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washingtonpost.com
A Modernizer
Challenges Syria's Old Order
By Nora Boustany
Friday, July 30, 2004; Page A14
Going out on a limb almost comes naturally for Ammar Abdulhamid.
He grew up in an artsy milieu in Damascus, the only child of a celebrity
couple whose daily existence depended on living on the edge of what was
acceptable within a rigid political system. His father, Mohammed
Shaheen, was a movie director, and his mother, Mona Wasef, is
a top Syrian actress. To succeed in their field meant breaking barriers.
At 38, Abdulhamid is one of Syria's daring modernizers, a member of
the country's budding reform movement that is challenging the old order,
at least verbally, and its way of doing things.
Abdulhamid, a well-read scholar and historian concerned with minority
and human rights in the Middle East, is founder of DarEmar, a
Damascus-based publishing house devoted to raising civic awareness. He
is also projects coordinator for DarEmar's Web-based research forum, Al
Tharwa, Arabic for "wealth." He does not want to scapegoat the Syrian
government, he said in an interview, nor does he want to let it off the
hook.
People like Abdulhamid are taking their revolutionary ideas not only
to new coffeehouses in the Syrian capital -- hangouts with names like
Oxygen and Alal Bal ("On My Mind") -- but also to global forums and to
the Internet. The fact that the authorities are watching has "crossed my
mind," he said nonchalantly. But he said officials are beginning to
attend some of the gatherings around town, and Syria's first lady,
Asma Assad, expressed an interest in Al Tharwa and asked to meet
with its participants.
At a recent luncheon discussion at the Saban Center for Middle East
Policy at the Brookings Institution, he lamented the passing of what he
called the "Damascus Spring," the blossoming of hope and lively
discussion shortly after the death of Hafez Assad four years ago
and the accession of his son, Bashar, to the presidency. Syrian
intellectuals began to challenge old platitudes. As a pacifist,
Abdulhamid said he called for a kind of national reconciliation that
would address Syria's diversity, which had always fascinated him.
"We need something new. . . . We need to come up with a specific
vision, a plan with milestones for gradual openness, a new system of
governance and a national pact that addresses the informal diversity of
the country more clearly," he said. "We have an obscurantist regime that
controls the military and political process in cooperation with people
from all sects. It is a system where no one trusts anybody and everyone
is dissembling. It takes a long time to repair cultural damage and the
attitude towards minorities."
But he said his own journey to adulthood -- watching his bohemian,
celebrity parents from the sidelines as a child -- was peculiar, almost
tortured.
When he was 18, he spent eight months in Moscow, studying astronomy
and learning Russian. But he became moody and depressed. It was during
this time, Abdulhamid said, that he turned to religion and
fundamentalism. He dropped out of school and returned home with a long
beard. His mother panicked and talked him into studying in the United
States. He was sent to Britain for a crash course in English and then
enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point.
After his third semester, he again dropped out of school and went to
Madison to live with a Syrian friend. He began going to the Islamic
Center there, training as an imam and reading books on Islam. In 1988,
he said, a Jordanian who worked for Abdullah Azzam, the late
mentor of Osama bin Laden, recruited him for duty in Afghanistan.
But during a visit to Los Angeles, Abdulhamid met some Afghans who had
returned from the front and dissuaded him from going.
Abdulhamid remained a devout Muslim, he said. "It gave my life
structure, but it enslaved the hell out of me."
He started working as an assistant at a mosque in Los Angeles. Then,
outrage broke out over Salman Rushdie's book "The Satanic
Verses." Abdulhamid said that he thought some of the passages were
offensive to Muslims but that he found a death edict issued by Iranian
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini excessive and ridiculous. The event
changed him.
He now looks at the world differently. He began questioning the
fundamentals of religion and the psychological aspect of what made
people go toward the unknown.
"Maybe in my case, religion was my drug, my crack. But at least my
brain didn't get fried. It gave me confidence and helped me out of my
shyness," he said.
"In 1993, I realized I am an atheist; now I am an agnostic," he said.
He returned home in 1994 and taught in a high school for diplomats'
children. He is married and has swapped his long untrimmed beard for a
long, curly ponytail.
© 2004 The
Washington Post Company
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