More than a quarter
of a century ago, Francois Mitterrand, then the president
of France, called on President Anwar Sadat
and, as he was leaving, told Sadat that he would be going
on to visit Mohamed Hassanein Heikal. The Egyptian president's
immediate reaction to this bit of news was to exclaim: "But
I fired him!" President Mitterrand told friends later
that he could not understand what that had to do with his
decision to meet Heikal: "I didn't say I was going to
call on the editor of Al-Ahram; I said I was going to call
on Mohamed Hassanein Heikal."
When
the story was related to me by Mitterrand's daughter, whose
paternity he acknowledged
shortly before his death, I said her father's inability
to understand Sadat's remark was due to the different cultural
backgrounds and mentalities of the two men. For
Sadat, as
for many of our countrymen, a person's worth is
measured in terms of the position he holds. Thus if Heikal's
value
stemmed from his position as editor-in-chief of
Al-Ahram, then it follows that when Sadat fired him he
became a worthless
nobody – hence Sadat's surprise that Mitterrand would
want to meet him. Nothing, of course, could be further from
the truth.
Although
I differ with Mr. Heikal on most political issues, I know
that he is far and away the best journalist
in the Arabic-speaking world. I also know that
all those who attack him today do so to curry favour with
people in
high places to whom they are greatly beholden
for their good fortune. And, talking of how a person's
worth should be appraised,
I wonder if the international publishers who
published Mr. Heikal's best-selling books would even deign
to look at a
manuscript presented by any of his attackers.
I would like to recount an anecdote here that is self-explanatory.
Despite
my political differences with Mr. Heikal, I
was lunching with him at a London restaurant a few years
ago
when he called
the Spanish royal palace to request an appointment
with King Juan Carlos two days later. After only fifteen
minutes, the
palace called him back to confirm that the
king would be happy to see him the day after tomorrow.
This
is a man whose
books have been translated into many languages
and read by millions of people throughout the world.
As to his critics,
it is a fact that they vilify him for no other
reason than to ingratiate themselves with their benefactors.
It is also
a fact that not a single one of them is capable
of putting together a manuscript that would be acceptable
to an international
publisher.
The deeply entrenched
notion that personal worth is measured in terms of the
post one holds has led to a series of ugly
events in recent years. For example, it led the deputy president
of the "Yesterday Party", Mr. M. M., to betray
its president, Mr. A. N., for the account of a third party,
confirming the truth of the famous verse by Al-Mutanaby:
"Does Egypt
open its doors
To every slave
who kills his master?"
It is almost certainly what led the university professor
and former dean of the Faculty of Law to enter into a pitched
battle with his opponents in the party, using live ammunition,
in a bid to stay on as party president against the will of
its members. Perhaps he would not have been so determined
to cling to his position at the head of the party if he had
remembered that its founder, who held no official position,
was more popular than Egypt's king and its prime minister.
The same thing happened in a famous sports club, where violent
battles were fought over the club presidency.
These and hundreds of other examples show how far people
will go to cling to their privileged positions. Nobody today
accepts the idea that occupancy of these positions is a temporary,
not a permanent, state of affairs.
A few weeks ago, Dar el Hilal published a book on the monarchs
who ruled Egypt more than five thousand years ago, i.e. from
the time of the founder of the First Dynasty in 3400 B.C.,
the Pharaoh Menes who unified Upper and Lower Egypt. A simple
statistical survey shows that these rulers can be divided
into three numerically equal groups:
- Those who were forcibly removed from the throne
- Those who died in office
- Those killed in office.
My search for
a single ruler who had voluntarily abdicated proved fruitless.
In this connection, I would like to mention
the sole exception to this pattern. On Wednesday, October
17th, 1917, the ruler of Egypt, Sultan Hussein Kamel, died.
In accordance with the rules of succession, the throne was
offered to his son, Prince Kamal el-Din Hussein, who turned
down the offer. The throne went instead to the "blackguard" prince,
the sultan's younger brother Ahmed Fouad. In a lecture I
gave to a class of history students, I asked if any of them
knew the name of the man who, less than a hundred years ago,
had declined the throne of Egypt when it was offered to him.
Not a single one of the history students knew what I was
talking about: it was as though the event had never happened.
The only
explanation for this collective amnesia is that in our
culture anyone who actually turns down the chance
to wield absolute power must be demented and hence
not worth remembering. And so a man of high principle,
an idealist
who exercised his free will in the face of the
ultimate temptation, has been relegated to oblivion. In
using the word "blackguard" to
describe Prince Ahmed Fouad, I am quoting Bairam el-Tonsi
who lamented the accession of a prince best known for his
love of cabarets to the throne of the great Pharaohs in a
famous poem that goes like this:
"When in
Egypt we ran out of kings,
The British brought you and threw you in the ring,
They sat you on the throne to masquerade as a king true,
where did they
find a traitor and blackguard like you."
A friend of mine
with a philosophical bent of mind is fond of quoting the
dictum that "answers are blind, questions
are clear-sighted." I would like to ask our esteemed
historians if they have a scientific explanation for the
monstrous growth and spread of the "staying put" culture
in our society, a phenomenon that has led us to witness the
infamous Gomaa using firearms to remain at the head of a
party that no longer wanted him as its leader.CRO