http://www.aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=2&id=20011


The Book, If You Please

26/02/2010 
By Mshari Al-Zaydi


 

A customs officer at an airport in an Arab capital smiled at me and asked, "Can 
you please tell me what is inside your suitcase?" I answered, "Some books, 
clothes, and travel items." Still smiling, the airport customs officer said 
"May I have a look at your books? What kind of books are they?" I felt the 
smile fade from my face as I began to worry about being delayed, especially as 
I neither had the time or inclination to deal with any authority with regards 
to the books that I had brought with me. However since one must comply with the 
rules I opened my suitcase for the customs officer and he looked through my 
books. He then asked me "What are in these books?" I answered, "The words of 
their authors." The airports customs officer started looking through the books; 
he looked through a book by Ahmed Amin that deals with popular traditions in 
Egypt, another called 'A Brief History of Time' by Professor Stephen Hawking, 
and a third book about Sufism and politics. 

The customs officer grew bored with his investigation and returned my books to 
me saying, "I don't want to detain you; I will let you pass although this is no 
small matter. I should really pass these books onto the 'concerned 
authorities.'" This ambiguous term disturbed me. Nevertheless, I thanked the 
customs officer for his kindness, and left thinking "what would have happened 
if he had taken these books and passed them onto the 'concerned authorities?'" 

The most that I, or any other Arab citizen, could do is complain and try to 
obtain such books by downloading them from the internet, and the kind of 
websites that offer this service are on the rise. With a single click one is 
able to download a book either in the form of a PDF [Portable Document Format] 
or a Word document. If this is not possible, one can simply purchase a book 
from a bookselling website, or ask a friend travelling overseas to buy the 
book, or simply buy it themselves on their next trip abroad. It is not even 
necessary to travel to a distant country. 

The concept of blocking and banning [books from entering the country] which the 
customs officer was trying to enforce may have been effective as a form of 
censorship before the age of the internet, satellite and international travel. 
However today, in this information age, it is an ineffective and obsolete 
measure. It is like somebody trying to open the door to a five-star hotel room 
with an old-fashioned brass key [as hotels now use key-cards]. There is nothing 
wrong with a five-star hotel room or a brass key; what is wrong is trying to 
use this tool in the wrong place and at the wrong time. 

I recall attending a meeting with an Arab Information Minister in the company 
of a group of journalists and writers. During this meeting, I asked the 
Minister about the suppression of books at airports and border crossings in 
this age of the internet. He answered cleverly, saying "we realize that banning 
such materials will not prevent an individual from reading what he wants. 
Suppression or censorship by the Ministry of Information is equivalent to 
stating a position and sending a moral message against the book or material in 
question more than it is a means to deprive the population, or those that want 
to, from reading the material in question." This is a clever and intricate 
bureaucratic view, but ultimately completely impractical. 

Without mentioning any specific Arab country, we must say that systems and laws 
are established in order to organize and regulate people's lives, determining 
their rights and duties and clarifying what is permitted and not permitted. 
Moreover, systems and laws are supposed to regulate and widen all that is 
permissible, whilst narrowing and clarifying all that is not permissible. There 
is nothing wrong with reversing a decision or repealing a law if this proves to 
be outdated and obsolete. These laws and systems were brought into effect in 
order to serve man, not constrain him. For example, if a young girl wears the 
same bracelet as she grows up without having it re-sized or taking it off 
completely, this bracelet will ultimately turn into a shackle and hinder growth 
and development, and perhaps even cause deformity by preventing natural growth. 

Censorship or banning is an ordinary feature of societies and individuals - and 
this is not limited to any creed or culture - until the subject of the ban's 
features can be fully examined, or until it is revealed to be useful and 
conducive to material comforts, as was the case with telephones, automobiles, 
the radio, television, and even the printing press. 

As we have mentioned the printing press, we must remember that even if this now 
seems to be an outdated and archaic tool, this was something that was initially 
looked upon by Muslims as a terrifying and evil thing; a tool to meddle and 
tamper with the purity of the past. Fatwas prohibiting the use of printing 
presses were issued by the clerics of Constantinople [Istanbul], the capital of 
the Ottoman Empire, particularly when it came to printing copies of the Quran, 
on the pretext that this was a violation of the sanctity of the Holy Book. This 
prohibition extended to include all other religious and juristic books as well. 

Yemeni writer Ahmed al Hubaishi has an interesting article that deals with this 
issue in which he writes: "Printing was introduced to the Muslim World for the 
first time at the beginning of the 16th century in Constantinople, the capital 
of the Ottoman Empire. However the clerics strongly resisted this, allowing the 
Jewish community of the Islamic Empire to benefit from this by printing an 
Arabic translation of the Torah. Arabic printing first entered the Muslim world 
in the middle of the 18th century at the hands of Mohammed Chalabi and his son 
Said. Chalabi was the Ottoman Ambassador to Paris, and he and his son saw the 
benefits of printing first-hand, and with great difficultly Chalabi managed to 
convince the clerics to issue a fatwa in 1728 permitting the printing of 
non-religious books only." 

It is important here to look at the hidden aspects that led to the issuance of 
a fatwa prohibiting printing during the middle period of the Ottoman Empire. 
With regards to small-scale interests, the spread of the printing press would 
have dealt a devastating blow to calligraphers and scribers who had a complete 
monopoly on state correspondence and books written by jurists and poets and 
others, not to mention all the power, influence, and money afforded to the 
calligraphers and scribers as a result of this. As for large-scale interests, 
the spread of the printing press and other tools that facilitate the writing 
process and the horizontal circulation of information would have weakened the 
central state's control of the trading of books and leaflets, and would have 
made it much more difficult for Constantinople to censor such material. In 
other words, the printing press would almost certainly have been used to 
promote information and concepts that Constantinople was against. However in 
the end all those fears were cast aside for the higher interests of the state 
and society. We have seen how the founder of modern Egypt, Ottoman Governor 
Muhammad Ali Pasha, became a symbol in the history of modern printing in the 
Middle East through his establishment of the famous Bulaq press [first official 
governmental printing press to be established in Egypt]. 

Censorship, or relying on the inability of an individual or a group to obtain 
information, or trying to control the flow of information to the population, 
may be an effective strategy in the short term, but not in the medium or long 
term. Information cannot be held back for too long. Those who gambled that 
information could be prevented from reaching the masses in the age of conflict 
between the inkwell and the printing press lost their money, and others are 
making this same mistake today in this age of conflict between the printing 
press and the internet. 

The easiest, safest, and best approach is to deal with information and diverse 
culture in an open manner. We should be willing to change our views if fresh 
evidence comes to our attention proving us wrong. 

A good example of this can be seen in the breakthrough made in the mysterious 
death surrounding the iconic ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamen. Modern 
science has been able to answer many baffling questions about the Golden 
Pharaoh, and his death was discovered to be the direct result of a malarial 
infection, as cited by Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, 
Dr. Zahi Hawass. It was also revealed that the Pharaoh Boy-King had a club 
foot, and this explains the presence of 19 walking sticks in his tomb, 
contradicting the previous assumptions of many Egyptologists who believed that 
the walking sticks signified the Pharaoh's greatness. Test results also 
confirmed that Tutankhamen was the son of Akhenaton, the Pharaoh who promoted 
monotheism, contradicting previous beliefs that Tutankhamen was the son of 
Pharaoh Amenhotep III and Queen Tiye. 

All of these ideas, upon which historical and therefore ideological illusions 
may have been built upon, have all been revealed to be untrue by science and 
information. If we use the light of knowledge to clear away the darkness the 
outcome will always be positive, even if it does not appear to be so at first 
glance


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