mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
364 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
364 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE ARAB PEOPLES OF THE MIDEAST
|
||
|
||
ARABS
|
||
|
||
The term Arabs refers to the people who speak Arabic as their
|
||
native language. A Semitic people like the Jews (see SEMITES),
|
||
Arabs form the bulk of the population of Algeria, Bahrain,
|
||
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman,
|
||
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab
|
||
Emirates, Yemen (Aden), and Yemen (Sana). In addition, there
|
||
are about 1.7 million Palestinian Arabs living under Israeli
|
||
rule in the WEST BANK and GAZA STRIP, territories occupied by
|
||
Israel during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War (see ARAB-ISRAELI
|
||
WARS), and more than 700,000 Arab citizens of Israel.
|
||
Estimates of the total Arab population of the countries above
|
||
range from 175 to 200 million. The great majority of Arabs are
|
||
Muslims, but there are significant numbers of Christian Arabs
|
||
in Egypt (see COPTIC CHURCH), Lebanon, and Syria and among
|
||
Palestinians. In geographical terms the Arab world includes
|
||
North Africa and most of the Middle East (excluding Turkey,
|
||
Israel, and Iran), a region that has been a center of
|
||
civilization and crossroads of trade since prehistoric times.
|
||
|
||
ARAB HISTORY
|
||
|
||
References to Arabs as nomads and camel herders of northern
|
||
ARABIA appear in Assyrian inscriptions of the 9th century BC.
|
||
The name was subsequently applied to all inhabitants of the
|
||
Arabian peninsula. From time to time Arab kingdoms arose
|
||
across on the fringes of the desert, including the Nabataeans
|
||
at PETRA in southern Jordan in the 2d century BC and PALMYRA in
|
||
central Syria in the 3d century AD, but no great Arab empire
|
||
emerged until ISLAM appeared in the 7th century AD and provided a
|
||
basis for Arab tribal unity.
|
||
|
||
Although a majority of Muslims today are not Arabs, the
|
||
religion was born in the Arabian peninsula and Arabic is its
|
||
mother tongue. MECCA, a place of religious pilgrimage for
|
||
tribes of western Arabia and a trading center on the route
|
||
between southern Arabia and the urban civilizations of the
|
||
eastern Mediterranean and Iraq, was the birthplace of the
|
||
prophet of Islam, MUHAMMAD Ibn Abdullah (c.570-632 AD); the
|
||
Muslim calendar begins with his flight to MEDINA in 622 because
|
||
it marked the founding of a separate Muslim community. By the
|
||
time of Muhammad's death, Mecca and nearly all the tribes of
|
||
the peninsula had accepted Islam. A century later the lands of
|
||
Islam, under Arab leadership, stretched from Spain in the west
|
||
across North Africa and most of the modern Middle East into
|
||
Central Asia and northern India.
|
||
|
||
There were tow great Islamic dynasties of Arab origin, the
|
||
UMAYYADS (661-750), centered in Damascus, and the ABBASIDS
|
||
(750-1258), whose capital was Baghdad. Most Umayyad rulers
|
||
insisted on Arab primacy over non-Arab converts to Islam, while
|
||
the Abbasid caliphs (see CALIPHATE) accepted the principle of
|
||
Arab and non-Arab equality as Muslims. At its height in the
|
||
8th and 9th centuries, the Abbasid caliphate was
|
||
extraordinarily wealthy, dominating trade routes between Asia
|
||
and Europe. Islamic civilization flourished during the Abbasid
|
||
period (see ARABIC LITERATURE; ISLAMIC ART AND ARCHITECTURE)
|
||
even though the political unity of the caliphate often
|
||
shattered into rival dynasties. Greek philosophy was
|
||
translated into Arabic and contributed to the expansion of
|
||
Arab-Persian Islamic scholarship. Islamic treatises on
|
||
medicine, philosophy, and science, including Arabic translation
|
||
of Plato and Aristotle, greatly influenced Christian thinkers
|
||
in Europe in the 12th century by way of Muslim Spain. The
|
||
power of the Arab Abbasid family declined from the 10th century
|
||
onward due to internal political and religious rivalries and
|
||
victories by Christian European Crusaders (see CRUSADES;
|
||
MIDDLE EAST, HISTORY OF THE) seeking to recapture territory
|
||
lost to Islam. The Mongol invasion of the 13th century
|
||
(see MONGOLS) led to the destruction of the Abbasid caliphate in
|
||
1258 and opened the way for the eventual rise of a great
|
||
Turkish Muslim empire known as the OTTOMAN EMPIRE. The
|
||
Ottomans took Constantinople (Istanbul) from the Byzantines in
|
||
1453 and had taken control of the Arab Middle East and most of
|
||
North Africa by the end of the 16th century. Arabs remained
|
||
subjects of the Ottoman Turks for over 300 years.
