Mubarak, Morsi, and then?


Muriel Muriel Mirak-Weissbach

Muriel Mirak-Weissbach is a political journalist specialising in economic, political and cultural development in the Arab and Islamic world for thirty years. She is the author of two books published by Ithaca Press Through the Wall of Fire, Armenia – Iraq – Palestine: From Wrath to Reconciliation, and Madmen at the Helm: Pathology and Politics in the Arab Spring.

In his famous novel Animal Farm, George Orwell satirized the outcome of the Bolshevik revolution and Stalinism. His allegorical tale showed how a gang of animals had risen up against the exploitative farmer and seized power, only to reproduce the political structures they had sought to eliminate.

Madmen at the Helm Pathology and Politics in the Arab Spring by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach

Madmen at the Helm Pathology and Politics in the Arab Spring by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach

Something similar may be unfolding in Egypt. After the 2011 revolution, in which mass forces mobilized nationally over 18 days and forced President Hosni Mubarak to resign, an interim military government came in, followed by the Muslim Brotherhood, led by Mohammad Morsi, declared winner of the May–June 2012 presidential elections. Now, less than a year after assuming power, Morsi, who pledged to be the president of all Egyptians, is being denounced as ‘no better than Mubarak’, even the ‘new pharaoh of Egypt’. Masses of Egyptians, including many formations that constituted the revolutionary movement that ousted Mubarak, are again taking to the streets this time demanding Morsi’s downfall, carrying posters which explicitly identify him as the reincarnation of the ousted dictator. Some are calling on the military to intervene, at least temporarily, to oversee a transition to democratic rule.

In my book on the psychological aspects of the Arab upheavals,[*] I posed the following question: are dictators, most often characterized by narcissism and other personality disorders, born or are they made? Are they doomed by traumatic childhood experiences and other social conditions to become tyrannical leaders, or are they well-meaning individuals who, once assuming political power, turn into such? Is it the case that ‘power corrupts’?

Egypt, as I witnessed during a recent visit to Cairo, provides a good case study. When he was inaugurated last June, Morsi, a leading figure of the Islamists so long persecuted by Mubarak, enjoyed public support. This was the case despite the fact that the electoral process had not been free from controversy, regarding the procedures leading to the vetting of candidates and the actual voting and tallying.

It did not take long for Morsi to fall from grace, and it was all of his own doing. His first big mistake was to overrule the Supreme Constitutional Court by calling the dissolved parliament back into session. This was the beginning of a continuing challenge to state institutions, the judiciary and military. On 22 November he issued a declaration in which he decreed (à la Mubarak) special powers to the president, i.e. to himself. Thus, all his decisions, decrees, laws etc., were protected from changes or cancellation. He also arrogated the right to take any measures he deemed necessary to protect the revolution. Although public pressure forced him to retract some of these measures, he did not fully receive the message. Instead, he rammed through a constitutional draft put together by an Islamist-dominated rump constituent assembly, announced a referendum and then new elections. Morsi proceeded to fill all possible political as well as civilian positions with people from his party, the Muslim Brotherhood, or, Ikhwan in Arabic. Egyptians call this the Ikhwanization of political and public life and compare it most unfavorably with the nepotism and favoritism characteristic of the Mubarak era. Not only has the Muslim Brotherhood put its people in ministries, but also in leadership positions of businessmen’s associations, religious and civil society organizations, etc. As Mustafa El-Labbad from the Al Sharq Center for Strategic Studies told me in an interview, through this Ikhwanization process, businessmen associated with the Brotherhood are reaping benefits as they did earlier; they are the same ‘compradors, only this time bearded.’

When I asked my Egyptian friends why Morsi was making such egregious errors, jeopardizing the power he and his movement had so long aspired to, the answer I got was: ‘it’s ideological.’ In fact, if these reports are reliable, Morsi’s Brotherhood government would like to introduce a number of demands that can only be understood as issuing from ideological concerns. Among them are the calls for eliminating a traditional Egyptian spring festival, changing the national anthem, removing music from school curricula and the like.

Egyptians of all political tendencies are demanding responsible leadership to lead the country into a new era. This means restoring public order and economic security, and finally introducing institutions of truly representative government. The number of people killed during demonstrations has been rising and the economy is on the verge of collapse. Unless the Morsi regime wakes up to political reality, it will be as readily dispensed with as was the Mubarak regime. Elections called by Morsi for Parliament cannot take place if the opposition, which, though not unified programmatically, represents a secure majority of the population, successfully leads a boycott. And if the economically and politically important governorate of Port Said, which has become a center of protest, refuses to take part, then the elections will be meaningless. Even if the polls were to be held, if only the Brotherhood and other Islamist parties were to take part, and if they were to ‘win’, that would be a Pyrrhic victory, which international bodies would have great difficulty in acknowledging.

