Guerrilla History - How the West Stole Democracy from the Arabs w/ Elizabeth Thompson [Remastered]

Episode Date: October 13, 2023

In this remastered episode of Guerrilla History (originally released in January, 2021), we were joined by Professor Elizabeth F. Thompson to talk about her book How the West Stole Democracy from the A...rabs, about the historic Syrian-Arab Congress of 1920.  Elizabeth Thompson is the Mohamed S. Farsi Chair of Islamic Peace and Professor of History at American University.  Her book was published by Atlantic Monthly Press, and is available here: https://groveatlantic.com/book/how-the-west-stole-democracy-from-the-arabs/     Help support the show by signing up to our patreon, where you also will get bonus content: https://www.patreon.com/guerrillahistory 

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Dear guerrilla history listeners, this is co-host Henry. I'm taking this opportunity to inform you about what the plan is for this episode and for next week. We have been trying for the last few days to get an episode together in order to release at today's regularly scheduled episode release date that would discuss the history and the present of Occupied Palestine. Unfortunately, due to some scheduling difficulties that we've been having trying to connect with some, of our Palestinian comrades in order to discuss this history. We haven't been able to connect with them in time to release an episode this week on the topic. We will do whatever we can to have that episode ready for you for next week's release. We just want to make sure that you are
Starting point is 00:00:49 aware that we are not avoiding discussions of the settler occupation of Palestine and the genocidal actions of the settler colonial regime of Israel. It's just simply scheduling issues that it prevented us from having an episode ready for this week's release. We hope that you understand this, and that you'll enjoy and learn from the episode that we're releasing today, which is a remastered version of one of our very first episodes, How the West Stole Democracy from the Arabs. This episode is related, although it is more historic in nature, than we were hoping to have
Starting point is 00:01:23 for this week's episode. We do have several other episodes within our feed that you can check out if you would like more of the historical grounding for what is going on within occupied Palestine right now. This includes episodes like the One Kingdom Solution, which is an intelligence briefing that we did about a paper that Adnan Hussein and Margaret Popano had co-written looking at cross-confessional marriages within historic Palestine. We also have a cross-release from our sister show, Guerrilla Radio, titled How to Shut Down an Arms factory with the founders of Palestine action. We do have several other episodes as well that have touched on the occupation of Palestine, including our episode with Max Isle, on how national liberation struggles and the agrarian question are related.
Starting point is 00:02:17 As I said, we do apologize for not having this episode ready for today. But do stay tuned. We will have it as soon as we are able to. We would also like to take the opportunity to apologize to the Leninist lawyer, whose episode is already recorded and edited, and was planned on being released today. Due to the recent actions within occupied Palestine and the ongoing assault on Gaza, we wanted to make sure that there was an episode that was related to this, historically, that we could release today, and so we're having to shift the Leninist lawyer's episode back until after we are able to get this content related to what's going on right now out there.
Starting point is 00:02:57 We understand that the Leninist lawyer will understand this, but we do want to take the opportunity to apologize for this delay in any case. So listeners, with that aside, we hope that you find use, and we hope that you enjoy the re-released and remastered edition of How the West Stole Democracy from the Arabs with Professor Elizabeth Thompson. You remember Den Ben Boo? No. The same thing happened in Algeria, in Africa.
Starting point is 00:03:32 They didn't have anything but a rank. The French had all these highly mechanized instruments of warfare. But they put some guerrilla action on. Hello and welcome to guerrilla history, the podcast that acts as a reconnaissance report of global proletarian history, history and aims to use the lessons of history to analyze the present. I'm one of your co-hosts, Henry Huckimacki. Joined by my co-hosts, Professor Adnan Hussein, historian and director of the School of Religion
Starting point is 00:04:03 at Queen's University in Ontario, Canada. Hello, Adnan. How are you today? I'm great, Henry. And Brett O'Shea, hosts of Revolutionary Left Radio and co-host of the Red Menace podcast. Hello, Brett. How are you? I'm doing great. We got another exciting one today. Yes, we do. Today, our guest is going to. to be Elizabeth F. Thompson, the Muhammad S. Barsi chair of Islamic Peace and professor of history
Starting point is 00:04:27 at American University. Professor Thompson is an expert of social movements and liberal constitutionalism in the Middle East. She's the author of Colonial Citizens, Republican Rights, paternal privilege and gender in French Syria and Lebanon from Columbia books. Justice interrupted the struggle for constitutional government in the Middle East from Harvard Press, and her latest work, which is going to be the topic of today's episode, which is how the West stole democracy from the Arabs, the Syrian Arab Congress of 1920, and the destruction of its historic liberal Islamic alliance.
Starting point is 00:05:02 It's out this year from Atlantic Monthly Press. So I thought that this was a very interesting book because it's a topic that, well, it seems to be a going theme, something that I had not known nearly enough about before looking into it when we had Adnan actually raised the perspective of having, Professor Thompson on the show and talking about this topic.
Starting point is 00:05:25 So Adnan, why don't I pitch it over to you and we'll have you talk about kind of what the importance of this book is because I do think that this immediate post-World War I era in the Middle East is incredibly undercover
Starting point is 00:05:41 particularly in the West, but I also get the feeling that it's just undercover generally, partially because some of this history was hidden. But why don't we have you talk about what the importance of this work by Professor Thompson was. Well, Henry, you're absolutely right that this is an interesting and important story that hasn't been told. So that's what's great about history. It can be either reinterpreting
Starting point is 00:06:07 events that we all know about, but getting a new perspective on them or learning something completely new that we didn't understand was taking place. And I think this story and this book really does both those things. Our previous episodes have looked at broad periods and movements and taken a kind of general synthetic view of either the history of Turkey and the problem of authoritarianism or looking at CIA interventions in particularly the post war period looking at the long history of struggle in Nepal. This is a book that It's focused very much in its principal events on a particular episode. It's kind of a micro-history.
Starting point is 00:06:54 The focus is very different looking at what happened in 1919, 1920, with the Syrian Arab Congress that was established in Damascus after the end of World War I. But it has broad implications and connects to many themes that are of relevance to colonialism, the World War I and its end, the broader shape of the Middle East relations between Islam and democracy. These are big, broad questions, but we get to wrestle with them and see how they were being worked out in a very focused context. And when we do, we discover this episode that really changes a lot of our views and understandings about the region that are based on romantic popular impressions. Maybe if you've seen Lawrence of Arabia and you see the end of that
Starting point is 00:07:50 epic movie, gorgeous cinematography, but filled with all kinds of oriental stereotypes that also characterizes the end of World War I and the failure of the Arab revolt to lead to independent democratic nations because of the history of the mandates, a kind of form of colonialism that is established that this book discusses, it's often seen as a result of the inability of the people of the region themselves to govern themselves because of petty squabbling and pursuing all kinds of, you know, petty kind of interests and not being able to see the larger picture and organize themselves in a responsible fashion to govern themselves. So unfortunately, the tragedy, this is the way the narrative goes is unfortunately they couldn't be given their independence and had to have
Starting point is 00:08:49 the League of Nations impose this other form of control over them. And what we'll see in this book and in the discussion with Elizabeth Thompson, said that that narrative really fails to take into account some fascinating developments during this period where the Arabs tried to organize themselves and establish a liberal constitutional order. So I think this book is really important. It's incredibly well written and connects with the context of what's going on. It unfolds in a really pleasing sort of way with each part of the story, introducing its characters and what was happening.
Starting point is 00:09:33 So it's an enjoyable read, and I think we'll have a really enjoyable conversation. Yeah, great. And I agree that basically the way that we're exposed to this topic is via Lawrence of Arabia. There's very little else out, at least in the mass public, on this period of time and this region other than Lawrence of Arabia, which, as you mentioned, is beautiful as a film, but is just full of Orientalist views. but Brett, I have the impression that probably you had a similar experience with this topic that I did growing up where this was basically the only exposure that we had was to things like Lawrence of Arabia. What did this book bring to light for you that perhaps you hadn't even considered before? And what do you think the importance of this is, just briefly, because of course we're going to get into this with the professor when she comes on. But what did this really bring to light
Starting point is 00:10:32 for you? And why do you think that this work is so important? Yeah, I mean, I've had like a general understanding of like the partitioning project that, you know, happened in the wake of World War I. But you don't know the nitty gritty details. And learning about this, as well as learning about Turkey and the Ottoman Empire in a recent episode, really highlights the dynamics that get concealed from like Western tellings of what's going on, particularly the, the different or the unity between liberals and and, you know, Islamists or those of, you know, Muslims that wanted a more religious flavor to the way that they run their society. So that's always something that pops up in that episode and as well as this one. And then this just really
Starting point is 00:11:13 drives home how, you know, colonialism and racism and this entire history's entire century is shaped by these things and how they've operated for centuries to really purposefully We hold back the development of the entire world. And the logic of that system, the logic of European colonialism, understanding it in its fine-grained details, really helps us understand the world as it is today. And we understand that the logic inherent in the European Colonial Project has led our entire species to where we are today,
Starting point is 00:11:44 which is the brink of ecological catastrophe, of constant warfare, of the inability for international cooperation, precisely when the problems we're facing as a species, demand that the most. And so, you know, this is, again, is trying to put in this dialectical materialist understanding of history where you cannot separate the present from the past. And to understand the history of this region is really an absolute requirement if you are going to think about, let alone opine on the region today. And so, yeah, it's an incredibly important history to understand. Yeah, so I'll basically transition us into the next thing that we want to cover, which is more or less what we want to get out of this conversation.
