard to be dismissive of tourism knowing how many millions of Egyptians have been living off of it. 

Long periods of quietness, total silence save for the sound of the wind or that of the camels munching away on their food, or regurgitating it. I started the trip with my backpack full of all of my modern technology gadgets, measuring altitudes, distance and time; after a while I was only using the camera functions; what's more, I only used less than 10% of everything I carried! I didn't need my watch; I needed relatively small amounts of water to keep clean! I repacked my cloth sack so I only need to access the top quarter, if that. I slept on the ground on a thin plastic matt inside my sleeping bag better than I sleep on my advanced technology 15-inch Swedish made mattress. The periods of reflection in the silent cold pre dawn, looking at the nightly extravaganza that only I was awake to watch, the Milky Way, the shooting stars, the sparkling of the brighter stars, my breathing, the wind, the susurrus of the bushes, occasionally whistle like then gentle again ... we need so much, we use so little, we think so much, yet in reality know so little. Sinai the land of the moon, its hard rugged hostile nature captured me with its beauty, its people. Its silence, captured me its purity and cleanliness … with a new inner me that I reconnected with walking ahead of the camels, climbing the rocky mountains, breathing deeply to overcome a panic attack as a looked at the deep fall below as we climbed the Mattameer Mountain. Sinai today is the result of millennia of struggles against the elements; its beauty is the result of this very struggle. Sinai will persevere , its purity and beauty will outlast all, this seemingly empty land, deprived of life, is in actual fact the land of rich life, it will always persevere 

AA
October 20, 2013