A source on politics, war, the Middle East, Arabic poetry, and art.
Tuesday, August 23, 2005
How do thinkers and intellectuals fare in jail, especially when subjucted to rough treatment and torture? It varies widely by individual, I was thinking. Michel `Aflaq, the Ba`th founder trembled so much in jail, and wanted to get out so fast that he quickly issued a humiliating statement, that Ba`thists would never be able to recover from it. Bakunin's confessions to the Tsar were less damaging, but that is a long story to tell. `Aziz Al-Hajj, the Iraqi Communist Party leader was another embarrassing case: he even appeared on Iraqi TV ("interviewed by none other than loudmouth Muhammad Sa`id As-Sahhaf, a junior Saddam propagandist in those days in the early 70s) and praised Saddam's regime. (Now he is a democracy advocate. Who is not these days?--I am not, I guess). Ibn Hanbal: that man was tough. But what does that say? Does it take a mere physical quality to endure torture and physical humiliation or is it more than that? And what about Al-Hallaj? They were slicing parts of his body while he was yelling out his courageous defiance. Al-Hallaj: if only all his writings survived.