Starting point is 00:12:25 with Professor Thompson. And I agree entirely with what both Brett and Adnan were saying. I think that the transition point between why this is important and what we hope to underscore in our conversation is that it's popularly portrayed that the Arabs, as it's portrayed, are ungovernable. They're incapable of self-governance, let's say. And I think that this work really underscores that that is not necessarily the case. In fact, it is not the case, that they're inherently incapable of self-governance. Everyone should inherently understand that. These are people, there's not some genetic hardwiring in them that makes them incapable of self-governance, but rather it's external forces as well as perhaps kind of chance events that
Starting point is 00:13:15 happened internally that have, for the decade since then, basically prevented what we would consider liberal self-governance. So I think that that's something that would be very important for us to underscore with Professor Thompson is how this in view of Arabs as incapable of self-governance is historically inaccurate as well as just philosophically inaccurate. But what do you two think about, what are we hoping to underscore in this conversation? What should we hope to get out of the conversation with Professor Thompson for our listeners who may not have read the book yet?
Starting point is 00:13:50 Well, I think there are a lot of important issues that are raised through this history that we could explore further. So one issue is really thinking about, you know, the reconciliation between, you know, Muslim religiosity and desire for the state to somehow represent Muslim values and so on. and democratic structures and the respect of and inclusion as full citizens, people of different religious or no religious background. This has always been an issue or a question and the popular sort of understanding in view is that Islam, if you look at political science discourse in the mid-50s and earlier, and of course in the colonial era, the idea that Islam is somehow incompatible with democracy that you can't have the two integrated in a modern state. So that's an important issue to see how was this being worked out? what were the issues, the sources of tension, both the possibilities and the limitations of this moment in 1920, where people came together, representatives from greater Syria, and we'll hear a little bit about the boundaries of greater Syria that included, you know, what is today, Palestine,
Starting point is 00:15:18 Israel, Jordan, Syria, parts of Southern Anatolia, and Lebanon. The representatives came together and wrestled with exactly these sorts of questions and tried to deliberate on them. So that's an important point that is a continuing question or problem when we think about Islamist parties in the 2000s, for example, in Turkey, which we've already discussed, but elsewhere, for example, like in Egypt. And I think Elizabeth Thompson was inspired by contemporary events in 2011 to think about this question. So that'll be worth probing a little further. That's a key kind of question that this book makes a fascinating contribution to. Yeah, and I don't know if we'll get to this in the conversation,
Starting point is 00:16:09 but it's just worth sort of noting up front is the, you know, the idea that the Arabs are incapable of governing themselves is obviously not unique to just Arab people. This is the colonial narrative. This is, and if you're an American or a North American, you know this is how indigenous people have always been seen and viewed. This is how black folks have been seen and viewed, continue to be on the racist right. And it really highlights the connection between colonialism and modern day fascism. When we try to understand what are these fascist movements popping up all over Europe and all over North America and the imperial core, where do they come from? You cannot understand that without understanding the colonialist empires and that history and that
Starting point is 00:16:52 past and what the entitlement of white people in the imperial core is rooted in. And that's an interesting and noteworthy thing to highlight. And of course, this is how everybody is treated outside of Europe by European colonialists. I mean, Asians, Latin Americans, Africans, these narratives may shift and they might change a little bit around the fringes, but the basic lens, the basic perspective is always there. And you're talking about, both of you mentioned Lawrence of Arabia and how, you know, these things can seep ideologically into popular culture where you have a beautiful film, a masterpiece in a lot of ways, but what does it do? It tells history from the perspective of the imperialist and it plays into the Orientalist notions that undermined that
Starting point is 00:17:34 entire project. And so once again, you walk away from that movie not thinking you've picked up some idea about how you should understand that region and that period of time, but you walk away with this sort of Orientalist understanding of yeah, they just aren't able to govern themselves and that's a despicable view of people that is at the root of so much of our conflict today. And if I could just read this quote really quick because I think it speaks to these connections
Starting point is 00:18:01 and it speaks to Thompson's ability to write so beautifully in some ways. The quote is, I think from the intro, it says in 1938, CLR James exposed the truce of the Haitian Revolution in his classic history, the Black Jacobins. Descendants of African slaves had embraced and implemented the ideals of the French Revolution only to have Napoleon Bonaparte trick them and reimpose slavery.
Starting point is 00:18:25 Quote, it is on colonial peoples without means of counter-publicity that imperialism practices its basest arts, James reflected. France crushed the Haitian revolution with brutal vengeance. Not only did Bonaparte fear Haitian leader Toussaint-Lovitcher, James wrote, quote, he feared too the French Revolution which he and his kind had stifled. white Europeans simply could not accept that, quote, among those blacks whom they rule are men so infinitely their superior in ability, energy, range of vision, and tenacity of purpose.
Starting point is 00:18:57 Likewise, the French in 1920 feared the world order promised by the League of Nations. And I think that serves well to take these strands and sort of tie them together. I think that's fantastic, Brett, to show the connections. She does show that connection, but that's what's important about this history, is to see this not as an isolated episode. It is very interesting in its own context, but also as exposing these dynamics that have patterned world history for this century,
Starting point is 00:19:27 for centuries. And I'm hopeful that someday we'll also talk maybe about the Haitian Revolution and other revolts against slavery and so on. But that history is so vital. What's great about this is, as you were pointing out, that we get imperialist history in most of our popular media,
Starting point is 00:19:44 in Lawrence of Arabia, in a lot of history writing from that period even. And this really gives us an understanding and a texture of the people themselves. What were they concerned about? What were their aspirations? How did they see their own futures? And that's what we have to connect with and resurrect. And so I'm really looking forward to this conversation. Yeah, I think that that was a great summary of bringing it up.
Starting point is 00:20:12 And Brett, if I may, as an aside, You did have an episode on the Haitian Revolution on Rev. Left, I think, with Alex Avenia, did you not? Absolutely, yeah. One episode could never capture the complexities of that, but yeah, we did for like an hour and a half, two-hour episode on it, for sure. Yeah, it was excellent. I remember it. Thank you. But, yeah, I think that another point that you raised, Brett, that really will bring us well into the conversation with Professor Thompson is that otherizing by imperialist powers. As you said, it's a common thread for members of the ruling elite within the imperial powers to see anyone that is the other as incapable of self-governance.
Starting point is 00:20:52 And unfortunately, that narrative isn't just perpetuated by people in the ruling class, but that is also trickled down to people in the imperial power itself, whether they're working class, working poor, just members of the proletariat more generally. They're indoctrinated with this otherizing view of people from other parts of the world that are of different races, different religions, a different cultural background. And I think that kind of exposing this narrative and dismantling this narrative is really important going into this conversation. So I think that we'll wrap up this introductory segment now.
Starting point is 00:21:31 We'll be right back with Professor Elizabeth F. Thompson to talk about her book, How the West Stole Democracy from the Arabs. We're back on the basics and all of it will be able to be our guest. Our guest again, for those of you listening, is Elizabeth F. Thompson, the Muhammad S. Farsi, Chair of Islamic Peace and Professor of History at American University. We're going to be talking about her new book, how the West. the West stole democracy from the Arabs, the Syrian Arab Congress of 1920, and the destruction of its historic liberal Islamic alliance from Atlantic Monthly Press. Professor Thompson,
Starting point is 00:22:19 thank you for coming on to guerrilla history. Thank you for inviting me. It's a pleasure to be here. The pleasure is all ours. So I guess let's start by, I want you to kind of introduce some of the characters that are going to be at play here so the listeners have some understanding of who is who when we bring them up in the conversation. But, Even before we bring up the characters that are in this narrative of the story that you've laid out in your book, why did you write this book? As I understand it, you wrote this book after the Tahrir Square protests and basically immediately after the massacres at Rabas Square and Al-Nada Square in Egypt. How did those influence your decision to write this book?
Starting point is 00:23:02 Oh, that's a great question. Yeah, going back to 2013. You know, I had been in Cairo in 2011 to observe and interview people who had been involved in the uprising that toppled Hussein Mabar. These were people who were at some level conscious of trying to revive what had been lost during the Cold War. that they too like the peoples of eastern New York who had had the color revolutions after the fall of the Berlin Wall felt that the supports for the dictators they'd been living under should be removed and they should sort of let's just say take hold again of their own history really but what struck me in interviewing them in 2011 even and this is just in Egypt but I have had lived in Syria and visited Syria recently before that is how little people knew about their own history. If the kind of history you get under a dictatorship is quite sanitized, of course, doesn't talk a lot about past moments of democracy. And there were sort of false
Starting point is 00:24:19 expectations, but also when I returned in 2013 right before the coup that ended the period of democratic optimism in Egypt, I found that people were quite dejected, feeling that they had only a little bit of time and it had been up to them to invent or reinvent a democratic culture and that they had failed to do so. And I think I wanted my first motive was as an outsider who was freer to write to offer a history to local activists of the civilian heroes in their own history that they'd never learned about that had been censored from their textbooks and from their class rules and give them a sense that they were standing on the shoulders. of those who came before them in a long struggle.
Starting point is 00:25:21 So that was my first interest. I had a more academic interest, if you will, and maybe a Middle East specific interest in that the story I discovered, as I researched, the history of the Arab Congress in 1920, was a story in which the parties that had fallen out and fought one another, and so ended the Arab Spring of 2011,
Starting point is 00:25:52 had actually worked together and formed a Democratic coalition back in 1920. And what made me particularly interested to understand is how it was that religious leaders would have consented a hundred years ago to creating and founding a state that was by all means secular and not Islamic, even though they themselves were Muslim leaders. So two others, I guess. Excellent. So before I have you launch into kind of laying out who the characters are, I really want to just appreciate the point that you said that this book is written for local activists.
