http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/1011/op5.htm

12 - 18 August 2010
Issue No. 1011
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Between Berlin and Beirut
The Arab penchant to celebrate those opposed to the perceived root of Arab 
suffering has more than once led to the disgrace of Arabs lauding Nazi crimes, 
writes Amr Hamzawy* 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Berlin, mid-1990s: The House of World Cultures (an institution dedicated to 
exposing residents of and visitors to the German capital to intellectual, 
literary, musical and artistic productions from around the world, with a 
special focus on non-European cultures and societies) announced a forthcoming 
reading of the poetry of Nizar Qabbani. The poems would be accompanied by a 
German translation of the recited works and music by a small oriental music 
group. The announcement lauded the late Syrian poet as an exponent of Arab 
romanticism, an advocate of women's rights and gender equality, and a 
courageous defender of secularism, freedom of opinion and expression, and 
freedom of intellectual and literary creativity unhampered by religious or 
traditional fixations. The cleverness of this publicity lay in the fact that it 
ran counter to the preconceptions of the Arab world that prevailed in the West 
at the time, because Western media was constantly bombarding its audiences with 
images that fed the widespread impression of an Arab world made up of suicide 
bombers, maltreatment of women and spreading fundamentalist fanaticism. The 
effect of the announcement, therefore, was to draw quite a respectable turnout 
of German citizens to the poetry reading, in addition to the expected audience 
of Arab residents in Berlin.

If memory serves me correctly, over a thousand people attended. It was 
certainly standing room only. And judging from outward appearances and snatches 
of conversation I heard before the reading, the audience featured quite a 
composite of social, intellectual and professional backgrounds. As the room 
filled, I had no inkling whatsoever of the disaster that would strike.

Before reciting his poetry, Qabbani delivered a short speech to welcome his 
audience. He spoke of the great esteem the Arabs have always had for Germany 
and German philosophers, intellectuals and poets. He also spoke of Arab 
admiration for how the German people managed to rebuild their society after the 
ravages of two world wars. Then, what followed next I still remember to the 
letter. He said that such was the Arabs' admiration for Germany that they 
rooted for the German football team in the World Cup finals and they cheered 
its victories as enthusiastically as they cheered the German army as it swept 
across Europe in World War II. This elicited a sudden outburst of groans of 
disgust and angry protestations, after which no less than a third of the German 
members of the audience left the room. Yet in spite of the evident discomfort 
of the German organisers of this event and the remaining audience, no one 
interrupted Qabbani, who completed his welcome address along the lines of the 
previous themes. The poet then recited several of his works, but neither the 
German translations, as eloquent as they were, or the delicate strains of 
oriental music could now persuade the remaining Germans in the room that the 
person who had been introduced to them as an exponent of Arab romanticism was 
as sensitive and broadminded as he was billed. (For how could he be if he 
admired Nazi crimes and the violence of the Nazi armies?)

Beirut and Cairo, Summer 2010: In Al-Hayat, political editor and columnist 
Hazem Saghieh commented on the scenes of celebration in Beirut by supporters of 
the German football team following its victory over Argentina in the World Cup 
finals. Many of the jubilant fans that paraded through the streets of the 
Lebanese capital sported Nazi flags and emblems and performed the Nazi salute, 
prompting the German embassy to lodge a protest with the Lebanese Foreign 
Ministry. Saghieh explains, "Since the end of World War II, the Germans have 
steadfastly purged their society and their consciences of the Nazi past. They 
conducted this drive at all levels, from educational curricula and cultural 
production to the rehabilitation of society as a whole." 

I, too, was a supporter of the German team during the World Cup finals. Some of 
the congratulatory letters I received from friends and relatives in Cairo and 
quite a few of the commentaries I came across on the websites of Egyptian and 
Arab newspapers expressed admiration for that Nazi past, its campaign of 
"liquidation" of the Jews and its "sweeping victories" over the Jews and the 
forces that support them.

In Beirut and Cairo, the German football team fans who cheered the German 
victory by cheering the Nazis and their actions have no appreciation whatsoever 
of the depth of the German collective sense of guilt and desire to cleanse 
itself of a past that, in German public space, bears the headings "Nazi 
brutality" and "Nazi crimes against humanity". As Saghieh rightly points out, 
the Germans' acknowledgment of this past is frank and open, and translated 
institutionally in the educational system, the media, cultural and intellectual 
production, and in the constant refutation of Nazi beliefs and apologetics. The 
Arab celebrators -- who I do not suggest represent a prevailing trend in our 
societies -- are also blind to the racist creed that the Nazis promulgated 
until their defeat in World War II and that German society has come a long way 
to uprooting, to which testify the multiethnic and multi-faith composition of 
the German team that took part in the World Cup finals this year.

What Nizar Qabbani's introductory remarks at the House of World Cultures in 
Berlin in the mid-1990s and the way some pro-German football fans cheered the 
German victory in the World Cup in Beirut and Cairo in 2010 have in common is a 
deranged way of expressing their admiration of another (Germany) by reducing 
that other to a set of actions, symbols and ideas that they interpret as 
victory or revenge against the party that inflicts harm on the collective Arab 
self. That party is generalised as Jews, global Zionism, Zionist gangs and 
other such expressions of which there is no lack in the Arabic lexicon. The 
consequence of this perverse form of admiration is not to draw the object of 
admiration closer and win its affection but rather to alienate it and arouse 
its condemnation (as occurred when the German embassy protested the use of Nazi 
emblems in Beirut and a third of the German audience walked out on the Qabbani 
poetry reading). There is an equally strong tendency to reduce to the other 
solely to those actions, ideas and symbols that stand for that other's support 
for the perpetrator of collective Arab suffering and its promotion of Israeli 
superiority over the Arabs. Needless to say, this is essentially how a broad 
swathe of Arab intellectuals and laypeople read the US. 

The Arabs need to take serious pause to reconsider their reductionist views of 
the other. In the process, they might examine the German experience in purging 
itself of its collective guilt for the Nazi phenomenon and its systematic 
dehumanisation of Jews, which paved the way to the holocaust and other horrors. 
The German experience in how it has since fought to eradicate the ideas, 
attitudes and socio-political mechanisms that foster racism might also offer 
the Arabs some useful lessons.

* The writer is research director and senior associate at the Carnegie 
Endowment for International Peace in Beirut. 






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