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How the Arabs Turned Shame Into Liberty-"They were done with the politics of fear & silence"-are we?

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kpete Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-27-11 12:39 PM
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How the Arabs Turned Shame Into Liberty-"They were done with the politics of fear & silence"-are we?
Edited on Sun Feb-27-11 12:40 PM by kpete

How the Arabs Turned Shame Into Liberty
By FOUAD AJAMI
Published: February 26, 2011

..........................

And so, in those big, public spaces in Tunis, Cairo and Manama, Bahrain, in the Libyan cities of Benghazi and Tobruk, millions of Arabs came together to bid farewell to an age of quiescence. They were done with the politics of fear and silence.

Every day and every gathering, broadcast to the world, offered its own memorable image. In Cairo, a girl of 6 or 7 rode her skateboard waving the flag of her country. In Tobruk, a young boy, atop the shoulders of a man most likely his father, held a placard and a message for Colonel Qaddafi: “Irhall, irhall, ya saffah.” (“Be gone, be gone, O butcher.”)

In this tumult, I was struck by the chasm between the incoherence of the rulers and the poise of the many who wanted the outside world to bear witness. A Libyan of early middle age, a professional and a diabetic, was proud to speak on camera, to show his face, in a discussion with CNN’s Anderson Cooper. He was a new man, he said, free of fear for the first time, and he beheld the future with confidence. The precision in his diction was a stark contrast to Colonel Qadaffi’s rambling TV address on Tuesday that blamed the “Arab media” for his ills and called on Libyans to “prepare to defend petrol.”

In the tyrant’s shadow, unknown to him and to the killers and cronies around him, a moral clarity had come to ordinary men and women. They were not worried that a secular tyranny would be replaced by a theocracy; the specter of an “Islamic emirate” invoked by the dictator did not paralyze or terrify them.

..........

the rest:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/27/opinion/27ajami.html?_r=1&pagewanted=2&hp


Silence is simply a symptom. The problem is to get at what it is a symptom of.

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