Starting point is 00:26:34 Are you planning on translating this book into Arabic at some point? Oh, yeah. Okay, great. I just signed a contract. So please, I've signed a contract. with a publisher, and I'm hoping it possible within a year. It will appear at least online. The deal we made was that it would be available online, as well as for a very low price. You know, there's a problem with censorship in much of the Middle East right now, and so grabbing things off,
Starting point is 00:27:03 digitally offline, online seemed to be the better route. So I'm very excited. I'm very glad to hear that. So now let's get into the book itself. Would you be willing to lay out kind of who the key players in this narrative are going to be what the significance of them are. Yeah, you did a great job at the beginning of your book. You had a lineup of basically the people, but for the listeners who might not have read the book yet, could you lay out who some of the key people to understand who they were, are so that when they're listening to this narrative that unfolds, they understand the people's context within us. Sure, the personality people are most likely to have heard of was Prince Faisal, who was the son of
Starting point is 00:27:49 Sharif Hussein of Mecca, who was featured in the movie Lawrence of Arabia as the leader of the Northern Arab Army fighting for independence against the Ottoman Empire. The Arabs in the region of the Eastern Mediterranean had been living for 400 years under the rule of the Ottoman Turks, and had for much of that time consented to such rule, but the brutal conditions of World War I and the clear disregard for Arabs as somehow a lesser race by Turkish leaders had stoked support for independence. And so, as the movie showed, Faisal had fought for independence alongside British troops. And with perhaps lesser guidance from the famous Lawrence of Arabia, T.E. Lawrence, than T.E. Lawrence would have
Starting point is 00:28:48 estate. So he's number one, Prince Faisal. And the second personality, important personality in the book is a man who's never entered into this narrative about this moment, the Syrian Arab kingdom after World War I. And his name is Shchech, Rinda, who was much older than Faisal. Faisal, who is a young man. in 19, 19, 1920. Riddow was a middle-aged man who sort of portly had been living in exile from the Ottoman Empire for decades, but writing in favor of constitutional government and in favor of a kind of reformed modern Islam
Starting point is 00:29:31 in his own magazine called The Lighthouse in English, which was read from Morocco to Indonesia. So he's a very famous man, and he was very eager to return home to what we call Greater Syria, that includes Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, and Jordan today, a region where around people's families live in the various cities of that larger region, speak a similar dialect of Arabic, and have a sense of sharing a region called Greater Syria or an Arabic, that is Shinn.
Starting point is 00:30:06 So Rashid Riddhar was a very important figure and would become the president. of the Congress. A third person we, I'm sure most of our listeners have heard of is President Woodrow Wilson. And I have a little anecdote about Woodrow Wilson because while he played
Starting point is 00:30:24 a very positive role at the Paris Peace Conference in supporting Arab claims for self-rule, he is known in this country primarily for his segregationist policies in Washington, D.C. and an has an heir to the racism that had fueled the Jim Crow era in the late 19th century in the
Starting point is 00:30:51 United States. So Woodrow was a complex character. And I think the moment has been misread by people who too easily want to push him into a two-dimensional figure. I believe that he did sincerely believe that even small nations should have their own governments. and should be freed from colonialism. I also do believe, however, that he supported the Arabs because he believed Arabs were white. So Rudra Wilson comes to the Paris Peace Conference with the strength of his famous 14 points
Starting point is 00:31:26 seeking a new era based on international law and the rights of nations. It was very hostile to the kind of colonial rule that the British and French actually wanted to impose over the Arabs after World War I. So those are the three main characters, I think, as we go along, and if other names come up, we'll identify them. That's terrific. Thanks so much, Libby, for joining us and giving us that background. It's a wonderful book. I really encourage everyone to get a copy and read it, read so beautifully, and it's a fascinating story.
Starting point is 00:32:02 You've taken us to the era of World War I. And, of course, people are familiar with World War I, but they think of it as, you know, a strong. between the allied, you know, British and French, and possibly they may know about the Russians being, at least for the first part of the war, part of the allied powers and that they opposed Germany. But what they often don't know is about Turkey or at least the Ottoman Empire's role in it and also how and why some kind of alliance at least seem to emerge between the Arabs struggling for freedom from Ottoman rule that you just mentioned. And so it was called a World War for a reason. And so I'm wondering if maybe you can give us a little bit more of the context in the Middle East
Starting point is 00:32:53 of developments and events taking place over the course of World War I so that we appreciate and understand the aftermath that you focused on in the book. Yeah, thank you so much. I'd love to do that. You know, since we've just covered the centennial of war, World War I from 2014 to 2018, there's been a wave of new scholarship. And what I'm most pleased about is that the Middle Eastern theater of the war has taken a more robust place in that narrative now. I have the fortune to be an editor for an online encyclopedia, which I highly recommend
Starting point is 00:33:30 to people that's called Online, or not 1914, 1918, online. And it was produced out of Berlin, free university in Berlin, but it's in English. And the first thing they wanted to do was globalized World War I. And they called in people like me and Mustafa Aksa Call over at Georgetown and a host of historians of the Middle East to help round out. Why? Because the Ottoman Empire had long been a sort of lynching in the balance of power in Europe since the 19th century in a politics that diplomatic historians refer to as the Eastern question. And the Eastern question was all about preventing Russia from expanding too far into Europe and upsetting the balance of power in the region.
Starting point is 00:34:24 And so the Ottoman Empire had been, for most of the 19th century, an ally of the British. But the British and French abandoned the Ottoman Empire at the turn of the century, and leaders were forced to seek the protection of Germany on the opposing side of the war when they discovered telegrams between the Russians and the British and the French to the tune of, oh, yes. And when we occupy Turkey, Russia will take Constantinople, modern-day Istanbul, as, you know, the ancient capital and orthodox Christianity and so on. So the Turks entered the war on the side of the Germans and the Austro-Hungarian Empire against Russia, Britain, and France.
Starting point is 00:35:14 And ultimately, Italy joined the allies as well. This was a war, as most listeners know, was a war of attrition by industrial powers. immediately in 1914 all battle froze in those in those trenches in northeastern France and you know it was a race to manufacture shells to you know shoot at one another and nothing budged in Europe for several years until 1917 and 1918 right so much of the war was fought actually outside the European theater in the Middle East. The Germans wanted to draw away British and French resources into a fight over the colonies. And so in the region that I study, particularly greater Syria, which we just talked about, half a million people would die in that war. The Syrians had the second highest per capita death rate in the war of any country outdone only, sadly, by the Serbs. And so we even, even though we are very familiar with a story about the Europeans,
Starting point is 00:36:30 you know, and whole generations of young men being cut down in World War I. In fact, the Ottoman Empire, which was much less industrialized, had to literally work its own population to death. What you remember or what you may have read about the use of slave labor by the Germans in World War II was present within the Ottoman Empire during World War I. So there's a little bit of background of how the Arabs in the empire sought to, you know, assert their rights and a certain autonomy over their provinces in exchange for their loyalty and their support to this devastating war.
Starting point is 00:37:15 But the Ottoman Turks took instead the opportunity during the war to assert more or more centralized control and with more brutal. control over the Arab provinces. That is the sort of source of the Arab revolt that you say make famous in the Murphy, Lawrence of Arabia. Oh, thanks so much. I guess I'm interested as a consequence of those developments. Syria, maybe surprisingly for listeners, became a very central question or problem in the peace negotiations afterwards. So we think of the armistice as involving, you know, the disposition of Europe. But a lot of the controversies and a lot of the struggles in the negotiations, as you tell so vividly in the book, made Syria central. So it's interesting.
Starting point is 00:38:11 So maybe you can tell us about exactly how and why that was the case and the nature of those kinds. competitions for influence and power over this region, you know, were undertaken. That was a surprise to me as well. I, like most of us, was quite familiar with the bitter negotiations over reparations for Germany and how that led to the tragic Treaty of Bersailles in June of 1919. But as I read through the original documents on the negotiations that spring, And what jumped out at me was that the negotiations over Syria were as bitter. They stumbled at moments that included a threat by Woodrow Wilson to go back to his ship and sail back across the Atlantic rather than continue speaking with Britain and France
Starting point is 00:39:08 over their desire to occupy Syria. and so and continued with strongly bitter negotiations between the British and French over how they might divide Syria up to the point in May of 1919 where similar threats were being made by the French premier against David Lloyd George, the Prime Minister of England. So what was at stake ultimately? And it took a lot of digging through a lot of you know, diplomatic history written from the point of view of the British and the French and mostly the British. I would say that I would be willing to bet that nine out of ten people who have read anything on World War I have read it from a British point of Europe to learning that really what was at stake in the end was oil. I guess that shouldn't surprise us after the Iraq war, right? But both Britain and France had run short of petroleum during World War.
Starting point is 00:40:12 War I. And Britain did not, actually, going into 1914, did not actually have oil wells in its territory anywhere in the empire. Britain and France both believed, and this is why the Draconian Treaty of Versailles was written, they both believed that Germany would fight them again, right, correctly, as we know in retrospect, although I hesitate to draw a straight line between World War I and World War II, but they were bound and determined to assure two things that they had enough petroleum, because by the end of the war, tanks had become very important. They take gasoline, planes, and airplanes were becoming important by the end of the war. It was quite clear that they would be instrumental in the next.
Starting point is 00:41:07 war, right? So they needed oil. They also needed bodies. And so, for example, although George Clemenceau, this is a great irony of history, George Clemenceau was probably the least racist of all the leaders who met in Paris. I mean, the European, American leaders. He had spent, he had spent exiled from Louis Napoleon in the 1860s in New York outside of France and had written columns for French newspapers about reconstruction in this country and the great experiment in racial equality. Okay. So this is not a man who was, you know, unreflectively racist. But he's also a man who left France and wanted to make sure that France would never be occupied again by the Germans. Okay. He had seen the German invasion in 1870, and then again, in 1914.
Starting point is 00:42:05 So even though many promises had been made to, you know, hundreds of thousands of colonial troops, particularly from North Africa and West Africa, you know, for rights, if not independence, for their service during the war, they weren't going to give them independence because they needed those bodies. So in the same spirit, right? The British and French were eyeing the information that there was oil in what we know today as Iraq, right? And so I'll make a long story short. George Commenceau was not interested in colonizing Syria or the Arab world. Yeah, and it was me.
