The
Arab democratic revolt has highlighted a potential
reshaping of Pan-Arabism for the 21st century, and it is
exciting to observe.
In the period from Abdul Gamal Nasser’s coup against the
then King of Egypt in 1952 through the mid-1970s, there
was a sense of Pan-Arabism that shook North Africa and the
Middle East. This was a Pan Arabism that grew out of the
anti-colonial and national liberation struggles of the period.
These efforts, whether in Egypt, Iraq, Syria, Algeria, or
later Yemen, South Yemen, Palestine, the Sudan and Libya,
were anti-imperialist and, on the global stage largely neutralist
vis a vis the two superpowers of the time (the USA and the
USSR). This Pan Arabism even took the form of efforts at
structural unification, such as the failed merger of Egypt
and Syria (to form the United Arab Republic) and efforts
to include Iraq in that process.
The disastrous June 1967 war with Israel, along with the
failure of the Arab states to develop a coherent and implementable
strategy to support Palestinian liberation, compounded
by the debt crisis (and rise of neo-liberalism) undermined
the progressive impulse that was Pan Arabism. All that
was left was the rhetoric and a few political “outposts”
attempting to keep the flag of Pan Arabism flying.
The
failure of Pan Arabism to fulfill a revolutionary mission,
both in terms of truly liberating the people, eliminating
corruption and authoritarianism, as well as keeping Western
imperialism at bay, resulted in the creation of a void.
This void began to be filled by various forms of what came
to be known as political Islam (or Islamism). It is important
to clarify that Pan Arabism always contained an Islamic
‘flavor’, but it included within it non-Muslims. For that
matter, it included within its tent peoples who would not
necessarily see themselves as Arabs or be seen as Arabs.
Political Islam emerged, in both its right-wing and left-wing
variants, as a challenge to what was by the 1980s a decrepit
Pan Arabism, and substituted a more global Islamic mission.
The Arab democratic revolt of 2011 represents the potential
for a renewal and transformation of Pan Arabism. First,
it is a popular movement that is relying on the masses of
people not as instruments of someone’s agenda but as self-conscious
political forces who are seeking freedom. As many people
have noted, this is a movement without leaders, but, as
I have said previously, it is not a movement without organizations.
It represents an effort by social movements of the people
to find their own voices. Hopefully clear leadership will
emerge and the necessary organization in order to transform
the revolts into revolutions, but that said, the movements
have themselves proven to be transformative. If one compares
this with even the most progressive coups that took place
in the Arab World, e.g., 1952 Egypt; 1958 Iraq, those coups
were not what one could call popular democratic revolutions.
Though they were generally supported by masses of people,
they were engineered by small groups. The Algerian Revolution
(1954-1962), of course, stands in contrast given the mass
nature of the war against the French.
The 2011 Arab democratic revolt, in transforming Pan Arabism,
could also have a major impact on the rest of Africa. It
is important to remember that the earlier generation of
Pan Arabism emerged in the context of the broader struggles,
not just in the Arab World, but in what we call today the
“global South.” Egypt’s Nasser, for instance, was not simply
seen as an Arab leader, but as an African leader (including
by African Americans in the USA). The Algerian Revolution
was not viewed as an Arab/Berber uprising against the French,
but part of a wave of national liberation struggles throughout
Africa and the Arab World. In fact, after the victory of
the Algerian Revolution, Algeria undertook efforts to support
other struggles for liberation within Africa and saw itself
as part of the progressive Pan Africanist movement.
To the extent to which the renewed Pan Arabism retains its
democratic impulse, it can address not only tyrannies, such
as the northern Sudan under Al Bashir, but also represent
an example of mass democratic movements against corrupt
neo-colonial/post-colonial regimes that have plagued the
continent. In this sense the Arab democratic revolt , though
shaped by the Arab experience, need not be exclusive to
the Arab World. In far too many countries on the Continent
regimes have arisen that have become retrograde. In other
cases, regimes have come into existence that have, irrespective
of their rhetoric, aligned themselves with an anti-people,
neo-liberal agenda that benefits a small minority. The
current global economic crisis is exacerbating these divisions
and can produce disastrous explosions, e.g., 1994 Rwanda,
or mass democratic eruptions as witnessed in the Arab World.
For these and many other reasons the Arab democratic revolt
needs to be embraced as very much a North AFRICAN democratic
revolt that holds lessons for the rest of the continent
and with which progressive Africans and progressive Pan
Africanists throughout the Continent and the African Diaspora
should express solidarity.
It is no exaggeration to suggest that the Arab democratic
revolt has the potential to shift global politics. Perhaps
it can not only shift politics in the rest of Africa but
also contribute to a 21st century renewal of Pan Africanism.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with
the Institute for
Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfricaForum and co-author of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in
Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized
labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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