What awaits Egypt is something that George Orwell did not contemplate in his fictional scenario: a new revolution. Although it is politically heterogeneous, the opposition can find its unity in a commitment to representative government. Civil disobedience has spread across the country, intellectuals and artists are issuing statements demanding Morsi’s resignation. And the opposition is also wielding that invincible weapon of humor. The most popular weekly television show is ‘The Program’, featuring Bassem Youssef, the Egyptian answer to American political satirist Jon Stewart. Youssef devotes most of his show to biting ridicule of Morsi and the Brotherhood. The 6 April Movement, which was at the forefront of the revolution, launched an initiative to send Morsi to the moon and collected over 20,000 signatures, placing his name on an online competition sponsored by the Axe Apollo Space Academy. Novelist Ibrahim Abdel-Meguid was quoted in Al-Ahram weekly in late February, saying: ‘If he is not getting the message from the demonstrations, and if he is not getting it from the jokes wanting to send him to the moon, then he might get it from the statements addressed to him directly.’ He added: ‘Morsi had his chance, but he failed to make anything of it. His performance shows that he is totally disconnected from what is going on in the country. He must really come from the moon, and he might as well go back there.’


[*] Madmen at the Helm: Pathology and Politics in the Arab Spring, Ithaca Press/ Garnet Publishing, 2012/2013.

Mapping Civil Society in the Middle East: The Cases of Egypt, Lebanon and Turkey


This article comparatively assesses the meaning of civil society in Egypt, Lebanon and Turkey, by utilising the results of a study conducted among civil society actors. In recent decades, civil society has become integral to discussions of political liberalisation. At the same time, there is a growing rift between international democracy promotion through investment in civil society and the more critical literature on the relationship between the two. This article makes three contributions to these debates by comparing the actual experiences of civil society actors. First, it argues that the boundaries between states and civil societies are indeterminate, making it problematic to expect civil society organisations alone to become catalysts for regime transformation. Second, it shows that expectations of monolithic generation of civic values through civil society organisations do not reflect the actual experience of actors in this realm. Finally, it argues for taking into consideration other sources of mobilisation as potential contributors to meaningful political and social transformation.

From: British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Volume 39, Issue 2, 2012

Being a Nonbeliever in a Time of Islamic Revival: Trajectories of Doubt and Certainty in Contemporary Egypt


What is the function of logic in al-Kindī’s corpus? What kind of relation does it have with mathematics? This article tackles these questions by examining al-Kindī’s theory of categories as it was presented in his epistle On the Number of Aristotle’s Books (Fī Kammiyyat kutub Arisṭū), from which we can learn about his special attitude towards Aristotle theory of categories and his interpretation, as well. Al-Kindī treats the Categories as a logical book, but in a manner different from that of the classical Aristotelian tradition. He ascribes a special status to the categories Quantity (kammiyya) and Quality (kayfiyya), whereas the rest of the categories are thought to be no more than different combinations of these two categories with the category Substance. The discussion will pay special attention to the function of the categories of Quantity and Quality as mediators between logic and mathematics.

Samuli Schielke (2012). BEING A NONBELIEVER IN A TIME OF ISLAMIC REVIVAL: TRAJECTORIES OF DOUBT AND CERTAINTY IN CONTEMPORARY EGYPT. International Journal of Middle East Studies, 44 , pp 301-320 doi:10.1017/S0020743812000062  http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S0020743812000062

Anthropology Review Database review of The Society of Muslim Brothers


Lia, Brynjar
1998 The Society of the Muslim Brothers in Egypt: The Rise of an Islamic Mass Movement 1928-1942. Reading, UK: Ithaca Press.

Notes: xi, 328 p. : ill. ; ISBN 9780863722202
Reviewed 21 Jan 2012 by:
Jack David Eller <david.eller@ccd.edu>
Community College of Denver

A fascinating and important study of the founding years of the Muslim Brotherhood depicts it as not at all a ‘fundamentalist’ movement but a modernizing and institutionalized organization blending Islamic values with middle-class and nationalist interests—which finally appears to have achieved power after more than eight decades.

