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The audacity to dream |
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By Khaled Diab If we suspend scepticism and take up Barack Obama’s
invitation to dream of change, what |
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January
2009 Since Barack Obama’s victory, I have
been somewhat at odds with myself. The realist and sceptic tells me that,
despite the euphoria, it may well be back to business more or less as usual
once the president elect actually takes office. Still, the
dreamer and romantic urges me to savour the symbolism of Obama’s
victory, with the way it has energised US voters and inspired people around
the world, and allow myself the luxury of dreaming that change really can
happen. This leads me to wonder about my native The most
immediate dream I have – and one that is probably shared by most of the
region – is to dispel the spectre of conflict which has destroyed Peace will
encourage stability, and stability will trigger change and progress. But what
change does the Well, the
region is a diverse and complex place, and there is no general panacea. But
to take up Obama’s challenge for people to have the
audacity to hope, I will suspend my disbelief and allow myself the luxury to
flesh out my own Middle Eastern dream. The I dream of
societies that have the self-confidence to look to the future, and take
assured strides into the unknown, rather than fixating on the past, whether
in terms of glories or grievances. I desire societies that put more trust in
innovation, and less in tradition, and where change is something to be
striven for and not just emulated. I wish people would realise just how
inappropriate, counterproductive and indecorous it is for them to let
religion out on to the streets to make a nuisance of itself and intimidate
others, when its rightful place should be at home and in the heart, where it can
engage in private affairs with the faithful. I hope
that the failed dream of pan-Arabism can be resurrected in a more inclusive
form to build a loose trans-national union between all the peoples of the
region: Arabs, Persians, Turks, Israelis, etc. I aspire to a future in which
national and ethnic identity become less important and more blurred, so that
a non-Muslim can become the leader of a Muslim majority country, or a non-Jew
the prime minister of These
prospects seem like fantasy at the moment, but, after much blood, sweat and
suffering, what was once deemed impossible, sometimes does become possible.
Pre-Obama who would’ve thought that Since Obama triggered this train of thought and since we
shouldn’t get too carried away with dreaming, let’s start with the There are
hopes that, under Obama’s tutelage, Given The major
difference Left to
its own devices, the shaky regime of the ageing Hosni
Mubarak in Nevertheless,
the outlook of the Pax Americana empire is unlikely
to change all that much, and the United States is likely to continue to
believe that its narrow imperial interests are served by continued support
for forces that are ultimately not in the interests of the Middle East and
its people. Of course,
This
column appeared in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section
on 30 November 2008. Read the related
discussion. ãCopyright 2009 – Khaled Diab.
Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website is the copyright of Khaled Diab. |