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Egypt’s radicals eliminating country’s connection to West, but does anyone care?
By Guy Bechor
It was barely mentioned in the Israeli and global
media, but the following event pertains to the whole of Western civilization:
Last Saturday, violent groups of Islamic-Salafi radicals burned the famous
scientific institute established by Napoleon in Egypt after its first encounter
with the West. Some historians consider it the start of modern times in the
Middle East.
The site, L’Institut d’Egypte, held some 200,000
original and rare books, exhibits, maps, archeological findings and studies
from Egypt and the entire Middle East, based on the work of generations of
western researchers. Most of the artifacts were lost forever, burned or looted.
It’s difficult to understand the modern Middle East
without these studies, which were overcome by an immense fire. The large
building was situated in the center of Cairo and torching it was a symbolic,
intentional act. Those who burned the building and its artifacts meant to burn
the era of logic, enlightenment, research and individualism.
This was a grave provocation against the whole of
Western civilization, a desire to disconnect from science, research and
modernity, while cynically using a Western means – that is, democracy – in
order to take power.
One need not go all the way to blowing up the
pyramids, as some of Egypt’s Salafis wish to do after they seized some 35% of
the new parliament seats (alongside 40% of the Islamic brotherhood,) and there
is no reason to go as far as Afghanistan, where the Taliban blew up the huge
Buddha statues. The elimination of Egypt’s non-Muslim past is already here.
Anything that dates back to the Pharaohs, that is
ancient, or that is Western is destined to be destroyed, and the mission has
already been launched in the most symbolic manner: The outset of Egypt’s modern
era, which the Salafis seek to erase, and in fact rewrite. This is a battle for
writing the history of Egypt and of the Arab and Muslim world.
UNESCO’s silence
This isn’t a new phenomenon, and in Jerusalem as well
we see elements associated with political Islam trying to erase any presence of
the 3,000-year Jewish existence there, on Temple Mount for example – existence
that pre-dated Islam.
In 1258, the Mongols burned the immense library in
Baghdad known as the “House of Wisdom.” It held rare writings that have
disappeared forever, Plato, Aristotle, Pythagoras, and the other cornerstones
of Western civilization. All we know today is that these books existed, yet
following the terrible fire in Baghdad they were burned forever. The Mongols
sought to secure the same objective as Egypt’s Salafis: Erasing the past and
keeping only their present.
All of this is happening while the confused West is
lauding the new democracy established in Egypt, without understanding that this
democracy is erasing the historic Egypt that was intimately connected to the
West and its culture; a new Egypt shall rise on the ruins of the great fire.
What we are seeing here is not a battle for power, but rather, a battle for
perception, memory, heritage and historiography; that is, the writing of
history.
Oddly, this is happening in Egypt of all places, a
state that always demanded the return of the archeological findings taken from
it as part of its national ethos. Artifacts of the era of the Pharaohs are
still held in London and in Paris, yet Israel already returned all the archeological
findings it discovered in the Sinai. Now, it is doubtful whether Egypt would be
able to safeguard its own museums, which are also facing the threat of fire and
looting.
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