Articles
Message from Dr. Mahgoub El-Tigani
Mahgoub El-Tigani Sudanese Writers' Union (in
exile)
The message by the human
rights leader and women's activist Dr. Nawal el-Saadawi is indeed a masterpiece.
Her human rights concern is a universal one that already crossed the frontiers
of States as it occupied the hearts and minds of millions of readers every
where through her multi-langual translated works. Discrimination by country
or race or gender will never stop the dissemination of her honest ideas
all over the world. Interpretations of religion that aim to silence her
thought will never work.
I have tremendous respect to the Sufi spiritual religiosity
of Dr. Saadawi as she explained in her message. The ethos of religion
is not simply based on formal duties of a believer. The essence of religion
for Saadawi is "providing for the family and the good upbringing
of its members, that a simple life, and sensitivity to the plight of the
poor was more important in the teachings of the Prophet than prostrating
oneself before God day and night, to believe that hard work was more important
than worship, and that which was needed to feed the home should not be
given to the mosque" to use the words of Prophet Muhammad, and was
more important than buying a plane ticket to go on pilgrimage and kiss
the black stone to use my own words in the interview."
Dr. Nawal's righteous view for the realization of equality
and social justice between females and males is based on the eradication
of poverty as a key factor and the need for a continuous struggle to insure
the enjoyment of the right to free expression and creative works for all
citizens. Her independent thinking, strong belief in the ability of People
to realize social justice, the strong critic she consistently placed on
the aggression and colonial atrocities of Israel versus the Palestinians
and other peoples of the region, and her lifetime struggle with story
writing as an ascetic expression to glorify these values are the real
strength of her personality.
Equally, these are the real causes of the attack she and
her husband have been facing even to the level of separating them from
one another as was earlier enforced -by court decision - on their intellectual
fellows, Dr. Hamid and his wife. Dr.
Abou Zeid and Dr. Ibtihal Younes were further compelled to live abroad,
in exile. Dr. Saadawi and her husband now decided to continue the struggle
from the Homeland.
This morning, the Egyptian human rights movement also
received another blow when Dr.
Ibrahim Saadeldeen was sentenced to prison for seven years and many
of Ibn Khaldun crew was also imprisoned by court decision. In the case
of Dr. Ibrahim, however, it was not a gender case or an Islamic fundamentalist
group that mainly launched the accusation. Rather, it was the State Prosecution
that initiated and pursued the case against Ibrahim and the Ibn Khaldun
Institute.
The fact remains, nonetheless, that Dr. Ibrahim's human
rights activities, especially his intellectual work for the defense of
the rights of minority groups in his country and elsewhere, especially
Sudan, Iraq, Algeria, etc., figured out as an intellectual background
of the development of his case. All this adds up to the previous cases
of Dr. Abu Zeid and his wife and Dr. el-Saadawi and her husband. It casts
a gloomy picture on the relations between State and the human rights movement.
Hope is that the Right of Appeal as granted in Egyptian
law would do justice to the case of Dr. Ibrahim and the Ibn Khaldun researchers.
Hope is that the Constitution of Egypt would guarantee the means to Dr.
Saadawi to continue her profound mission without family separation. Hope
is that Dr. Abou Zeid and Dr. Ibtihal return to the free academia that
is missing them, for sure.
Egypt has always been a country most influenced by universal
civilizations, including the great civilization of Islam, and has thus
largely benefited than most of the other countries of the Arab and Muslim
regions had from these civilizations. It is important that Egypt maintains
this distinguished status, keeps up the worth and concern for human rights
as Egyptian activists suggest, and endorses fully the agenda Dr. el-Saadawi
- as bravely as ever - posted towards a healthy society and advanced life
in Egypt and the whole world.
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