Jahaliya in Tanta

Dan Murphy goes to the Badawi moulid in Tanta after a run-in with the US Ambassador in Egypt.

Al Azhar and the Brotherhood don’t like it, though:

They lean their foreheads against the metal cage that surrounds the tomb, and murmur prayers for health, better financial fortune, or a child’s success in school. The practice – similar to Catholic prayers to the Virgin Mary seeking intercession with God or Shiite prayers to Imam Ali – is strictly at odds with Sunni Islam, which is generally thought to prevail here.

Indeed, the leaders of Al Azhar University, the arbiters of Sunni orthodoxy in Egypt, have long assailed this and other popular moulids, or saint’s festivals, like the ones to mark the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday or the death of Zeinab, his granddaughter, whom the faithful believe is buried in Cairo. To these leading Sunni imams, praying to saints or even celebrating Muhammad’s birthday is akin to idolatry.

But their long-standing efforts and those of groups like the Muslim Brotherhood to discourage expressions of popular Egyptian Islam have gained very little traction. A senior Brotherhood official rolls his eyes when asked about the moulids. “We’re against it, it’s a relic of jahaliya,” he says, using the Arabic term for the age of ignorance before Muhammad’s time. “We would really like this to stop.”

And people say the Brothers are more in touch with the people.

Heggy on Copts and security

I really don’t want to promote Tarek Heggy‘s delusions of grandeur (see his bio, which describes him as “being amongst the members of the first echelon of the contemporary Arab liberal thinkers”), but I find his constant references to “security services mentality” in this piece on Copts interesting.

This security-service mentality is one of the factors that contributed to the collapse of objectivity and rationality in our thinking, and which [cause this kind of thinking] to be so far removed from objective and civilized modes of analysis which are one of the achievements of human civilization.

The basic issue is: ‘Do the Copts in Egypt suffer from serious problems in their own country?’ The only possible answer is: ‘Yes’.

Perhaps he’ll be sharing those views with his friend and next-door neighbor, Omar Suleiman.

Around the web

A collection of interesting stories and sites collected in the last week or so.

Words Without Borders has a special issue on Palestine this month.

– NYT: For Evangelicals, Supporting Israel Is ‘God’s Foreign Policy’
How evangelicals and Elliott Abrams heart each other. The article also says that the right-wing Jerusalem Post recently started an edition for American Christians.

– WaPo: Support Builds for Libyan Dissident
The case of Fathi al-Jahmi, the Libyan dissident imprisoned for meeting with a US diplomat. Will the US push for his release or stay quiet because it fears losing oil business?

– Carnegie: Jordan and Its Islamic Movement: The Limits of Inclusion?
New report by Nathan Brown.

– LRB: The Least Accountable Regime in the Middle East
Survey of US spending in Iraq, misuse of funds, etc. based on US government info.

– Maps of War: The Middle East
Fantastic animated map of different empires control of the Middle East over time.

– NYRB: How Terrible Is It?
Max Rodenbeck looks at recent books and official documents on the war on terror, giving you a 12-point rundown of their major points so you don’t have to read them. Nice!

– CCC: The Virtual Ummah
Military think tank looks at Jihadis on the internet and TV, notably al-Jazeera.

– French political scientist Olivier Da Lage has a new book out: Géopolitique de l’Arabie Saoudite.

– Mother Jones: Rumsfeld’s Replacement: The Robert Gates File

– HRW: Building Towers, Cheating Workers
A report on the “Exploitation of Migrant Construction Workers in the United Arab Emirates,” is out,a s is a photo essay full of striking pictures. And an FT report on the same.

– WaPo: Michael Dirda on Irwin on Said. (More about that here.)

– Nation: A Civilizing Mission
Review of Eqbal Ahmad’s collected works.

– Guardian: Luxury timeshares on offer at Islam’s holiest pilgrimage site
The Bin Laden Group’s new luxury resort in Mecca, ZamZam Tower.

– Figaro: Le pétrole conforte le pouvoir soudanais
Tanguy Berthemet reports from Sudan on China’s growing power there and how oil money is sheltering the regime.

Political Comics
Cartoon blog does cool caricatures of people in the news. Controversial, here’s the one of Sheikh Yassin (click to enlarge).

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Jehan Sadat, fundraising for Israel

Why is Jehan Sadat attending a Zionist fundraising conference?

Her best line:

She noted that he gave his Nobel Peace Prize money to the poor of Egypt, despite her telling him that the family could use it. “He said, ‘Money comes and goes, but friends are forever.’ He was right, of course.”

This from the widow of the man who began the institutionalization of corruption in Egypt. And now she participated in a dinner that raised $7 million in bond sales for Israel.

First impressions: Al Jazeera English

Yesterday, amidst all this effort trying to fix the blog, I watched the countdown clock to 12pm GMT on my television screen. When it reached 0, Al Jazeera English finally launched, about six months behind their last schedule, which was also several months behind the previous announced time. In that time it has changed its name, made some changes to the way it operates to be more Doha-focused, and missed out on the year’s biggest story, the war on Lebanon.

I visited Al Jazeera English last February and spoke to staff on both the English and Arabic channels. Many had misgivings about the editorial line the channel would took — in Arabic they were afraid it would embarrass them, in English they seemed to have no clear idea of what that line should be. It turns out, judging from the first day, that AJE does have an editorial line that is different than BBC World or CNN International, but its style remains quite similar to the others — most notably because of the preponderance of British accents on the channel (and a few non-native English ones, which is a bit of a gamble to take as a broadcaster.)