|
||
The Arab world of today is the product of Ottoman decline,
|
||
European colonialism, and Arab demands for freedom from
|
||
European occupation. At the beginning of World War I all of
|
||
North Africa was under French (Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco),
|
||
Italian (Libya), or British (Egypt) domination. After World
|
||
War I the League of Nations divided the Arab lands that had
|
||
remained Ottoman during the war between Britain and France with
|
||
the understanding that each power would encourage the
|
||
development of the peoples of the region toward self-rule.
|
||
Iraq and PALESTINE (including what is now Jordan) went to
|
||
Britain, and Syria and Lebanon to France. Britain had
|
||
suggested to Arab leaders during the war that Palestine would
|
||
be included in areas to be given Arab self-determination, but
|
||
British officials then promised the region to the Zionist
|
||
movement, which called for a Jewish state there (see ZIONISM).
|
||
The Arab lands gained their independence in stages after World
|
||
War II, sometimes, as in Algeria, after long and bitter
|
||
struggles. Much of Palestine became the state of Israel in May
|
||
1948, setting the stage for the Arab-Israeli conflict, in which
|
||
five wars have occurred (1948-49, 1956, 1967, 1973, and 1982),
|
||
and contributing to the rise of the PALESTINE LIBERATION
|
||
ORGANIZATION (PLO), which gained prominence after the
|
||
humiliating Arab losses in the 1967 war.
|
||
|
||
PEOPLE AND ECONOMY
|
||
|
||
Arabs have traditionally been considered nomads, epitomized by
|
||
the BEDOUIN of Arabia. Stereotypical portrayals of Arabs today
|
||
use the image of the nomad or tribal sheik, usually with
|
||
prejudicial intent. In fact, it is difficult to generalize
|
||
about Arabs in terms of appearance or way of life. Bedouins
|
||
are less than 10 percent of the total Arab population. Most
|
||
Arab societies are heavily urbanized, particularly the oil-rich
|
||
states of the Arabian Peninsula. This reversal of the
|
||
stereotype of the desert Arab owes much to the fact that there
|
||
is little if any agriculture in such societies. Major peasant
|
||
populations are found in countries such as Egypt (see
|
||
FELLAHIN), Syria, Algeria, and Iraq, where there is water for
|
||
irrigation, but even there generalizations are difficult. All
|
||
these nations have heavy urban concentrations; Cairo, for
|
||
example, has a population of 14 million and is still expanding.
|
||
As a whole, then, Arab society today is more heavily urban than
|
||
rural, as a result of major political, economic, and social
|
||
changes that have occurred in the last century. In addition,
|
||
there are important variations in political and religious
|
||
outlooks among Arabs.
