Thursday 23 October 2014

Filling political vacuum




I postpone writing about a very important matter; that is the criteria decided by the supreme council of Judiciary that should be taken into consideration when choosing those eligible to work in the Judiciary… it’s said those criteria have to do with the father’s level of education and family economic and social living standard… I wish the dignified council can issue the constitutional, legal, logic and humane criteria it seeks so that one can discuss the matter after hearing from all parties… until now, we heard only from those who were denied acceptance to enroll in the judiciary service.

Now I move to a very cross-cutting issue in our country’s agenda; that is the issue of dealing with youth aging from 18 to 30 years old and who are in millions.

First there is a question I myself have yet no answer for… however, I still try to find one through my interest in the historical movement of Egypt… the question is: why have civil political formations whether parties, groups or alliances failed to continue and cope with the changes of every era… and most, if not all, of them ended up dismantled or finished… while armed religious ideologies-referenced groups were able to continue and expand?

We have been analyzing those civil political formations since the last decade of the 19th century… first, there was Al-Game’ya Al-Wataniya or the national community, also called Helwan community as it was established in Helwan… this political group also contributed to the 1881 revolution… then at the beginning of the 20th century came Al-Omma party or the nation party in 1907… then Al-Islah Ala Al-Mabade’a Al-Dostoriya party or Reform as per the constitutional principles party… then Al-Hezb Al-Watani or the National party leaded by Mustafa kamel and Muhammed Farid…

Then one find other parties that were vanished completely and almost forgotten in history like one called An-Nobala’a party or the Nobles party… Al-Omma Al-Qebtya party or the Coptic Nation party… then came World War I… and what followed later when the independence battle raged… and so Al-Wafd party was established to become the first party in the political life… after it, came Al-Ahrar Ad-Dostoreyeen party and Ash-Sha’ab party established by Sedki Pasha…

After this, Al-Wafd party divided and yielded Al-Ha’yaa As-Sa’adiya in 1938… later came Al-Kotla leaded by Makram Ebied Pasha in 1943… also, At-Taliya’a Al-Wafdiya was established… moreover, there were other parties in the political arena like Masr Al-Fattaa and the communist movement along with its offshoots.

On the other side, muslim brotherhood group was established in 1928… one can read through its history that this group’s course was never interrupted… however, it witnessed ups and downs in a continuous line describing its movement.

Afterwards, came political formations of July 23 revolution… starting from Haya’at At-Tahrir or Liberation organization… then Al-Itihad Al-Qawmi or National Union… to Al-Itihad Al-Ishteraki or Socialist Union… all this confirms my point of view… that is all civil political formations came to an end… while other armed groups with references of religious ideologies continued.

I discussed with my friend and historian Dr. Assem Ad-Desouki about this phenomenon while I was documenting those information I mentioned here about the history of those parties… We both had the same opinion that the Egyptian people adores the “all in one” formula… as Al-Wafd party was, in composition and course, a political melting pot for all social and intellectual diversities of the Egyptian people… since it included peasants starting from daily workers, very small land owners, small land owners, average standard land owners and reaching to very wealthy agriculture land owners… the same thing applies to other categories and groups like workers, real estate capitalists, bankers, industrialists…

I have been trying, since the Nasserist movement was at its peak, to present a point of view I believe is right for describing the continuity of Egyptian history… this opinion states that Nasserist political organizations had the same essence of Al-Wafd party; that is the “all in one” formula… with only one difference; Nasserism – despite considering national capitalism part of the working powers of people – excluded all exploitation powers that were targeted by agrarian reform laws and nationalization… and so, there were no big agriculture land owners or capitalists like the case before 1952.

I believe Nasserism wanted to shift the Egyptian political life from the “all in one” phase to a phase of diverse political life through founding a political formation; that is At-Tanzim At-Talie’y inside the big organization; meaning the Social Union… along with that was the youth organization that aimed at preparing and qualifying the youth through deepening their social and political awareness… and so after the end of this transformation phase, low and middle classes can establish their own parties defending their interests and expressing their orientations… after the society class conflict is settled and consequently, all the society economic interests and political and intellectual orientations are well defined.

However, everything came to an end after the defeat of 1967… and what followed after the 1973 war victory of open economy or Infitah policies that opened the door for undermining the country politically, economically and intellectually as we all know.

There is also another point of view that is based on what we can consider a historical fact; that is Egypt has been in a state of continuous change since Muhammed Ali era to date… and it didn’t witness any long times of political economic social stability where economic and political orientations are established… and where society class conflict is settled… only then, the national will can view its long-term strategic course to follow.

What happened is that every renaissance attempt was either scuttled or interrupted… that is what happened to Muhammed Ali, Khedive Ismail and Nasser’s projects… as a result, all political formations’ experiments were interrupted because there was no solid ground for them to continue and develop… and so the most successful model was the armed religious ideologies-referenced groups… those who adopt violence as means to express their relation with the other in the country… and where their closed narrow-minded religious interpretations act like the shell protecting the group against changes and absence of experiences’ accumulation in its sociological and cultural surroundings.

And thus, this formula combining armed violence and narrow-minded religious interpretations have become haven for those disappointed of failure of civil political formations … also for others who look for “salvation” by resorting to religious interpretations describing the way for them in exchange for total obedience… and so death becomes the “gift” they receive if they died for the sake of supporting the group’s ideology.

The question now: Can we have this political formation adopting the “all in one” formula to go through our current transformation state?... can’t we form a national front capable of gathering many parties while maintaining diversity and employing it to serve the collective national agreed-upon goals?... in doing such thing, it would be regarded as a historical development of the “all in one” formula.

Could we have a youth political organization comprising all ideologies and which can act as the melting pot of those millions of young men that can later provide the political arena with intellectually and culturally qualified cadres?

Endless questions looking for answers…

Translated into English by: Dalia Elnaggar





This article was published in Al Ahram newspaper on October 23, 2014.

To see the original article, go to:


#alahram #ahmed_elgammal #Egypt #political_organizations #political_parties #all_in_one

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