This document discusses the Berber/Amazigh culture movement in North Africa and how globalization has impacted and reinforced Berber identity. It notes that Berberist discourse strongly supports Western liberal values like human rights, democracy, and pluralism, while criticizing the dominant order based on Arabism and Islam. The movement seeks official recognition of the Amazigh language and culture in North African countries in a way that accommodates outside influences while emphasizing Berber identity and challenging the status quo. The movement draws inspiration from Western ideals but aims to contribute to a "universal civilization" that integrates diverse cultures.
Article in The Times of Israel by Andy Blumenthal: The Jewish people are full of paradoxes, and this translates into the life and times of the State of Israel.
The document discusses the historical origins of religious tensions between Muslims and Christians in Nigeria. It notes that Nigeria emerged from British colonial rule in 1914, combining Northern and Southern territories with different dominant ethnic groups and religions. While the North was predominantly Muslim, the South was mostly Christian. This religious divide, combined with political and economic factors under colonialism and after independence, have contributed to ongoing ethno-religious conflicts in Nigeria between Muslims and Christians over issues like the introduction of Sharia law. Major events and groups like the Boko Haram insurgency have exacerbated tensions and violence.
Initially published on 9th November 2004 in Buzzle
Excerpt:
Which are the major historical-cultural foundations on which the future Afghani education should be based?
Ten major topics of historical evolution and cultural achievement are to be present in this regard. Even if only one is missing, the result is going to be an unbalanced or minimized perception of the dimensions of the Afghanistan’s contribution to the History of the Mankind. In the past, several of these pillars were present, but undermined, other pillars were totally absent, and finally one pillar was excessively over-accentuated and misleadingly presented. In the rest of the present article, the Ten Pillars are briefly specified; at the same time, special consideration is given to the way they should be presented through the 12-year obligatory Education that the current Afghani government has to promulgate.
Every cultural – historical unity must be present at all levels: History, Literature, Language, Art History, History of the Religion, Philosophy, including also Sciences, i.e. Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and Cosmology.
The document discusses Palestinian incitement as a violation of international legal norms. It argues that genuine peace requires mutual trust and respect between peoples, which must come from leadership. However, extreme anti-Israel and anti-Semitic indoctrination in Palestinian society has led to violence and undermines peace. The Palestinian leadership continues to glorify terrorists and encourage hostility despite agreements to prevent incitement. Overall, the document asserts that widespread incitement in Palestinian media and education prevents the possibility of a just and lasting peace.
Westernization has dulled the Filipino mind's perception of exploitation and resulted in an identity crisis. This crisis is difficult to resolve because westernization is widespread and Filipinos are unaware of their lack of national consciousness. While other colonized Asian countries had developed civilizations, the Philippines did not and was easily conquered by Spain. Spanish friars were crucial in westernizing the islands and spreading Catholicism, demanding conformity and prohibiting native culture. This created a cult of conformism that discouraged independent thinking. Americanization also distorted history to portray Americans as benefactors rather than occupiers. Global corporations now aim to change values and consumption patterns, further threatening national identity and culture.
There are four major strains of thought in the universe of Black Nationalism. Those strains are Cultural Black Nationalism., Religious Black Nationalism, Political Black Nationalism, and Economic Black Nationalism. We will explore what has been described as the three periods of Black Nationalism. The first period was pre-classical African Nationalism or what has been called Pan-Negro Nationalism.
After the Revolutionary War the second period occurred which was characterized by a critical mass of Africans brought to New England and Pennsylvania by the European Colonizers. This period witnessed the development of the Free African Society, African Masonic Lodges and Black Churches. These institutions were founded and developed by individuals such as Prince Hall and Richard Allen. The Post-Reconstruction Era marked the third period of Black Nationalism which was associated with the flowering of a variety of African American clergy circles. This period ushered in what has been described as modern-day Black Nationalism. Indeed, the term “Black Nationalism” has been used in American History to describe a body of social thought, attitudes, and actions ranging from the simplest expressions of ethnocentrism and racial solidarity to the comprehensive and sophisticated ideologies of Pan-Negroism to Pan-Africanism.” We will trace the development of Black Nationalism through the thinking of people such as Richard Allen, Marcus Garvey, George Padmore, Malcolm X, Elijah Muhammad, Reverend Albert Cleage and the phenomenon know as Black Power.
This document discusses several ideologies that have been influential in the Caribbean, including Pan-Africanism, Negritude, Capitalism, Marxism, and Feminism. It provides background on the origins and objectives of the Pan-African movement in the 18th century, spearheaded by figures like Henry Sylvester Williams. It also discusses how these ideologies were taken up and advanced by various Caribbean thinkers and activists in the 19th-20th centuries, including Marcus Garvey, Cyril Briggs, and Malcolm Nurse in the case of Pan-Africanism, and the celebration of black identity and culture through Negritude. The document further examines the adoption of Marxist and capitalist frameworks to analyze and guide Caribbean economic
What is Nation?
Keyword related to Nation,
What is Nationalism?
Types of Nationalism,
Why Nationalism is Important?
Advantages and Disadvantages of Nationalism.
Article in The Times of Israel by Andy Blumenthal: The Jewish people are full of paradoxes, and this translates into the life and times of the State of Israel.
The document discusses the historical origins of religious tensions between Muslims and Christians in Nigeria. It notes that Nigeria emerged from British colonial rule in 1914, combining Northern and Southern territories with different dominant ethnic groups and religions. While the North was predominantly Muslim, the South was mostly Christian. This religious divide, combined with political and economic factors under colonialism and after independence, have contributed to ongoing ethno-religious conflicts in Nigeria between Muslims and Christians over issues like the introduction of Sharia law. Major events and groups like the Boko Haram insurgency have exacerbated tensions and violence.
Initially published on 9th November 2004 in Buzzle
Excerpt:
Which are the major historical-cultural foundations on which the future Afghani education should be based?
Ten major topics of historical evolution and cultural achievement are to be present in this regard. Even if only one is missing, the result is going to be an unbalanced or minimized perception of the dimensions of the Afghanistan’s contribution to the History of the Mankind. In the past, several of these pillars were present, but undermined, other pillars were totally absent, and finally one pillar was excessively over-accentuated and misleadingly presented. In the rest of the present article, the Ten Pillars are briefly specified; at the same time, special consideration is given to the way they should be presented through the 12-year obligatory Education that the current Afghani government has to promulgate.
Every cultural – historical unity must be present at all levels: History, Literature, Language, Art History, History of the Religion, Philosophy, including also Sciences, i.e. Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and Cosmology.
The document discusses Palestinian incitement as a violation of international legal norms. It argues that genuine peace requires mutual trust and respect between peoples, which must come from leadership. However, extreme anti-Israel and anti-Semitic indoctrination in Palestinian society has led to violence and undermines peace. The Palestinian leadership continues to glorify terrorists and encourage hostility despite agreements to prevent incitement. Overall, the document asserts that widespread incitement in Palestinian media and education prevents the possibility of a just and lasting peace.
Westernization has dulled the Filipino mind's perception of exploitation and resulted in an identity crisis. This crisis is difficult to resolve because westernization is widespread and Filipinos are unaware of their lack of national consciousness. While other colonized Asian countries had developed civilizations, the Philippines did not and was easily conquered by Spain. Spanish friars were crucial in westernizing the islands and spreading Catholicism, demanding conformity and prohibiting native culture. This created a cult of conformism that discouraged independent thinking. Americanization also distorted history to portray Americans as benefactors rather than occupiers. Global corporations now aim to change values and consumption patterns, further threatening national identity and culture.
There are four major strains of thought in the universe of Black Nationalism. Those strains are Cultural Black Nationalism., Religious Black Nationalism, Political Black Nationalism, and Economic Black Nationalism. We will explore what has been described as the three periods of Black Nationalism. The first period was pre-classical African Nationalism or what has been called Pan-Negro Nationalism.
After the Revolutionary War the second period occurred which was characterized by a critical mass of Africans brought to New England and Pennsylvania by the European Colonizers. This period witnessed the development of the Free African Society, African Masonic Lodges and Black Churches. These institutions were founded and developed by individuals such as Prince Hall and Richard Allen. The Post-Reconstruction Era marked the third period of Black Nationalism which was associated with the flowering of a variety of African American clergy circles. This period ushered in what has been described as modern-day Black Nationalism. Indeed, the term “Black Nationalism” has been used in American History to describe a body of social thought, attitudes, and actions ranging from the simplest expressions of ethnocentrism and racial solidarity to the comprehensive and sophisticated ideologies of Pan-Negroism to Pan-Africanism.” We will trace the development of Black Nationalism through the thinking of people such as Richard Allen, Marcus Garvey, George Padmore, Malcolm X, Elijah Muhammad, Reverend Albert Cleage and the phenomenon know as Black Power.
This document discusses several ideologies that have been influential in the Caribbean, including Pan-Africanism, Negritude, Capitalism, Marxism, and Feminism. It provides background on the origins and objectives of the Pan-African movement in the 18th century, spearheaded by figures like Henry Sylvester Williams. It also discusses how these ideologies were taken up and advanced by various Caribbean thinkers and activists in the 19th-20th centuries, including Marcus Garvey, Cyril Briggs, and Malcolm Nurse in the case of Pan-Africanism, and the celebration of black identity and culture through Negritude. The document further examines the adoption of Marxist and capitalist frameworks to analyze and guide Caribbean economic
What is Nation?
Keyword related to Nation,
What is Nationalism?
Types of Nationalism,
Why Nationalism is Important?
Advantages and Disadvantages of Nationalism.
Morocco is a North African country with a rich history and culture. It has experienced influence from various civilizations like Roman, Arab, and European. Morocco's culture is reflected in aspects like its architecture, pottery, carpets, cuisine, festivals, and traditional clothing. Tourism is an important industry for Morocco, which offers visitors opportunities to experience its cultural heritage, landscapes, and history. Ibn Battuta was a famous Moroccan explorer who traveled extensively in the 14th century, journeying as far as China.
The document lists the names of various countries, ethnic groups and regions around the world. It then provides statistics indicating that while there are 6.5 billion people in the world, 5.5 billion are spiritually lost and 1.7 billion have never heard the name of Jesus.
This report provides an overview of the constitutional, legislative and administrative protections of indigenous rights in Morocco. It examines Morocco's legal framework and how it impacts the rights of indigenous Berbers. The Berbers are the indigenous peoples of Morocco and speak the Tamazight language. They have faced 'Arabisation' policies that deny their cultural and linguistic identity. The report provides demographic details on Berbers, an overview of Morocco's history and legal system, and an analysis of legal protections for indigenous rights in areas like non-discrimination, language, land and natural resources. It concludes with recommendations to strengthen protections for Berber rights.
Los bereberes son los primeros habitantes del norte de África y se concentran principalmente en las montañas de Marruecos y Argelia. Su población total es de entre 25 y 45 millones de personas en África. Su lengua principal es el tamazight y su religión es principalmente el Islam aunque con influencias del cristianismo y el judaísmo. Viven principalmente en casas excavadas en la roca conocidas como casas trogloditas.
This document provides an overview of the ethnic groups that make up the population of Morocco throughout history. It discusses several indigenous Berber groups like the Masmuda, Zenata, and Sanhaja tribes that settled across Morocco. It also mentions Arab groups that migrated to Morocco like the Doui-Menia and Banu Hilal. The document outlines the history of Morocco from the 8th century onwards and the various dynasties that ruled the country and influenced its ethnic composition. It provides details on current Berber tribes located in different regions of Morocco like the Ait Atta, Ait Waryaghar, Ait Seghrouchen, Ait Yafelman, Chiadma
This document summarizes the emergence of racial tensions and violence in Zanzibar in the 1960s as the country experienced its first democratic elections beginning in 1957 and the overthrow of the Sultan's government in 1964. It discusses how racial discourse developed among local intellectuals by combining ideas from various sources. Political parties, like the Afro-Shirazi Party and Zanzibar National Party, used racial thinking strategically to gain power and control by creating new paradigms of belonging. This exacerbated existing social divisions and led to intensifying violence around elections in the late 1950s and early 1960s as party membership correlated with class, racial, and civilizational boundaries in Zanzibari society.
