A Lesson From Tunisia
Is Knowledge The Wrong Kind Of Power
February 2011
In many ways, Tunisia is the most westernized country in
North Africa. Boasting a large
middle class, a relatively well-educated populace, liberal social and gender
equality, and warm Mediterranean beaches, the country seems to have it all for
a nation of its standing. However,
things came to a halt this month for the government and its leader of 23 years,
Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, who fled the country on January 14 after a wave of
protests against him brought the highest degree of anti-government sentiment
the country has seen since Mr. Ben Ali and his ruling party came to power.
Mr. Ben Ali and his government were quite wealthy. Living lavish lifestyles and attending
well-decked parties with friends, Mr. Ben Ali was a man not afraid to live the
good life in this largely economically sustainable country. Poverty rates here, however, are still
quite high, as they are in much of north Africa; and the man who started the
anti-government demonstrations a few weeks ago, himself a college educated
street vendor, simply declared himself too abhorred by his own dismal future
prospects with Tunisia’s poverty-stricken, and burned himself to death in
protest. What soon followed was a
rash of violent street protests against the Tunisian government that finally
led Mr. Ben Ali to flee the country on January 14, thus toppling the nation’s
government. In response, an
interim government of unity was quickly set up, led by prime minister Mohamed
Ghannouchi, promising to restore order and bring free elections as soon as
possible. Mr. Ghannouchi quickly
freed 1,800 long-term political prisoners and promised that many others would
soon be freed as well under the new regime.
But in this short time frame the new unity government has
quickly proven to be unpopular, attracting complaints from many protesters that
it is too exclusionary, and that although it allows members from many parties,
it specifically exempts members of the Tunisian Communist Party and many
once-powerful Islamist groups from participating in it. The new government even jailed the
owner of Tunisia’s largest and most popular private television station,
stopping its broadcast, saying the owner’s affiliations were too “Communist.”
But what of sociological fairness here? Tunisia is certainly not alone in
having a political leader who is among the well-to-do. Many countries hold affluent leaders,
and Tunisia, in many ways, was fortunate to have a leader who, although rich,
was not afraid to lead a country with one of the highest educational and social
welfare policies in all of Africa.
Tunisia is also markedly different from many other countries in the
region that suffer a period of major civil unrest, in that the discontent in Tunisia
was not expressed under Islamic customs, but instead with a secular tone. The Tunisian revolt was not purported
by political, religious extremists, but by working members of its
government-benefited working class.
One theory we may pursue for determining the cause of the
revolt in Tunisia is to argue that, far from being the cry of religiosos, the
uprising was actually due exactly to the type of educational perks and
opportunity the country has engendered since the rule of the country’s first
post-independence president, Habib Bourguiba, Is it ironic that a college-educated person is the one who
started the protests saying that in stark contrast to what his country
provided, he in fact actually had no opportunity at all? Is it circular and fatalistic that the
protests were carried out in the somewhat socioeconomically successful capital
of Tunis, calling for even better wealth distribution and educational
opportunities? What is the
satisfaction level of people in a country whose economy is albeit not as
thriving as those in nearby Europe, but is nonetheless a successfully
post-burgeoning one that decides it must oust the president and topple the
government to believe they themselves as citizens will even be heard? Is what is in many ways one of the most
successful governments in the region actually one of the most unfortunate and
misaligned for its people?
Since the 1960’s and even before, it has been a widely held
maxim in this country and elsewhere that knowledge is power, and understanding
society is one of the keys to a successful working economy. Obviously a person requires education
to succeed in society, and one of the goals of successful societies has been to
make education available to more and more citizens to give them that chance to
succeed in society themselves.
Knowledge was seen as critical to advancement in society and
unconditional to making one’s way peaceably in life as a whole. But here in Tunisia we are faced with
the very offspring of a success-driven economy bringing it in facie ipse to its own ruin. The very people the government intended to, and played a
critical role in helping, get on their feet turned violently against them.
It’s easy to say that, given the current global recession,
that frustrations among the poor have been higher worldwide, and that fuel for
resentment has been present in rising rates of unemployment and inflation. But if these factors are indeed the
case, why didn’t Tunisia’s uprising begin in rural outlays, where poverty rates
and the number of uneducated are highest?
Why did it start in a city with more opportunity and less religious
extremism than virtually any of its neighbors? The answer has to be resentment. It is resentment of what was known to be a political system
operating virtually to the letter within the confines of how one would
realistically expect a bourgeoisie government to act. It doesn’t make sense that educated masses were jealous of
their own opportunities at climbing the rungs of society; they were jealous
because they were smart enough and educated enough to know that the government
simply had more. It wasn’t like
the American Revolution, where revolt was to gain certain personal freedoms, it
wasn’t like other regional revolts in Africa and the Middle East where specific
Islamic dogma was desired in the government. It was simply a case of the haves versus the have-mores.
An interesting point should be raised here. Can a society indeed get too smart for
itself? Is education in itself
something that will teach us that someone will almost always be wealthier, and
that we would have been better off born under a specifically different
star? Is societal Enlightenment
the very thing that will turn society against itself? Is it too much to know that an independently wealthy ruler
is someone who is just that—independently wealthy—and, although they may be
guilty of some level of corruption, at least they give us the opportunity to
make something of ourselves in life?
Tunisia was, and still is, by and large a successful African nation, but
something here pulled the plug. In
America and Europe, reforms are generally brought by discontent at personal conditions and people wanting relief from that. But here in Tunisia, it almost seems
like it was a degree of asking the government to do the impossible—to make
opportunity where opportunity already existed and to reform, in an impossible
way, that which did not largely need to be reformed.
So at the end of the day we can take our coats, and we can
take our hats, and we can bring the lunch Tupperware home to fill again for the
next day. But the question
remains. Do we want our streets to
be safe? Do we want our government
to have the ability to actually rule us and take the administrative roles in
managing our society they normally do for our betterment? Or do we want to resentfully learn that
this is too great a feat for them and that we must, in our civilian way, be
their equals, toppling them for being basically, too “big”. We as industrialists in our quest for
excellence have learned that governments rule us, and we have learned that they
are indeed elite; and the ironic thing is that the dangerous part seems to be
that fact exactly. If we are to
succeed in a global economy, we need to be glad for what we have and know when
it is time just to butt out, and live and let live. If Tunisia had known these simple facts beforehand, I think
they would have saved themselves, and the world, a heck of a lot of grief.
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