09.09.05. Re-Thinking the
Mediterranean
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by ericbritton @ 10:10 0
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Editor’s note: We had better find a place in
our thinking for ideas and approaches like this. Otherwise, dear friends, we
are dead in the water.
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Re-Thinking the Mediterranean
An Alternative Bridging
Project
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by Omar Barghouti
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and Adrian Grima
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In a world where the “clash of
civilizations” is unfolding as a self-fulfilling prophecy, reclaiming the
Mediterranean as a cultural
bridge acquires unprecedented import and urgency. Countering the United
States’ crusade
of neo-colonial hegemony, disregard for international law, xenophobia and
unchecked projection of immense power on the world stage necessitates a
world-wide rejection of fundamentalism, whether in the north or the south, the
east or the west. People of conscience everywhere are compelled to unite in
resisting empire, or else the ravages and devastation of the old world
colonialism will pale in comparison with what we might expect in this modern
“crusade,” to borrow George W. Bush.
Rather than succumb to the “clash”
temptation by reinforcing “defensive self-pride,” it is time to
come to terms with “the bewildering interdependence of our time,”
as Edward Said called it years ago in his article about “The Clash of
Ignorance.” We are called upon “to reflect, examine, sort out what
it is we are dealing with in reality, the interconnectedness of innumerable
lives, ‘ours’ as well as ‘theirs,’” debunking, in
the process, the confused and confusing myths about who or what the West or the
Other may be.
The Mediterranean has
once again found itself representing a conflict mired in myths and
misunderstanding; but it is also from the Mediterranean that
new paths can emerge. Despite its tendency to close itself within a fortress,
the European Union includes within it strong civil society organizations, which
can play a key role in forging a new partnership with all progressive forces within
the Euro-Mediterranean region and beyond. Such an alliance can elaborate and
push forward a program for holistic development in the interrelated fields of
politics, culture, the environment, and the economy.
A progressive alliance that focuses on the
Mediterranean can be a credible, indeed a crucial, core of a larger alliance
that presents a counterweight to American unilateralism and European cultural
ethnocentrism and economic protectionism, as well as a new paradigm for
cross-regional partnerships based on a harmonizing vision and a geopolitical
philosophy that is essentially at odds with the neocon worldview. It is not
civilizations or even cultures that are pitted against each other, but the
haves and the have-nots, the “powerful and powerless communities, the
secular politics of reason and ignorance, and universal principles of justice
and injustice.”
Although religion assumes at times key significance
in the Euro-Med discourse, as evident in the ongoing debate on Turkey’s
prospects for accession to the EU, it is important to reexamine the
hypothetical line in the sea separating Christianity from Islam. The increasing
population of Muslims in Europe and the
indigenous presence of Christian Arabs are often ignored when drawing such a
rigid line. Furthermore, the centuries-long religious co-existence in the
region has been lost on the “clash” theorists. If fundamentalism in
all religions is undoubtedly a source of schism and hostility towards the
“Other,” diversity in faith per se does not have to be divisive.
Malta, as a possible bridge between the “two sides” of what could
be viewed as one region with a wealth of diversity, is one place where this
re-evaluation of the “divide” can be carried out by critically
re-reading the past and rethinking the taken-for-granted present.
Religion aside, Euro-Med skeptics on either side
present a number of compelling arguments that ought to be considered.
On one side of the proposed cross-Mediterranean
bridge we have a largely successful experiment of integrating very distinct
European nations that have in the not-so-distant past led protracted,
devastating wars against each other; while on the other we have one Arab
nation, interspersed with indigenous national minorities, torn apart by former
colonial powers into separate countries with artificial borders and still
languishing under fragmentation, authoritarian rule and developmental
stagnation. That’s what any snapshot of the two sides would reveal. But
if snapshots may account for part of reality, they ultimately remain distorted
images that freeze the time and space context and thus fail to reveal the
complex processes at play and the inherent potential for change. The
Mediterranean region’s latent strength should not be underestimated.
The Mediterranean domain is where some of the
world’s most vibrant civilizations once thrived on interaction,
acculturation, trade and common interest. It is a region that has contributed a
disproportionately great share to human philosophy, arts and sciences, anchored
in a seamless blend of different cultures. Its potential is embedded in its
history. It is also borne by geopolitical and economic realities of the
present.
