A group of my friends went camping in the desert. They chose a spot in
the middle of nowhere and set up camp. They pulled out a few benches and arranged them
in a square, for everyone to sit together. With night fall, they started laying
down their sleeping bags in the middle of the square. As each one got into his
bag, the square got too crowded and they started
trying to arrange the layout in order to fit everybody. After half an hour of attempting
to solve this issue geometrically, they realized that they were – in fact – in the
middle of the desert and that all they needed to do was move the benches to make
more space.
This story has always fascinated
me. Those free-spirited, young and intelligent minds, who were in the middle of
a desert that stretched hundreds of kilometers in every direction, created a
square and their minds were locked inside that shape. They limited their
options by limiting their creativity and they lost the big picture by focusing
on the details.
In many ways I feel the same is
happening to us in Egypt now. We are spending too much effort trying to fit
everyone within the square when in fact the dimensions of the square were set
by us (and - by the way - I don't know if it should even be a square). We're
being forced to choose from a list of options that is only limited by the
creativity (or lack thereof) of a group of old and decaying bastards. We're
wrecking our brains trying to figure out who to vote for and what our
constitution should look like, when in fact these are processes that were based
on the wrong set of parameters. There is no denying that a healthy structure is
a fantastic start, but even a sound constitution is worthless in the absence of
a continuous interest by the people in how their lives are being run. Democracy
becomes a curse when the society is uninvolved and unaware.
We were surprised (not to say
disappointed) by the results of our elections. In many cases we blamed politicians
for abusing the good-will of the people and for manipulating their choices with
cheap religious and emotional messages. When in fact the main problem remains
that our people are unaware of the choices they have and their votes were
limited to the options presented to them. We are fighting the wrong battles. The
constitution will be shit, at best it will be a mindless document made
"pour la forme"; that much I can promise you. But then again this is
not the real issue. Even if we get the best people to write the most modern,
comprehensive and inclusive constitution, without a society that believes in
those values and is willing to protect them, it will not be even worth the paper it's printed on. Our choice of president matters very little if
we as a society are not there to monitor his/her performance and put our feet down when need to. Without the awareness and the continuous involvement of the people, change is not going to
happen.
It's no secret that we live in a
society where the majority is uneducated and unexposed. Even if people are
aware of what is going on in the country they remain unaware of the
alternatives that were not presented to them; those alternatives that
politicians fight so hard to keep away from their voters. Our real battle is
not with a healthy constitution or a good president, our real battle is to
empower communities. Make them aware of their rights and more importantly their
dreams and their capabilities. But this is not a battle against only those politicians who
don't want things to change but also against a long heritage of skewed up
values, morals and principals that came to characterize our society. The
resistance from the people themselves might prove to be more difficult than
that of the politicians. However, that is the real fight after all. Everything else
is secondary.
I have no idea how to do that nor
who should do it. I just know that we're spending our time focusing on the
wrong battle.
LOVE THE POST! it's a fresh voice that i sympathies and admire!
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, no picture is a black/white picture and i dont think we should limit ourself into either/or kind of thinking we can do both. since it is not yet an utopian world and it will take a long process (which it worth it, no matter how long does it take) to educate people, it is equally important to fight for your constitution for the civil state and human rights. having a good and strong infrastructure will give you the time and will pave the road ahead of you. without these infrastructure you won't get to the educational phase you so desire
Orit :))