Starting point is 00:42:47 His politics had always been build strength in France in our hexagon at home. All right. But he could not ignore the colonial lobby when the colonial lobby was excited by the British machinations in the Middle Leaps. Lord Curzon, former Viceroy of India, had his eye both on Iraq and Syria and Arabia, right, who wanted to maximize territorial gains that would actually effectively link India to Egypt, which the British already occupied. The French were apoclectic, right, because the British army had been active during World War I in Middle East only because of a division of labor. The French army focused on the Western Front in Europe, and the British would take care of that southern flank in the Mediterranean and the Middle East. It was only by virtue of that arrangement during the war that there were so many British troops in the Middle East poised to make a land grab in 1919. So it's only because the British were boundy to determine to control those oil wells in Iraq
Starting point is 00:43:55 that they had to, in the end, make a deal with Clemenceau and the French colonial lobby that they could have Syria. Okay. So this is the reason why I think the negotiations over the status of Syria were so stormy. Enter Ruggroh Wilson, who was against all colonialism as part of his 14 points, right, and seeking to assure self-determination for the Syria. and you can see what sparks would have flown behind closed doors in the spring of 1919. Yeah, that's incredibly interesting. I'm sort of going back and forth between what I want to address next,
Starting point is 00:44:33 but let's just go with Woodrow Wilson for now. You mentioned earlier sort of some of his background, his domestic policies, and sort of like the difference between his domestic policies and his international ones, except the caveat that, you know, he thought Syrians were white, and that played into his entire vision for what's possible for that for that area. So can you just talk a little bit about the role that Wilson played in all of this and not only what he personally thought, but sort of the influences acting upon him that shifted his positions or or jostled up against what he personally wanted.
Starting point is 00:45:06 Yeah, that's true. You know, he was not a well man, right? Later in 1919, he would have a stroke that would incapacitate him, of course. We also believe that in the early April, a time of great disagreement in the negotiations, particularly over Germany. He probably had the Spanish flu, the influenza of 1918, 1919, and as we've been discovering even with COVID today, you know, these viruses affected pretty, right? So given that, he, at first, we know, when he was sailing across the Atlantic to France in December of 1918, that he was discussing ways of handling all the territories that had once been governed by the defeated Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires. right there were he had already had visits and made deals with leaders polish leaders and check leaders to have their own independent states
Starting point is 00:46:18 and so when you know he learned that syrians and other peoples the turks um other people's part of the autumn empire also wanted their own states uh you know he felt he had to play an even hand because he had kept promising that all nations all nations, true nations of people, would have a right to self-government, right? He was in competition, of course, in that rhetoric with the Soviets. You know, the Bolsheviks had their revolution in 1917 and quickly assured self-determination to the peoples that have been part of the Russian Empire. But his thinking was, because he knew quite well, hadn't learned about the secret deals that the British and French had made during the war to partition the Ottoman Empire. He had already been done thinking of an interim temporary sort of, not exactly, he didn't want to be a colony, but regime. We would call it nation building today, send in some
Starting point is 00:47:26 advisors, help them construct their ministry of education in their parliament and their, of course, national army and so on out of the cinders of war. But he actually told his advisors on that ship crossing the Atlantic that he thought the best advisors or advisory country, what they would call a mandate, would be a Scandinavian country. Scandinavian countries would consider to be very well run, right, but non-imperialist, that no Scandinavian country would want to colonize these countries in the Middle East, nor would they have the resources to do so. So his ideal, coming into Paris, was that his envisioned League of Nations, precursor to the current United Nations, would provide the resources to a small, unambitious country to give, you know, neutral advice
Starting point is 00:48:19 to a country that just needs to organize itself for independence, right? But that was swept aside by the end of January 1919. And it was not simply David Lord George. It was the Commonwealth members of the British Empire who were allowed representation in these secret meetings giving the British Empire inordinate influence, right? So the representatives of South Africa wanted, you know, to directly annex lands in Africa that the Germans had lost during the war. representatives from Australia and New Zealand wanted to take over Pacific Islands that vacated by the Germans. And so too, right, the British and the French immediately said, well, we want to take those lands that have been part of the Ottoman Empire. So that while the League of Nations covenant promised the Arab countries that they were a superior form of mandate that would be very
Starting point is 00:49:21 temporary and very lightweight. They still were deemed not yet ready for, you know, self-rule and that the Paris Peace Conference would decide who their mandatory power would be. Then Wilson has his stroke and bam, who, you know, the fox is in the chicken, chicken coop and, you know, the British and French immediately assert that they will be the mandatory powers controlling Syria and Iraq and other portions of the Ottoman Empire. So Wilson was not, as he was not duped by the British and French, as some historians have written. He was not in cahoots with imperial powers, if you read closely the record, but unfortunately, right, he had come to Paris with a weak hand, at least it seemed, in that the Republicans, the Republican Party, he was a Democrat, the Republican, party had taken over Congress and they were so hostile he didn't even bring any representatives
Starting point is 00:50:26 of the Republican Party with him. This had not escaped the British and the French. And so they saw him as dealing with a weak hand. Just a footnote to that because we have so much we want to talk about in Syria. But there's a recent book by Adam 2's at Columbia University, a couple years old now, that argues actually Wilson had a much stronger hand than he understood. Had he He'd been schooled in the, in finance, which he was not. He was not an economist, and he had only a rudimentary understanding. He would have understood the United States had a stranglehold over Europe. The Europeans were far in debt to American banks, and he could have used that as an instrument.
Starting point is 00:51:12 But in retrospect, we see that was not even on his radar screen. So the British and French were able to take advantage of Wilson. Just a thought, a note, if you tell, if you don't mind, there is a famous proposal by the Japanese in February of 2019 to insert into the covenant of the League of Nations a clause on racial equality. And here's what gets very interesting coming to Woodrow Wilson. Because at first, Woodrow Wilson thought that was a great idea, that there should be, the races of the world should be equal.
Starting point is 00:51:45 Right? He was a sort of, oh, you know, he thought of himself as a, modern progressive southerner, not the Ku Klux Klan type of racist. He admired greatly Booker T. Washington and the idea that, you know, African Americans could be made equal after being schooled a bit. They're behind culturally because they've been enslaved, but after some indeterminate number of decades, they might be ready to carry the full load of full citizenship and so on. So he was not a strict, racialists, I mean biological racialists, right? But he did believe that countries around the world could be brought to the level of whites. He certainly thought that European whites had gained
Starting point is 00:52:34 in civilization, a higher standing. And so he was open to the idea that when the Japanese proposed it, things happened. Number one, he was surrounded by advisors who did not actually believe in his radical vision of equal rights under international law, right? And we have, I can point you guys, if you want a bibliography to go through your podcast, I can give it to you, right? And numbers of books have written, particularly in the last decade, showing how radical this vision truly was. Okay. But instead, around him, he had advisors who were anglophiles, who were listening to the very racist. I mean, the people and those negotiations, used the N-word were from the British Empire, not the Americans, okay? And they whispered in his
Starting point is 00:53:25 year that this was not a good idea. And then his own advisor, Colonel House, did remind him that as a Democrat, you know, he was the first Democrat to come to the private war after the Civil War. And how did he do it? He depended on Southern votes. Not only Southern votes, the truly crucial votes were in California. And Californians were against immigration from Asia. There were laws on the book since the 1880s, barring immigration of the yellow race to the United States. After, you've all read probably in high school or grade school stories of how Chinese laborers builds our railroad across the continent and so on, right? And the doors shut on that immigration. And so Wilson did not want to alienate them because he added an eye on re-election to a new term in 1920.
Starting point is 00:54:16 So the man was a pragmatic racist, but he was not the black and white racist that he's been portrayed to be. And there the sort of middle chapters, or actually, yeah, the middle chapters of the book show in a new way how the Syrians understood that there was an opening there by playing themselves as whites. So that's a great transitional thought because, you know, this is all interesting, but it takes a westernized look at what was going on. And I think we should move on to what was going on in Syria from Syria's perspective at this point. So I guess the transition point would be Wilson was looked at relatively highly by people in the area. Could you briefly explain who fattaught were, what Wilson's influence, on that group was and then transition us into the the Syrian Arab Congress
Starting point is 00:55:18 and then perhaps we can get into that aspect of the history and what they thought about governance of themselves at that point in history. Thank you. Yes. Absolutely. You mentioned Fatat, F-A-T-A-T, a word meaning youth, really, or young, in Arabic. And it was a movement begun before the war by highly educated, young men, they were all men at that time, to seek Arab rights within the Ottoman Empire. And what I did not know before doing this research is that they knew foreign languages
Starting point is 00:55:57 and that they actually had copies of Woodrow Wilson's own textbook on politics and state making. you know, was one of the first kind of real textbooks in political science written. And I've gone through many editions since the 1890s, started with, you know, Roman and Greek state building, and of course colonated in the American government and particularly solely our federal form of government. And they saw in our federal form of government with states' rights a model of what they wanted within the Ottoman Empire, you know, so that you would have a Syrian state within the Ottoman Empire. It would control some local revenues. It would send representatives to Istanbul, right?
Starting point is 00:56:43 But as a way of pushing back against the autocratic rule of the sultan and later during the war against the military regime of the own Turks that wanted to assert direct control. So the Fetat people quite interesting, they went to law school in France and so on, highly educated. So they go underground during the war and break the turn against the Turks, ally with people who are in exile in Cairo, people like Sheikh Rashid Riddha, who forms something called the Syrian Union Party,
Starting point is 00:57:18 and draws up a model of constitution for a projected independent Syria during the war. When the war ends, Faisal and his army enter Damascus in October of 1918, They converge on Damascus to build that government. Faisal declared from the first moment in October 1918 that this would be a constitutional state with an elected government and that as soon as he can, he would convene a Congress to write a constitution. That Congress was convened in June of 2019 when Woodrow Wilson's own delegation of a kind of commission of inquiry. It's called the King Crane Commission after the leaders of the commission arrived in Syria to interview people on what their political
Starting point is 00:58:16 preferences were. Again, in keeping with the idea of self-determination, what kind of government do you want? Who would you want to be your mandatory power? And of course, they all said, never the French. The French had been scheming for decades to take over Syria. And, And they insisted they wanted independence, but if they had to have a mandatory advisor for a while, it should be the Americans because they believe the Americans had no colonial interests in the Middle East, right? And also because many of the people in that group and the Congress had heard of Wilson, admired Wilson, and had even read his book and wanted to build an American-style federal state. They had a vision of a sort of United States of Arabia, so USA, but it would have been greater Syria as one sort of state within the United States, and then Iraq and then Arabia, the Arabian Peninsula where Faisal's father ruled in Mecca. So the Congress convened that summer to meet with the American delegation, and then they chose a committee to start writing a concert. Constitution, but the Congress wouldn't begin debating and really ratifying that Constitution until the spring of 1920.
