Human rights virtually regained (JERUSALEM POST OP-ED) By KHALED A. AL JASER 04/22/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=266985
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The Arab Spring was an uprising against oppressive dictatorship
and corrupt regimes that led to abuse of human rights and poverty. It
is spearheaded by young people, communicating and mobilizing on the
Internet (primarily Facebook). Its outcome is far from clear but what
is obvious is that the main agents of change in the region are young
people organizing and communicating on the Internet.
Israel had its spring of sorts, Israelis occupying by the hundreds of
thousands the streets and squares of our cities, demanding social
justice. What the socio-political effect of the tent-protest movement
will be, it is premature to define. Yet it is quite obvious that the
same forces working for change last summer will repeat the protest
this summer.
Based on these premises, I launched about a year ago, together with
Palestinian partners, a Facebook-based peace and cooperation
movement, YaLa-Young Leaders: a meeting place for the young
of “Tahrir” and “Rothschild.” Today, YaLa-Young Leaders is 66,000
strong from 16 Arab countries and Israel, dialoguing on a daily
basis, from Saudi Arabia to Algeria, from Egypt to Lebanon, from Iraq
to Israel and Palestine.
While YaLa is working continuously to foster dialogue and cooperation
we are also aiming for the future – we intend to create this year an
online academy in connection with the best universities in the United
States, providing good higher education leading to employment, and
promoting long-term, sustainable cooperation. The end goal is clear –
Change by the young, for the young. A sustainable peace.
The purpose of this column is to give these young leaders a voice,
starting today with Khaled al-Jaser from Kuwait. – Nimrod Ben-Ze’ev,
director of the President’s Office, Peres Center for Peace
It was during the month of January, 2011, that the tyrants of the
Arab world discovered or thought to have discovered the power of
social media but not that of the human spirit – the powerful human
urge for dignity, justice and freedom.
Tyrants everywhere, not just in the Arab world, took it upon
themselves to fight with all of their might the virtual world’s
freedom of speech, of expression, of information and of assembly,
afforded by Internet-based platforms such as Facebook, Twitter,
Wordpress, Wikipedia, Google, etc. Freedoms they have hitherto
sadistically repressed in the real, physical, world.
Arabs, in particular, depended on their government-sanctioned sources
of information that were censored, distorted and in most cases
nothing more than pure propaganda. Take for instance the following
statement from an Arab news outlet website defining themselves as “a
publication that would uphold the highest standards of journalistic
integrity while remaining true to the principles of anti-imperialist
struggle, progressive politics, and freedom of expression.”
A news outlet with a mission that includes “remaining true to the
principles of anti-imperialist struggle” is the kind of news outlet
allowed by Arab tyrants, and can have various missions depending on
the methods and circumstance of the tyrant.
Arabs have also been prevented from publicly congregating, whether
for political causes or simply to share ideas or express themselves –
except, that is, in mosques (with restrictions), a fact which
partially explains the rise of male-dominated political Islam in the
aftermath of sustained revolutions planned, organized and conducted
by liberal, secular Arabs. It is through those newly-regained
freedoms that Arabs will be able to create a new, democratic and
prosperous future.
The late Anthony Shadid – an undisputedly outstanding reporter with a
deep understanding of the Arab world – sums it up beautifully: “If
the revolts that swept the Middle East a year ago were the coming of
age of youths determined to imagine another future for the Arab
world, the aftermath that has brought elections in Egypt and Tunisia
and the prospect of decisive Islamist influence in Morocco, Libya
and, perhaps, Syria is the moment of another, older generation.”
It was during the upheaval of the Arab spring of 2011 that I created
my Facebook and Twitter profiles. I wanted to be part of the Arab
Spring. I never thought that those two virtual profiles would take me
so far into the deep recesses of my consciousness.
Facebook and Twitter have forever changed the way I read, write,
interact and understand the world. Since then I have been, or I think
I have been, contributing to every single Arab revolt in my own way –
sharing news, writing about my feelings, participating in awareness
campaigns with fellow virtual friends in spreading the words of
humanity and its goodness.
I have also joined numerous FB pages advocating in unison humanistic
ideals, which I am proud to have been a member of. My favorite is
YaLa – Young Leaders, which strives to bring about peace between
Palestinians, Israelis and Arabs.
I personally had never interacted or communicated with any Israeli in
my life – how could I when our two countries are in conflict because
of the just Palestinian plight? I have met honorable Israelis,
Palestinians and people from all over the world at YaLa – a most
exciting human experience, I have to admit.
I believe there are thousands of people from all over the Middle East
and North Africa who have had such a human experience, who have
interacted and communicated with and got to know the “other,”
discovered, perhaps for the first time, our shared humanity. It is
this fact which makes me believe that peace in the Middle East is
nearer than we imagine.
The Internet and the social media(s) were tools Arabs have harnessed
to regain their unalienable rights, which then were manifested in the
revolutions they have ignited but have yet to master. Those same
tools are also breaking boundaries and taboos between Israelis,
Palestinians and Arabs and will hasten our desired outcome of a just
peace in the Middle East.
Revolutions, counterrevolutions and counter-counterrevolutions are
history’s lesson. We may never see the ultimate outcome of the Arab
Spring in our lifetime but in the end I am sure Arabs of future ages
will be proud of this Arab Spring.
The following quote is as true now as when it was said, and is an
expression of an idea of which partially explains the Arab Spring and
gives hope that its future will be much brighter. In the words of
James Madison: “A popular government, without popular information or
the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy,
or perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance, and a
people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with
the power which knowledge gives.”
The writer, is a member of the YaLa – Young Leaders Online Middle
Eastern and North African Movement for change in the region. (© 1995-
2011, The Jerusalem Post 04/22/12)
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