http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/960/op2.htm

13 - 19 August 2009
Issue No. 960
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875


Sex, marriage and Mideast peacemaking

Pushing Arabs and Israelis towards peace is comparable to concluding a marriage 
between two hostile families. Without clear terms it cannot be consummated, and 
halfway intimacies are not enough, writes Ezzedine Choukri Fishere* 

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Once again, Arab, American and Israeli policymakers are engaged in sterile 
debates over the possible and impossible steps that could build confidence 
between Israel and its neighbours. Arabs are reluctant to take any steps before 
Israel makes serious and tangible moves towards a final political settlement. 
In their view, doing so gives away the "normalisation card" for free. 

Most Americans and Israelis do not appreciate this reluctance. They explain to 
all who want to listen -- and also those who don't -- that goodwill gestures 
are needed before peace agreements are reached. Arab goodwill gestures, they 
argue, are part and parcel of building the confidence needed in order to reach 
a political settlement. 

Israelis are quick to point out that in order to win Israel's support for 
territorial concessions, Arab states must send a message -- and preferably more 
than one -- that they are serious about normalisation.

To the sceptics, American mediators explain that goodwill gestures do not 
constitute "normalization" with Israel: Arab states can at any time reverse 
whatever positive measures they have taken towards Israel. In addition, Israel 
will also make goodwill gestures; a settlement freeze is its best example. 

There is no point in repeating the arguments and counterarguments on each side 
of this debate; the parties have done so ad nauseum. Instead, try looking at 
this matter as if we were arranging a marriage between two hostile families; 
many of whom -- including the prospective bride and groom -- doubt the 
intentions of the other and question the possibility of finding agreement on 
the marriage's terms. 

The mediators, who see in the marriage a possible end to the hostility between 
the two families that would bring peace to the village, are trying to convince 
bride, groom and the members of the two families of the merits of such a deal. 

In the midst of their zeal, and to allay the multiple concerns of the groom 
(who has commitment issues as well as problems with his boisterous family 
members), the mediators encourage the bride to have sex with her prospective 
groom before the marriage is concluded. "Sex would entice him to proceed; it 
will reassure him that the money he will put in the marriage will be well 
rewarded," they say.

Mostly liberal in their thinking and ways of life, the mediators see no problem 
in the proposition (neither does the prospective groom, for all too different 
reasons). After all, millions of couples in America and Europe engage in 
premarital sex as a way of experiencing each other and determining whether it 
would be a good idea to proceed further. There is no disrespect, foul play or 
wrongdoing involved. They argue.

The proposition sounds logical to the bride (and quite convenient for the 
groom). Yet the bride's family is really conservative. Even if she finds it 
tempting, the bride knows well that she cannot face her family with such a 
proposition. "It will be suicide," she says. However, not wanting to undermine 
the prospects of her own marriage, the bride is willing to engage in premarital 
intimate encounters -- but short of intercourse. And in return for these 
intimacies she requires the groom to make demonstrable progress towards signing 
the marriage contract. 

Thrilled by this "window of opportunity", the mediators spend weeks negotiating 
the nature of these intimacies; how much skin is involved, whether it would be 
made public or kept secret, how far they will go, how frequently they will 
meet, etc. At the same time, they negotiate the nature of demonstrable steps 
that would satisfy the bride in return; the nature of commitments the groom has 
to make, whether these would be reversible, phased, synchronised with the 
intimacies, etc. (Verification and arbitration remain contentious and 
unresolved issues). 

Instead of working on finalising the terms of the marriage contract, the 
mediators waste everyone's time on fine-tuning the terms of these 
confidence-building measures. Naturally, neither the groom nor the bride 
derives any pleasure from their halfway intimacies, and they are busy 
quarrelling over each other's compliance with the terms of the deal. The 
families get no closer to marriage; nobody has negotiated the terms of that 
agreement -- and its difficult issues didn't become any easier on their own. In 
the meantime, the bride's family gets angrier as they feel they were taken for 
a ride (again) and eventually lock the bride at home. And those who always 
opposed the marriage on both sides feel vindicated in their prejudice: "this 
marriage will never take place," they say; "if they can't even agree on these 
tiny matters, how are they going to face common life with all its challenges?"

Senator Mitchell and friends: would you please drop the useless 
confidence-building track that depleted precious political resources of so many 
mediators before you and focus on the real issue? Get the marriage contract 
signed, after which you can have all the sex you want. 

* The writer is distinguished visiting lecturer at the American University in 
Cairo. 

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