Frolinan historical conception and overview updated 01-28-2013RBG Communiversity
The document provides a historical overview of the FROLINAN movement by outlining 4 key epochs in the struggle for Black liberation and independence in America: 1) The Niagara Movement and founding of the NAACP, 2) Marcus Garvey's Back to Africa movement, 3) The rise of the Nation of Islam and civil rights movement, representing separatist and integrationist ideals, and 4) The Black Panther Party which synthesized these ideals and advocated for armed self-defense and community control. It argues this history shows there have been both integrationist and separatist strands of struggle that continue to shape the movement going forward.
One of my most popular articles ever proved to be the devastating rejection and denunciation of Pan-Arabism that I published under the title "Progenitor of Wars and Tyrannies: the Falsehood of Pan-Arabism" in several portals notably American Chronicle, Buzzle and AfroArticles in the mid-2000s. It was thence extensively and widely mentioned, discussed, quoted and republished in portals, sites, and blogs. Indicatively, I herewith include the following links:
https://www.aramnahrin.org/English/Muhammad_Shamsaddin_Progenitor-of-Wars-And-Tyrannies_29-6-2004.htm
http://aramean-dem.org/English/History/8.htm (paragraph ending with note 5)
https://phoenicia.org/panarab.html
http://www.aramnaharaim.org/English/opinion_analyse.htm
https://goodmaniac.blogspot.com/2012/06/libyans-and-people-of-maghreb-are.html
https://www.maroc.nl/forums/het-nieuws-van-de-dag/217670-telquel-zijn-geen-arabieren-onze-geschiedennis-vervalst-4.html
https://arabracismislamofascism.wordpress.com/category/pan-arabism/
https://www.geocities.ws/panarabism/
https://mergueze.info/arabism-racism/
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=2905&PN=3
Even here (!):https://context.reverso.net/translation/english-dutch/pan-arabism
Slightly edited, the integral standard version of the article can be found here:
https://www.academia.edu/23219268/Prof_Muhammad_Shamsaddin_Megalommatis_Progenitor_of_Wars_and_Tyrannies_the_Falsehood_of_Pan_Arabism
However, in its original form, this article was published in the Political Forum on 23rd June 2004, generating a fascinating polarization and many conflicting comments. That's why I am herewith reproducing the entire discussion, which can still be found here:
https://www.politicsforum.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=25086
I must however add that my very first publication on the topic goes back to 1988, and it took the form of a 11000-word entry (in Greek) in the Great General Encyclopedia Hydria (published by Etaireia Ellinikon Ekdoseon / Greek Publications Co) – Μεγάλη Γενική Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Υδρία (Εταιρεία Ελληνικών Εκδόσεων). The entry title was 'Φυλές και Λαοί της Μέσης Ανατολής' (Peoples and ethnic groups in the Middle East). In my Curriculum, it is mentioned as no 37 in the first unit of my Entries to Encyclopedias, here:
https://megalommatiscomments.wordpress.com/about-prof-muhammad-shamsaddin-megalommatis-entries-of-encyclopedias/
First published on 12th September 2021 here:
https://megalommatis.wordpress.com/extensive-discussion-about-my-article-progenitor-of-wars-and-tyrannies-the-falsehood-of-pan-arabism-in-the-political-forum/
The RBG Quest for Black Power Reader a The RBG Quest for Black Power Reader: ...RBG Communiversity
This document provides an overview and introduction to essays on the history of Black Nationalism and Pan-Africanism. It discusses how the compilation aims to encourage critical thinking about these topics through both written and oral traditions. The essays will examine Black Nationalist philosophies and ideologies from different time periods, covering influential figures like Marcus Garvey, Elijah Muhammad, and Malcolm X. They will also discuss the origins and key principles of Black Nationalism, including black unity, self-determination, and the importance of Africa to the movement.
FaithApproximate Year FoundedFounderScriptureLanguageMai.docxnealwaters20034
Faith
Approximate Year Founded
Founder
Scripture
Language
Main Idea
Place of Worship
Name for a Person of this faith
Adjective
Judaism
1200 BCE
Moses
Tanak
Hebrew
Covenant
synagogue
Jew
Jewish
Christianity
60 CE
Paul and John
New Testament
Greek
Faith in Salvation
church
Christian
Christian
Islam
620 CE
Muhammad
Quran
Arabic
Obedience submission
to the will of Allah
mosque
Muslim
Islamic
Edgecombe Community College
REL 110 OL1
Update on human rights and ideas of salvation.
What we are going to be looking at between now and the end of the semester is the whole question of human rights. This is about the push for universal human rights as embraced by a secular civil society vs. a more conditional religious approach which would see human rights from the perspective that people who belong to a certain faith have different rights.
In Judaism, in Christianity, and in Islam there are groups of people pulling in opposite directions. Some advocate for the ideals of a secular, humanistic civil society where everyone is treated equally. Others advocate for a more specifically religious social narrative where a person's status, and thus their rights, are determined more by the narrative of faith. The more religious social narrative inclines more toward religious fundamentalism.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all possess narratives of salvation and damnation. That is to say, they all have doctrines which deal with salvation, with who exactly gets to live with God in the after-life. They also have doctrines of damnation, or who gets excluded from the heavenly fellowship after death. We might see these as narratives of divine inclusion and divine exclusion. These competing narratives merge into considerations of human rights because, if we really believe a certain person is going to hell, why should we work to assure their rights while they are here on earth? This has led to tremendous religious persecution in the past.
The problem all three religions have is that there are people in each faith who strongly believe that their own personal doctrine of salvation is the only one that works. Likewise, all three faiths have scriptures which call for respect and hospitality to be shown to those who are “sojourners”, or people of a different, or outsider faith. Unfortunately, in many situations these are not the scriptures which get promoted. Instead, people tend to gravitate toward doctrines which promote a more limited and specific idea of exactly who enjoys the favor of the Almighty.
Edgecombe Community College GEO 111
Stephen Herring, Instructor
April 1, 2015
Key Vocabulary for Study of the Middle East
Chapter 7 covers the Middle East, also known as Southwest Asia/North Africa
To understand this region you need to begin with the first round of colonial expansion under Arab influences following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE. There was a division right after his death between the Arabs and the Persians over who would .
Initially published on 26th April 2008 in American Chronicle, AfroArticles, Buzzle and OpEd News:
https://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_muhammad_080501_open_letter_to_hrh_2c_.htm
Republished subsequently in the official site of the Oromo Liberation Front:
http://www.oromoliberationfront.org/News/2008/Open%20Letter%20to%20HRH.html
Excerpt:
To better understand the situation, one has to examine combined data as regards the various nations and the religious groups of Abyssinia. The ruling Abyssinian tribes are mainly the Amhara and the Tigray, who amount to ca. 30% of the entire population. The rest (70% of the country´s entire population) are either Cushitic (Oromos, Ogadenis, Sidamas, Afars, Kaffas, Kambatas, Hadiya, Agaw, and Shekachos) or Nilo-Saharan (Anuak).
It would however be erroneous to consider the aforementioned figures without further analysis; the oppressed Cushitic and Nilo-Saharan nations follow different religions, either traditional African religions or Islam and Christianity (the latter preached mainly through Western, Catholic and Protestant missionaries). The Abyssinian Amharas and Tigrays are either Monophysitic (heretic Christians) or Muslims. Muslims make ca. 40% of the Abyssinians. Viewed by the Monophysitic Abyssinian elite and people as historical enemies and as renegades, they have been terribly oppressed, perhaps more than the Cushitic nations.
We can thus draw the conclusion that the Monophysitic Abyssinians represent approximately 18% of the country´s total population, and rule invariably discriminating and tyrannizing the Abyssinian Muslims and all the subjugated Cushitic and Nilo-Saharan nations. If we compare this figure to those given for other cases of despotic regimes, notably Milosevic´s Yugoslavia and Saddam Hussein´s Iraq, we realize that nothing was more unrepresentative and more totalitarian, more discriminatory and more tyrannical than the colonial state of ´Ethiopia´.
The refugee crisis is the tragic result of a criminal policy of war and military intervention for regime change, implemented by the United States and the European Union in Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, Libya and, above all, Syria. What the world witness today, with thousands of desperate refugees trying to reach Europe, it is the effect of this policy, maintained by the major Western powers. In more than a decade, Afghanistan wars and Iraq, waged under the pretext of being "against terrorism", and justified on the infamous lies about "Iraqi weapons of mass destruction", devastated whole societies and killed hundreds of thousands of men, women and children. To these wars followed the war for regime change - led by the United States and NATO - which overthrew the government of Muammar Gaddafi and turned Libya into a country of mockery, with virtually no government, wracked by continuous fighting between rival militias. This was followed by civil war in Syria - fueled, armed and financed by the US government and its European allies, aiming to topple Bashar Al-Assad and replace him with an obedient puppet to Western powers.
Sub-Saharan Africa Post-Independence Starting in t.docxhanneloremccaffery
Sub-Saharan Africa: Post-Independence
Starting in the late 1950s, Sub-Saharan Africans intensified the struggle for independence from their European colonizers, and the
white rulers. So came to Sub-Saharan Africa the process known as
decolonization. Following World War II, the region’s European rulers
came to realization that their control over the colonies could not
continue as usual. Two main forces emerged to challenge the
European domination of Africans. First, challenges came from
African nationalists who wanted something so simple yet so difficult
to realize: Africa for Africans. Second, after World War II, which was
framed as epic battle against undemocratic tyranny of
totalitarianism, Africans began to challenge why the allies could not
uphold the same democratic values in Africa. To many African
nationalists, it was an example of supreme irony that nations that
defeated Nazism and Fascism were doing something Hitler’s
Germany wanted to do in Europe, conquest and exploitation. (The
above is a picture of the founding members of the anti-apartheid
organization later became African National Congress.) They
obviously felt justified in resisting European colonization more aggressively after World War II, which, by the way, destroyed and
weakened European societies.
This decolonization process was relatively peaceful in countries like Kenya, Tanzania, and Ivory Coast. However, independence did
not come easily in southern part of Africa. In Rhodesia, a formal British colony, 250,000 white
residents who owned the country’s farmlands refused to let their power and domination pass away
peacefully. Instead of accepting the black majority rule, they
declared Rhodesia independent as a white-supremacist state.
The blacks in turn declared war against the white rulers and
the civil war continued until 1975 when the Rhodesian
government capitulated. So came the birth of Zimbabwe, but
at a heavy human and material cost.
Something similar happened in Angola and Mozambique,
both Portuguese colonies. When Lisbon refused to grant
independence to these countries, people of Angola and
Mozambique turned to guerrilla warfare. The war in Angola
became even more violent, when the U.S. and the Soviet Union turned that civil war into a theater
of their own superpower competition. The Marxist groups within guerrilla movement, supported by the Soviet Union and Cuba,
eventually succeeded in forcing Portugal to leave Angola and Mozambique, and setup leftist governments. The U.S. and South Africa
perceived the leftist governments in Angola and Mozambique as thereat to their interests and financed guerrilla forces seeking to
topple the Marxist government of Angola and Mozambique. The fighting continued
well into the 1980s. The war ended at least in Mozambique due in large part to the
Soviet Union and the U.S. losing interest in it following the end of the cold war. In
Angola, low intensity war drags on, however. .
What is Nationalism vs Pan-africanism- Compare the Similarities and DifferencesRBG Communiversity
RBG Communiversity is a Web 2.0 New Afrikan Liberation Education and Nationhood Program dedicated to Implementing the Teachings of Our Elders and Ancestors.