Starting point is 00:59:39 Yeah, so drilling down on that a little bit more, can you just actually talk about the Constitution that the Syrian Arab Congress sort of spawned? And then also the efforts since then by the Europeans to not only sort of topple it, but also to write it out of history. Absolutely. Thank you. So the, yeah, the Constitution came out of the whole thrust of politics that these various groups had been pursuing since before World War I. I have not mentioned, but I think it's important here to mention that there had been a constitutional revolution in the Ottoman Empire in 2008, which restored a constitution that the Sultan had abrogated and which revised the Constitution to give the Ottoman Parliament. more power. Okay. So many of these people, either they themselves or their fathers, had been members of parliament in Istanbul before the war. What's so interesting about the Syrian case compared to the other cases I've learned about as a historic World War I, both in Europe and the
Starting point is 01:00:43 Middle East, is that in the case of Syria, it's almost a singular case of people seeking to restore their democracy that had crumbled during the war. So often in Europe, you have countries like Britain and France that had built tremendously powerful war machines and granted much greater power to the central government over the economy and so on that it was loath to relinquish after the war. And then you had countries like Poland, Czechoslovakia, and the newborn Yugoslavia that were highly nationalist in nature, seeking. to really homogenize their populations, their reactions against the multinational empires of Russia, Austria, and the Ottoman empires that had ruled them before. They were brutal to their minorities. The League of Nations, some of your leaders may be familiar with this if they have followed
Starting point is 01:01:43 European Jewish history, is that the League of Nations had imposed minority treaties on these Eastern European countries to ensure Jewish rights because they were extremely intolerant countries, right? And so the Syrians were amazingly out of touch. They wanted to build a completely tolerant multicultural society. You know, the one thing that bound them together is they spoke Arabic. But, you know, in Syria, in greater Syria, you have a large minority of Christians and a smaller but more but important minority of Jews living there. You have other religious just minorities. They're the Druze, an offshoot of Islam. And then you have other ethnicities, Armenians and Kurds and so on. And the idea was they were all, you were going to be equal as a
Starting point is 01:02:36 citizen, regardless of your religion. This was absolutely radical. The Ottomans had never permitted that. The Ottomans had retained the idea that this is an Islamic empire and that Muslims would always have greater privileges than non-Muslims. Despite efforts, to negotiate that equality, there had always been pushed back. And here, that equality was achieved, right? The constitution, unlike any constitution in the Arab world today, omitted any reference to Islam as an official religion or as a basis for legislation. The king was elected. He had no divine right to rule, and he swore allegiance to divine laws in the plural, not to Islamic law, unheard of in the Arab world today.
Starting point is 01:03:26 And the parliament was granted greater power over the king, controlled the parliament and so on. So in addition, there was a long list of what we would call a bill of rights, guaranteeing freedom of speech, assembly, and so on. I'm assuring everyone a free public education, something that you and I would recognize as a democratic institution. And the remarkable thing was, even religious conservatives signed on to it in the spring of 19. Quick follow-up question on that.
Starting point is 01:04:01 So, as you said, the Constitution basically disestablished Islam as the official religion of the area. The king had to be a Muslim, but it was not intended to be ruled as a Islamic country. and the people did not have an official state religion. But as I understand it, the French intentionally mistranslated Article 1 of the Constitution regarding disestablishment of Islam, would you like to just briefly bring up that point? I think that that was something that was rather interesting. Yeah, it is quite interesting. And it took me a long time and a lot of checking or rechecking my sources because nobody
Starting point is 01:04:49 written about that. In fact, there had been scholars later from the region who had relied on the mistranslated French version of the Constitution, which read in Article 1 that the religion of the state is Islam, right? A mistranslation of the text in the Arabic, which read the religion of the king is Islam, right? So the French had justified their, obviously, of Syria on the premise that the, you know, Prince Vaisal, who was, you know, son of the Sharif of Mecca, was going to build a theocracy. And as a Muslim theocracy, it was going to kill the Christians, right, particularly in Mount Lebanon, just as the Muslim Turks had committed genocide against the Armenians during World War I. So it was not an accident
Starting point is 01:05:48 it, that it was mistranslated. It was translating in this way to conform with what the French foreign ministry and the military were telling the French parliament at that time about why they were spending the money to occupy Syria, okay? And what is greatly unfortunate is that later scholars used that French translation of the Constitution as though it were a true historical record. You know, we are still decades, a hundred years later, clearing away the lies, you know, the official lies that belong to the institution of colonial rule over Syrians, as we
Starting point is 01:06:33 are in other parts of the world, right? This is quite common in publicist colonial studies. But it was particularly alarming that even Arabs from that region were relying on that French translation. Why? Because the French, after mistranslated the Constitution, appeared to have destroyed every Arab original
Starting point is 01:06:55 copy of that, that they could get their hands on. Fortunately, one man who was a minister in the government at that time seems to have gotten out of Syria and gone to Amman in Jordan with an original copy. He later
Starting point is 01:07:13 published set of documents belonging to the Syrian Arab Kingdom. And so we have a copy in Arabic of that sort, not an original, but published in his book. Well, that's a fascinating and a great work of history to be able to bring to light, you know, the original text and context. So you did some originalist constitutional development there or investigation. But, you know, it's very interesting that the context for this, of course, is of French using this discourse, Orientalist discourse about an Islamic threat and raising the specter of the danger to religious Christian, religious minorities in the region. Of course, this is following, you know,
Starting point is 01:08:00 purges and genocide in under the late Ottomans in Anatolia and so on. So this is the kind of context that they're claiming that it's impossible for there to be Arab and Muslim governance because it'll be a threat to these religious minorities, that they won't protect religious minorities. So that's an important component of it. Some might be given to read this as a progressive constitution that arises very much contingently as an aberration from, you know, Islam and Islam's relation to democracy and so on because of those particular circumstances. So I'm wondering if you could perhaps reflect on not only that historical situation that may have helped inform how they wanted to demonstrate their fitness to this external audience at the
Starting point is 01:08:59 League of Nations and in the Paris Peace Conference of their ability to rule, but also how this may have been embedded in a broader sense of, you know, Islamic thought during this period. You've told us a little bit about Rashid Breda, but perhaps you can tell us a little bit about how these interesting discussions about sovereignty, popular sovereignty, things that might be surprising for contemporaries, for us today, both in the region and outside, to really appreciate and understand that this wasn't just some contingent response, political, to the need to establish these more universal rights and protections. How would you parse that?
Starting point is 01:09:42 Oh, yeah. You know, there's a great story of Rida being welcomed by a bishop in Tyro in, or I think it was actually Alexandria, in Egypt anyway, after the 1908 constitutional revolution, right, that there was a coming together Muslim and Christians and that this was the way forward. He had embraced that constitution. He had spoken in terms of constitutional. government for years in his magazine. I did theorize in the book that this was contingent in the sense that he was there. He was seen as enough of an authority to be
Starting point is 01:10:20 able to argue in favor of popular sovereignty and a parliament robust enough to pass legislation to meet the needs of the society of the day without being hemmed in by Islamic law. There certainly were people back then, as there are today, who believed that all of life should be governed by Islamic law. There's always been, I mean, you're a medieval historian. You've seen them way back when. That's like in any religion.
Starting point is 01:10:56 I mean, you can find them in Christianity and any. But Rinda had contended with those people. people for many years before coming to Damascus in 1919 and was equipped to take the moon so that when there were discussions, as there were in March of 1920, about, oh, should there be official religion of Islam, you know, should the king be Muslim and so on, he was able to strike the compromises between very conservative people and people in that Congress who, who, if given the chance, might well have wanted to establish a republic and do away with a monarchy even. You know, and he put his foot down and said, look, these are people who for 400 years have been, you know, ruled by a Sultan al-Khalif,
Starting point is 01:11:47 Caliph being the head of Sunni Islam, you know, they'll rise up as, you know, and call this, you know, an illegitimate government. if you go that far, let's compromise. And he was part of that compromise that asserted that at least there should be a king and the king should be Muslim. But he was also part of the process that assured that that king did not have much power. Okay, so there's a little bit like,
Starting point is 01:12:17 I don't know if anybody's watching the crown right now, right? But it's a little bit like the diminishing of power on the part of the British monarchy in favor of constitutional government there. So ridda was extremely important and was somebody who, you know, has been misunderstood, I think, read as a rigid Islamist, which I understand how you could read him is that it is later years. He was very bitter after the French came in. But in 1920, he was not that man. he believed, even as late as August of 1921, after the French had occupied Syria, he went to Geneva. He'd never been to Europe before.
Starting point is 01:13:08 He went to Geneva on a ship, you know, across the Mediterranean, and his cabin mate was a Christian friend. And thank goodness his Christian friend read French on the, you know, ship because Ridley didn't know French, and he wouldn't be able to tell if the dish had pork in it or not. So they work together, right? He writes in his diary, and I was fortunate enough to get a hold of coffee at his diary. He writes in the diary, oh, I believe that there are liberals in Europe who are going to protect our rights, who are going to stand up for liberal democracy in the post-war world, because that's what we all fought for. he had devoted a whole issue of his magazine to praising Woodrow Wilson in December 1918, right?