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Reform in the Middle East Oil Monarchies

Considerations of the Nature of Democracy and Reform in the Arabian Peninsula


Reform in the Middle East Oil Monarchies, Ithaca Press, Editors: Anoushiravan Ehteshami , Steven Wright, ISBN: 9780863723230, New Edition, Feb 2012

Oil – essential to the economy of the Middle East – is central to current unrest in the region, and is therefore inextricably linked to any consideration of wider political reform.
This collection of articles features contributions by eminent academics and government officials, through which it addresses issues surrounding reform specifically in the oil-rich countries and states of the Arabian Peninsula.
These oil-rich monarchies are frequently dismissed as having no democratic systems compared to most other regions of the world. However, recent consideration has shown that these countries and states are perhaps not as autocratic as they have traditionally been perceived to be.
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Book Review: The Pure and Powerful: Studies in Contemporary Muslim Society. Reading, UK: Ithaca Press.


Reviewed 11 Sep 2011 by:
Jack David Eller
Reviewed on: Anthropology Review Database

1998 The Society of the Muslim Brothers in Egypt: The Rise of an Islamic Mass Movement 1928-1942. Reading, UK: Ithaca Press.

ABSTRACT:    Through detailed observation and description of several ritual contexts in Egypt, the author challenges essentializing and exoticizing accounts of Islam and shows that popular and scholarly religion are integrated, as well as religion and the wider society.


“What the world does not need,” writes Daniel Varisco, “is yet another book that assumes Islam can be abstracted out of evolving cultural contexts and neatly essentialized into print without repeating the obvious or glossing over the obtuse” (2005: 1). Indeed, despite worthy efforts like Geertz’ Islam Observed, the anthropological study of Islam has, for many critics, suffered from two fatal lacks—not enough Islam and not enough culture. For instance, Gabriele Marranci comments that during his postgraduate work he “was surprised how Islam, as religion, was missing from ethnographies devoted to Muslims” (2008: 35). At the same time, because Islam is so easily and frequently essentialized, the cultural—and therefore culturally diverse—side of Muslim life is also often missing (Geertz 1968 and Gilsenan 1982, for instance, notwithstanding). And many of the anthropological attempts to grapple with Islam have failed rather miserably; Ernest Gellner’s influential Muslim Society is one book that has been subjected to savage criticism. Varisco adds that “If there is any one book by an anthropologist purporting to explain Islam or Muslim society that should be avoided because it is so summarily patched together and indignantly indifferent to available scholarship, that text could easily be Ernest Gellner’s Muslim Society” (2005: 53).     This is not to say that anthropology has made no contribution to the study of Islamic societies. Recent explorations on the Islamic practice of halal by Johan Fischer or of Muslim dress and style by Emma Tarlo (both reviewed elsewhere in ARD) have shown that anthropology can shed light on Muslim life. However, patches of darkness still remain, personified, unhappily, by Gellner who also opined that “I think it is fair to say that no secularization has taken place in the world of Islam: that the hold of Islam over its believers is as strong, and in some ways stronger, now than it was 100 years ago. Somehow or other Islam is secularization-resistant” (1991: 2) when there are many important instances of Islamic secularism, not to mention that ‘secularism’ does not necessarily mean the same thing in Muslim societies as it means in the Christian-dominated West (Eller 2010).

These observations provide the reasons why Nadia Abu-Zahra’s study of Muslim society in Egypt, while not a brand new publication, is so timely and significant. Originally published in 1997 and released in paperback in 1999, Abu-Zahra brings unique qualifications and perspectives to the project, in which she provides detailed data to refute the generalizing and exoticizing claims of Gellner, Gilsenan, and others. As she explains in the first sentence of the introduction, her book “examines the beliefs and practices of the common Muslim as part of the intricate web of social relationships which involve the ‘ulama (the traditionally educated scholars), government Islamic institutions, Sufis and the people of the city and country, both men and women” (p. xi). She is overtly writing against “the existing ethnography on Muslim society” which “is full of assumptions which oversimplify complex social relationships and conceal issues worthy of study” (xi), particularly Gellner’s claim that textual and official Islam is detached from popular and practiced Islam. Rather, in the best possible contemporary anthropological tradition, she insists that we “need to know how a specific Islamic prescription is variously enacted and integrated in different social conditions in diverse Muslim societies” (p. xii).