This document provides a historical overview of ethnic group definitions and relations in the Central African Republic (CAR) from colonial times to the present. It discusses how colonial powers arbitrarily categorized ethnic groups for administrative control purposes. This altered traditional ethnic boundaries and identities. After independence, leaders favored their own ethnic groups, exacerbating tensions. While ethnicity has been a factor in conflicts, the current conflict has more religious dimensions with tensions between Muslim former Seleka rebels and Christian anti-balaka militias. The document analyzes how colonial legacies and weak governance contributed to CAR's political instability and conflicts over identities and resources.
A Critical Appraisal of Kwame Nkrumah’s Pan Africanism and the Appropriation ...ijtsrd
This paper sets out to discuss the question of African identity from the position related to Nkrumah’s Pan Africanism. This work demonstrates that the question of African identity is challenged by the diversity of cultural heritages that incarnate the African continent and its peoples. It also shows that the invasions by foreign cultures impede the delimitation of an identity called African, and that the re education of the African is instrumental in reinventing an African identity capable of competing with other cultures in the global space . Tanyi, Pamela Nugha | Nde, Paul Ade "A Critical Appraisal of Kwame Nkrumah’s Pan Africanism and the Appropriation of African Identity" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-6 | Issue-1 , December 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd49130.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/social-science/49130/a-critical-appraisal-of-kwame-nkrumah’s-pan-africanism-and-the-appropriation-of-african-identity/tanyi-pamela-nugha
Colonialism has had lasting impacts on culture. During colonial rule, colonizers imposed their language and institutions on colonies, disrupting local cultures. Even after independence, formerly colonized countries continue to be influenced by their colonizers' culture, such as maintaining English as the language of power. Colonialism also led to loss of cultural sovereignty and identity as local languages and traditions declined or disappeared. The scars of colonialism continue to negatively impact post-colonial societies economically and socially.
3 Cultural Diversity And Culture Change Class#4tacit dynamite
The document discusses cultural diversity in Africa, noting that Africa is made up of many distinct ethnic groups and languages rather than being a single unified culture. It explores some of the complexities around concepts like ethnicity, tribes, and castes in countries like Rwanda and Burundi. Religion also plays a key role in African cultures and identities, with indigenous beliefs mixing with Islam and Christianity. The document argues that cultures are constantly evolving and being contested by different groups, and many "timeless" traditions are recent social constructions.
This document discusses ethnicity in Africa. It argues that ethnicity has long been viewed negatively in Africa as "tribalism" or a remnant of the past, but that this view is misguided. Ethnicity remains an important part of African identity and should be viewed positively. Seeing ethnicity as positive could help address conflicts, support development, and guide resource mobilization. Rather than blaming ethnicity for issues like violence or economic competition, the artificial borders imposed during colonization and dysfunctional post-colonial states are more valid sources of problems in Africa. The document advocates reexamining ethnicity in a positive light and drawing on ethnic history and community as a basis for development.
Morocco is a North African country with a rich history and culture. It has experienced influence from various civilizations like Roman, Arab, and European. Morocco's culture is reflected in aspects like its architecture, pottery, carpets, cuisine, festivals, and traditional clothing. Tourism is an important industry for Morocco, which offers visitors opportunities to experience its cultural heritage, landscapes, and history. Ibn Battuta was a famous Moroccan explorer who traveled extensively in the 14th century, journeying as far as China.
The document lists the names of various countries, ethnic groups and regions around the world. It then provides statistics indicating that while there are 6.5 billion people in the world, 5.5 billion are spiritually lost and 1.7 billion have never heard the name of Jesus.
This report provides an overview of the constitutional, legislative and administrative protections of indigenous rights in Morocco. It examines Morocco's legal framework and how it impacts the rights of indigenous Berbers. The Berbers are the indigenous peoples of Morocco and speak the Tamazight language. They have faced 'Arabisation' policies that deny their cultural and linguistic identity. The report provides demographic details on Berbers, an overview of Morocco's history and legal system, and an analysis of legal protections for indigenous rights in areas like non-discrimination, language, land and natural resources. It concludes with recommendations to strengthen protections for Berber rights.
Los bereberes son los primeros habitantes del norte de África y se concentran principalmente en las montañas de Marruecos y Argelia. Su población total es de entre 25 y 45 millones de personas en África. Su lengua principal es el tamazight y su religión es principalmente el Islam aunque con influencias del cristianismo y el judaísmo. Viven principalmente en casas excavadas en la roca conocidas como casas trogloditas.
This document provides an overview of the ethnic groups that make up the population of Morocco throughout history. It discusses several indigenous Berber groups like the Masmuda, Zenata, and Sanhaja tribes that settled across Morocco. It also mentions Arab groups that migrated to Morocco like the Doui-Menia and Banu Hilal. The document outlines the history of Morocco from the 8th century onwards and the various dynasties that ruled the country and influenced its ethnic composition. It provides details on current Berber tribes located in different regions of Morocco like the Ait Atta, Ait Waryaghar, Ait Seghrouchen, Ait Yafelman, Chiadma
This document summarizes the emergence of racial tensions and violence in Zanzibar in the 1960s as the country experienced its first democratic elections beginning in 1957 and the overthrow of the Sultan's government in 1964. It discusses how racial discourse developed among local intellectuals by combining ideas from various sources. Political parties, like the Afro-Shirazi Party and Zanzibar National Party, used racial thinking strategically to gain power and control by creating new paradigms of belonging. This exacerbated existing social divisions and led to intensifying violence around elections in the late 1950s and early 1960s as party membership correlated with class, racial, and civilizational boundaries in Zanzibari society.
Frolinan historical conception and overview updated 01-28-2013RBG Communiversity
The document provides a historical overview of the FROLINAN movement by outlining 4 key epochs in the struggle for Black liberation and independence in America: 1) The Niagara Movement and founding of the NAACP, 2) Marcus Garvey's Back to Africa movement, 3) The rise of the Nation of Islam and civil rights movement, representing separatist and integrationist ideals, and 4) The Black Panther Party which synthesized these ideals and advocated for armed self-defense and community control. It argues this history shows there have been both integrationist and separatist strands of struggle that continue to shape the movement going forward.
One of my most popular articles ever proved to be the devastating rejection and denunciation of Pan-Arabism that I published under the title "Progenitor of Wars and Tyrannies: the Falsehood of Pan-Arabism" in several portals notably American Chronicle, Buzzle and AfroArticles in the mid-2000s. It was thence extensively and widely mentioned, discussed, quoted and republished in portals, sites, and blogs. Indicatively, I herewith include the following links:
https://www.aramnahrin.org/English/Muhammad_Shamsaddin_Progenitor-of-Wars-And-Tyrannies_29-6-2004.htm
http://aramean-dem.org/English/History/8.htm (paragraph ending with note 5)
https://phoenicia.org/panarab.html
http://www.aramnaharaim.org/English/opinion_analyse.htm
https://goodmaniac.blogspot.com/2012/06/libyans-and-people-of-maghreb-are.html
https://www.maroc.nl/forums/het-nieuws-van-de-dag/217670-telquel-zijn-geen-arabieren-onze-geschiedennis-vervalst-4.html
https://arabracismislamofascism.wordpress.com/category/pan-arabism/
https://www.geocities.ws/panarabism/
https://mergueze.info/arabism-racism/
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=2905&PN=3
Even here (!):https://context.reverso.net/translation/english-dutch/pan-arabism
Slightly edited, the integral standard version of the article can be found here:
https://www.academia.edu/23219268/Prof_Muhammad_Shamsaddin_Megalommatis_Progenitor_of_Wars_and_Tyrannies_the_Falsehood_of_Pan_Arabism
However, in its original form, this article was published in the Political Forum on 23rd June 2004, generating a fascinating polarization and many conflicting comments. That's why I am herewith reproducing the entire discussion, which can still be found here:
https://www.politicsforum.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=25086
I must however add that my very first publication on the topic goes back to 1988, and it took the form of a 11000-word entry (in Greek) in the Great General Encyclopedia Hydria (published by Etaireia Ellinikon Ekdoseon / Greek Publications Co) – Μεγάλη Γενική Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Υδρία (Εταιρεία Ελληνικών Εκδόσεων). The entry title was 'Φυλές και Λαοί της Μέσης Ανατολής' (Peoples and ethnic groups in the Middle East). In my Curriculum, it is mentioned as no 37 in the first unit of my Entries to Encyclopedias, here:
https://megalommatiscomments.wordpress.com/about-prof-muhammad-shamsaddin-megalommatis-entries-of-encyclopedias/
First published on 12th September 2021 here:
https://megalommatis.wordpress.com/extensive-discussion-about-my-article-progenitor-of-wars-and-tyrannies-the-falsehood-of-pan-arabism-in-the-political-forum/
The RBG Quest for Black Power Reader a The RBG Quest for Black Power Reader: ...RBG Communiversity
This document provides an overview and introduction to essays on the history of Black Nationalism and Pan-Africanism. It discusses how the compilation aims to encourage critical thinking about these topics through both written and oral traditions. The essays will examine Black Nationalist philosophies and ideologies from different time periods, covering influential figures like Marcus Garvey, Elijah Muhammad, and Malcolm X. They will also discuss the origins and key principles of Black Nationalism, including black unity, self-determination, and the importance of Africa to the movement.
FaithApproximate Year FoundedFounderScriptureLanguageMai.docxnealwaters20034
Faith
Approximate Year Founded
Founder
Scripture
Language
Main Idea
Place of Worship
Name for a Person of this faith
Adjective
Judaism
1200 BCE
Moses
Tanak
Hebrew
Covenant
synagogue
Jew
Jewish
Christianity
60 CE
Paul and John
New Testament
Greek
Faith in Salvation
church
Christian
Christian
Islam
620 CE
Muhammad
Quran
Arabic
Obedience submission
to the will of Allah
mosque
Muslim
Islamic
Edgecombe Community College
REL 110 OL1
Update on human rights and ideas of salvation.
What we are going to be looking at between now and the end of the semester is the whole question of human rights. This is about the push for universal human rights as embraced by a secular civil society vs. a more conditional religious approach which would see human rights from the perspective that people who belong to a certain faith have different rights.
In Judaism, in Christianity, and in Islam there are groups of people pulling in opposite directions. Some advocate for the ideals of a secular, humanistic civil society where everyone is treated equally. Others advocate for a more specifically religious social narrative where a person's status, and thus their rights, are determined more by the narrative of faith. The more religious social narrative inclines more toward religious fundamentalism.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all possess narratives of salvation and damnation. That is to say, they all have doctrines which deal with salvation, with who exactly gets to live with God in the after-life. They also have doctrines of damnation, or who gets excluded from the heavenly fellowship after death. We might see these as narratives of divine inclusion and divine exclusion. These competing narratives merge into considerations of human rights because, if we really believe a certain person is going to hell, why should we work to assure their rights while they are here on earth? This has led to tremendous religious persecution in the past.
The problem all three religions have is that there are people in each faith who strongly believe that their own personal doctrine of salvation is the only one that works. Likewise, all three faiths have scriptures which call for respect and hospitality to be shown to those who are “sojourners”, or people of a different, or outsider faith. Unfortunately, in many situations these are not the scriptures which get promoted. Instead, people tend to gravitate toward doctrines which promote a more limited and specific idea of exactly who enjoys the favor of the Almighty.
Edgecombe Community College GEO 111
Stephen Herring, Instructor
April 1, 2015
Key Vocabulary for Study of the Middle East
Chapter 7 covers the Middle East, also known as Southwest Asia/North Africa
To understand this region you need to begin with the first round of colonial expansion under Arab influences following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE. There was a division right after his death between the Arabs and the Persians over who would .