Several things struck me about their political line:

  • They keep on referring to “so-called” Palestinian terror attacks (the rockets launched on Israel from Gaza), putting the stress on “so-called.” If they are going to pursue this, which is fair enough, they need to develop the debate over legitimate resistance to occupation using terrorist tactics. The insertion of qualifiers like “so-called” and “alleged” will quickly get tiring without a more probing debate into what’s legitimate resistance and what’s terrorism against civilians (and where the two meet.)
  • My impression is that they are pretty fair on Israel — they don’t only show in a bad light, they interviewed Shimon Peres and did a little featurette on the Israeli national football team.
  • Their focus on Gaza is on the misery and poverty. I’m glad this is getting more attention, but it’d be great to talk about the ins and outs of Palestinian politics and the role Egypt, Israel and the US have in them. We have enough channels pretending that Palestinian politics are completely independent without external influence already.
  • Their reporting on Zimbabwe, including the first live broadcast in seven years, was impressive and obliquely tough on Mugabe. But why didn’t he give the background story to farm nationalization that caused the current crisis? Are there red lines he’s not crossing?
  • The reporting on Iran was very interesting. At one point they had Richard Haass from the Council on Foreign Relations debating Egyptian octogenarian strategist Muhammad Hassanein Heykal. Great to see Heykal talking in English, but he was unconvincing. In another segment they had a professor of political science in Tehran who was much more interesting and not pro-regime.
  • Did they really need to include a report on the Emir of Qatar’s latest speech as the third or fourth leading news item? Small price to pay, but still…
  • They make obvious attempts to position themselves as outside the West, for instance referring to “making the headlines in the West is Tony Blair’s recent statements on Iran…” and then following it with a segment on Iranians not paying attention to all this. Interesting strategy, but it won’t always be convincing.
  • They tried to get several scoops in during the first day. The reporting from Somalia was interesting but too human interest and not political enough, but still good to see live images from there. The Zimbabwe report was not as exclusive as they say since the BBC regularly goes there covertly. The interview with the head of Interpol warning that most countries were doing nothing to check for stolen passports was great, a real scoop, but so far I haven’t seen it picked up elsewhere. Sour grapes?

Overall, though, I feel this channel has the potential to be much, much better than the most boring and underfunded BBC World or very bland CNN International (which may still have the edge on access). They focus on other issues than the existing channels and, when tackling big topics such as Iran, approach things from a different angle. I see no deep hostility to Israel or the West (although they’ll be accused of it), and generally it’s pretty professional. Let’s hope they keep going the same way — the big test will be what their coverage will be like during the next regional crisis.

Update: Now watching the noon broadcast. They’re promoting themselves again. It’s getting annoying. Teh top story should not be themselves.

Related stories:

NYT – A New Al Jazeera With a Global Focus
WaPo – Al Jazeera’s US Face
NY Sun – Al Jazeera in English (hatchet job)
NY Sun – Major Cable Providers Refuse To Carry English-Language Al-Jazeera
NYT – Not Coming Soon to a Channel Near You
Guardian – Weather in Arabia, crisis in Gaza, and no sign of Sir David’s Through the Cavehole
BBC – Al-Jazeera English hits airwaves
Aqoul – Al-Jazeera International: Setting the News Agenda?

US Copt activist teams up with Fox News

Does anyone else find the prospect of Coptic activist Michael Meunier and Fox News teaming up potentially extremely dangerous? Watch this closely. Maybe it’ll be legitimate — there is plenty to complain about if you’re a Copt. But Meunier has a history of manipulating media to advance his own political profile in Washington, and we all know about Fox News’ reputation.

U.S. Copts and Fox News Partner on Egypt Project

Washington DC Nov.15, 2006

Dear Copts and Friends,

I’m pleased to share with you news of Fox News Channel’s upcoming special report on religious freedom in Egypt, in which I had the pleasure of co-operating with Fox News producers and journalists during this past summer.

U.S. Copts has joined with international cable television giant the Fox News Channel to create a televised special report on human rights abuses against Copts in Egypt. The report, part of a new Fox News series on religious freedom in countries around the world, features exclusive interviews with Coptic victims, priests, and others inside Egypt.

In the summer of 2006, I traveled to Egypt with Fox News journalists where we went on locations all over Egypt to shoot hours of documentary footage highlighting victims and sites of anti-Coptic human rights abuses.

The footage include those of destroyed churches, victims and their families. If the serious is to come out in the way I hope too, it will provide a great exposure for our cause. My understanding is that the initial report which will air starting today will be a short program. However, I am promised by Fox that the hours of tapes they recorded will be used in another full hour special on Egypt and the Copts.

The entire series, including the Egypt report, airs this coming Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, November 15- 17, 2006 on the Fox News Channel at 7.00 PM Eastern Standard Time (2:00 AM Egypt time).

Best Wishes,

Michael Meunier

If someone can digitally record this on Fox News and somehow send it my way, I’d be very grateful.

muesli madness

angry-hippie.jpg

Authorities are warning this morning of a new threat to the safety of Cairene motorists—angry hippies.

“We think they’re coming from California,� confided Mohamed El Jalaad of the Traffic Safety Division of State Security. “It’s the sandals that tip us off. But do not worry. We will crush them beneath the wheels of our Jeeps.�

While rumors of steadily rising face-mask sales continue to circulate, pedestrians are being advised to take care in crossing the road.

“These angry hippies can be dangerous,� says taxi driver Ahmed al Soua pointing to mark on the side of his cab. While he says he wasn’t really watching, he thinks the mark may have been caused when he sideswiped a Deadhead on a mountain bike.

Meanwhile Shabaan Abdel Rahim has announced that he will be releasing a song next week entitled “Squash the bearded freak under the wheels of your Lada.