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Contributors
Daniel Pipes- Contributor
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the
presidentially-appointed board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace,
and a prize-winning columnist for the New York Sun and The
Jerusalem Post. His most recent book, Miniatures:
Views of Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction
Publishers) appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on
the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a chance
to sign-up to receive his new materials as they appear. [go
to Pipes index]
Saddam
the Novelist
Can't wait for the film version...
[Daniel Pipes] 7/14/04
Ash-Sharq
al-Awsat, a London-based Arabic paper, last
week began the complete serialization of Saddam Hussein's
final novel written as a free man, Be Gone Demons! As
though it were just any book, the newspaper posted a picture
of the cover and of the author (appearing as a jailbird,
however, not as absolute ruler).
The Associated
Press's Salah Nasrawi helpfully provides
a summary of the plot, as related to him by Ali Abdel Amir,
an Iraqi writer and critic who read the whole manuscript: The
novel recounts a Zionist-Christian conspiracy against Arabs
and Muslims that an Arab army eventually defeats by invading
the Zionist-Christian land and toppling one of its monumental
towers, an apparent reference to Sept. 11, 2001.
The novel opens with a narrator, who bears a resemblance to the Jewish, Christian
and Muslim patriarch Abraham, telling cousins Ezekiel, Youssef and Mahmoud
that Satan lives in the ruins of a Babylon destroyed by the Persians
and the Jews. …
Ezekiel,
symbolizing the Jews, is portrayed as greedy, ambitious and
destructive. "Even if you seize all the property of
others, you will suffer all your life," the narrator
tells him. Youssef, who symbolizes the Christians, is portrayed
as generous and tolerant - at least in the early passages.
Mahmoud, symbolizing Muslims, emerges as the conqueror at
the end of the book.
The critics
have not been kind to Be Gone Demons! Saddam "was
completely out of touch with actual reality, and novel writing
gave him the chance to live in delusions," comments Abdel
Amir. Saad Hadi, a journalist who had a hand in the production
of Saddam's novels, agrees: "He
lost touch with reality. He thought he was a god who could
do anything, including writing novels."
According
to Hadi, Saddam's favorite novelist was Ernest Hemingway, in
particular The Old Man and the Sea, whose style he
tried to emulate. "He'd sit in his state room and recount
simple tales, while his aides recorded his words." Youssef
al-Qaeed, an Egyptian novelist, describes the dictator's oeuvre
as "naïve and superficial."
This is hardly
Saddam's first published novel. "At the end of the year
2000, a publishing sensation left Baghdad abuzz with rumor," reports
Ofra Bengio in "Saddam
Husayn's Novel of Fear," an analysis of Saddam's becoming
the author of a historical romance titled Zabiba and the
King. Although Bengio finds the novel "boring and
incoherent," she argues it "is best understood as
Saddam's own preparation for his final descent from the stage.
It should be read as a summary of his life, an ‘artistic'
contribution to his people, an epitaph, and a last will and
testament, all rolled into one."
One might
have thought that more pressing issues of state would have
been on the absolute dictator's mind by late 2002, as the Bush
administration made clear its impatience with Iraqi behavior
and signaled an intent to take action. One would be wrong,
at least according to an account given by NBC news on July
15, 2003: Tom Brokaw reported on the authority of Deputy Prime
Minister Tariq Aziz, already in captivity, that "in the
last year Saddam Hussein has been preoccupied with writing
three epic novels."
Even more
remarkable is the information from a subsequent
report in London's Daily Telegraph: "Saddam
Hussein spent the final weeks before the war [in March 2003]
writing a novel predicting that he would lead an underground
resistance movement to victory over the Americans, rather than
planning the defence of his regime. As the war began and Saddam
went into hiding, 40,000 copies of Be Gone Demons! were rolling
off the presses."
After Zabiba
and the King, Saddam produced The Fortified Castle and Men
and the City and finally Be Gone Demons! Tariq
Aziz's comment suggests that another two novels were in the
works when war so rudely interrupted.
Saddam's
being caught up with novel writing as war was brewing directly
confirms a thesis I presented months back, in "[Saddam's]
WMD Lies," to explain the seemingly missing weapons
of mass destruction. Supposing there really are no nukes in
Iraq, Saddam gave off the impression he had them as a result
of a terrible error.
This mistake can best be explained as the result of Saddam inhabiting the
uniquely self-indulgent circumstance of the totalitarian autocrat, with
its two key qualities: Hubris: The absolute ruler can do anything
he wants, so he thinks himself unbounded in his power. Ignorance: The
all-wise ruler brooks no contradiction, so his aides, fearing for their
lives, tell him only what he wants to hear. Both these incapacities worsen
with time and the tyrant becomes increasingly removed from reality. His
whims, eccentricities and fantasies dominate state policy. The result
is a pattern of monumental mistakes.
Saddam Hussein's
being consumed with a literary urge, even as his dictatorship
was about to be destroyed by the greatest power on earth, points
to both his hubris and his ignorance. It also goes far to explain
how he could think there were nuclear weapons in the works
when they did not exist by the time his political demise began
in March 2003. CRO
This piece
first appeared in FrontPageMagazine.com
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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