Initially published on 26th April 2008 in American Chronicle, AfroArticles, Buzzle and OpEd News:
https://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_muhammad_080501_open_letter_to_hrh_2c_.htm
Republished subsequently in the official site of the Oromo Liberation Front:
http://www.oromoliberationfront.org/News/2008/Open%20Letter%20to%20HRH.html
Excerpt:
To better understand the situation, one has to examine combined data as regards the various nations and the religious groups of Abyssinia. The ruling Abyssinian tribes are mainly the Amhara and the Tigray, who amount to ca. 30% of the entire population. The rest (70% of the country´s entire population) are either Cushitic (Oromos, Ogadenis, Sidamas, Afars, Kaffas, Kambatas, Hadiya, Agaw, and Shekachos) or Nilo-Saharan (Anuak).
It would however be erroneous to consider the aforementioned figures without further analysis; the oppressed Cushitic and Nilo-Saharan nations follow different religions, either traditional African religions or Islam and Christianity (the latter preached mainly through Western, Catholic and Protestant missionaries). The Abyssinian Amharas and Tigrays are either Monophysitic (heretic Christians) or Muslims. Muslims make ca. 40% of the Abyssinians. Viewed by the Monophysitic Abyssinian elite and people as historical enemies and as renegades, they have been terribly oppressed, perhaps more than the Cushitic nations.
We can thus draw the conclusion that the Monophysitic Abyssinians represent approximately 18% of the country´s total population, and rule invariably discriminating and tyrannizing the Abyssinian Muslims and all the subjugated Cushitic and Nilo-Saharan nations. If we compare this figure to those given for other cases of despotic regimes, notably Milosevic´s Yugoslavia and Saddam Hussein´s Iraq, we realize that nothing was more unrepresentative and more totalitarian, more discriminatory and more tyrannical than the colonial state of ´Ethiopia´.
The refugee crisis is the tragic result of a criminal policy of war and military intervention for regime change, implemented by the United States and the European Union in Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, Libya and, above all, Syria. What the world witness today, with thousands of desperate refugees trying to reach Europe, it is the effect of this policy, maintained by the major Western powers. In more than a decade, Afghanistan wars and Iraq, waged under the pretext of being "against terrorism", and justified on the infamous lies about "Iraqi weapons of mass destruction", devastated whole societies and killed hundreds of thousands of men, women and children. To these wars followed the war for regime change - led by the United States and NATO - which overthrew the government of Muammar Gaddafi and turned Libya into a country of mockery, with virtually no government, wracked by continuous fighting between rival militias. This was followed by civil war in Syria - fueled, armed and financed by the US government and its European allies, aiming to topple Bashar Al-Assad and replace him with an obedient puppet to Western powers.
Sub-Saharan Africa Post-Independence Starting in t.docxhanneloremccaffery
Sub-Saharan Africa: Post-Independence
Starting in the late 1950s, Sub-Saharan Africans intensified the struggle for independence from their European colonizers, and the
white rulers. So came to Sub-Saharan Africa the process known as
decolonization. Following World War II, the region’s European rulers
came to realization that their control over the colonies could not
continue as usual. Two main forces emerged to challenge the
European domination of Africans. First, challenges came from
African nationalists who wanted something so simple yet so difficult
to realize: Africa for Africans. Second, after World War II, which was
framed as epic battle against undemocratic tyranny of
totalitarianism, Africans began to challenge why the allies could not
uphold the same democratic values in Africa. To many African
nationalists, it was an example of supreme irony that nations that
defeated Nazism and Fascism were doing something Hitler’s
Germany wanted to do in Europe, conquest and exploitation. (The
above is a picture of the founding members of the anti-apartheid
organization later became African National Congress.) They
obviously felt justified in resisting European colonization more aggressively after World War II, which, by the way, destroyed and
weakened European societies.
This decolonization process was relatively peaceful in countries like Kenya, Tanzania, and Ivory Coast. However, independence did
not come easily in southern part of Africa. In Rhodesia, a formal British colony, 250,000 white
residents who owned the country’s farmlands refused to let their power and domination pass away
peacefully. Instead of accepting the black majority rule, they
declared Rhodesia independent as a white-supremacist state.
The blacks in turn declared war against the white rulers and
the civil war continued until 1975 when the Rhodesian
government capitulated. So came the birth of Zimbabwe, but
at a heavy human and material cost.
Something similar happened in Angola and Mozambique,
both Portuguese colonies. When Lisbon refused to grant
independence to these countries, people of Angola and
Mozambique turned to guerrilla warfare. The war in Angola
became even more violent, when the U.S. and the Soviet Union turned that civil war into a theater
of their own superpower competition. The Marxist groups within guerrilla movement, supported by the Soviet Union and Cuba,
eventually succeeded in forcing Portugal to leave Angola and Mozambique, and setup leftist governments. The U.S. and South Africa
perceived the leftist governments in Angola and Mozambique as thereat to their interests and financed guerrilla forces seeking to
topple the Marxist government of Angola and Mozambique. The fighting continued
well into the 1980s. The war ended at least in Mozambique due in large part to the
Soviet Union and the U.S. losing interest in it following the end of the cold war. In
Angola, low intensity war drags on, however. .
What is Nationalism vs Pan-africanism- Compare the Similarities and DifferencesRBG Communiversity
RBG Communiversity is a Web 2.0 New Afrikan Liberation Education and Nationhood Program dedicated to Implementing the Teachings of Our Elders and Ancestors.
This document provides a historical overview of ethnic group definitions and relations in the Central African Republic (CAR) from colonial times to the present. It discusses how colonial powers arbitrarily categorized ethnic groups for administrative control purposes. This altered traditional ethnic boundaries and identities. After independence, leaders favored their own ethnic groups, exacerbating tensions. While ethnicity has been a factor in conflicts, the current conflict has more religious dimensions with tensions between Muslim former Seleka rebels and Christian anti-balaka militias. The document analyzes how colonial legacies and weak governance contributed to CAR's political instability and conflicts over identities and resources.
A Critical Appraisal of Kwame Nkrumah’s Pan Africanism and the Appropriation ...ijtsrd
This paper sets out to discuss the question of African identity from the position related to Nkrumah’s Pan Africanism. This work demonstrates that the question of African identity is challenged by the diversity of cultural heritages that incarnate the African continent and its peoples. It also shows that the invasions by foreign cultures impede the delimitation of an identity called African, and that the re education of the African is instrumental in reinventing an African identity capable of competing with other cultures in the global space . Tanyi, Pamela Nugha | Nde, Paul Ade "A Critical Appraisal of Kwame Nkrumah’s Pan Africanism and the Appropriation of African Identity" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-6 | Issue-1 , December 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd49130.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/social-science/49130/a-critical-appraisal-of-kwame-nkrumah’s-pan-africanism-and-the-appropriation-of-african-identity/tanyi-pamela-nugha
Colonialism has had lasting impacts on culture. During colonial rule, colonizers imposed their language and institutions on colonies, disrupting local cultures. Even after independence, formerly colonized countries continue to be influenced by their colonizers' culture, such as maintaining English as the language of power. Colonialism also led to loss of cultural sovereignty and identity as local languages and traditions declined or disappeared. The scars of colonialism continue to negatively impact post-colonial societies economically and socially.
3 Cultural Diversity And Culture Change Class#4tacit dynamite
The document discusses cultural diversity in Africa, noting that Africa is made up of many distinct ethnic groups and languages rather than being a single unified culture. It explores some of the complexities around concepts like ethnicity, tribes, and castes in countries like Rwanda and Burundi. Religion also plays a key role in African cultures and identities, with indigenous beliefs mixing with Islam and Christianity. The document argues that cultures are constantly evolving and being contested by different groups, and many "timeless" traditions are recent social constructions.
This document discusses ethnicity in Africa. It argues that ethnicity has long been viewed negatively in Africa as "tribalism" or a remnant of the past, but that this view is misguided. Ethnicity remains an important part of African identity and should be viewed positively. Seeing ethnicity as positive could help address conflicts, support development, and guide resource mobilization. Rather than blaming ethnicity for issues like violence or economic competition, the artificial borders imposed during colonization and dysfunctional post-colonial states are more valid sources of problems in Africa. The document advocates reexamining ethnicity in a positive light and drawing on ethnic history and community as a basis for development.
Postcolonial strangers in a cosmopolitan worldSasha Harrison
This document analyzes Alina Sajed's work on hybridity and citizenship among migrants in the Franco-Maghrebian border region. Sajed distinguishes between exiles, who are intellectuals comfortable with multiculturalism, and immigrants, who experience hybridity as confusing and seek upward mobility. Language plays a key role, with French signifying assimilation but also post-colonial tensions. The analysis finds differentiated experiences of hybridity and citizenship depending on class, race, and language factors.
Defining and Studying the Modern African DiasporaAuthor.docxAASTHA76
This document discusses defining and studying the modern African diaspora. It begins by noting the increased interest in studying the African diaspora as an academic field. The author attempts to provide a comprehensive definition of the modern African diaspora by identifying 5 major diasporic streams involving the movement of African peoples over time, including early migrations out of Africa around 100,000 years ago, the Bantu migrations around 3000 BCE, pre-Atlantic trading diasporas beginning in the 5th century BCE, the Atlantic slave trade beginning in the 15th century, and post-slavery migrations of the 19th century to today. The author argues the modern African diaspora should be defined as millions of peoples of African descent united
On June 5, during a rare trip abroad, Aung San Suu Kyi, state counsellor of Myanmar and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, visited Hungary and met Prime Minister Viktor Orban. After the meeting, the Hungarian government released an official statement, saying: "The two leaders highlighted that one of the greatest challenges at present for both countries and their respective regions - Southeast Asia and Europe - is migration. They noted that both regions have seen the emergence of the issue of coexistence with continuously growing Muslim populations."
http://lisauk.org/news/detail/islamophobia-will-not-solve-europe-or-asia-s-problems
Edgecombe Community College GEO 111Stephen Herring, Instructor.docxtidwellveronique
Edgecombe Community College GEO 111
Stephen Herring, Instructor
April 1, 2015
Key Vocabulary for Study of the Middle East
Chapter 7 covers the Middle East, also known as Southwest Asia/North Africa
To understand this region you need to begin with the first round of colonial expansion under Arab influences following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE. There was a division right after his death between the Arabs and the Persians over who would be the leader of Islam. This division led to the split between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. This split has many complex religious and cultural overtones, but it has been historically exacerbated by ethnic and economic tensions throughout the region between Sunni Arabs and Shiite Persians. Sunni Islam is largely influenced by ethnic Arabs and Shiite Islam is largely influenced by ethnic Persians. This is an oversimplification because many Shiite or Sunni Muslims are neither Arabs nor Persians, but this way of framing the conflict helps us to see the influences of Arab colonialism throughout the area.
Following the era of Arab colonialism we come into the period of European colonialism, a time when many of the present day nation states of the region had their borders drawn without regard to pre-existing tribal or ethnic allegiances. Look, for example, at Greater Kurdistan, a well- defined ethnic region which came to be subsumed within Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria.
The next item required for an understanding of the Middle East is the Holocaust. The Holocaust was the slaughter of over six million Jewish men, women, and children under the Nazi leadership of Germany during the Second World War. The Holocaust was the direct result of accumulating attitudes of anti-Semitism in the Christian West. There had been centuries of pogroms and outbursts of anti-Semitic violence throughout Europe prior to the Holocaust. The Holocaust brought about the realization that there needed to be a Jewish sovereign state, a Jewish homeland in the Biblical land of Israel. All religious considerations aside, this was initially a purely practical, secular observation, that there had to be an organized Jewish state in order that the Jews might defend themselves effectively against the threats of widespread anti-Semitism. This concept came to be known as Secular Zionism.
