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from the January 08, 2004 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0108/p12s01-wome.html
If Hillary can make it in Arabic, will Rousseau?
By Samar Farah
| Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
DAMASCUS, SYRIA
- Nouri Bookstore, one of the main book dealers in Damascus, bulges and
buckles with Arabic translations of Western texts - mostly books on
computers, medicine, and cooking. On prominent display: a book by former Ku
Klux Klan leader David Duke with the very loosely translated title "My
Awakening, the Jewish Control over USA"; a copy of Hillary Clinton's
autobiography, and other works on Sept. 11 and the Iraq war.
But
writers like Rousseau and Descartes are relegated to a small corner in the
back - symbolic of the Arab world's lack of access to the West's great
thinkers and philosophers. According to a United Nations report last fall,
Spain translates in a single year as much as the Arab world has translated
in the past millennium.
Syrian author and publisher Ammar Abdulhamid hopes to change all that. If he
has his way, comparisons between nomads and cowboys, Arab thinkers and
French philosophers, Islamic art and modern art, will become common chatter
in Damascene restaurants and cabs. The key, he says, is a translation
movement that will put ordinary Arabs in closer touch with Western literary
and philosophical traditions.
Last
year, he gathered a staff of five and launched a nonprofit publishing group
and website,
DarEmar.
Despite more pressing concerns in this part of the world - illiteracy,
poverty, and peace - a few Arab publishers and academics are determined to
kindle cerebral passions. Stacking shelves with more foreign books is
central to their goal. Moreover, they say, such efforts are not merely a
playground for a small clique of intellectuals but an urgent matter for the
region's future.
"We
are definitely in a chaotic moment that will certainly crystallize," says
Dimitri Avghérinos, editor of
Maaber,
a highbrow Syrian webzine that covers everything from nonviolent resistance
to ecology. "Translation should play a crucial role in that - especially
translation of classics."
Last
fall's UN report - the second annual Arab Human Development Report (AHDR), a
critique of Arab countries by Arab intellectuals - calls on the Arab world
to "regain its historical prowess in translation," referring to early
Islamic history when translators were the heroes of an intellectual
flowering.
The
translation movement is taking hold slowly. In Beirut, a regional publishing
center, the Arab Organization for Translation was formed last year with a
goal to produce high-quality translations of academic texts. Only 10 percent
of all Arabic translations meet academic standards, the director says.
In
downtown Damascus, Cadmus, a small publishing outfit, offers Arabic
translations of political, historical, and philosophical works free of
charge online. And Dar Al Mada, a Damascus-based publisher, struck a deal
last year with newspapers in seven Arab countries: With each subscription,
customers get a free copy every month of world classics such as Aesop's
Fables.
Syria's ambitious Abdulhamid hops in conversation among the US Civil War,
the French Revolution, and ancient Greece with the ease and swiftness of a
channel surfer. Abdulhamid's interest in Western philosophy goes at least as
far back as his undergraduate days at the University of Wisconsin. When he
came back to Syria in 1994, he translated a book on American film for the
National Foundation for Cinema here. Although the work was commissioned,
officials deemed the finished translation "too American" for the Syrian
public.
While no book on Syrian film is likely to top US bestseller lists, many
academics and intellectuals - including the AHDR authors - criticize modern
Arab culture and scholarship as especially insular. The last surge in
translation took place in the 1950s, but they say the rise of Islamist
movements and authoritarian regimes slowed the movement. No official record
of the number or types of books translated into Arabic exists, and several
publishers dispute AHDR figures.
Islam encourages all Muslims to engage in more cultural exchange with the
West, says Salah Kuftaro, head of the Kuftaro Islamic Foundation in
Damascus. He cites a saying of the Prophet Muhammad "Seek knowledge even in
China."
Still many academics, intellectuals, and bookstore owners say getting
ordinary Arabs to curl up with French philosophers, let alone Arabic
philosophy, is wishful thinking. Part of the problem, is simply a lack of
bibliophiles.
"Stop 10 people in the street. If you find one person who reads, I'll give
you $10," laments Ammar Abd al-Aal, a worker at the Light of Damascus Book
Center. "Out of 100, you'll find two people who read."
Some
say illiteracy and the widespread need to hold several jobs keep most Arabs
from spending a few spare liras on pages of abstract musing.
"There are too many problems that are more important ... things that affect
daily life, that should take priority," says Damascus researcher Hassan
Abbas. "That doesn't mean we shouldn't translate, it's very important." But
he says even students - perhaps the segment of society most given to waxing
philosophical - are too busy trying to make ends meet.
Censorship offices in 22 Arab countries, high shipping costs, and the lack
of distribution companies don't help. The result is: In a region that once
used to pay authors the weight of their books in gold, a work that sells
5,000 copies now qualifies as a bestseller.
According to many observers, to the extent that Arabs have time and money
for purely intellectual pursuits, most are focused on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Until America's foreign policy changes, many
Syrians say, few will be curious about American philosophers.
"I
don't really foresee a possible new renaissance unless real peace is
established [in the Arab countries]," says Nafez Shammas, head of the
English department at Damascus University.
But
for Abdulhamid, the goal of translation is public dialogue, which he
considers necessary to any real change. He's in the process of publishing
Arabic versions of Dutch works with help from the Netherlands. He's also
applying to the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington for funding
to translate US works.
Among the projects percolating in
DarEmar's
brand new office in the upscale Mezzeh district is an anthology of Western
philosophy published with commentary by Syrians - not professors, but cab
drivers, waiters, students. Abdulhamid insists: "You need to popularize the
books."
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