Pragmatically speaking, both sides stand to gain
from such an alliance.
As the constant flow of migration shows, the Mediterranean and its
surrounding regions are full of brave and resourceful people who are willing to
work hard, even to risk their lives, to carve out a better future for
themselves and for their families and communities. With its surplus of underutilized
university graduates on its Northern and Southern shores, the Mediterranean, in
partnership with all forces of good will, has the potential to come up with the
practical solutions of its own problems and to serve as a model for other
regions of the world where global powers wield their unrestrained control.
European proponents of Euro-Med politics are well
aware of the region’s potential in helping Europe
translate its massive economic power into political potency and international
influence, currently in short supply. Having easier, safer and cheaper access
to Arab oil (until safer, cleaner sources of energy are developed), enjoying
open trade in a stable, prosperous and free zone and having access to the
growing Arab market are all factors that enter into their calculations. Arabs
who strive for a pan-Arab unity as a necessary condition for resuming healthy
development and transcending fragmentation and powerlessness ought not dismiss
this alliance out of hand, either. For Europe is,
above everything else, an appealing, if embattled, model of political and
economic integration that can be emulated. Striving to form an alliance with Europe may
indeed act as a catalyst for democratization and preciously needed
modernization in parallel with Arab reunification. Furthermore, open cultural
and intellectual channels with Europe can
help progressive Arabs combat fundamentalism and corruption, both inhibiting
true progress in the Arab world. And it can empower those Europeans on the left
of what is left of the political “spectrum,” especially those
involved in concrete ways in the new global movements, in their efforts to
reclaim the unified continent from the choking hold of multinational
corporations, to debunk myths and to counter the demonization of the Other,
both within Europe itself and in the surrounding Mediterranean countries. By
strengthening their ties in the region, European progressives will be in a
better position to understand those who are crossing the sea to enter an
increasingly unwelcoming Europe and to propose and run projects that would
really make the lives of people throughout the region more dignified, thus
worth living.
Repositioning the Mediterranean in the
centre of a new progressive project means thinking about this diverse region
and its resources in original and truly sustainable ways. The Mediterranean, for
example, has an overabundance of sunlight that can provide countries in the
region and beyond with cleaner energy. This would not only have serious,
long-term positive effects on the health of our planet as a whole but would
also promote the region as a hub of research in the field of sustainable energy
development. Europe, on the
other hand, would provide already available technology and know-how, and
possibly the initial investment that sets the ball rolling. Of course, this is
not meant to encourage the rich to waste more energy and the poor to produce it
for them - it is meant, rather, to encourage a new reliance on renewable
sources and to start a chain reaction of sustainable practices throughout the
region and beyond, an outreach guaranteed by the millions of tourists who visit
the region every year and who would therefore be exposed to this wave of green
innovation. The other long-term effect would be to establish a more fruitful
relationship between equals and to provide more skilled jobs for people on all
sides of the Sea.
Another area in which civil society, possibly in
partnership with the institutions, can play a major role in rethinking and
rejuvenating the Mediterranean and the
relationship between the various cultures and resources within it is cultural,
ecological and agricultural tourism. As a hub of research and production of
alternative energies, the region could attract people through conferences,
research visits and the like. It could also provide renewable energy to
small-scale farms, resorts and cultural sites and thus have a direct effect on
the income and livelihood of people in the region who would not need to flee to
continental Europe in the
hope of a better future. The shift from mass tourism, which has a devastating
impact on the environment, and therefore on all living species in the region,
to cultural, ecological, and agricultural tourism would also pave the way for
more research into traditional, more sustainable and holistic ways of living,
and possibly even to ethical tourism.
Moreover, with its popularity among so many
northerners, the Mediterranean is a
region with a great potential to develop fair trade, encouraging local
communities to produce crafts and foodstuffs that reflect and respect their
environment and culture and guarantee fair wages for the producer and a fair
price for the consumer. There are already some important fair trade producer
initiatives and “social cooperatives” in Palestine and Southern
Italy, to mention but two. A democratic
strategy based on empowering local communities has the potential to succeed
because it aims to provide for a generally guaranteed demand but also because
it has the potential to create a new demand for forms of
“recreation” or leisure such as eco-villages that have long-term
effects even on those who benefit from them as visitors or short-term
residents. These are initiatives that start to refuse the
“ours-theirs” divide that Said talks about and builds on the
“interconnectedness of innumerable lives.”