Various definitions are available for Zionism, but for our purposes it will be defined as the belief that there must be a Jewish sovereign nation in the Biblical land of Israel. Today within the modern state of Israel and elsewhere we have both secular and religious Zionists.
After the Holocaust Jewish people migrated back to Israel from all over the world. They claimed and settled the land of Israel. The problem with this was that there were already people living there who called the place Palestine. The Palestinians were forced to leave their homes and property as Israel expended through the 1950’s. The Palestinian refugees moved int.
Edgecombe Community College GEO 111Stephen Herring, Instructor.docxgidmanmary
Edgecombe Community College GEO 111
Stephen Herring, Instructor
April 1, 2015
Key Vocabulary for Study of the Middle East
Chapter 7 covers the Middle East, also known as Southwest Asia/North Africa
To understand this region you need to begin with the first round of colonial expansion under Arab influences following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE. There was a division right after his death between the Arabs and the Persians over who would be the leader of Islam. This division led to the split between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. This split has many complex religious and cultural overtones, but it has been historically exacerbated by ethnic and economic tensions throughout the region between Sunni Arabs and Shiite Persians. Sunni Islam is largely influenced by ethnic Arabs and Shiite Islam is largely influenced by ethnic Persians. This is an oversimplification because many Shiite or Sunni Muslims are neither Arabs nor Persians, but this way of framing the conflict helps us to see the influences of Arab colonialism throughout the area.
Following the era of Arab colonialism we come into the period of European colonialism, a time when many of the present day nation states of the region had their borders drawn without regard to pre-existing tribal or ethnic allegiances. Look, for example, at Greater Kurdistan, a well- defined ethnic region which came to be subsumed within Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria.
The next item required for an understanding of the Middle East is the Holocaust. The Holocaust was the slaughter of over six million Jewish men, women, and children under the Nazi leadership of Germany during the Second World War. The Holocaust was the direct result of accumulating attitudes of anti-Semitism in the Christian West. There had been centuries of pogroms and outbursts of anti-Semitic violence throughout Europe prior to the Holocaust. The Holocaust brought about the realization that there needed to be a Jewish sovereign state, a Jewish homeland in the Biblical land of Israel. All religious considerations aside, this was initially a purely practical, secular observation, that there had to be an organized Jewish state in order that the Jews might defend themselves effectively against the threats of widespread anti-Semitism. This concept came to be known as Secular Zionism.
Various definitions are available for Zionism, but for our purposes it will be defined as the belief that there must be a Jewish sovereign nation in the Biblical land of Israel. Today within the modern state of Israel and elsewhere we have both secular and religious Zionists.
After the Holocaust Jewish people migrated back to Israel from all over the world. They claimed and settled the land of Israel. The problem with this was that there were already people living there who called the place Palestine. The Palestinians were forced to leave their homes and property as Israel expended through the 1950’s. The Palestinian refugees moved int ...
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Bruce the berber culture movement
1. The Journal of North African Studies Vol. 11, No. 1, March 2006
Ethno-politics and Globalisation in
North Africa: The Berber Culture
MovementÃ
BRUCE MADDY-WEITZMAN
ABSTRACT Contemporary processes of globalisation have stimulated and reinforced a specific
Berber/Amazigh ethno-political identity. Overall, the Berberist discourse is profoundly
sympathetic to Western liberal-humanist values, and strongly condemnatory of the predominant
monocultural order based on Islam and Arabism. To be sure, globalisation’s homogenising
effects are seen as a threat to indigenous peoples’ cultural identities, Berbers included. But,
overall, modern Berber imagining is bound up with a secular, Western-modern vision of the
future. Berber/Amazigh culturalists seek to accommodate larger outside forces while placing an
explicit emphasis on the collective ‘self’, thus posing a challenge to the existing order in
the Maghrib.
From the beginning of its recorded history, Maghrib North Africa has never ceased to be
buffeted by cross-currents emanating from the northern side of the Mediterranean, Egypt
and the Near East, the Sahara region and further south. Interacting with local realities,
these external influences have decisively shaped Maghribi politics and societies. The
Berber-speaking peoples of antiquity, having already met the Phoenicians in Carthage,
encountered the original ‘globalisers’ (Rome), which later morphed into Byzantium.
This, in turn, was followed, most profoundly, by Islam. The initial incorporation of the
Berber tribes into the Islamic domain was not pain free by any means. Nonetheless,
over time Islam became a central part of their individual and collective identities, and
Berber dynasties even expanded Islamic rule over wide swaths of territory in North
Africa and Andalusia. Linguistically, Arabic gradually spread, not only through the
dissemination and institutionalisation of Islam, but also thanks to the arrival of new
waves of Arab tribes from the East in the tenth – twelfth centuries. By the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries, Arabic had come to predominate in Tunisia and Algeria,
while exclusively Berber-speaking tribes in Algeria retreated to the mountain areas,
away from the Ottoman authorities in Algiers and Constantine. In Morocco, the majority
of the population continued to live within Berber-speaking tribal frameworks. Christian
Bruce Maddy-Weitzman is a senior research fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African
Studies, Tel Aviv University. He is the author of The Crystallization of the Arab State System, 1945–1954 (1993),
Palestinian and Israeli Intellectuals in the Shadow of Oslo and Intifadat al-Aqsa (2002) and articles on modern
Middle Eastern and Maghribi history and politics; editor of Middle East Contemporary Survey 19– 24 (1995–
2000) and co-editor of volume 18 (1994); and also co-editor of Religious Radicalism in the Greater Middle
East (1997) and The Camp David Summit: What Went Wrong? (2005).
ISSN 1362-9387 print=ISSN 1743-9345 online=06=010071–13 # 2006 Taylor & Francis
DOI: 10.1080=13629380500409917
2. 72 B. Maddy-Weitzman
Europe’s presence was already being felt in the coastal areas during the fifteenth century.
But it was only in the nineteenth century that Europe returned to the Maghrib in full
triumph, inaugurating another wave of integration into the world economic system
through the agency of ‘imperialism’.
Beginning in the 1930s and 1940s, the specific ‘Berber’ component of Algerian Muslim
society was put on the defensive, as the emerging nationalist movement proclaimed Islam
and the Arabic language the exclusive components of Algerian identity, in opposition to
the 100-year-old French colonial rule. France’s promotion of the ‘Kabylian Vulgate’,
which posited that Kabylian Berbers were really European in origin and only nominally
attached to Islam, and therefore ripe to be ‘returned’ to the Christian – European fold,
through France’s ‘civilising mission’,1 rendered any particularist assertion of Kabylian
Berber identity extremely suspect in nationalist eyes. Algeria’s Kabylian Berbers, who
today constitute approximately 4 million people (two-thirds of all Algerian Berbers,
who, in turn, constitute 20 per cent of the total Algerian population of 30 million), were
progressively marginalised as a group during the armed struggle for independence
(notwithstanding their initial leadership role), and then with greater force by the post-
colonial state. Of Morocco’s 30 million people, 40 –45 per cent belong to one of the
three main Berber-speaking communities, while prior to independence they still consti-
tuted a majority of all Moroccan Muslims. Notwithstanding their majority status at the
time, their subordination to the emerging Moroccan ‘Arab’ nationalist polity was
even more acute than that of their Kabylian Berber counterparts in Algeria, spurred, iro-
nically, by France’s efforts during the Protectorate to isolate them from the more urban
Arabic-speaking elites.
As it was true in the past, so is it true in the present: contemporary and often contradic-
tory processes of ‘globalisation’, both as a macro-phenomenon and as a political ideology,
and the ensuing responses have had profound consequences. In Algeria and Morocco, the
‘Berber/Amazigh dimension’ of social and political life has been especially affected.2
Given the marginalisation of Berber communities during earlier waves of ‘globalisation’,
there is no small irony in the fact that the latest wave has helped stimulate and reinforced
the elaboration and acceleration of a specific ‘Berber/Amazigh’ ethno-political identity,
in the face of both hegemonic, albeit increasingly challenged state authorities and
broad-based opposition Islamist movements. To be sure, the many-headed monster of
‘globalisation’ is often seen as having a pernicious levelling effect, wiping out local differ-
ences and distinctions in the name of ‘progress’ and bringing the world closer together. At
the same time, the phenomenon of accelerated globalisation enabling or prompting greater
assertion of sub-national identities is familiar from the EU experience. In the Amazigh case,
globalisation has opened up new avenues by which to challenge the orthodox ethos of con-
temporary North African states. Most recently, the internet, the symbol, par excellence, of
the contemporary global information revolution, has become an additional important tool in
the construction of a ‘landscape of group identity’, i.e. the building of an ‘imagined’
Amazigh community worldwide. Internet sites, e.g. ,www.mondeberbere.com. and
,www.kabyle.com., and e-mail list-serves, e.g. Amazigh-Net and soc.culture.berber,
have proliferated in the last decade, making possible the dissemination of information
and images, often in real time, as well as stimulating discussion and contacts between
activists worldwide.3
The ‘Berber/Amazigh culture movement’ (mouvement culturel Berbere/Amazigh; `
MCB/MCA)4 is an amorphous, multi-faceted phenomenon (with both ‘pan-Berber’ and
3. The Berber Culture Movement 73
state-specific aspects) with a clear core demand: the affirmation by state authorities—in
North Africa, first and foremost, but also in the Berber diaspora in Western Europe and
North America—of the existence of the Amazigh people as a collective, and of the
Amazighity (Berberness) of the land of ‘Tamazgha’, defined as the area stretching from
the Siwa Oasis in Egypt’s Western Desert to the Canary Islands, and as far south as the
Sahel. In practical terms, their core demand is for the recognition of Tamazight as an
official language in the North African states, and for educational, social and economic
policies to redress the multitude of injustices said to have been inflicted on the Berbers
during the colonial and independence eras. In Algeria, the dimension of their efforts is
overtly political, owing to the ongoing and long-running confrontation between
Kabylia, the territorial and cultural core of resurgent Berberism, and the regime.5 In
Morocco, state – community relations have been less confrontational, and less overtly
political, but have significantly evolved in that direction in recent years. In France and
other European countries, the Berber culture movement provides crucial intellectual,
moral and probably financial support for the struggles across the Mediterranean. At
bottom, the Berber culture movement wants nothing less than to refashion the identity
of North African states and fundamentally change the bases of their collective lives.
During the initial post-independence decades, the MCB/MCA’s primary obstacle was
the ‘state’ authorities (the pouvoir in Algeria; the makhzen in Moroccan parlance). More
recently, resurgent Islamist movements have profoundly challenged the ‘state,’ which,
40 –50 years after independence, now finds itself in a situation of acute crisis.6 Given
their radically opposing visions and expanded activities, the Berberists, broadly aligned
with liberal forces advocating democratisation and the expansion of human rights, and
the Islamists now constitute the two primary alternative poles of civil society in Algeria
and Morocco: in essence, politics in the two most important Maghrib countries, in its
fullest sense, has now become a three-cornered contest. Although they do not entirely
fit Huntington’s definition of ‘torn’ states,7 Morocco and Algeria both possess some
elements of them, since a significant portion of their elites are looking westward.8 Now,
the MCB/MCA phenomenon has introduced a new factor into the equation, as Berberists
press both their particularist and national agendas. This study will explore the nature of the
MCB/MCA’s orientation towards Western culture/civilisation, as well as towards the
dominant Arab-Islamic culture within the Maghrib states, and thus shed light on some
of the larger issues shaping Maghrib states and societies.