|
||
|
||
In the midst of such diversity the two basic elements uniting
|
||
most Arabs are the Arabic language and Islam. Though spoken
|
||
Arabic differs from country to country, the written language
|
||
forms a cultural basis for all Arabs. Islam does the same for
|
||
many, with Arabic being the language of the KORAN, the revealed
|
||
word of God delivered through the prophet Muhammad. Most Arabs
|
||
are Sunni Muslims (see SUNNITES). A minority are SHIITES. The
|
||
division of Islam into two main branches is the result of a
|
||
dispute over succession to the caliphate that goes back to the
|
||
7th century and has led to certain doctrinal differences
|
||
between the two branches. The major Shiite country is non-Arab
|
||
Iran, but there are large numbers of Shiites in Iraq (where
|
||
they form a majority) and in Lebanon (where Shiites are now the
|
||
biggest single religious group). Shiite tensions are due
|
||
partly to Iranian efforts to promote Shiite Islam in the
|
||
aftermath of the 1979 revolution that brought Ayatollah
|
||
Ruhollah KHOMEINI to power and partly to the fact that Shiites,
|
||
who form the economic underclass in many Arab nations, feel
|
||
that they have been discriminated against by the Sunnite
|
||
majority.
|
||
|
||
Although traditional tribal life has nearly disappeared, tribal
|
||
values and identity retain some importance, especially when
|
||
linked to Islam. Descent from the clan of the prophet Muhammad
|
||
or from one of the first Arab tribes to accept Islam still
|
||
carries great prestige. Many villages and towns contain
|
||
prominent families with common links to tribal ancestors.
|
||
Blood ties contribute to the formation of political factions.
|
||
These types of relationships are less prevalent in cities;
|
||
even there, however, leading families may seek to intermarry
|
||
their children to preserve traditional bonds, and many urban
|
||
families retain patronage ties to their villages.
|
||
|
||
Nevertheless, the importance of kinship has been weakened by
|
||
the rapid expansion of urban society, by modern educational
|
||
systems, and by the creation of centralized governments whose
|
||
bureaucracies are often the major source of employment for
|
||
university graduates. Many educated young people choose
|
||
spouses from among fellow classmates, a development that
|
||
reflects especially the expansion of educational and
|
||
professional opportunities for women. It is not uncommon for
|
||
young people to become engaged and then wait a year or two to
|
||
marry because they cannot find or afford suitable housing
|
||
immediately. In the past the bride would have become part of
|
||
the husband's family household, a custom still followed in many
|
||
villages.
|
||
|
||
This rapid pace of urbanization and social change has been
|
||
encouraged by economic constraints found in many Arab
|
||
societies. Except for oil, there are few natural resources to
|
||
be exploited for industrial development. Agricultural
|
||
productivity is generally high in Arab countries, but
|
||
productive land is scarce in some regions because of the lack
|
||
of water, and droughts and rising demand have increased the
|
||
possibility of conflicts over water resources shared by
|
||
neighboring countries. Fewer opportunities in agriculture,
|
||
coupled with social modernization, have caused young people to
|
||
flock to major cities seeking education and employment. This
|
||
has placed serious strains on governmental abilities to respond
|
||
to social needs.
|
||
|
||
This process has been exacerbated by another factor--the rapid
|
||
rate of population growth in many Arab countries. Most have a
|
||
rate of increase near 3% annually, as compared to rates of
|
||
growth in Western Europe of under 1%. These growth rates
|
||
reflect the impact of modern medicine and social services that
|
||
have lessened infant mortality. The tendency to smaller
|
||
families found in Western urban societies has not occurred
|
||
because of the prevalence of traditional attitudes favoring
|
||
large families, particularly among the poor and in areas where
|
||
tribal values prevail. The United Arab Emirates has a growth
|
||
rate approaching 9%, and even a rate of 2.7% for Egypt means
|
||
that a million Egyptians are born every 9 months in a country
|
||
where agricultural land comprises only 12% of the total land
|
||
area, forcing further urban congestion and the need to import
|
||
more food to maintain subsistence levels. This inability to
|
||
feed one's population from indigenous resources leads to
|
||
increased indebtedness and a diversion of funds needed for
|
||
development.