Starting point is 01:13:58 He was a man who firmly believed that the basic principles of governance, as well as he could understand them in the Islamic tradition, were congruent with the basic principles of liberalism, right? This comes as a shock to people who have considered him to be a man who led a very bitter reaction against. Europe and the West later in his years. And of course, we can see why, right? Yeah, I mean, a man who had put so much faith in the Europeans and in the coexistence of Muslims and Christians on an equal basis, but in the congruence of two great civilizations, was a man sort of of the 19th century. You know, there were great civilizations in the world. And to be civilized, they were all, if you boil it down, based on civilized principles that they share, right? I mean, there were differences in culturally in civilizations,
Starting point is 01:14:56 but civilization with a big sea existed, right? And he is disabused of that and disillusioned when the League of Nations refused Syrians appeals to withdraw the French mandate. And it is only at that point that he turned against Europe and turned against the West for having betrayed its own principles, So now that we have all this context, we understand the internal, the external pressures, we understand the role that the U.S. and Woodrow Wilson played, the Syrian Arab Congress, etc. Your book is titled, after all, how the West stole democracy from the Arabs.
Starting point is 01:15:33 So could you dive down into how exactly the West did steal democracy from the Arabs? And then just talk about, you know, the repercussions immediately in its aftermath and for that region going forward from that point. Sure. Yeah. That was a, You know, that was my editor. You know, I published with, this is Grove Atlantic, I don't know. You know, there's sort of a lefty press, I suppose. And they were all excited about the story I told there. And so, you know, it was my editor, Morgan Entrichin, who came up with the title.
Starting point is 01:16:06 And, you know, it existed. And then, you know, I resisted the, you know, as a good Middle East historian, I don't divide the world into East and West. understand that those are constructions and so on. But it was in their construction of themselves as the West that the British and the French took it upon themselves to violate the basic spirit of the mandate. The mandate was supposed to be a period of tutelage in which provisional independence was recognized and in which the Syrians would choose who their advisors would be and instead turned it into an occasion of military invasion and occupation, right, and killing
Starting point is 01:16:51 of Syrians and sending them into exile and issuing dozens of death sentences and running a regime of terror in the 1920s. You know, the man, the governor, not the governor, the general, who occupied Damascus in the summer of 1920, quit two years later. Why? Because all of a sudden, the French parliament said, oh, we're having some budgetary trouble. Let's cut funding to Syria, really. We don't, you know, want that. And he knew he could not rule Syria without keeping maximum military pressure over it. Indeed, there would be a militarized armed revolt in Syria in 2025.
Starting point is 01:17:36 Right. So, you know, they knew that they were imposing this mandate against the will of the people. and against the spirit of the League of Nations. So that was very clear in the writings and in the letters exchanged amongst the French. And then the idea of theft of them comes in the sense of it's more of the sort of like white-collar-crowing theft, you know, covering your tracks by making it look like it had never existed,
Starting point is 01:18:10 You know, and so by using the word stole in my title, I wanted to emphasize that that democracy had existed. They had ratified in toto in a first rounder review that constitution, right, and that that was born of, as I showed, longstanding political activism and deeply held principles, not, you know, window dressing for Paris in any respect. But the French had to rewrite that history. I have just been, this is an interesting angle for links to modern day. You know, there are huge controversies in France today about the role of Muslims in the French democracy, in the French republic. In light of the violent reaction to the cartoons that were published that defamed the Prophet Muhammad. and then they're republishing when the trial of the first round of criminals were being brought to trial and the French president's, you know, vocal defense of the right to publish these offensive cartoons
Starting point is 01:19:21 and crusade to, you know, modernize Islam for Muslims who can't seem to do it themselves, right? and that now it's our whole reorganization of Islamic institutions and leadership within France, right? This is all the background to say I got an urgent email from the editor of a lefty academic, anti-colonial journal in France and asked me, please write up the story of how the French erased evidence of the French, the Syrian Congress and the Syrian Constitution. I have a letter from the French prime minister saying destroy every trace of that government. So it would not look like they had destroyed a democracy, right? She pleaded with me, please write that. And do you understand, I need you to write this. Do you understand how many attacks and that magazine like mine gets by people, you know,
Starting point is 01:20:21 for criticizing France's colonial past and for upholding a different reading of of the relationship between Muslims and Christian and even allowing for the possibility that the republishing the freedom to publish defamatory cartoons about the Prophet Muhammad is a freedom that belongs to the old colonizers and is an old repertoire of racial, you know, subversion or, you know, by the French towards their Muslims in their rule. forbid. And so I felt compelled to say, yes, I have to write that article. So I'll expand on the many ways that the French had to then by sleight of fan cover their tracks and make what was a theft look like something that never existed. This is going to be probably an unfair follow-up question,
Starting point is 01:21:19 but since you mentioned Macron and given these relatively recent events, I'm going to bring him up as well as a quote from your preface of your book. And I would like your You know, your thoughts on Macron overall, recent events as well as what you bring up in the preface, which I found to be very interesting. You said, quote, a century after the Paris Peace Conference, we are at a moment of historical reckoning. Only in 2017 did a French president for the first time declare that colonialism was a crime against humanity. Emmanuel Macron called on this generation to base history and to rethink and redesign a new relationship between France and the people. of its former colonies. How do you tie that in with this recent, you know, outlook of Macron towards the formerly colonized people in Islam in France more generally. And I think Adnan looks like
Starting point is 01:22:11 he wants to tag on to this question as well. I just want to follow up a little bit with his recent visit to Lebanon, where he sounded a lot like, you know, colonizer taking responsibility. We will never abandon Lebanon. I was like, wait a minute, you're not supposed to be in Lebanon. anymore. And as a historian of this, you know, kind of French colonial context in Lebanon and Syria, I'm sure you were thinking a lot about the ironies of those statements. But even more, I just wanted to reflect on the fact that why were the French, you know, the pro-colonial party so interested in Syria? Part of it was, well, they had to have something, but they tried to make it very meaningful by referring to the Latin Crusader kingdoms, the Frankish nobility that had established itself
Starting point is 01:23:01 as a result of the success of the First Crusade to create this idea that they had a special relationship and responsibility, particularly for the Eastern Christians there, which is a discourse that they again revive in 19th and early 20th century to justify the mandate. We have to protect the Eastern Christians there. we have a historic connection since the time of the Crusades and so on. So it's interesting how quickly and easily any positive developments are, they can be reversed so easily in this context it seems. Well, you know, Macraw is not a university professor. He's a president and he's not been doing well, right? He's got, he's up against the wall. He is, I supported him when he was
Starting point is 01:23:48 elected only because the alternative was Maureen Le Pen, right, to his right. So he, you know, all power to him for speaking truth in 2017. But as the
Starting point is 01:24:04 email from this editor in France suggests, the critique of French colonialism has not yet measured into the mainstream, right? And that should not surprise us, right? in a country in the United States anyway, now that it lives
Starting point is 01:24:22 according to at least two radically different realities at the same time. France has long done so, right? Macro follows a hundred years after a period of in which Clemenceau
Starting point is 01:24:38 himself anti-colonial was unceremoniously brutally turned out of power right right after the Peace Conference. He was, you know, he was the father of the war. You know, he was beloved during the war by the soldiers. But the colonial lobby and very right wing politicians profited in the elections following the peace conference. And that wing of French politics has never gone away. Since the 1890s, you know, the foreign ministry and the military had been given over to the Colonial Party. You know, I mean, the French Republic was, you know, if you look at French history in the 19th century, the French Republic only came in the last third, 30 years of the century.
Starting point is 01:25:30 The monarchists were very strong in that country. And so it is not surprising to me that not only in 1920, but in 2020, that McRoehl has to play to that script. We won't have time today, but I'll remind listeners who are likely aware of the relevance here of Algeria, right, that many leftists, socialists who had defended France and the resistance in 1940s, then fought to keep hold of Algeria, right, in the 1950s, and many people living in France had been expelled from Algeria or their parents had been or their grandparents had been, right? This is a wound that is reopened regularly, right? That McRole would resort and reach for a very old playbook about individual crimes of, you know, a tiny minority of extremists representing the beliefs of an entire religion is a very sad thing indeed. Indeed. Well, I just thought it might be worth thinking about the aftermath. of this moment. You talked a little bit about the contemporary circumstances that impelled you to
Starting point is 01:26:52 write this book, but I'm wondering if now reflecting how you would characterize, what are the legacies and consequences of this derailing, of the stealing of democracy in that moment? You mentioned Rida turned to, you know, very anti-West sort of politics after being disillusioned. I'm sure he was not the only one who thought that maybe these appeals to liberal democracy under the mandate were not going to be fruitful. And whether this had a long-lasting effect on the trajectory, you might say, historically of the relationship between democratic or liberation movements in subsequent periods of Middle Eastern history to our contemporary period. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, mindful that 10 decades have passed.
