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There seems to some people left in the Western media who read
history differently from how the Israeli-fed media are writing it.
We do appreciate their integrity.]
“I lived
in the holy land for nearly four years as the Guardian
correspondent. I was greeted and treated by virtually every Arab I
met with the greatest courtesy and grace, even in the most trying
and sometimes downright tragic circumstances. Sometimes I would poke
a little fun at close friends by making up absurdly flowery
compliments in the local style - my best invention was "May the womb
of your favourite she-camel never wither!" - and invariably they
would giggle helplessly. Indeed, the Arab propensity for laughter
and friendship is one of my fondest memories of those times.
The Arab people have been traduced enough in
the western world and - let's be honest - the western media. It is
perhaps time we poured our collective bile over a more deserving
target. Cheap, mindless, voyeuristic, shallow, nasty, lobotomised
daytime telly, to take a random
example.”
What have the
Arabs ever done for us?
Zero, just to begin with, and incalculably
more than daytime-TV
presenters,
Writes Derek
Brown
The Guardian
It is pretty
universally acknowledged that an informed world view is not a
prerequisite for success in daytime television. Even so, Robert
Kilroy-Silk's anti-Arab diatribe is not only offensive and stupid;
it also speaks of a startling degree of ignorance.
"We owe Arabs
nothing," he wrote. "Apart from oil, which was discovered, is
produced and is paid for by the west, what do they contribute?"
Arabs, according to the sage of the sob story, are "suicide bombers,
limb amputators, women repressors".
It is slightly
ironic that, at the time this balderdash was printed in the Sunday
Express, Mr Kilroy-Silk was topping up his studio tan in a Spanish
beach resort. Had he been in the mood for a slightly more demanding
cultural shift, he could have gone to the south of that country, to
Granada in the province of Andalucia, where he could have seen some
of the most beautiful architecture in Europe. Arab architecture.
Planned, built and exquisitely decorated by the ancestors of the
people Mr Kilroy-Silk apparently thinks so inferior.
It is not only
in Spain that Arab architecture has left a European mark. The
pointed arch, so eagerly adopted by medieval builders and known
today as gothic, was an idea copied from the east, and brought to
the west by the early crusaders. And while those religiously crazed
bigots were burning and slaughtering in the holy land, Arab poets,
mathematicians, astronomers, philosophers and scientists were
advancing human civilisation to unprecedented peaks of
sophistication.
The Abbasid caliphate of Baghdad, which
flourished for half a millennium from about AD750, was arguably the
most dazzling of regimes the world had seen up to that date. Arab
scholars picked up from where the Greek ancients had stopped
centuries earlier, and extended human understanding in virtually
every field. As every schoolboy
knows, the mathematical concept of zero was discovered by Arabs,
when northern Europeans were still wearing horns on their helmets. In fact, as a Guardian reader pointed out this
week, every schoolboy is probably wrong: the zero idea almost
certainly came from India, but, crucially, it was first written down
by an Arab.
Writing is a key part of the Arab nation's
bequest to the world. Paper was introduced from China before the end
of the first Christian millennium, freeing Arab writers from the
costly straitjacket of parchment and papyrus, some 300-400 years
before paper reached western Europe. The result was a torrent of
poetry and prose, philosophy and scholarship, learning and
entertainment. This was the era
of The Thousand and One Nights and of vast public libraries. There
were astronomical observatories, pharmaceutical laboratories and
medical schools. And most of these were flourishing before
England's King Alfred was born.
Mr Kilroy-Silk
might argue that these are spent glories, and that the modern Arab
culture is debased. He would be compounding his ignorance to do so.
More poetry than prose is published in Arabic today. The visual arts
are vibrant. Music, both popular and traditional, is flourishing.
Calligraphy, that most elegant of arts, continues to fascinate users
of the flowing Arabic scripts. Arab cuisine - Lebanese mainly, but
increasingly Egyptian and other north African - is being belatedly
discovered in the west.
For sure, the
Arab world has more than its share of despotic rulers and religious
bigots. But to lump everyone together under Mr Kilroy-Silk's puerile
labels is not only false, but plain daft. Cultures and their values
are not only measured by historical achievement, but also in terms
of day-to-day living.