|
||
One final element in this equation is the large number of young
|
||
people in these expanding populations. For example, 6% of all
|
||
Tunisians are under 20 years of age, a not unrepresentative
|
||
statistic suggesting that future problems of unemployment and
|
||
food shortages will be greater than they are now. These
|
||
population indices suggest great potential for social unrest,
|
||
and the failure of many secular Arab regimes to fulfill their
|
||
promises of economic prosperity and national strength have
|
||
contributed to the increasing adherence to Islam by young
|
||
people in some Arab countries. Among the young, in particular,
|
||
Arab inability to regain the territories lost in the 1967 war
|
||
with Israel led to questioning of the secular ideologies that
|
||
had dominated regional politics during the post-World War II
|
||
era, while a growing gap between rich and poor and the spread
|
||
of education increased demands for greater participation in
|
||
largely undemocratic political systems.
|
||
|
||
MODERN POLITICS AND SOCIAL ISSUES
|
||
|
||
The men who led the Arab independence movements after World War I
|
||
were usually secularists. Although many of them, such as
|
||
Egypt's Gamal Abdul NASSER, were Pan-Arab nationalists who
|
||
advocated the creation of a single Arab nation, they believed
|
||
it essential that their countries adopt many aspects of Western
|
||
civilization, such as secular laws, parliamentary government,
|
||
and the like. These views challenged the primacy of Islam in
|
||
everyday life. Islamic law (see SHARIA) makes no distinction
|
||
between religious and temporal power. Muslims believe that all
|
||
law derives from the Koran, and that God's word must therefore
|
||
apply to all aspects of life. The gradual relegation of Islam
|
||
to the realm of personal status, a process that began during
|
||
the period of Western dominance, continued as Arab nations
|
||
gained independence under nationalist leaders who believed that
|
||
Islam lacked answers to the problems confronting modern society
|
||
and national development.
|
||
|
||
Many devout Arab Muslims disagreed. The Muslim Brotherhood,
|
||
for example, was formed in Egypt as early as 1929 to meet the
|
||
needs of Egyptians uprooted by modern economic and cultural
|
||
inroads into traditional Egyptian life. A central tenet of all
|
||
such Muslim groups is the belief that Western economic and
|
||
social values cannot restore past Arab greatness, and that
|
||
Muslim societies must be based on principles derived from their
|
||
own roots. Beyond this, such groups often differ on the type
|
||
of society they envisage and how to achieve it. Some
|
||
organizations advocate overthrow of existing regimes, others
|
||
the spread of their views by peaceful means. The call to Islam
|
||
has special appeal to those who are unemployed and have little
|
||
hope of a secure future, people who are the victims rather than
|
||
the beneficiaries of modernization. Many others who have
|
||
rejected membership in such groups have returned to the private
|
||
religious duties of Islam, such as praying five times daily,
|
||
fasting during the holy month of RAMADAN, and making a
|
||
pilgrimage to Mecca.
|
||
|
||
Muslim organizations see the West as the real threat to Islamic
|
||
stability. Most see Israel as an agent of the West in the
|
||
Middle East, depriving Palestinian Arabs of their rightful
|
||
homeland. Even secular Arabs who admire the West and fear
|
||
reintroduction of a Muslim theocracy nevertheless often feel
|
||
angered at what they perceive as Western and especially
|
||
American ignorance of and unconcern for Arab concerns. The
|
||
Palestinian uprising (intifada) launched in December 1988 has
|
||
created new awareness of the problem.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, anti-Israel pronouncements have often served
|
||
to create a false impression of unity when real agreement was
|
||
lacking. The ARAB LEAGUE, formed in 1945, has been more a
|
||
forum for Arab infighting than a framework for cooperation.
|
||
Arabs genuinely feel common bonds based on language and a
|
||
shared historical and cultural legacy, but they also identify
|
||
themselves as Egyptians, Iraqis, and so on. Their ideological
|
||
differences reflect the wide range of governing systems in the
|
||
Arab world, from socialist regimes to oil-rich monarchies.
