Sunday, January 30, 2011

Us and Them.

I've been awestruck by the world's audacity to still manage to attack Islam at times like these.
If you are a loyal viewer of Fox News or supporter of the likes of Robert Gibbs and Glenn Beck please skip this entry.

I'm speaking as a Muslim Egyptian living in the USA for almost two years now.
Americans have become absolutely terrified by my people. We have been stigmatized beyond belief. Simply due to our belief system and ethnicity.
I won't go into Islamophobia right now, that's not why I'm writing this.
Throughout the last couple of days, all I can hear on CNN and from the White House is the unbearable trepidation caused by the Muslim Brotherhood possibly taking Mubarak's place post-regime.
It's absolutely ludicrous the amount of panic the word MUSLIM produces.

I want to make one thing very clear - the world needs to understand.
What you are witnessing in Egypt right this very moment is pure Egyptian nationalism. Right now, there is no prominent political denomination. What you are seeing on the streets on the news are Egyptian men, women, children, and the elderly. No hidden agendas. No strategy. No religious divide.
Is it any wonder that Muslims and Christians are collaborating despite the Alexandria Church explosion just a couple of weeks back?
Maybe the West can't get over the possibility of the non-existence of partisan interest in this revolt. But that's exactly what is taking place.
They can't wrap their minds around the patriotism we have that they have started lacking.
Just because some don't know what being American really means, doesn't mean Egyptians suffer the same ailment.

The Muslim Brotherhood did NOT spark these protests. Egypt's political future has not been determined yet, but one thing is for sure -- it is the people themselves that will shape it according to principles of social justice, equality, and fairness.

We are united and adamant.
We have surpassed petty divisions and partisan ego-trips.
We are Egyptians and we don't emulate any other nation. Stop trying to take us under, we will not budge.
Tunisia has led the way, and we are closely following up. This is the people's time.
We know what nationalism is, we know who we are.

We are not you, America.

Mr. President ..

I received this email yesterday. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I find these to be very basic and very feasible demands. And we deserve each and every one of them.

مصر أولاً

السيد الرئيس محمد حسنى مبارك – رئيس جمهورية مصر العربية

سمعناكم منتصف ليلة أمس فى بيانكم للأمة التى تشهد أحداثاً غير مسبوقة فى خطورتها؛

نشكركم لتوجيهكم باستقالة الحكومة ومحاولتكم تهدئة الأوضاع فى أنحاء البلاد؛

نناشدكم، حفاظاً على بلادنا، وأرواح أبنائنا، ولاستعادة سلطة القانون.. نناشدكم

الاعلان عن الخطوات التالية بصورة فورية:

1- بصفتكم رئيس الجمهورية، اعتزامكم عدم الترشح لفترة أخرى.

2- بصفتكم رئيس الحزب الوطني الديمقراطي، الاستقالة من الحزب.

3- بصفتكم الحاكم العسكري، توجيه الجيش وقوات الأمن – بقيادة وزير الداخلية الجديد - باتخاذ جميع السبل اللازمة لتأمين البلاد ومواطنيها والأملاك العامة والخاصة.

4- توجيه الجهات القضائية بفتح التحقيقات فى الأحداث الأخيرة وفى وفاة أبنائنا من المواطنين وقوات الأمن، وفى عمليات النهب والترويع، والبت فى قانونية الانتخابات التشريعية الأخيرة وايجاد السبل القانونية لمعالجة الخلل القائم من جراء التجاوزات التى شابت العملية الانتخابية الأخيرة.

5- توجيه الحكومة الجديدة بفتح حوار فعلي مع قيادات المجتمع المدني بهدف تعديل الدستور لاتاحة مجال أكبر من الحريات وضمان نزاهة العملية الانتخابية وتمثيل الشعب فى المجالس النيابية المختلفة.

واذ نشكركم على اعلاء مصر فوق الجميع، وفوق كل شيء،

جبهة "مصر أولاً"

Egypt Demonstrations Yesterday in Washington DC

Egyptians all over the world are showing solidarity and echoing the chants of Egyptians in all languages. We're not with you in body, but we're with you in spirit.

January 30th, 2011

Two years ago, my family and I were sitting around the dining table, discussing the fate of Egypt. That's what people in Egypt do, they talk about everything and nothing. You would speak about politics as if you have years of expertise in the field. You predict events that are very unlikely to happen. You judge. You gossip. But that's what we have learned to do. We have learned to talk and talk and talk. Sometimes with no basis to our judgment. Sometimes with first hand knowledge.
Most of the people I'm associated with back in Egypt are, what you can say, members of the high-middle to high class. In other words -- sheltered.
We have grown up in a small modern community. Embedded in a much larger yet awfully disenfranchised population. We constitute a very small percentage of the population, yet we have all the influence. I don't need to tell you about how the world is run, because I won't pretend to know. But all I know is that money buys everything. Money buys your status, money buys your friends, money buys your influence, money buys your politics.
Our families have always sheltered us from the "savage" part of Egypt. They protected us from the uglies of Egypt. Little did we know that that has become the essence of Egypt. Our home isn't the flowery, pampered, modern environment we were seeing before us. Egypt was hungry, stepped upon, taken advantage of, and so unbearably oblivious to it all.

But I digress. Back to my story.
That day while speaking to my family, I felt confident saying that our country will undergo a revolution. And one that is coming very soon. We were too deep in to rely on electoral reform alone. Things were going to get ugly because our own government has officially pushed it that far. It wasn't much longer for the people to erupt demanding social justice. One that they have been denied ever since the death of Anwar Sadat.
Two years later, subsequent to the Tunisian revolt, we have finally followed suit. We're not a sitting duck anymore. The people of Egypt have woken up.
I need to point something out, however, something that I found the most disturbing in the midst of all that's happening.
There is a huge number of "Egyptians" right this very moment calling this a "Poor People's Revolution". In other words, excluding themselves from the events by dubbing it inconsequential to their social stance and/or political future in the Egyptian society.
I was absolutely infuriated. This is not about patriotism or even nationalism at this point. It's about being a cog in a system where exploitation and nepotism is paramount to justice. I'm sad to say that the fact is, in Egypt you're either being stepped on or you're the one doing the stepping. There's no in between anymore. We are purely a population of haves and have-nots.
This is not about mere dissatisfaction with lifestyles. This is about Egyptian dignity in citizenship. I said it before and I will say it again, the Egyptian citizen is currently nullified in terms of political practice.
Our political system is monopolized, terrorized, and capitalized. Pluralism has become an extinct concept since 50 years ago. We're not a democracy and never really were. At this point, I'm doubting there has ever been a democracy anywhere. We are conquered by dirty capitalism and hidden agendas. Giving people power is a glorified concept. Something politicians feel compelled to advocate to win ballots. But it is simply not existent.
People are tired, disenfranchised, taken advantage of.

Right now Egypt is at a crossroads. It's either we do get what we want, which directly translates into Palestine's benefit. Or the system prevails, securing relations with Israel and the US. What they don't understand is the people's resilience. They have nothing to lose anymore. They want their country back. A country with the richest history on earth. They will stop at nothing.

Yesterday at the protests in Washington DC in front of the White House, we kept chanting one statement over and over: The Egyptian nation is not a coward.

Egypt will not back down. We will reclaim what's ours. Our children and grandchildren will look back at this in pride. And the world will give no credit to a once proclaimed "world's policeman" United States of America.