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I was reading an article on Lebanese politics and after a while I gave up because I was reading the words but I didn't know what they meant. 

For example: Druze. I know the Druze are a religious grouping, but I don't know what the content is. I could look it up in Wikipedia, I suppose, but still  I wouldn't really know. I lack the cultural experience to be able, even dimly, to understand what it must feel like to be Druze.

And the same goes for Sunni, Shia, Maronite, Hezbollah....

Cultural experience is everything. I can form a dim idea of what it might feel like to belong to the Provisional IRA  because IRA members and I share a certain amount of cultural experience. I understand rainy northern cities.  I understand terraced streets and council estates.  I understand fields full of cows. I understand catholic.  I understand protestant.  I understand Irish nationalism.  I understand the British empire. And when I say "understand" what I mean is that all these concepts call up a certain emotional response in me. 

But the Lebanon? No shared cultural experience, no emotional response, no understanding.

It would be nice to think that the Western leaders who are currently meddling in the Middle East have the understanding I lack but, given the results of their meddling, I doubt it.

Date: 2006-08-13 05:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solar-diablo.livejournal.com
I'm finishing up watching a HBO documentary called Death in Gaza. A British journalist talks to Palestinian children in the Gaza Strip amidst the occupation and fighting. Absolutely chilling listening to 12 and 14 year old boys refer to Jews as "sons of whores" and playacting the role of martyrs with toys guns and bombs, all the while being indoctrinated by teachers and militant groups to hate and see violent death as a desirable end. Miller, the journalist, intended to do a second part to the documentary and film the lives of Israelis in the area, but was shot and killed by an Israeli soldier making the first part.

I have no direct experience or link to the conflict in the Middle East, but I think to say that "cultural experience is everything" is overreaching. Without denying that it does provide critical insight, I think to adopt such a stance is to implicitly dismiss or devalue the insight/opinions of those who may not be directly involved but might very well have a comprehensive grasp on the history/sociology/politics surrounding the topic. I always used to bristle at the t-shirts that said "It's a Black thing: you wouldn't understand" because while it may have been only an attempt at ethnic pride it only served to further isolate and divide.

Date: 2006-08-13 09:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
I'm only talking about myself. I'm sure there are plenty of people outside the conflict who have a finely tuned awareness of the issues involved. I'm just saying I don't.

My point, I think, is that most of us, inevitably, have very little understanding of what gives in the Middle east- and I suspect that goes for quite a few of our political leaders.

Does Tony Blair know what the Druze believe and how they live? Bet he doesn't.

Date: 2006-08-13 09:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solar-diablo.livejournal.com
Point taken.

Date: 2006-08-14 02:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] methodius.livejournal.com
What scares me is that a lot of Americans who seem proud of being "anti-multiculturalism" support George Bush, so I can believe the allegation that when he decided to attack Iraq he didn't know the difference between Sunni and Shi'a Islam -- didn't even know there was a difference.

The self-proclaimed anti-multiculturalists seem to have a mindset of "You will be assimilated" to whatever their particular version of American culture happens to be, so what they think of a multicultural country like Lebanon can only be imagined.

As for me, Lebanese politics are beyond me. I find it hard enough keeping up with Balkan politics, and we have people from the Balkans and people from the Near East in our church.

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