Starting point is 01:27:45 right? And no historian wants to draw a straight line without a lot of intervening variables and events and so on. What I do think is clear, it's two things. Through 1920, I saw, and this includes the 1919 revolution in Egypt, okay, I saw through the region coming out of the period of Ottoman, a popular base for liberal democracy. There were many people who filled, the streets of Damascus in support of that Congress repeatedly in that period. That disappears. These people, these leaders stuck out their necks, their political, they put their political careers on the line to decide to sit down and devise a constitutional monarchy instead of picking up guns in 1920. They had wagered that they could carry through to
Starting point is 01:28:45 independence using the new instruments of international law and the rhetoric of rights and their sincere belief that their political principles agreed with those of European liberals. They lost. That door was shut, drastically so, at the point of many guns and under the bombs of many airplanes, Iraq and Syria were both bombed by the British and the French, right? And let's not even begin. ever end our podcast if we talk about the events that occurred in Palestine. Second, amongst themselves, a cleavage opened between those conservative religious leaders who had been present in the serial Congress and those who consider themselves secular liberals. So the compromises and the bonds that were forged in the spring of 1920 were not only untethered,
Starting point is 01:29:49 but they became arch enemies to one another. The liberals were reduced to become a kind of elite clique that were seen to profit from British and French rule because the British and French always retained the myth that they were going to introduce democratic rule or at least independent rule to their Arab we'll call them colonies. They weren't really mandates, and including Egypt, and that the Islamists became Islamists, and they became the populists, really. So the crowds in the streets were gathered by sheikhs who now no longer believed in the congruence of liberal European political principles and those of Muslims and Muslims. Muslim world. And instead we get the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in the 1930s, which was founded. If you read the founding documents and the writings of Hassan al-Bana, the founder of the
Starting point is 01:30:53 Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in 1928, it is founded on the principle that Islamic politics are different from European politics and that there is no concurrency, right? And he writes a famous letter to the young king in 1936, new king Faruip in Egypt, you know, saying, look at Europe, you know, they're making the mess of things. It was a Europe in world depression or Europe being taken over by fascist governments. That's no model for us, right? Well, following justice and good government in Islamic law. If he goes in a direction beyond which even Riddha would have wanted to get. But it is that fundamental cleave. between sort of secular liberalism and a belief in a sort of a kind of Islam of populism, I guess I would call it,
Starting point is 01:31:46 but one that was based not the way Riddha did, but based on a reading of Islamic law that hemmed in sort of possibilities for a kind of government you would have, that in the end, I think, split and undermined the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011. The Muslim Brotherhood most famously joined a few days late in Tahrir Square in Cairo, right, brought large numbers of people to Tahrir Square, larger numbers than the liberal students and professionals could have done, right? But as soon as Hussein Mubart, the dictator, was deposed, rallied to take all the winnings. And there were, you know, very few. there were some minor politicians who tried to build bonds of trust between sort of secular and Islamic wings, but they did not hold, right? In Syria, too. The beginning of the uprisings in 2011 in Syria were carried on by people who seemed to believe in civil democracy, right, but quickly overwhelmed by self-styled Islamic groups who had no interest in actually working alongside. Now, this is open to some debate, perhaps, because we saw some attempts at cooperation in the Exile Serial Coalition, but on the ground, the Islamic groups were not working with the secular groups at all.
Starting point is 01:33:20 And I think that that basic distrust, much as in party systems in politics, you might see moments of profound cleavage between the Democratic Party and the Republican Party, say, in the 1930s when FDR took power, for example. It's like an enduring cleavage between those two parties. So I think, and this would belong to another book, obviously. I can't claim it. But I would not be surprised if we found and could prove that that cleavage that opened up in the 1920s in response to the occupation of Syria opened up a Gulf for decades to come out. And yeah, this is fascinating.
Starting point is 01:34:00 We're over an hour. I'm going to hand it over to Henry to wrap it up after this. But just sort of finishing that thought, you know, in the past 10 years after the Arab Spring, we had the Obama administration, drone bombs, almost a proxy war with Russia in the U.S. Trump came in and actually one of the best he was treated by the liberal media, right, was when he bombed that Syrian airstrip, for example. You have Turkish and Kurdish forces fighting in northern Syria, American bases being put all around northern Syria. So can you just sort of, I know this is a big question. You can be brief about it. but sort of connect this colonialist history up with present-day Syria,
Starting point is 01:34:38 particularly in the past decade, and how these mechanisms of neocolonialism, orientalism, and imperialism still operate today. Oh, boy. Yeah. Well, Syria had been, I think, I'll just do it this way. In 1920, I think Syria was the heart, the beating heart of not just without a sham, but this imagined United Arab States, right, United States of a very United States of
Starting point is 01:35:03 Arabia that they were imagining by occupying Syria and splitting its peoples up into ethnic minorities, sending it into a civil war, basically, in the uprising and the 1920s, grounding out the sort of populist basis of democracy, and leaving the space of democracy, and leaving the space open for large landowning class by the time I left in the 1940s, right? Syria could no longer play that kind of role that it had played in 1920, okay? It became a play thing in the Cold War between proxies of the Soviet Union and the United States, an attempt to restore democracy in the 1950s in Syria failed because NATO troops lined up against a left-of-center coalition in 1956-57 that ruled the country.
Starting point is 01:36:06 And in defense of their sovereignty, they faithfully threw themselves into the arms of the dictator in Egypt, Kamal Abdin Nasser. And that truly, one historian is called it the hollowing out of any remnant of democratic governments came under Nosser's rule between 1958, 1968, 1961.
Starting point is 01:36:30 Okay, so it is not surprised, that Syria remains the kind of football in proxy wars down to today. And so the Russians swoop in to, you know, support an alliance with the Iranians in Syria and with Hezbollah in Lebanon. The United States shy after two disastrous wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, of course, was not willing to go up against that Russian back to alliance in Syria. people are suffering to a degree unimaginable. I mean, when I wrote my first book on Syria 20 years ago, we could say that the 500,000 people who died in World War I was a catastrophe unheard of and not to be repeated again in Syria, nay, nay. In World War I, many people were killed, but the cities stood. There are no cities left in Syria, right? There are, before the war
Starting point is 01:37:31 there were four million domiciles, houses in Syria, right? Now, half the population, more than half the population is displaced with millions outside of the country, right? Half of those houses have been destroyed. There are two million domiciles left in Syria. Those people are not going home. You know, entire cities like Aleppo and Hunts have been reduced to rubble, right? And so it is all the more tragic to see from the viewpoint of 100 years ago, what might have been, you know, that Syria was the jewel in the crown, really, of a new,
Starting point is 01:38:07 revived, an independent Arab world to be reduced to rubble today. And the preconditions for its weakened role geopolitically in the region and its subsequent role as a football between superpowers were laid, I think, in the rivalry between the British and the French over Syria in 1921. Excellent. We are just about out of time and I do want to thank you for your time. But I've got one quick question for you. And I think that this is going to be for the listeners who haven't yet read your book, but definitely should listeners. If you haven't read the book yet, go out and get it. It's highly worth your time. It's packed full of information that's written in a highly engaging style. So if you haven't read it yet, go get it now. But for the listeners that haven't read it yet when they listen to this interview, a lot of them are really only going to have. have been introduced to this region and this period of time via the film Lawrence of Arabia. And we mentioned in the introduction, and we touched on it
Starting point is 01:39:07 briefly during the conversation as well. This has a highly orientalist view of the region and this historical kind of event and time period. For those that are listening that have only watched the movie, and that's their only introduction to
Starting point is 01:39:23 the region, what would the big lie be and what do you want them to understand? Oh, well, you've seen the movie. It's a beautiful movie, yes, absolutely. I still show it to my students. You have sections of it. It's one and three hours long. But look, there's a wonderful two things.
Starting point is 01:39:42 And this is the sad part about the movie. There's a wonderful scene early on in the movie in Faisal's tent where Omar Sharif, the great Egyptian actor, you know, plays a key air fighter in the and the story, you know, almost spits at their British soldier who suggests that they should fall back, you know, move south, away from the front lines, and learn to fight with some old guns. You know, Faisal is in the tent, right, the same Prince Faisal, we were talking about. He says, no, give us artillery. Give us artillery like the Turks artillery.
Starting point is 01:40:19 We'll use it. We'll win, right? And the guy says, oh, no, you're not educated enough to use artillery. And Omar Sharif Tursu, it says, you know, forget your stupid education. This was the colonial ideology, the racial ideology that you're not ready. You need to be educated. Just give us the guns, for God's sake, right? We can use the guns.
Starting point is 01:40:42 So the movie was able to put its finger on the lie, you know, that somehow these people are just not civilized enough to pick up a gun and defend themselves, right? But then it ends with an atrocious seat, right, in the Syrian country. Congress, where A, there are no educated city Arabs, they're only Bedouin, who fight with one another, right, can't fix the water works, you know, they don't know how, have left people dying in a hospital because they're incompetent and disorganized, right? And the implication is, thank God General Al and B, the British have come to restore order that the Arabs were not able to rule themselves. So, if anything, the takeaway, I hope, from my book.
Starting point is 01:41:26 both is, oh, wait a second, maybe they could have ruled themselves just fine. Excellent. I think that that's an excellent summary of the problem with that being the only narrative in the West in regards to this region in this time period, why your book is so critical for further understanding of this time period in this event, the Syrian Arab Congress as a body. So thank you very much. Again, our guest was Elizabeth F. Thompson, Muhammad S. F. chair of Islamic peace and professor of history at American University. We were just talking about her excellent, excellent book, How the West Stole Democracy from the Arabs,
Starting point is 01:42:03 the Syrian Arab Congress of 1920, and the destruction of its historic liberal Islamic alliance. Get it from Atlantic Monthly Press. Highly recommended. Thank you, Professor Thompson. It was wonderful talking with you. And I know I speak for the guys when I say that it was great to have you on the show. Oh, thank you.
Starting point is 01:42:19 Such a pleasure. I'm so glad. And listeners will be right back. with the wrap-up conversation on guerrilla history. We're back on guerrilla history, and we just had an excellent conversation with Elizabeth F. Thompson, and one of the things that I had forgotten to ask Professor Thompson at the end of our conversation was how the listeners could follow her. And listeners, she has a website that she wants to direct you to. It's elizabethfthompson.org.
Starting point is 01:42:59 So if you want to keep up with what Professor Thompson's doing, just check that out, Elizabethfthompson.org. And I'll have that link in the show notes. But let's kind of tie a bow on this conversation that we had with Professor Thompson. I guess I'll start. I just want to draw out one of the parallels that it kind of took a different route here in Syria than it did in our conversation with Haleal Caravelli and our conversation why Turkey is authoritarian.