The Amazigh and ‘Universal’ Civilisation
Overall, Berberist discourse is profoundly sympathetic to Western liberal-humanist
values, specifically the promotion of human rights, democracy and freedom, within a plur-
alist, multicultural order, and strongly condemnatory of the predominant hegemonic,
monocultural order based on Islam and Arabism. To be sure, some Berberist writers
frame their views with an eye to avoiding the much discussed ‘clash of civilisations’
between the West and Islam. This is the approach adopted by the Moroccan Amazigh
intellectual Mohammed Chafik, first head of the recently founded, officially sanctioned
Royal Institute for Amazigh Culture (IRCAM). ‘In my part of the world,’ he declared,
there is an urgent need to imbue culture with a humanism, modernism and univers-
alism that rejects excess. This is because unitarianism and fundamentalism have
4. 74 B. Maddy-Weitzman
demonstrated their destructive power throughout history to the extent that the threat
of ethnic cleansing and religious conflict is still all too present.9
In Chafik’s view, making Muslim culture ‘more open to modern scientific knowledge and
its positive aspects’ can be done only gradually, through a ‘fruitful dialogue’ with the
West, which, for its part, needs to ‘get over its obsession with its dazzling material and
organizational success’. Chafik’s universalist vision was dedicated to ‘achieving peace
amongst different ethnic groups along with a real understanding between religious
faiths’, beginning with the Amazigh people, whose ‘vibrant culture’ could, like all
cultures, contribute something unique to the totality of human experience. Seeking to
deflect criticism from the Islamists while placing the Amazigh movement firmly within
the humanist fold, Chafik emphasised that
because it [the Amazigh movement] does not claim to be the depository of the
sacred, it is not opposed to evolution. In its way, it is humanist because it remembers
a distant past when it was well represented in the concert of Mediterranean cultures
by figures such as Terence (Afer) [Carthage-born Roman playwright, c. 190– 160
BC ], Juba (Juba II) [Roman client king of Mauritenia, 25– 23 BC ], and Apuleius
(Afulay) [second-century AD philosopher and rhetorician in Roman North Africa].
In short, Amazigh culture can enter and benefit from the worlds of politics, econ-
omics, society and justice without the risk of any real prejudice to religious faith.10
The 79-year-old Chafik (b. 1926) was the principal author of the ‘Berber Manifesto’, an
extraordinary document signed by hundreds of Moroccan Berber intellectuals. The mani-
festo laid out an interpretation of Moroccan history radically at odds with the standard,
official version, and a set of concrete demands for placing Morocco’s Amazighity at the
centre of the country’s collective identity. It posited the Amazigh’s traditional political
cultural traditions of dialogue and consultation in opposition to the despotism imported
from the early Islamic empires of the East, the Umayyads and Abassaids (but not from
the Prophet Muhammad, the manifesto stressed, or his immediate successors, the four
‘Rightly Guided’ Caliphs, a period considered by believers as Islam’s most perfect
moment in time).
The document’s unstinting praise of Amazigh political and cultural traditions is familiar
to students of ethno-national projects. At the same time, the movement’s own demands
were not framed in terms of a return to an idealised ‘golden age’. Rather, the manifesto’s
vision was modern, and forward-looking, one that would allow Morocco to ‘enter the third
millennium through its widest gate’. Accepting the Amazighity of Morocco went hand in
hand with the modern requirements of citizenship, it declared. Responding to charges that
its demands for recognition of Tamazight as an official language constituted ‘separatism’,
the manifesto retorted that the cause of separatism and fragmentation of societies
evidenced a
lack of civilizational maturity . . . We believe that diversity is an enrichment and that
difference is a sharpener for the human designs . . . [and that] ‘uniformity’ leads to
the missing of opportunities for opening up (to the outside world and to other ideas),
for development and refinement . . . We believe in the advent of a universal civili-
zation which is capable of integrating all the contributions of mankind.11
5. The Berber Culture Movement 75
For comparison’s sake, Chafik’s ‘universal civilisation’ possesses almost spiritual
qualities, unlike Kemal Attaturk’s explicit conflation of ‘civilisation’ with the ‘West’.
The distinction is a common one made by Muslim intellectuals over the last century,
who often spoke (and still speak) of the ‘spiritual superiority’ of the ‘East’ over the
‘West’. Clearly, Chafik takes it a step further, in order to achieve a synthesis between
‘East’ and ‘West’. Nonetheless, for most Amazigh intellectuals, the Berberist project
has important commonalities with Attaturkism, in that it is explicitly both laique
(secular) and ethnique, opposing the use of religion as the basis for law, in line with the
trends of contemporary civilisation. In addition, they do not conceptualise Morocco in
terms of the Muslim world only (al-Maghrib al-aqsa). Rather their image of Morocco
is one of a crossroads, geographically, culturally and ethnically.12 Here the comparison
to Turkey’s Attaturk reaches its limits, for Attaturkism stressed the centrality of a
homogeneous ‘Turkish’ nation and culture.
Human Rights, Group Rights and Democracy
Among the many phenomena associated with the latest wave of ‘political-ideological’
globalisation have been the spread of discourses of human rights and minority group
rights, with concomitant limitations on the formerly inviolable sanctity of a state’s
‘internal affairs’. In general, these discourses emphasise the need to promote democracy
and multiculturalism, and even the notion of ‘international humanitarian intervention’
to protect populations from the despotic acts of their own governments. The European
Union, the most ‘globalised’ of all economic and political frameworks worldwide, has
been a particular stimulus, institutionally and ideologically, for sub-national groups, for
whom the evolving supra-national framework provides increased space for activity.
This is true whether one is speaking of ‘native’ minorities, e.g. Bretons and Basques, or
immigrants. United-Nations-affiliated institutions have provided complementary encour-
agement in recent years.
The first moves to institutionalise an international Berber movement were made at a
film festival in Brittany in 1994, hardly a coincidence in light of the Bretons’ own
renewed assertiveness. Berberists often invoke Spain’s ‘Catalan’ model of regional
ethnic distinctiveness as a model. Separately and at times together, the MCB’s myriad
associations, sometimes operating under the rubric of the World Amazigh Congress
(CMA), have made their case at various international forums, from the 2001 Durban con-
ference against racism, to the UN Working Group on behalf of indigenous peoples, to the
European Commission, to the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights, to UNESCO’s
(United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation’s) committee on
economic, social and cultural rights.13 At times, they also work with Western NGOs,
which are themselves part of the contemporary ‘globalisation’ phenomena, to that end.14
Many opposition Islamist movements have also adopted the discourse of democracy
and human rights. However, unlike the Islamists, who place the ultimate source of their
ideal society in the Qur’an, not Athens, the MCB’s emphasis on democracy is not
merely instrumental, but also strategic. The intellectuals who have formulated the main
tenets of the MCB are secular. In Algeria, caught between their long-standing bete ˆ
noire, the pouvoir, and the more recent threat, the Islamists, the Kabylian Berbers have
been in the vanguard of those promoting a democratic alternative to the existing
system, and this notwithstanding their deep-seated tendencies toward internecine binary
6. 76 B. Maddy-Weitzman
divisions.15 The newest political phenomenon in Kabylia is the grassroots Coordination
¨
Inter-wilayas [‘districts’] des aarchs [‘tribes’], daıras [‘departments’] et communes
(CIADC), which has articulated a modernist, democratic agenda as well, although its
social basis is rooted in Kabylian villages and its conduct is heavily influenced by their
political traditions, rendering their behaviour increasingly controversial.16
One of the most outspoken Kabylian activists in this regard has been the singer/poet/
activist Ferhat Mehenni, who heads the recently formed Mouvement pour le Autonomie de
la Kabylie. Unlike Morocco’s Chafik, Mehenni has no interest in avoiding the Huntingto-
nian spectre of a clash of civilisations by reconciling Western and Islamic cultures, but
rather comes down firmly in the Western-secular camp. As articulated in the movement’s
platform, the core values of la Kabylie autonome are:
1. Respect for human rights, without distinction according to sex, race, language or reli-
gion; consequently, the existing Family Code (whose framework is the sharia17) would
be abrogated, polygamy forbidden and personal status matters governed by civil laws.
2. Guaranteed freedom of worship, religious matters being relegated to the private domain.
3. Democracy, being is a political system governed by elected institutions.18
Responding to charges that his movement is ‘separatist’, Mehenni emphasised to an
interviewer that ‘to build autonomy in Kabylia is also to build a modern, plural and demo-
cratic Algeria, where it will be good to live’. As in ‘most of the regions of the EU,’ he said,
where ‘regional flags cohabit harmoniously with the national and European flags . . . a
regional Kabyle flag will essentially occupy Kabylia’s public space, next to the Algerian
national emblem.’19
Contemporary processes of globalisation have stimulated and reinforced a specific
Berber/Amazigh ethno-political identity. Overall, the Berberist discourse is profoundly
sympathetic to Western liberal-humanist values, and strongly condemnatory of the predomi-
nant monocultural order based on Islam and Arabism. To be sure, globalisation’s
homogenising effects are seen as a threat to indigenous peoples’ cultural identities,
Berbers included. But modern Berber imagining is bound up with a secular, Western-
modern vision of the future. Berber/Amazigh culturalists seek to accommodate larger
outside forces while placing an explicit emphasis on the collective ‘self’, a departure from
past patterns, thus posing a challenge to the existing order in the Maghrib. Similarly, the
Leqsar (El-Kseir) platform of 11 June 2001, drawn up by the CIADC following the
‘Black Spring’ of protracted rioting and repression, was modernist and democratic in empha-
sis. Like Mehenni, it emphasised both particular Amazigh demands ‘in all its components
(identity, civilisation, linguistic, and cultural)’, and the need for an Algerian state in
which all executive functions, including the security forces, were controlled by democrati-
cally elected authorities. Economically, as well, the platform stressed the urgent specific
development needs of Kabylia, as well as its rejection of ‘the policies of underdevelopment,
impoverishment and debasement [clochardisation] of the Algerian people’.20
9– 11, and the Iraq War
Amazigh reactions to the September 11, 2001 destruction of New York’s World Trade
Center reflected their anathema to both radical Islam and repressive authoritarian regimes,
and placed their movement firmly on the side of the West. The CMA’s Secretary-General
7. The Berber Culture Movement 77
Belcacem Lounes quickly dispatched a strong letter of sympathy and solidarity with the US
to President George W. Bush, expressing confidence that the US would
punish, in an exemplary fashion, the criminal organisers and financiers of such
an unspeakable . . . terrorist . . . attack. It is necessary and urgent that all of humanity,
all those attached to human and democratic values, join their efforts to eradicate
terrorism and its supporters, whoever they are and wherever they are found.21
Not surprisingly, Berberists were especially concerned about the impact of September
11 on their own immediate environs. The veteran Kabylian head of the Front des Forces
Socialistes (FFS), Hocine Ait Ahmed, elaborated at length on the new dangers. The attacks
had given ‘totalitarian regimes’ and particularly the Algerian regime ‘the occasion to
reduce to a pure terrorist phenomenon a conflict which, in reality, opposes them to their
own societies!’ By presenting Algeria as being ‘at the avant-garde of the fight against
the new international plague’, all of the just demands being made by Algerian society
could be safely shunted aside and ignored by the West, while the regime would benefit
from Western military aid. The essence of the Algerian crisis, Ait Ahmed said, ‘could
not be reduced to a ‘modernity – obscurantism’ confrontation. Such a discourse, which
was being echoed worldwide, risked a drift ‘toward a conflict of civilisations’. But the
real heart of the problem, he said, was the ‘immobility of a totalitarian power, incapable
of being reformed’. ‘Human rights and liberties’, he emphasised, ‘are not a luxury reserved
only for the West.’ Promoting a democratic transition in Algeria, under international
supervision, was vital. Essentially, Ait Ahmed turned the Algerian authorities’ argument
on its head: international terrorism must be combated in Algeria, as elsewhere, but not the
way the regime suggested. ‘The internationalization of the fight against terrorism’, he
declared, ‘should allow, in the same movement, the globalization of democracy, good
governance and solidarity.’ Only in this way could a durable wall be built to block the
escalating dangers that threatened all of humanity.22
Said Saadi, who stood opposed to Ait Ahmed throughout the 1990s as head of the other
Algerian Berber-based party, the Rassemblement pour la Culture et la Democratie ´
(RCD),23 also shifted his view in favoru of greater European involvement in Algerian
affairs, in order to promote democracy. ‘Intervention is one thing; asserting solidarity
with democratic forces . . . is another . . . Everything (regarding relations with France
and the EU) has to be subjected to the respect for human rights.’24
The US-led war to overthrow Iraq’s Baathist regime in the spring of 2003 won
expressions of strong support from a number of Amazigh activists. For some time
already, Berbers and Kurds had discovered one another as aspiring minorities within an
unfriendly Arab nationalist milieu.25 Thus, for Amazigh proponents, the overthrow of
Iraqi Baath rule and the US’s promotion of democracy and human rights in Iraq consti-
tuted a joyous occasion, and, hopefully, a harbinger of things to come. Frustration with
the European countries’ continued support of the Algerian state, in particular, also
influenced their attitudes to the war. Ferhat Mehenni articulated this position without
subtleties.
