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Editorial
Why
Tharwa? Why Now?
Ammar Abdulhamid
March 10, 2004
Raising such a sensitive issue as Minority Rights in such a troubled part
of the world as the Middle East (especially the Arab World) at this point in
time, when external forces are once again actively involved in reshaping the
region and when many of their officials and "experts" are loudly and
unambiguously calling for "regime changes" and new Sykes-Picot arrangements
of one type or another, is bound to raise some eyebrows as well, both as a
reflection of confusion and dismay.
But then, what's new?
Leaving it to the policymakers of the region (who, in this case, may indeed
reflect certain true "popular" sentiments, at least as far as the particular
majority population involved), there has never been and there will never
be an opportune historical moment for raising this issue. The ethnically
and religiously charged atmosphere of the various constituent countries and
enclaves of the region has made it all but too certain that the issue of
Minority Rights is consistently viewed with much suspicion and fear.
The historical
interaction between minority groups and majority populations throughout the
history of the region (especially during the 20th Century),
coupled with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the Millet System, the
sudden influx of nationalist ideologies, and the continuing intervention of
external powers (often using the need for safeguarding the rights of one
minority group or another as a pretext) have all combined to help make this
issue one of the most forbidden political and cultural taboos in the region.
What this amounted to in
practice is a wholesale negligence of potentially (and historically) one of
the most destabilizing forces in regional development, thus contributing to
the continued souring of relations between minority groups and majority
populations (not to mention relations between the minority groups
themselves) making it even harder in the process for this issue to be
raised.
Yet, here we are,
nonetheless, raising this issue very clearly if not bluntly through the
Tharwa Project.
Why? Why now? And who
are we exactly?
The answers are simple.
For, at a time when there is so much interest in spreading democratic values
in the ME and encouraging greater respect for basic human rights, and at a
time when the region seems so hard-pressed to tackle its basic developmental
problems and challenges and unleash its creative potential, the issue of
Minority Rights, being one the major sources of unrest and instability and
one of the major justifications for continued authoritarian practices,
cannot be ignored anymore.
Indeed, the demands and
concerns of minority groups need to be seriously considered and addressed
so that the end product of the democratization processes currently taking
place in the region should be growth and prosperity for all, not chaos.
This region desperately
needs win-win solutions to its problems and cannot afford to continue to
preserve the system of "selective empowerment" that it has fostered for so
long and whereby only certain segments of the population is taking into
account in the decision-making process.
Democratization should
seek to empower all societal forces and all groups, as any attempt at
limiting its scope will be counterproductive and will serve to undermine the
very concept and legitimacy of the process, as the recent history of the
region can attest.
The Tharwa Project
should, therefore, be viewed as part and parcel of the ongoing
democratization efforts in the region, one with special interest in helping
to "foster better relations and establish a free channel for communication
and dialogue between minority groups and the majority population in each
Arab country and across the Arab World" (See the
Tharwa Project Mission
Statement)
This special focus on the
Arab World, and the Arab Mashreq in particular (that is on
the Arab Gulf States, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan,
Palestine, Iraq and Egypt), is no way meant to deny the importance
and relevance of the issue in other parts of the Middle East as well.
Rather, the purpose of this limitation is to help establish a sense of
perspective in the early stages of the Project by focusing on that
particular part of the region where the issue of Minority Rights is becoming
increasingly more critical and is receiving more and more attention both
locally and internationally.
Indeed, it is in the hope
of transforming this newly (re)gained attention into a constructive force, a
force capable of supplying the necessary vision and tools for the
improvement of minority-majority relations in the Arab World and across the
region that the decision to launch the Tharwa Project was taken.
In due course of time,
the scope of the Project will be expanded to gradually include other
parts of the Middle East as well.
Meanwhile, the Tharwa
Project will slowly integrate itself into the various peace-building
activities taking place in the region, and will attempt to play an effective
role in conflict resolution and prevention.
In this, the Tharwa
Project's website only represents a small, though important, part of the
overall scope of the Project. The articles that could be found here,
some of which are written specifically for the site, are mainly meant to
highlight some of the Project's concerns and activities and to play
an educational role of sorts for the general readership both in the Arab
World and abroad, and advisory role as well for policymakers interested in
the region.
Other activities of the
Tharwa Project will include organizing conferences, seminars and
workshops, on both the grassroots and leadership levels meant to help dispel
some of the negative stereotypes that plague minority-majority relations and
cast some dark shadows on the issue of Minority Rights, and create some
guidelines and recommendations for regional and international policymakers.
Moreover, a newsletter
will soon be issued highlighting some of the various methods that could be
applied to help improve community relations and participation in the
centralized decision-making process so that the interests and needs of the
various local populations are accommodated.
Special studies and polls
seeking to assess the degree of integration of minority groups in the
overall socioeconomic and political life of various Arab countries are also
planned for the upcoming year.
Emerging as a result of
an independent regional initiative and being implemented in cooperation with
various regional and international scholars, activists and organizations,
the Tharwa Project could also serve as a barometer of sorts
with regard to the region's increasing willingness (or lack thereof) to
seriously tackle some of its lingering problems and to allow for private
initiatives to play an important role in this regard.
The fact that this
Project can be launched from a country such as Syria, of all places,
without any governmental approval or intervention is indeed indicative of
the kind of progress that can be made when private initiative insists on
playing its role in regional development even in the hardest of
circumstances.
So, who are we exactly?
Well, we are simply just a small group of regional and international
observers and activists who think that this region and its peoples deserve a
better future than the one that seems to be looming overhead should certain
problems continue to be ignored.
If our modest efforts
should end up playing even a tiny part in rekindling interest in minority
issues in the region and establishing the basis for a constructive dialogue
between all concerned, then our basic mission will have been accomplished.
But this is not a task
that we can achieve by ourselves. Indeed, the Tharwa Project will go
nowhere without material and moral support from all those who can identify
with its stated mission and its declared goals. By launching this project
and this website, a tiny seed has indeed been planted in a rather rough
terrain, much nurture will be required to ensure its proper growth. For
this, we cannot solely rely on our own resources, but we have to extend an
appeal to you, the reader of these words, as well. For, indeed,
community-oriented endeavors cannot aspire to flourish without community
acceptance and support.
For more information on
how you can support the Tharwa Project, please visit our Membership
Page.
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