Starting point is 01:43:26 And that is that here in the Syrian Arab Congress, we saw that there was a coming together of both secular liberals as well as Islamists. And those groups, despite us in the West, again, West using the term as they would have used it, us in the West would have thought that those groups would have been really opposed to one another and not able to come together and get something very extensive and very detailed put together. I believe what was their constitution? 147 articles,
Starting point is 01:44:02 if I'm remembering correctly. It's a really lengthy document. And these two very different groups, secular liberals and Islamists, were able to come together in the Syrian era of Congress and pass what Professor Thompson describes as a very progressive constitution, the most progressive of to date in the entire region, whereas if you remember from our conversation with Halil Caravelli, and if you haven't listened to that episode, I'd recommend going back and listening to that, the left in Turkey has always pushed away the religious community by basically seeing them as not being enlightened. And that's prevented the left from really ever coming into power for any significant period of time and really making any critical reforms to the
Starting point is 01:44:46 society as a whole. So even though this experience with the Syrian Arab Congress, you couldn't necessarily say it was a success, but it wasn't a success not because of them not being able to come together and put something together, but really that opportunity was stolen from them by the West. So I think that that's something that I want to draw out from those two different conversations, these two different contexts, when the secular liberals and the Islamist work able to come together, they got through the most progressive constitution to date in the entire region, whereas in Turkey, not having those two groups able to come together has prevented them from ever really taking power or ever making any institutional structural changes within the
Starting point is 01:45:33 society. Adnan, what were your thoughts on the conversation? Well, I thought it was a really fascinating story and really enjoyed her elucidation of the consequences and the implications for the Middle East. I think the two things that we didn't get a chance to talk as much about, one that the book really does deal with and one that I think is part of a larger or longer story, perhaps. The first is about women's rights. So it was a a very progressive constitution, but of course there were limitations on it. There were a lot of possibilities, but there were also limitations. And as she tells us in the book, there were conflicts over how far to go to whether to give women the right to vote in this democratic constitutional
Starting point is 01:46:29 government that they were trying to establish and set up. And this threatened to really fracture the Syrian Arab Congress. And although it seems that there would have been a majority in favor of doing that, that they might have lost some of the more conservative delegates, conservative, religiously oriented delegates who walked out after the discussion when it looked like they would pass that potentially. And so Rashid Rida brokered some kind of some kind of, some kind of compromise there of ambiguity and actually in the discussion or the debate
Starting point is 01:47:09 about whether Islam, for example, could endorse women's equality politically as full citizens. Some saying yes, that it did. Some saying no, that it was incompatible and having this debate. He said, well, it has nothing to do with Islam, actually, and this is a matter for the people of the region. It's a pragmatic kind of question now whether we should postpone it. So they essentially postponed it out of pragmatic reasons because of the pressure from the French. They felt unity was more important than taking a stance. But his position, and he was a very influential figure in the Congress, was that it would be up to the people to decide. And so if a majority in the
Starting point is 01:47:54 Syrian Arab Congress wanted to establish that, that's what should happen and that it wasn't going to be incompatible with Muslim ethics or or Islamic law. And the second kind of area that I wish actually we could talk about more is that this is really about liberal constitutionalism and democracy. And the book really focuses on that. And so we don't get a sense for what were the social inequalities, popular workers' sorts of consciousness and struggles in this period, which the book even mentions, there were two really important anti-colonial and anti-imperial thinkers or people who would put that in the discourse who were critiquing colonialism around the world that were inspiring figures for those in colonies and in non-Western countries to look to.
Starting point is 01:48:47 One, of course, was Woodrow Wilson, and we talked about him quite a lot because he was directly involved here in the disposition of Syria. But of course, the other figure is Lenin. And the Russian Revolution also established a principle of anti-imperialism, and Lenin wrote quite extensively about the importance of freeing the colonies and ending imperialism. And in my other podcast, we had an interview with Elizabeth Thompson at the Mudgellis. I asked about that. And she said at this point, there really wasn't much of a kind of class consciousness
Starting point is 01:49:24 in that direct politicized way that that would feature later in Syrian politics and in the anti-colonial struggle, but it isn't really that much a part of this early story of the first attempts for independence in this region. But that's something to be interested in. I hope in the future we'll talk more about worker struggles in the Middle East, as we did when we were discussing the situation in Turkey in its modern history. Certainly. And listeners, make sure to check out Odnan's other podcasts, the Mudge List, where he, as he said, interviewed Elizabeth Thompson on there as well.
Starting point is 01:50:05 So by listening to two of them, you can get perhaps a little bit more of a nuanced view of the conversation just by having more time and a different target audience for both of the podcasts. Brett, now I'll pitch it over to you. Give your thoughts on the conversation. Then we'll turn around, give some thought. on the book, you know, what the reader should be looking for in it. And then we'll have Adnan's thoughts and then I'll wrap it up. Yeah, cool. I just wanted to bounce off what
Starting point is 01:50:29 Adnan was saying about the Bolsheviks and Lenin and self-determination. You know, this entire sort of way of thinking about the world stems in large part out of, you know, Lenin's principled materialist analysis of imperialism and the subsequent sort of, you know, rabid defense of self- determination, and we see how that contrast so sharply with how the West thinks of the rest of the world, you know, the so-called West, right, the Imperial Corps, if you will. And it's just another layer of irony that we're taught over here in the Imperial Court of you, Lenin, and the Bolsheviks as the bad guys when so clearly on so many questions, including this one, they were the good guys, and the imperialist in the so-called West were the objectively the bad guys.
Starting point is 01:51:16 Another thing that I like to pull out here is the League of Nations being a precursor to ostensibly international formations that ultimately serve the interests of the Imperial Corps. You can think of the United Nations today. You can think of the IMF and the World Bank. We're presented with these things as if they are truly international and is sort of an extension of democracy to the global level. But at time and time again, they serve as vehicles for the interests. first and foremost of the imperialist core. And that's still as true today as it was back then. And seeing just how these things were given birth, you know,
Starting point is 01:51:54 through this attempt at the League of Nations, I think really highlights that point. One thing we didn't get into on the conversation that would have been interesting, but probably took us too far afield, was what could have been, right? This idea that there could have been a USA in the Middle East, right? This sort of this influence of American federalism that was being taken into a,
Starting point is 01:52:16 account of how to structure that region, that would have been a fascinating, beautiful, and in a lot of ways, right, to see that idea flourish. But of course, it was stomped out by the boots of imperialists. And the last thing I'll just say is, at the end, when Elizabeth was talking about Syria today and just the profound human suffering going on in that country and that region, right now as we speak, My eyes swelled up with tears. I almost had to like, you know, start brushing tears away from my cheeks because it is just brutal how this long legacy has led and still goes on today. And who suffers? You know, it's not the rich elites. It's the everyday people. It's children. It's babies. And these are the people that have always suffered the brunt and continue to suffer the brunt of imperialism, neocolonialism, orientalism. And using these places with real human beings, with lives and dreams. as proxy battlefields for larger geopolitical jostlings
Starting point is 01:53:22 in the imperialist sort of arena. So it's just brutal and I'll end it with this quote because I think it wraps up a lot of what I'm saying and it kind of puts a bow on the conversation in the book she says quote In the end the great powers at the Paris Peace Conference treated their
Starting point is 01:53:38 Arab allies worse than their German enemies imposing terms suffered only by peoples who had been colonized before the war. Syrians experienced firsthand what one legal scholar has called, quote, the sordid origin of international law as a derivative of a colonial order that continues to reinforce rather than uprood the inequality of rights among nations. And I think that really gets at what I want to take away from this
Starting point is 01:54:04 and how we have to think of our battles, not as national or regional, but as international in scope and toward the liberation of all human beings from all forms of domination and oppression. I don't think that there's any better way to end this conversation than with that quote, Brett, that was an excellent conclusion. I just want to let the listeners know, remind them, if you haven't read the book yet, go out and get it. Whether or not you're a historian, whether or not you understand academic writing, this is not written for the academic. This is written, as she said, for activists in the area. This is written for people who want to understand. history, not necessarily written for historians. You will understand it. It's a riveting read and it's so much information and so much that, I mean, I guarantee you don't know it until you read
Starting point is 01:54:55 this book. So, so please, I'm urging you. Go out and get how the West stole democracy from the Arabs, the Syrian Arab Congress of 1920 and the destruction of its historic liberal Islamic alliance by Elizabeth F. Thompson from Atlantic Monthly Press. Again, listeners, you can check her out on her website, Elizabeth F.thompson.org. Keep up with all of her work. I know she's working on two books right now. So go to her website.
Starting point is 01:55:23 It's going to be updated with anything else that she comes out with. So as always, guys, thanks. It's so much fun doing these projects with you. Adnan, how can our listeners follow you on social media as well as your other project? Well, they can follow me on Twitter at Adnan A. Hussein.
Starting point is 01:55:42 H-U-S-A-I-N, and of course, if they're interested in a very compatible conversation that goes very nicely with our own today, with Elizabeth Thompson, they can check out the Mudgellis podcast of the Muslim Society's Global Perspectives Project at Queens University, and that's on all the various platforms. but if you want to find the feed, you can go to anchor.fm-fm-f-M-A-J-L-I-S. And I just want to echo with Brett. This was a fantastic conversation and thinking about this moment a century ago in light of what's been happening in Syria really is very consequential for us to see the consequences in some ways and legacies of history and of histories derailed. And Brett, how can the listeners find you in your work? Yeah, for everything I do on Red Menace and Rev. Left Radio, you can just go to
Starting point is 01:56:41 Revolutionary LeftRadio.com, our Twitter, our Patreon, our shirts, and both shows can be found easily through that website. Excellent. As for me, you can follow me on Twitter at Huck 1995, H-U-C-1995. I also have a Patreon where I break down recent science, research, and public health information for people to help me get through the pandemic. You can find that at patreon.com forward slash Huck1995. As for our show, Gorilla History, you can follow the show on Twitter at Gorilla, G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A-U-L-A-U-R-I-L-A-U-R-I-L-A-Histor.
Starting point is 01:57:17 And we also have some Patreon-exclusive content, including some bonus episodes. You can find that at patreon.com forward slash guerrilla history. Again, that's G-U-E-R-R-I-L-Hist. Take care, everyone. Solidarity. We hope that you enjoyed the episode. Stay tuned. We'll be back with more guerrilla history very soon. I'm going to be able to be.

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