by Khaled Diab
Egyptians refuse to believe the lie that they are docile sheeple who need a father figure to shepherd them.
“I am not pharaoh … After two revolutions, nobody who occupies this chair can become a pharaoh,” Egypt’s president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi reportedly told a select group of intellectuals and thinkers a few weeks ago, insisting that he accepted and respected criticism.
Despite the president’s repeated assurances, Egypt has been in the throes of an intensifying crackdown since the weeks leading up to the fifth anniversary of the January 25, 2011 revolution.
This has had the counter-effect of galvanising a rising tide of dissent, as epitomised by the remarkable media and protest campaign spearheaded by the Journalists Syndicate to defend press freedom, call for the resignation of the interior minister and demand an end to repression.
Insulting state institutions
After the initial arrest of one of their singers, known as Ezz, for allegedly “insulting” state institutions, the remaining members of the band were arrested last week.
The group seems to have upped the ante in their latest videos in which they ridicule “Sisi, my president“, the army and the security services – criticising the devaluation of the pound, the Suez Canal expansion and the transfer of two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia – and call on Sisi to “have some shame” and step down.
That a band of six young men armed with little more than their vocal cords should provoke such an autocratic reaction is bound to cement, rather than disprove, Sisi’s reputation as Egypt’s latest “pharaoh”.
In America and Europe, many commentators are convinced that Egypt can only be ruled by a strongman and so crowning a new ‘pharaoh’ was the only way to save Egypt.
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Some see that as no bad thing. In America and Europe, many commentators are convinced that Egypt can only be ruled by a strongman, and so crowning a new “pharaoh” was the only way to save Egypt.
This attitude has its native advocates too, not only among the political old guard but also among those who saw Egypt hanging over a precipice and concluded that the only way to stop it from falling into the abyss was to choose the pharaoh-president over people power.
One-upping other despot worshippers, former antiquities chief Zahi Hawass likened Sisi to a specific pharaoh, Mentuhotep II, who reunited Egypt after it split into two rival kingdoms.
This pharaoh-isation of Egypt’s leaders suggests that there is some kind of continuous, almost dynastic, line which stretches back to the dawn of history, leaving the impression that this is some kind of innate national trait.
There are those who subscribe to the pharaoh theory of Egyptian history in an ill-informed attempt to explain away modern autocracy.
Some outsiders are driven by an orientalist conviction that Egyptians neither desire nor understand democracy, while those who prop up Egypt’s dictators can sleep easily in the knowledge that this is ultimately what Egyptians want.
Futility of seeking change
Proponents of the theory at home use it to dissuade Egyptians from rising above their station and to demonstrate the apparent futility of seeking to change what has always been so.
An Egyptian woman holds a card bearing portraits of Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat and Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ([AFP] |
The trouble is that this is largely a myth – inspired more by Abrahamic scripture than actual history – that started some six decades ago, namely with Gamal Abdel-Nasser, the leader of the 1952 revolutionary coup and the Egyptian republic’s second president.
But even this wasn’t inevitable. The Free Officers which Nasser led were initially committed to civilian rule and strengthening Egypt’s parliamentary democracy.
And given more than a century of struggle to build a modern, egalitarian and fair state which generations of reformers had been waging, this early commitment to democracy was unsurprising.
However, Nasser reneged on the promise to transition back to elected civilian rule. In this, he was driven by a fervent desire for his revolution to succeed and the plain old-fashioned hypnotising lure of power.
“If I held elections today, [Mustafa] al-Nahas would win, not us. Then our achievement would be nothing,” he said in a meeting shortly after the coup.
Even during Nasser’s tenure, which combined popularity with brutality, many Egyptians refused to believe the lie that they were docile sheeple who needed a father figure…
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In this endeavour, he faced stiff opposition, namely from what he had assumed was his figurehead president, Muhammad Naguib, who wanted the army to return to its barracks after having accomplished their mission of unseating an unjust, British-backed regime.
Instead, Nasser placed Naguib under house arrest, abolished all political parties and started a brutal crackdown on secular and religious dissent, imprisoning liberals, communists and Muslim Brothers.
“[Nasser] recognised that democracy was the clear enemy of the cult of character he was trying to establish,” posits journalist and revolutionary Wael Eskandar.
Nasser’s popularity on the Arab street, coupled with shrewd propaganda, enabled him to turn the newly established republic into his personal fiefdom rather than a state of institutions and checks and balances.
Nasser’s tenure
In this project, Nasser was inspired not by his ancient pharaonic ancestors nor facilitated by some native Egyptian subservience to the “pharaoh”, but was part of a 20th-century trend of the larger-than-life dictator empowered by the advent of mass media.
Compared with Stalin and Mao, Nasser was, nevertheless, a gentle pussycat.
Even during Nasser’s tenure, which combined popularity with brutality, many Egyptians refused to believe the lie that they were docile sheeple who needed a father figure – or, in the case of Nasser, an amiable brother, cousin or charming boy next door – to shepherd them. In actuality, opposition was often brave and determined.
Moreover, co-option was often, and remains, a more effective tool than coercion, leading many to hitch their cart to the wagon train.
“There were many who embraced [Nasser’s] leadership as an active, not passive, choice because, rightly or wrongly, they envisaged themselves as making gains out of it,” points out Jack Shenker, the author of a major new book on the Egyptian revolution.
Today, the regime is also employing a blend of coercion and co-option to protect the state that Nasser built, and Sadat and Mubarak renovated. But without Nasser’s skill, charisma and monopoly of the media, and with a restive population that is no longer willing to buy yesteryear’s mythology, this enterprise seems doomed.
Sisi is right, no Egyptian president can become a “pharaoh” any more.
Khaled Diab is an award-winning Egyptian-Belgian journalist, writer and blogger. He is the author of Intimate Enemies: Living with Israelis and Palestinians in the Holy Land. He blogs at www.chronikler.com.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.
Source: Al Jazeera