|
||
|
||
Complicating factors for the region have been the GULF WAR
|
||
(1980-88) between Iran and Iraq and increased tensions between
|
||
Iran and the Arab states of the Persian Gulf. These conflicts
|
||
focused attention on the major oil-producing region of the
|
||
world. As of 1987, more than 69% of the proved oil reserves of
|
||
the globe could be found in the Middle East, particularly in
|
||
Saudi Arabia, which contains nearly half of the world's
|
||
reserves. Oil has been exported from the Arab world since the
|
||
1930s, but only with the creation of the ORGANIZATION OF
|
||
PETROLEUM EXPORTING COUNTRIES (OPEC) in 1960 and the Libyan
|
||
revolution of 1969 did these countries begin to determine oil
|
||
prices themselves. Although only eight Arab nations are
|
||
substantial oil producers and OPEC has several non-Arab
|
||
members, the organization is usually associated with Arab oil;
|
||
the oil shortages of 1973-74 resulted from Saudi anger at U.
|
||
S. policy during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War. Overproduction
|
||
drove down prices in the 1980s, weakening OPEC's clout and the
|
||
ability of the oil-producing Arab states to provide aid and
|
||
jobs for the poorer Arab nations. Oil experts believe,
|
||
however, that the Arab world will remain the strategically
|
||
significant center of world oil production well into the 21st
|
||
century, a fact that has contributed to the involvement of
|
||
foreign powers in the region.
|
||
|
||
FUTURE PROSPECTS
|
||
|
||
The Arab world holds potential for both growth and conflict. A
|
||
solution to the Palestinian problem would defuse the likelihood
|
||
of another Arab-Israeli war and permit allocation of resources
|
||
to domestic sectors rather than to military outlays. Arab
|
||
states, however, need to settle their own differences as well.
|
||
Some efforts to promote more unified approaches to problems of
|
||
common interest have been made in recent years, including the
|
||
formation of the Gulf Cooperation Council (Saudi Arabia,
|
||
Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates) in 1981 and
|
||
the Arab Maghrib Union (Algeria, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco and
|
||
Tunisia) and the Arab Cooperation Council (Egypt, Iraq, Jordan,
|
||
and Yemen [Sana]) in 1989. The major inter-Arab rivalry is
|
||
that between Syria and Iraq, the principal internal problem
|
||
that of Lebanon, where communal strife has involved its
|
||
neighbors and destabilized the region. The impact of
|
||
population growth on economic development and the appeal of
|
||
Islamic revolutionary factions to the disaffected will remain
|
||
crucial to Arab prospects into the next century. CHARLES D.
|
||
SMITH
|
||
|
||
MEMBERS OF THE ARAB LEAGUE
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
COUNTRY AREA POPULATION PER CAPITA INFANT PERCENT
|
||
(km sq.) (1989 EST.) INCOME MORTALITY URBAN
|
||
(1986) (per 1,000
|
||
live births)
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Algeria * 13,600 24,900,000 2,570 81 43
|
||
Bahrain 678 500,000 8,530 26 81
|
||
Djibouti 23,200 400,000 1,067 127 74
|
||
Egypt 1,001,449 54,800,000 760 93 45
|
||
Iraq * 458,317 18,100,000 2,400 69 68
|
||
Jordan 97,740 4,000,000 1,550 54 69
|
||
Kuwait* 17,818 2,100,000 13,890 16 94
|
||
Lebanon 16,000 3,300,000 1,000 50 80
|
||
Libya * 1,759,540 4,100,000 7,170 74 76
|
||
Mauritania 1,030,700 2,000,000 440 132 35
|
||
Morocco 446,550 25,600,000 590 90 43
|
||
Oman 212,457 1,400,000 4,990 100 9
|
||
Qatar * 11,000 400,000 12,520 31 88
|
||
Saudi 2,149,690 14,700,000 6,930 71 73
|
||
Arabia
|
||
Somalia 637,457 8,200,000 280 137 33
|
||
Sudan 2,505,813 24,500,000 320 113 20
|
||
Syria 185,180 12,100,000 1,560 48 50
|
||
Tunisia 163,610 7,900,000 1,140 77 53
|
||
United Arab 83,600 1,700,000 14,410 32 81
|
||
Emirates*
|
||
Yemen 332,968 2,500,000 480 132 20
|
||
(Aden)
|
||
Yemen 195,290 6,900,000 950 113 40
|
||
(Sana)
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
* Member of OPEC
|
||
|
||
|