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The Absence of the
Critical Mind.
By
Tarek Heggy
It is my belief that the "critical mind" is
almost non-existent today, largely due to the meager margin of
democracy allowed and to the fact that top positions, in many
cases, are concentrated in the hands of a few incompetent
individuals whose intellectual capacities and management
skills are mediocre at best. When we add to this the current
proliferation of a reactionary religious culture, it is
understandable that there should be a marked decrease in
rationality, a lack of participation marked by extreme
negativity, and a prevalence of constants and fixed ideas that
cannot hope to hold up against the objective criticism that is
crucial to true development. This lack of democracy actively
hinders social mobility, resulting in a general state of
incompetence that in turn leads to a decline in standards at
all levels. Invariably, rational thinking takes a back seat.
Eight centuries ago, Ibn Rushd (Averoess) attempted to
revive rationality and to draw attention to its merits, only
to be met with an onslaught of hostility and criticism from
Arab societies. Ironically, he was welcomed in France, where
he proved instrumental in the defeat of theocracy. And today?
If we but glance at a weekly article in El Akhbar newspaper by
an individual with a mind spewed straight from the womb of the
Middle Ages, we will soon realize the reason for our rapid
decline and sorry state of regression. When a newspaper of
repute with a wide national circulation allows what amounts to
a weekly demolition force against the values of humanity,
civilization and progress, it is small wonder that we should
be taking giant steps backwards. The articles bemoan a
glorious past that actually never existed outside the writer's
imagination, and was in fact characterized by excessive
bloodshed and slaughter (which tended to be the norm all over
the world at that time). The writer goes into endless tirades
against "The Other", who is pictured, quite simply,
as the devil, and in true tribal fashion, persists in seeing
this Other as a vile enemy intent upon 'destroying' us and who
must therefore be fought with words - and with the sword. This
kind of 'reasoning' is typical of the desert culture,
characterized as it is by tribal values, isolation, and danger
lurking behind every dune. In actual fact, the Other is
neither devil nor angel; and based upon this premise, we
should engage in a constructive interchange of ideas and
discussions, that can only benefit both sides and further the
cause of progress and of humanity at large. This said, we
should bear in mind that the concept of "humanity"
is completely alien to the nomadic tribal mind.
The Other played a significant and enriching role in our
lives during the past two centuries, and has had a profound
and positive influence on journalism, the theatre, literature,
translation, and thought in general. I can safely say that
Egypt was a melting-pot blending the Egyptian with the Other
in a harmonious and productive fusion that resulted in
countless works of beauty, refinement and cultural merit.
Isolation, on the other hand, has spawned a decline in
aesthetic values and an ugliness that few can deny. I have
every hope that the minorities in Arabic-speaking countries
will serve as a catalyst for the dissemination of progress and
refinement, taking society forward towards the age we live in,
rather than backwards to a past that belongs to the Dark Ages.
In addition to the absence of a critical mind in our lives
today, I have serious doubts as to the existence of a class of
intelligentsia in all Arabic-speaking countries. Ever since
the Fifties, most Arab regimes have been careful to create
what I can only call "the official intellectual".
This 'intellectual' may be an excellent reader and researcher,
but is almost invariably no more than a civil servant with
none of the independence that is crucial to the creation of a
class of free-thinking and effective intelligentsia that is
not subservient to the ruling regime. It is a sad fact that a
large number of intellects in our society have been lured by
Bedouin or Baathi petrodollars, while others have fallen prey
to the law of attraction to official positions. Thus have most
Arab countries become sadly devoid of free-thinking
intellectuals, and if further proof be needed, we have only to
note that almost all our intellectuals today churn out
identical views on most issues, a phenomenon that is - to put
it mildly - uncivilized and uncultured.
The picture becomes clearer when we realize that
rationality in our society has suffered two major defeats: the
first was the triumph of the school of copying in the tenth to
the thirteenth century A.D. over the school of reason as
exemplified by the students of Aristotle, headed by the
brilliant Ibn Rushd. The defeat of the champions of reason saw
the end of centuries of relatively enlightened thought and
paved the way for stagnation, inflexibility and inertia. The
second blow was the defeat of the Egyptian school of
enlightenment, exemplified by Ahmed Loutfy El Sayed, Salama
Moussa, Taha Hussein, Aly Abdel Razik and El Akkad (before he
retracted his views upon his dismissal from the Wafd party).
Perhaps the last of these great thinkers were Louis Awad,
Hussein Fawzi and Zaki Naguib Mahmoud. Egypt in the Twenties
was undergoing an intellectual boom in its capacity as a
leading Mediterranean country enjoying the fruits of the
Renaissance movement; however, the spread of Fascism in the
Thirties and the defeat suffered by Egyptian liberalism put
paid to the school of enlightenment in this country.
Nevertheless, I am confident that a third school of
enlightenment is beginning to make its presence felt here in
Egypt, and am confident that it will eventually prevail, even
if present-day liberals do not witness this outcome in their
lifetimes. It is my firm belief that the battle of progress
with reactionary forces can only end in the triumph of the
former and the retraction of the latter, though as I say, we
may not live long enough to see the end of the battle.
Email: [email protected]
http://www.heggy.org
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