The Curiosity science rover on Mars (top) and a Gaza smuggling tunnel |
Ghassan Charbel, editor-in-chief of pan-Arab daily al-Hayat,
penned this op-ed in Arabic
We are peoples of tunnels. We are born in them and
never leave. We put up with their darkness and thrive on their dampness and
rot.
Our schools are tunnels, and so are our universities.
Our books and our minds are sealed tunnels.
In such tunnels, you find bitter fanatics, hamstrung
armies, glum political parties and instruments of disinformation.
We had no states. We had tunnels-in-waiting, waiting for
an opportune moment to overpower the adjacent tunnel’s dwellers.
When an opinion crosses someone’s mind, we lure it into
a tunnel.
And when spring approaches, we send tunnels to kill
it.
The news was both interesting and informative. The
lady newscaster was eloquent and pleasant. A NASA spacecraft has landed on
Mars. Overnight, the Curiosity rover beamed back the first images of the Martian
surface. Clearly the United Sates had conquered the Red Planet some 40 years
after landing the first humans on the Moon.
President Barack Obama promptly congratulated NASA,
saying in a statement: “Tonight on the planet Mars, the United States of
America made history. The successful landing of Curiosity – the most
sophisticated roving laboratory ever to land on another planet – marks an
unprecedented feat of technology that will stand as a point of national pride
far into the future…”
I closed my eyes in front of the TV screen. I thought
it would be great if an Arab TV news channel announced that an Arab leader had
sent a message congratulating Arab scientists on a scientific achievement liable
to benefit their country and the world at large.
I quickly dismissed the thought for fear of hallucinating
and went back to the screen.
The cute newscaster then moved on – almost apologetically
-- to detail another news headline on the daily quota of some 200 killings.
I then feared she would move on and conclude by hosting
the habitual “analysts” who invariably impair listeners’ intellects and make
them lose sleep.
I was afraid one of them would show up to deny the
Mars landing altogether and say it was simply a simulation produced by the corrupt
West.
I imagined another “analyst” suggesting the Curiosity
rover was the Mossad’s brainchild intended to spy on the Arab countries from
Mars.
I feared a jihadist faction coming forward to condemn
the Americans’ invasion of the Red Planet and invite suicide bombers to take
out the science rover.
I was also worried about Iran announcing shortly that
it has produced a new generation of missiles capable of hitting Great Satan
targets on Mars.
Going back to planet Earth and the Middle East, the
scenes coming out from Aleppo and its sister cities are heartbreaking: corpses
on the streets; pools of blood inside bedrooms; and photographs of terrified families
fleeing to neighboring countries with their children.
The Arab citizen does not grieve over the
obliteration of Aleppo, one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the
world. The Arab citizen bemoans Syria’s unknown future.
More alarming than the buildings biting the dust is
the sight of Syria’s social fabric melting away and the risk of Syrian
society’s components fragmenting.
A victory in Aleppo won’t extract the regime from the
tunnel, but prolong its stay there.
The inflow of roving fighters and the practices of
some fanatics risk plunging the Syrian opposition in the tunnel as well.
A second news item is no less alarming.
It is about the brazen (Sunday) attack on an Egyptian
border post in Sinai, south of Rafah. Undoubtedly, the intention of the
attackers is to shove Egypt into a horrible tunnel that would undermine Egypt’s
status, the dignity of its army and its ability to control its borders and fulfill
its commitments.
The Sinai outrage reopens the entire file of tunnels
(used to smuggle people to and from Gaza, as well as goods, food and fuel from
Egypt to the Strip). What is at stake here is much more serious than the fate
of the Gaza smuggling tunnels.
The third news relates to the Iranians captured (in
Damascus) by the Free Syrian Army. Their photograph with their captors proves
the Syria crisis has rammed Iranian policy into a tunnel that can only deepen
the sectarian divide in the region.
Furthermore, Ahmet Davutoglu’s visit to Kirkuk, and
the current situation in Syrian Kurdish villages bordering Turkey shows that Ankara’s
regional policy has in turn slipped into a tunnel.
While others send science rovers to Mars, we send our
children to graveyards, or to tunnels in anticipation of looming civil wars.
A brief news bulletin suffices to expose our
disastrous whereabouts in what is known as the Global Village.
We are peoples of tunnels.
We are born in them and never leave.