The role of culture as a “vehicle for
dialogue” within the Euromed area was highlighted in a 2003 Report by the
High-Level Group established on the initiative of the President of the European
Commission, who at the time was Romano Prodi. Apart from the Barcelona
process, the Group proposes to “involve civil societies in ending the
discriminations from which European citizens of immigrant origin still too
often suffer and the persistent situation of injustice, violence and insecurity
in the Middle East, in
implementing educational programmes designed to replace negative mutual
perceptions with mutual knowledge and understanding, and so on.” Culture,
the report suggests, must be used to “reinforce the emerging sense of
fellowship and common destiny, so that Europe and its
Mediterranean partners lay the foundations of a wider civic consciousness based
on a convergent understanding of history and their common heritages.” The
Group, which recommends mobility and sharing of expertise, proposes to make
education a vehicle for learning about diversity and transmitting knowledge of
the Other, and this includes, amongst others, redefining the foundations of the
humanities and social sciences and the way they are taught, as regards the
anthropological, legal, cultural, religious, economic and social dimensions of
the history of the Mediterranean region, and to develop elements of common
knowledge.
On an institutional level, the Barcelona Process
launched by the Conference of EU and Mediterranean foreign
ministers that was held in Barcelona in
November 1995 can be a proper foundation for starting the dialogue --
particularly among civil society representatives -- about this alternative
Mediterranean project. It emphasizes friendly relations based on: political and
security partnership through the establishment of a common area of peace and
stability; economic partnership by creating an area of shared prosperity; and
partnership in social, cultural and human affairs, by developing human
resources, promoting understanding between cultures and collaboration between
civil societies.
Tackling these serious tasks, however, entails
challenging the three main impediments that stand in the way: current US foreign
policy in the region; Israel’s
occupation of Arab land and denial of Palestinian rights; and Europe’s
colonial legacy in the Arab world, manifested in socio-economic and political
weakness in the south and uncontrollable immigration to the north.
Although Cyprus presents another serious obstacle
that must be addressed, the fact that there is general agreement -- supported
by the UN and most major players -- that the EU is the proper framework for
solving this conflict, makes this issue not among the major impediments mentioned
above. Reunifying the island on the basis of equality, democracy and withdrawal
of all foreign forces, remains the only internationally-sanctioned solution,
regardless of how long it may take.
Going back to the primary challenge to the
suggested Mediterranean alliance, it is naïve to assume that the US will
just stand by and watch while a competing Euro-Arab pole is being established.
The possibility for aggressive and multi-faceted US
intervention to thwart the effort should be taken into consideration in all
phases of planning for this alliance. Emphasizing the UN’s central role
as the best available -- if not perfect -- embodiment of international law and
universal rights can attract wide international support, which will be needed
to fence off any American attempts to sabotage the entire process. Regardless,
Europe is invited to take a stand, to disengage from anachronistic, cold-war
groupings such as NATO, to free itself of its current role of “washing
the dishes,” while the US cooks the dinner and eats it too, as expressed
by Robert Kagan, a leading neocon ideologue. With the ominous consolidation of
power in the hands of fundamentalists, militarists and financial oligarchs in
the US, the
wider the Atlantic, the
narrower the Mediterranean will
be.
As for the second obstacle, although the Barcelona process
has included Israel -- for
obvious reasons -- it is time to critically analyze the roots and prospects of
resolving the long standing Arab-Zionist conflict, the most deep-rooted
conflict troubling the region. Despite differentiating itself from US foreign
policy to various degrees in other conflicts, Europe remains
overall submissive in its relation with the US in the Middle
East. "We are friends and allies
but we are not servants," French president Jacques Chirac recently burst
out in protest. Facts on the ground, however, can blur this distinction.