The idea is to democratise all the states of the Middle East in order to eradicate the
sources of terrorism and preempt a future ‘clash of civilisations,’ which, in time,
should really converge toward mutual respect on the basis of democracy and
8. 78 B. Maddy-Weitzman
liberty. It may be naive, but the Americans at least can be thanked for laying out
their goal forthrightly, and surely it’s worth a shot . . . The role of the United
States in this noble endeavor is key to the future of humanity. Better a world
inspired and led by one great power than a multi-polar world where nuclear risks
and destructive wars will proliferate. GOD BLESS AMERICA.26
Negative Aspects of Globalisation and Modernity
Globalisation and modernity are also conflated in less congenial ways in Berberist dis-
course. Occasionally, the struggle for Amazigh rights is presented as part of the worldwide
struggles of indigenous peoples fighting for their cultural identities against the tyrannical,
homogenising impulses of globalisation.27 In this sense, globalisation is the latest mani-
festation of the repressive modern state. For Amazigh activists, France, the Maghrib’s
former colonial master, comes in for especially harsh criticism, not just for its continued
support of repressive regimes, but, more profoundly, for transplanting its ‘Jacobin’
political system to Algeria and Morocco, thus leaving no room for Berber identity to
develop.28 According to Mehenni, genuine regional autonomy for Algeria would cons-
titute the ‘institutional decolonization of the structures of the State inherited from the
time of France’.29 Similarly, Berber activists struggling to inculcate their language and
culture in France among the estimated 1.25 –1.5 million Berberophones complain of
the ‘Jacobin’ educational system that fails to legitimise hyphenated, multicultural
identities.30
The very creation of a Berber diaspora has been another aspect of the globalisation
phenomenon that is relevant to Amazigh identity: the accelerated movement of popu-
lations across national boundaries, as part of an increasingly integrated world economy.
Emigration to the northern side of the Mediterranean Sea began from Algeria a century
ago, spearheaded by the Kabylians. The pace accelerated after Algeria gained indepen-
dence in 1962, but the Kabylians were no longer preponderant in numbers.31 Overall,
there are currently an estimated 2.5 million Algerians and Moroccans of Berber origin
in Europe, more than half of them in France, and the rest mainly in The Netherlands,
Belgium, Spain and Italy. Quite a good deal has been written about the ‘Beur’ community
in France and the identity issues of North African immigrants in general, particularly the
attractiveness of Islam to alienated young people on the margins of European life. No
systematic work that I am aware of has yet been done on the ways that encounters in
Berber emigrants’ new homes with fellow Amazighphones from other regions and
countries shape their identities and perhaps sharpen their Amazighity.
Emigration is often a profoundly traumatic, alienating experience, all the more so when
it involves the separation of families. An analysis of the lyrics of Riffian Amazigh poets
and songwriters displays elements of this trauma. Responding to a mother’s call to her
son to return home, the son replies, ‘the separation from my homeland has penetrated
my bones . . . I am here in Germany, with whiskey and bars, I married a foreigner, and
now we have children . . . You can consider me lost, O mother.’32 Other poems use the
metaphor of the son longing for his absent emigrant father. Many express their profound
alienation from a controlling, domineering society, whether Arab or European; hence the
conflation between modernity and globalisation. The problems of women, intertwined
with both modernity at home and the emigration of men to Europe, are an especially
powerful theme.33
9. The Berber Culture Movement 79
At the same time, the poets and folk singers of the Rif appear to be ambiguous regarding
modernisation and globalisation, particularly when it comes to women. According to
Amar Almasude, a US-based analyst of Rifian culture, the artists’ discourse takes place
between generations, ‘the male father reactionary who represents the normative and tra-
ditional rules of the society, and the progressive male lover who rejects the imposed
norms and aspires to a free society’. The latter ‘challenge the old values of honor and
propose love as a supreme source of honor’. This, says Almasude, constitutes the best
way ‘to defy the Arabo-Islamic discourse’.34 Whether or not the ‘old values’ are uniquely
Arabo-Islamic and not at all reflective of traditional Amazigh culture is not the issue.35
What is important here is the fact that for Amazigh cultural ‘producers’ and analysts
‘Arabo-Islam’ is the domineering, oppressive ‘Other’, which has managed to benefit
enough from ‘modernity’ to enhance its repression of the Amazigh.
The Battle Over the Proper Script for Tamazight
One small but telltale indication of the Amazigh movement’s tilt away from ‘Arabo-Islam’
and towards Western-driven globalisation has been the little-noticed battle in Morocco
during 2002 –3 over which script should be used for the writing of Tamazight. The
choices were Latin, Arabic or a modified version of Tifinagh (an ancient script still
used by the Touaregs in the Sahara/Sahel regions, but which otherwise fell into complete
´
disuse hundreds of years ago). The legal Islamist Parti de la justice et du developpement
(PJD), which has 42 seats in the 325-member Chamber of Deputies, campaigned hard for
the adoption of Arabic script, particularly through the daily newspaper Attajdid. It even
organised a declaration of allegedly Amazigh associations that endorsed the idea. In
general, Moroccan Islamists ostensibly agreed with the need to recognise Amazigh
culture as part of the Moroccan patrimony. However, they also viewed the struggle
over the appropriate script as part of Francophone-Western civilisation’s efforts to under-
mine the primacy of Islam and promote secularisation. Religious consciousness in the
Maghrib, they noted, was expressed through the Arabic language. Indeed, they understood
full well that the MCA’s demands would place Tamazight on an equal footing with Arabic,
and thus posed a direct challenge to their own preferred vision of a Moroccan society
imbued with Islamic values and guided by sacred Arabic-language texts. Not surprisingly,
mosque sermons in a number of cities and fatwas declared by Islamic clerics were devoted
to attacking the Berber associations and the Amazigh agenda, calling the Latin script
option the ‘imperialist choice’. One preacher even remonstrated his congregants for speak-
ing Tamazight in the mosque, saying that it caused ‘confusion and anarchy’ (bilbala
wa-fitna) among the worshippers, particularly during the holy months of the year.36
In response, Moroccan Berberists, led by Chafik, have been keen to emphasise that the
Arabic language is an inescapable part of Morocco’s cultural heritage, is crucial to ‘in-
depth knowledge of religious matters’ and is the ‘strongest link with our Arab brothers
in the Maghrib and the Middle East’. But this could not come at the expense of Tamazight
and Amazigh culture. Some Moroccan Amazigh groups, particularly the venerable
´
Association Marocaine de Recherche et d’Echange Culturel (AMREC), favoured the
adoption of Tifinagh, on the grounds of its identity-building value.37 Nonetheless, a
large majority Amazigh groups believed that the ‘universal’ (i.e. Latin) script was the
most practical way to promote Tamazight as a living language. The Islamists’ ‘sacrali-
´
zation of script’, declared a communique issued by 14 different Amazigh associations,
10. 80 B. Maddy-Weitzman
‘is nothing but a form of fetishism and animism which constitutes an insult to the
principles of Islam’.38 Tamazight, the Berber Manifesto noted, was the language of the
palace in Almohad times, and used for explaining the Qur’an and hadiths for many
centuries. Most importantly, declared the Manifesto, ‘history has not ended’, and the
current need for Morocco, and for the Amazigh, was to interact creatively with other cul-
tures and civilisations.39 The problem, wrote one Amazigh writer, was that the Moroccan
Islamists’ insistence on the Arabic script was underpinned by rejection of and contempt for
other peoples and languages, whether Western or Muslim.40 One of the Manifesto’s
signatories declared that the advocates of Arabic transcription, both Islamists and ‘pan-
Arabists’, ‘want to maintain our language in the camp of the underdeveloped, stop our
overture to the West and turn our language into a sub-dialect of Arabic’.41 Another
commentator attacked the PJD on broader issues, calling it ‘anti-development’ for reject-
ing a much debated, controversial programme to promote the status of women in order to
alleviate poverty and illiteracy.42 Their campaign against the Amazigh, declared the 14
Amazigh cultural associations’ joint statement, was simply a diversion from their own
inability to offer solutions to the real problems facing Morocco.43
Here then is the core of the Berberist response to the Islamists, notwithstanding the
numerous differences between the Algerian and Moroccan contexts, and within the
Berber communities themselves. For Berberists, the MCB/MCA’s worldview is
modern, open, progressive and democratic, in harmony with an increasingly interde-
pendent, globalised world. The Islamists’ programme, by contrast, is archaic, closed,
regressive and authoritarian.
The debate in Morocco over the proper script for teaching Tamazight was ostensibly
resolved during 2003 by the King’s decision to make Tifinagh the official writing
system for Tamazight. The move followed a recommendation to that effect by IRCAM,
following considerable discussion on the relative merits of Tifinagh versus Latin script.
According to one participant in the discussion, research showed that Tifinagh would be
no more difficult for children learning Tamazight than any other script. The identity
issue was also a factor in the decision, since younger people seemed especially keen on
learning Tifinagh, and small children reportedly took special delight in the script. But, at
bottom, it seems that the decisive factor in the decision was political, namely the pressure
applied by the Moroccan authorities, who viewed Tifinagh as an appropriate compromise
between the advocates of the Latin and Arabic scripts.44 The decision was controversial, to
say the least, among many Amazigh activists, focusing their attention again on the
formidable obstacles posed by the Moroccan state authorities to their movement.
The script issue in Kabylia, by contrast, was solved long ago by the adaption of Latin
script to the needs of Tamazight. The Kabylians’ ongoing resistance to independent
Algeria’s Arabisation policies, at the expense of the Francophone community of which
Kabylians are a leading part, has been another aspect of the language and culture wars
the Berbers have found themselves in. Throughout the colonial period and beyond,
French, writes one scholar, ‘remained not only the language of administration and indus-
trialization but also the instrument of economic and social advancement’. Hence, Algeria
developed ‘a kind of bicephalous economy based on two different standards, and resulted
in incalculable social, cultural, and ideological contradictions’. Poorer Algerians of rural
origin made up a high percentage of a post-independence generation educated exclusively
in Arabic, whose opportunity for economic advancement was limited.45 Such a situation
reinforced the validity of Ernest Gellner’s thirty-year-old declaration that ‘in his heart, the
11. The Berber Culture Movement 81
North African knows . . . that modernity speaks French’.46 This certainly remains the case
among Berberists, particularly in Kabylia. The passage of a law in 1996 compelling
sole use of Arabic by Algerian governmental and civil institutions and in all commercial
contracts drew strong protests in Kabylia, and among French speakers in general.47 The
statement by the venerated late Franco-Amazigh author Kateb Yacine summed up the
`
language –identity question vis-a-vis state policies: ‘Si je suis arab, pourquoi m’arabiser,
et si je ne suis pas arabe, pourquoi m’arabiser?’48
Concluding Thoughts
As historians of the Maghrib have shown, Berbers have always straddled multiple worlds;
they have been multi-lingual, multicultural, always part of the ‘Other’; and always
engaged in one form of ‘accommodation’ or another with stronger, more advanced
civilisations—from Roman to Byzantine to Islamic to modern times.49 At this point in
history, Berber/Amazigh culturalists are trying to renegotiate the terms of this accommo-
dation, with a much more explicit emphasis on the collective ‘self’, posing a significant
challenge to the established, if ever more shaky political order in the Maghrib.