Read the rest of the review here

20% discount on the The Sociology of Islam: Secularism, Economy and Politics


It is our pleasure to announce the publication of our latest title, The Sociology of Islam: Secularism, Economy and Politics by Dr Tugrul Keskin, published in English for the first time by the help of the Centre for Islamic Contributions to Civilization (Qatar). If you wish to order the book from our website, please visit www.ithacapress.co.uk and enter the promotional code VOY2S0PI at checkout. ORDER HERE 

If you wish to receive a review or desk copy, please kindly send us your request to arashhejazi@garnetpublishing.co.uk.
Edited by Dr Tugrul Keskin
Hardback, 520pp, 235 x 155mm
Ithaca Press
ISBN: 9780863723711

Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!: And Other Snapshots of Life in Contemporary Egypt


Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!: And Other Snapshots of Life in Contemporary Egypt

Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!: And Other Snapshots of Life in Contemporary Egypt

What happened to a former Miss Egypt when she took to wearing the veil under her pilot’s cap? Who are the young people posting videos of policemen torturing crime suspects? Where do Coptic Christians celebrate the Holy Family’s journey to Egypt? Why is President Hosni Mubarak still ruling Egypt, virtually uncontested, after more than 25 years in power? In Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!;, author Sanna Negus answers these questions and more, taking the reader on a journey into 21st-century Egypt. As a reporter, Ms Negus witnessed Egypt’s political opening after the Iraq war, the subsequent quelling of the Cairo Spring, and the growing influence of the Muslim Brotherhood. In addition to politics, the author discusses the thorny issue of relations between the sexes, listens to Copts’ grievances about the worsening relations between Muslims and Christians, and reveals an appalling human rights record. On the brighter side, she also visits oriental dancers and authors who defy censorship. While Egyptians joke about the longevity of their president, there is no doubt that Egypt is a nation waiting for a new, uncertain dawn. “Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!” relies heavily on primary sources, on the words and experiences of extraordinary Egyptian men and women, as well as the author’s personal encounters as a Western woman. Intimate stories are woven together with historical narratives and news events. This is the other side of Egypt, an intriguing modern nation a long way removed from the pyramids and temples visited by most visitors to the country.

Read reviews:

Walk like an Egyptian: A review on the book Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!

MAGIC, EGYPT, AND STING, a review on Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima, Outsideleft

Walk like an Egyptian: A review on the book Hold on to Your Veil, Fatima!

Harvard Panel Calls Egyptian Protests ‘Historic Moment’


By Monica M. Dodge, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Published: Friday, February 04, 2011

As bloody protests continue to rock the streets of Egypt, a panel convened at the Harvard Institute of Politics yesterday to discuss how the U.S. should approach the complex situation called it “the most historic moment in the modern Arab world in the last century.”

The panelists offered historical context for the recent spread of political instability across Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, and other Arab nations, and said that even for countries in which the government remains in power, the unrest will fundamentally alter the political fabric of the region.

The panel—Rami G. Khouri, a journalist from the American University in Beirut; Tarek Masoud, a HKS professor; E. Roger Owen, a history professor; and Malika Zeghal, a near eastern languages and civilizations professor—said that high unemployment in many nations has been coupled with a widespread belief that governments have failed to protect their citizens.

The recent success of the Tunisian protests in ending former President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali’s reign has sparked protest movements in other nations to oust governments that have grown unpopular with their people, Masoud said.

“The wall of fear has fallen and has changed the psychology and culture of the region,” said Zeghal. Several panelists agreed that while the U.S. is in a difficult diplomatic position, as Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is a long-standing ally, the U.S. should stand strongly behind the demands of the Egyptian people for a fully accountable democracy.

[read the rest]

 

University of Maryland Student Returns from Egypt Proud and Optimistic After Witnessing History


by David Acosta
AXcess News
February 2, 2011

http://axcessnews.com/index.php/articles/show/id/21424

Looking back on her five months studying in Alexandria, Egypt, Mae McIver says she couldn’t have foreseen the events of the past week.

McIver, 23, of Salisbury, Md., said she thought a lot about what she saw every day. The poverty, religious tension, government oppression and police corruption made her wonder, “What’s keeping this country from revolting?”

“That was always my question. I didn’t see it coming, though,” McIver said. “I didn’t really think it would happen, but it’s hard to expect a revolution.”

McIver, a senior studying government and economics at the University of Maryland, College Park, returned home Thursday because of a planned break in classes at the University of Alexandria where she was studying Arabic.

Seven other University of Maryland students were studying in Cairo, Dave Ottalini, university senior media relations specialist, said. One of the students remains at the American University in Cairo and is safe. The others have left Egypt and hope to return to the U.S. soon.

Just before McIver left, residents of many major Egyptian cities, including Alexandria and Cairo, took to the streets to protest against Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s government. Mubarak said Tuesday he will not run for re-election.

Protests in Alexandria started off peacefully Jan. 25, McIver said. One group marched down a street in front of her apartment building, followed closely by police…

Read the rest: http://axcessnews.com/index.php/articles/show/id/21424