|
The Pendulum or Anomic State: ‘Us‘ and ‘Them‘ (Part 3 of 5)
It was none other than the
Prophet Mohammad who said: “There will come a day upon my nation where nothing
will be left of the Koran except its figure, and from religion, except its name;
its sheikhs are the most evil on earth, subversion emanates from them and to
them it returns.“
The manipulation of Islamic thought by certain rulers and reactionary movements
to create, protect or destroy tyrannical regimes, to foster intellectual
sterility, oppression and violence, is one of the main structural (some would
argue organic) factors that have formed a basic impediment to this region’s
progress. This religious or cultural determinant also includes manipulation of
Judaism and Christianity. The second factor is a historical determinant, whereby
the city-state, representing the most advanced form of human community at its
time did not evolve to reach the next step in the ladder of development, the
nation-state. Instead, cities like Tyre, Byblos, Akkad, Sumer, Ebla and Ugarit
withered and regressed into little villages, or were engulfed (or sometimes
enlarged) into empires. The third factor is a geographical determinant, under
which the region’s positioning and its natural resources have subjected it to
invasion from the likes of the Tatars, the Crusaders, the Ottomans, the Allies,
and most recently the U.S. in Iraq.
Those three factors—ingredients of history, geography and culture—are not only a
source of creativity (as discussed in Parts 1 and 2), but of instability as
well. It is those factors combined that lie behind our inability to build
institutions and replace the persistent reign of mediocre leaderships. Those
factors are also reflected in the people’s collective consciousness and have led
to a state of ‘anomie’. In his book, What is Wrong with Lebanon?, published in
1990, Dr. Munir Khoury refers to a book by Durkheim, Le Suicide, which
attributes suicide to three societal conditions: egoism, altruism and anomie.
According to the sociologist Mark Iver, anomie is a “state of complete loss of
control, whereby the individual becomes socially frustrated... has no longer any
standards, but only disconnected urges... is responsive only to himself,
responsible to no one. His only faith is the philosophy of denial. He lives on
the thin line of sensation between no future and no past.”
Evidence of this phenomenon in the region has been revealed in tens of opinion
polls conducted by Information International. Dr. Khoury states that anomie
breeds anxiety, and he also discusses conditions of alienation, withdrawal,
aggression and compliance. In Lebanon, the examples are plenty: a lack of
institutions, corrupt and inept leadership, a pendulum existence between
submission and rebellion, tolerance and racism, and tribalism and openness. Are
we Lebanese, Syrians, Arabs, Keserwanis, Southerners, Shiias, Sunnis, Muslims,
Christians, Kurds, Assyrians, Iraqis, Saudis? All of the above? None of the
above?
We fail to agree on who we are and on our history, and continue to swing on the
pendulum. In a quick historical flashback, we can name many examples: the
dispute over Caliphate succession between Ali and Muawiya; Genghis Khan, who
demolished Baghdad, is seen as a faithful Muslim by some groups, while
Salaheddine is seen as an Arab nationalist liberator, ignoring the fact that he
was a Kurd; Bashir Gemayel, Saddam Hussein and Yasser Arafat are seen by some
groups as ‘traitors’ and by others as ‘heroes’.
It was the historian Kamal Salibi, who stated that “historical self-deception is
a luxury which only societies, confident of their unity and solidarity can
afford. Divided societies, on the other hand, cannot afford such fanciful
indulgence. To gain the degree of solidarity that is needed to maintain
viability, their best chance lies in getting to know and understand the full
truth of their past, and to accommodate its realities.” While the pendulum
continues to take us back and forth, from the Dark Ages to the 21st century, we
are lost between a rich past and an uncertain future. But all pendulums
eventually come to rest, as will the Arab world. In Arabic, this state is called
‘ittizan’, meaning equilibrium or rationality.
See Issue 24 for Part 4 of this editorial series
Jawad Adra Managing Partner
|
|
Current Statistics
Ministry of State for Administrative Development
• LBP 5,459 million ($3.6 million) was allocated to the ministry to pay
for the right to use Microsoft systems software and programs. Another $500,000
was allocated for the purchase of timeclocks to regulate working hours at the
ministry’s various administrations and public institutes.
Beirut mayors
• 108 is the number of mayors for Beirut. Out of those, 31 belong to the first
electoral district, 37 to the second and 40 to the third. The highest number of
mayors were for the Mazraa and Mossaitbeh areas, or 15 for each.
Municipal and mayoral elections
• LBP 2,900 million ($1.9 million) was the initial allocation for conducting
Lebanon’s municipal and mayoral elections. This includes the expenses of the
judiciary committees, certain administrative equipment and the transport of
employees participating in electoral training sessions.
|