´
Pierre Bourdieu once characterised the Kayblians as ‘une realisation paradigmatique de
´ ´
la tradition mediterraneenne’, having played a fundamental role in transmitting knowledge
between the eastern and western ends of the Mediterranean.50 One could take an even
broader view: ethnically, culturally and genetically, the Berbers as a whole may approxi-
mate a ‘Mediterranean’ ideal type, in the sense of the Mediterranean being more of a
‘crossroads’ of civilisation than a ‘source’.51 Coincidentally, their historic collective
weakness parallels the frailty of the Mediterranean ideal that has been floated in various
European and Mediterranean intellectual circles during the last decade.52 Perhaps in the
future, the MCB/MCA’s efforts to carve out a more explicit Amazigh-centred universe
related to the civilisations on both shores of the Mediterranean will bear fruit, and even
help breathe new life into the fragile yet compelling Mediterranean ideal. In the meantime,
in an age of accelerated globalisation and intensified identity politics, the West-centred
Berber culture movement appears to have found its voice. Regime policies, as well as
the movement’s own actions, will determine the degree of its success in the years ahead.
Notes
Ã
The author wishes to thank Paul Silverstein, Meir Litvak and Mohammed Errihani for their constructive
comments.
1. P.A. Silverstein, ‘The Kabyle Myth: The Production of Ethnicity in Colonial Algeria’, in B.K. Axel (ed.),
From the Margins: Historical Anthropology and Its Futures (Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2002)
pp.122–55.
2. The term ‘Amazigh’, meaning ‘free men’ is preferred over ‘Berber’ by increasing numbers of
Berberphones/Tamazightphones, and especially by activists. I use the terms ‘Amazigh’ and ‘Berber’
interchangeably in this article.
3. D. Merolla, ‘Digital Imagination and the “Landscapes of Group Identities”: The Flourishing of Theatre,
Video and “Amazigh Net” in the Maghrib and Berber Diaspora’, Journal of North African Studies 7/4
(2002) pp.122–131.
4. ‘MCB’ is the older term, coming more from the Algerian context. ‘MCA’ is the term preferred in
Morocco.
5. B. Maddy-Weitzman, ‘The Berber Question in Algeria: Nationalism in the Making?’, in O. Bengio and
G. Ben-Dor (eds), Minorities and the State in the Arab World (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner 1999)
12. 82 B. Maddy-Weitzman
pp.31–52; B. Maddy-Weitzman, ‘Contested Identities: Berbers, “Berberism,” and the State in North
Africa’, Journal of North African Studies 6/3 (2001) pp.23–47.
6. The Algerian and Moroccan cases differ widely, obviously, but the fact that they are both facing acute
´
challenges that stem from many common sources is also obvious. B. Stora, Algerie Maroc: Histoires
` ´
Paralleles, Destins Croises (Paris: Zellige 2002).
7. S. Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order (New York: Simon &
Schuster 1996).
8. Huntington (ibid.) defines a ‘torn country’ as having ‘a single predominant culture which places it in one
civilization but its leaders want to shift it to another civilization’ (p.138). Three requirements must be
met if a torn country is to successfully redefine its civilisational identity: ‘First, the political and econ-
omic elite of the country has to be generally supportive of and enthusiastic about this move. Second, the
public has to be at least willing to acquiesce in the redefinition of identity. Third, the dominant elements
in the host civilization, in most cases the West, have to be willing to embrace the convert’ (p.139).
9. M. Chafik, Remarks upon receipt of the Prince Claus Award, 13 December 2002, ,http://
www.mondeberbere.com/culture/chafik/indexc.htm..
10. Ibid.
11. Berber Manifesto, 2000, ,http://www.mondeberbere.com/societe/manifest.htm..
12. ´ ´
A. Asid, Remarks at the colloquium ‘L’amazighite et ses enjeux politiques actuels’, Universite Paris VIII
`
a Saint Denis, 21 October 2002.
13. ` ` ` `
M. Ait Kaki, De la question berbere au dilemme kabyle a l’aube du XXIeme siecle (Paris: L’Harmattan
2004) pp.279–94.
14. For example, in November 2001, the Friedrich Neuman Foundation, which is affiliated with Germany’s
Liberal Party, together with the Tamanyut Association sponsored two days of study on autochthonous
peoples’ rights, in Rabat. Le Monde Amazigh (16 November 2001; 30 November 2001).
15. P.A. Silverstein, ‘Martyrs and Patriots: Ethnic, National and Transnational Dimensions of Kabyle Poli-
tics’, Journal of North African Studies 8/1 (2003) pp.87–111.
16. International Crisis Group (ICG) (2003) ‘Algeria: Unrest and Impasse in Kabylia’, Middle East/North
Africa Report 15 (2003), ,http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id¼1415&l¼1..
17. M. Lazreg, The Eloquence of Silence: Algerian Women in Question (New York and London: Routledge
1994) pp.150–7.
18. F. Mehenni, ‘The Autonomy of Kabyle in Questions’, 25 May 2002, ,http://www.waac.info/
amazigh/politics/algeria/autonomy/ferhat_autonomy_in_questions.html..
19. Ibid.
20. Leqsar Platform, 2001, ,http://www.waac.info/amazigh/politics/algeria/el-kseur-platform11-6-
01eng.html.. For a critique of these demands, see ICG (note 16) pp.19–24.
21. B. Lounes, Letter to US President George Bush from Secretary-General of the World Amazigh Con-
gress, 13 September 2001, ,http://www.waac.info/amazigh/human_rights/CMA_condolences_to_
USA_eng.htmlgt.
22. H. Ait Ahmed, ‘Algeria’s Journey’, 2001, ,http://www.waac.info/amazigh/politics/algeria/
ait-ahmed_marseille19oct01eng.html..
23. For details on the differences between Ait Ahmed and Saadi, see Maddy-Weitzman, ‘The Berber
Question’ (note 5) pp.41–7; Silverstein (note 15) pp.95–8; ICG (note 16) pp.26–9.
24. Ait Ahmed (note 22).
25. For a detailed introduction of the Iraqi Kurdish community to Amazigh readers, including an interview
with a Kurdish activist, see Le Monde Amazigh 40 (2003) pp.4–5.
26. R. Kaplan, ‘Democracy in Algeria: Singer-Activist Ferhat Mehenni’s Campaign for Liberal Self-
government’, Weekly Standard 8/39 (2003).
27. Final Declaration of the Second World Amazigh Congress, 9 August 2000, ,http://geo.ya.com/errif/
contact/documents/manifeste.html..
28. The critique of ‘Jacobinism’ focuses on its emphasis on the centralization and pre-eminence of the state,
¨
and the homogenization of society. The French state’s laıque character, on the other hand, is widely
preferred by Berberists. Thanks to Paul Silverstein for clarifying this point to me.
29. Interview with Mehenni, Racines-Izuran 26 (2002).
30. `
‘Les droits linguistiques et culturels des Berberes de France’, Rapport du Congres mondial amazigh au
´
Comite pour les droits economiques sociaux et cultureles, Nations Unies, Conseil Economique et Social,
27th session, Geneva, 12 –30 November 2001, pp.5–6.
13. The Berber Culture Movement 83
´
31. S. Chaker, ‘Preface’, in Karina Direche-Slimani, Histoire de l’emigration en France au Kabyle en XXe
`
siecle (Paris: L’Harmattan 1997) pp.1–3.
32. M. Loualid, ‘Return O My Son’, quoted in A. Almasude, ‘Protest Music and Poetry in the Rif’, Race
Gender & Class 8/3 (2001) p.130.
33. Almasude (note 32).
34. Ibid. pp.128–9.
35. ‘New’ and ‘young’ do not necessarily mean liberal either. In an eye-opening account of challenges to
prevailing conservative social norms in a Kabylian village, subtitled ‘Dancing Toward La Mixite’, ´
Jane Goodman (‘Berber Associations and Cultural Change in Algeria’, Middle East Report 200
[1996] pp.16–19) refers to the existence of a ‘reverse generation gap’, in which some Kabylian
teenage males differ with their older brothers regarding the proprieties and freedoms of young unmarried
women, the younger group being more conservative in attitudes.
36. Le Monde Amazigh 29 –30 (2002), 31, 32, 33, 34, 39 (2003) (the last mentioned contains the report of the
imam’s remonstration of his congregants for using Tamazight).
37. Interviews with AMREC members, Rabat, October 2003.
38. Le Monde Amazigh 29 –30 (2002).
39. See note 11.
40. L. Walna’am, Al-Khitab al-Islamawi wal-Khat al-Ansab Likitabat al-Amazighiyya, Le Monde Amazigh
29 (2002) p.4.
41. M. Demnati, ‘Royal Amazigh Institute: Worries for Imazighen’, Amazigh Voice 10/3– 4 (2002) p.14.
42. B. Anghir, ‘Dawr Hizb al-‘Adala wal-Tanmiyya fi Ta‘til al-Tanmiyya wa Munahadat al-‘Adala’, Le
Monde Amazigh 32 (2003) p.27. For background on the issue, see B. Maddy-Weitzman, ‘Morocco’,
Middle East Contemporary Survey 24 (2000) pp.427– 30.
43. Le Monde Amazigh 29 –30 (2002).
44. H. Larbi, ‘Which Script for Tamazight, Whose Choice Is It?’, Amazigh Voice 12/2 (2003) pp.3–8. Also
based on interviews with Amazigh scholars and activists, Rabat, October 2003.
¨
45. H. Gafaıti, ‘The Monotheism of the Other: Language and De/construction of National Identity in Post-
colonial Algeria’, in A.-E. Berger (ed.), Algeria in Other’s Languages (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University
Press 2002) pp.31–2. In making this point, the author cites M. Willis, Islamist Challenge in Algeria: A
Political History (New York: New York University Press 1997) pp.51–2.
46. E. Gellner, ‘Introduction’, in E. Gellner and C. Micaud (eds), Arabs and Berbers: From Tribe to Nation
in North Africa (Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath 1972) p.9.
47. M. Litvak, ‘Algeria’, Middle East Contemporary Survey 20 (1996) p.232.
´ ´
48. ‘La Question amazighe en Algerie’, Rapport du Congres mondial amazigh au Comite pour les droits
´ ´
economiques sociaux et culturels, Nations Unies Conseil Economique et Social, 27th session,
Geneva, 12–30 November 2001, p.5.
49. M. Brett and E. Fentress, The Berbers (Oxford: Blackwell 1996); M. Shatzmiller, The Berbers and the
Islamic State: The Marinid Experience in Pre-Protectorate Morocco (Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener
2000).
´
50. Quoted in Kabylie, L’autonome en Debat (Paris: Seminaire D’Erancourt 2002) p.72.
51. P.A. Silverstein, ‘France’s Mare Nostrum: Colonial and Post-colonial Constructions of the French
Mediterranean’, Journal of North African Studies 7/4 (2002) pp.1–22.
´ ´ ´ ´ ´ ´ ´ ´
52. P. Balta (ed.), La Mediterranee reinventee: Realites et espoirs de la cooperation (Paris: Editions La
´ ´
Decouverte/Fondation Rene Seydoux 1992); W. Freund (ed.), L’emergence d’une nouvelle culture med- ´
´
iterraneenne [The emergence of a new Mediterranean culture] (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, Europaischer
Verlag der Wissenchaften, 2000).