Changing minds requires continuous conversations and a long chain of actions versus sporadic acts of charity. It's a diligent process that needs to focus on dignity, independence and inclusion versus dependence and exclusion.
The experience of Obama's Cairo speech was interesting. The content, I expected. He's an eloquent, intelligent, charming storyteller with sincere passion and values. I truly believe he's a good man. He's also got some amazing people around him as part of his communication team - among which are some great strategists and outstanding writers. Very admirable.
So what of Obama, Muslims, the Arab world, etc?
I really can't understand how we got here actually. How did the Arabs decide that they want to be a castrated race when it comes to their own issues? When did we agree that to be so pathetic and helpless is what we need to be? Where in history is the day we planned to become such dependent beggars? How do our own leaders keep getting away with spewing anesthesia in their public rhetoric?
I watched Obama's speech twice. Once to hear what he said, and the second to amuse myself at the reaction of the audience in that room. Hilarious! Waiting to applaud this serious, hard working man, who came very well prepared. Every time he mentioned a reference to the Quran - applause... cheering at his phrases of sensible thinking and an attitude of compassion.
While Obama used the theme 'a new beginning', I wonder when we, the Arab people want our new beginning to start. When will our leaders work for change rather than pitch for charity? When will we, the people, garner the confidence in ourselves and find our own common ground? When are we planning to start working?
That work needs to happen on this end of the world. We need to get our act together to fix negative stereotypes against Islam. We need to invest in economic empowerment of our own. We need a shakedown on education towards the rise of learning and enlightenment. The man came, he spoke, he conquered hearts and minds. It's now up to the Arabs... leaders, people in the region and beyond, to rise to the occasion. Rather than follow suit of what some are already doing by dismissing Obama's words, dissecting through conspiracy theories and paranoia, and being skeptical about what may be, it's time to shift into progress mode, change our own attitude. Time to do, time to deliver. Oh, PS: Obama is not the mahdi!
متى سينهض العالم العربي بنفسه؟
a small medium @large
6/05/2009
Another blog on Obama's Cairo speech
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4 comments:
Nice observations. I personally think we are lucky to have this man at this time. I happened to be in the USA at the time of the election and all the time I was thinking whether the American people were actually up to the challenge, of overcoming their historical prejudices and stereotypes to seize upon the opportunity of putting into power such a man. It was a beautiful moment on election night. Hard to describe, really. Not everybody accepted it so easily. Many were stunned but there was an acceptance that suddenly the USA was not the same place. A barrier had been crossed. He is not some kind of messiah, I know, but it is amazing to realize that every leader does not have to be dictatorial or corrupt or dismissive of human rights. The system can promote good people to power if the people care enough to make changes.
I wish with all my heart that the people of the Islamic world also can have this opportunity.
Obama is not the Mahdi!! LOOOOOOOOOOOOL
Your questions made me sad, it's not about obama..it never was,no matter what he wants to do,or what he can and can't do!
I think I've been in here before,but I came in now browsing for second life related to amman pages, and I thought I'm the only jordanian with experience in virtual worlds!
maybe sometime I'll tell you about my crazy vast virtual experiences.
Hello Led Zeppelin. You're right, it's not about Obama, at all!
We need to figure out ways to create a whole new kind of rhetoric for ourselves, and build systems that deliver on that... away from what now exists so that we make real progress on several political and socio-economic fronts.
Would love to exchange stories on virtual experiences sometime :)
I believe second life to be an incredibly useful and powerful tool to through which such an parallel system can be created, tested, nurtured. Have u seen what Dancing Ink do in SL?
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