Europe’s
understandable guilt over the Holocaust is often cited as the most profound
cause of its direct or indirect acquiescence in aspects of Israel’s
violation of international law, mainly its illegal occupation of Arab lands,
its stubborn rejection of the right of Palestinian refugees to return and its
entrenched and distinguished form of apartheid against its own Palestinian
citizens. Going beyond moral inconsistency and guilt-generated injustice,
though, requires overcoming this basic obstacle on the path of translating
Euro-Med rhetoric into sustainable realities on the ground. Arab leaders may
sign anything that overlooks this conflict, but their legitimacy is as solid as
ice-cream on a hot Mediterranean summer day. The Arab world’s hearts and
minds cannot be remotely represented by its unelected, despotic rulers. This is
where civil society, even where it is stifled by corrupt institutions, can be
empowered by a strong Mediterranean initiative.
Ignoring the gravity and implications of the
illegal Israeli occupation of Palestine, as the
2003 EU Report Dialogue Between Peoples and Cultures in the Euro-Mediterranean
Area mentioned earlier does, is not acceptable or constructive. Creative, bold
and morally sound solutions are indeed required to achieve justice and lasting
peace in this century-old conflict. A project that has every potential to win
wide Arab support for a Mediterranean alliance is the unitary, secular and
democratic state solution to the Palestine-Israel problem. Only such a state
can reconcile the seemingly irreconcilable: the inalienable, UN-sanctioned
rights of the indigenous people of Palestine to
self-determination and the internationally accepted rights of Israeli Jews to
live in peace and security after justice has prevailed. Regardless of
Israel’s establishment on the ruins of Palestinian society and as a
result of massive ethnic cleansing of most Palestinians during the Nakba
(catastrophe of 1948), Israeli Jews and Palestinian-Arabs (Muslims and
Christians) should enjoy equal democratic rights without discrimination, and
without ethnic supremacy of either community. The return and compensation of
the Palestinian refugees, in accordance with international law, remains the
cornerstone of any such historic solution to this long conflict. This would not
only redress the injustice done to Palestinians and end the last remnant of
colonialism in the world, but will also remove Europe’s
sore thorn from the heart of the Arab nation. It may well spawn an authentic
process of democratic reform in the Arab world at large, after denying Arab
rulers their age-long alibi of the “conflict” with Israel. This
home-grown political transformation will better promote and protect the process
of integrating the Mediterranean region on shared values of freedom, democracy,
rule of law and the fundamental equality of all humans, regardless of faith,
ethnicity or nationality.
As for the last mentioned obstacle, the colonial
legacy, it must be admitted that European colonial ravage and cruel
exploitation of the south has left its nations impoverished, dependent and
incapable of sustaining any meaningful development. Without seriously stopping
its collusion with the south’s autocratic regimes and consistently
investing into the region’s infrastructure and sustainable economic,
political and cultural development as compensation for decades of organized robbery
and horrific atrocities, we shall continue to witness this often uprooting
phenomenon of one-way migration.
Forming a Mediterranean alliance of progressive
forces everywhere in the region that attracts the support of similar elements
elsewhere would be beneficial to all those involved and would reflect the Mediterranean’s
true heritage of coexistence, multiculturalism, stability and prosperity. And
as the eminent Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes says: “[C]ultures are not
isolated, and perish when deprived of contact with what is different and
challenging. […] No culture […] retains its identity in isolation;
identity is attained in contact, in contrast, in breakthrough.”
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* Omar Barghouti, independent political and cultural
analyst who has published essays on the rise of empire, the Palestine question and art of the oppressed. He
holds a Masters degree in electrical engineering from Columbia University, and is currently a doctoral student of
philosophy (ethics) at Tel Aviv University. He contributed to the published book,
The New Intifada: Resisting Israel's Apartheid (Verso Books, 2001). He is an
advocate of the secular, democratic state solution in historic Palestine. His article “9.11 Putting the
Moment on Human Terms” was chosen among the “Best of 2002” by
The Guardian.
Adrian Grima, a lecturer at the University of Malta, has published books and articles about
Maltese Literature and about the Mediterranean and has read papers and poetry at conferences in Europe, the United States and the Caribbean. In 1999, he published It-Trumbettier, a
prize-winning book of poetry in Maltese. Some of his poems have appeared in
anthologies in Europe and Israel. His second collection of poetry,
including a Maltese-Arabic bilingual edition, will be published in 2006. Dr.
Grima is a cultural activist and the Maltese correspondent of the Babelmed.net
website about culture in the Mediterranean region. www.adriangrima.com