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Review : Obituary
Obituary: Naguib Mahfouz, novelist of Egypt and humanity
By Sandy English
15 December 2006
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There are many kinds of heroes in ancient Arabic literature,
all of them horsemen, knights. But a hero today would for me be
one who adheres to a certain set of principles and stands by them
in the face of oppositionNaguib Mahfouz, Paris
Review interview
On August 30, the world lost one of its most profound artists,
the Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz, who died at the age of 94.
Mahfouz demonstrated that in our time a writers immersion
in the historical and social issues of his own time could give
rise to an art of more universal human meaning, transcending national
limitations and perhaps even epochs.
Naguib Mahfouz was the son of a civil servant, born in 1911
in an Egypt dominated by British imperialism, during the last
stage of the colonial division of Asia and Africa by the European
Great Powers.
The young Mahfouz imbibed a spirit of social discontent. In
1919 the first Arab Nationalist movement came into prominence;
the Wafd (Arabic: delegation) gained a majority in
the Legislative Assembly, which had been formed by the British
suzerain Lord Kitchener in 1913. The British refused to recognize
the party, which demanded autonomy, and a widespread popular uprising
occurred in Egypt, the first of many attempts in the Arab world
throughout the twentieth century to resolve the problem of foreign
domination.
The revolution had a profound impact on the seven-year-old
Mahfouz. From the window of his house in al-Abbasiya, a newly
built Cairo suburb, he saw British soldiers shooting at demonstrators.
He later said, You could say that the one thing which most
shook the security of my childhood was the 1919 revolution.
As a boy he read a good deal. His mother took him to museums of
ancient Egyptian history, which were later to figure so centrally
in his work.
He became a civil servant in 1936 (a job that he would hold
until 1972) and began writing short stories. His first published
work was a translation of James Baikies history of ancient
Egypt. He worked as a journalist for Al-Ahram and other
newspapers and decided to be a creative writer at about this time.
In the preceding decade, Egypt had felt a fresh cultural breeze
as writers such as Taha Hussein, known as the first Arab novelist,
helped form circles of artists devoted to secular ideas. A major
goal of Husseins group, which included the young Mahfouz,
was the creation an Egyptian national identity that stretched
back to Pharaonic times. Another influence on Mahfouz was Salama
Musa, the Egyptian intellectual and Fabian socialist, who championed
the fight against class oppression and the uplifting values of
a scientific world outlook.
Mahfouzs first novels, published during the Second World
War, were set in the Egypt of the Pharaohs. But after the war
a hope for social change was in the political atmosphere, and
Mahfouz began writing about contemporary themes and produced his
powerful Midaq Alley (1947).
The characters of Midaq Alley, neighbors on one street,
constitute a microcosm of popular life in Cairo during the war.
One character, Hamida, is a working-class woman who envies the
freedom of the factory girls and seeks to imitate them. A boyfriend
is madly in love with her, but the free-spending British soldiers
also tempt her. Mahfouz is unrelentingly honest in his depiction
of peoples hopes amidst hashish smoking, licit and illicit
love, and politics!
The reader gets a feeling for the aspirations of Egyptians
and the way that so many things in official and traditional life
thwart them. There is a dynamic relationship between the sexes,
partly conditioned by the growing self-esteem of women: She
refused to submit passively to her ill fortune ... Individual
characters, one senses, reflect the social and emotional gestures
of millions.
A number of social and artistic forces were at work after the
war. One critic has remarked that the great creative wave of European
literature from 1910 to 1935 only began to reach Egypt in the
postwar period, and that the literary air was filled with such
new ideas as surrealism, the social novel and new poetic forms
[1].
Mass social movements of a left-wing character began to emerge
in Egypt, as in many oppressed nations, in the postwar period.
The regime of King Farouk was hated and corrupt and soon lost
prestige completely with its military debacle in Palestine in
1948. The Wafd, for its part, had collaborated with the British
during the war and had long since lost the allegiance of the working
class.
In 1946 there were large demonstrations of workers in Cairo
led by left-wing groups. British soldiers fired into the crowds,
and thousands were imprisoned.
But the Stalinists of the official Communist movement and its
front groups refused to fight for the independent mobilization
of the working class. Instead, they adhered to the two-stage
theory of revolution: a bourgeois-democratic revolution today
and a socialist revolution sometime in the future, though actually,
never.
The Egyptian Stalinists put the foreign policy needs of the
Soviet bureaucracy ahead of a common struggle against imperialism
by the workers of the region. In 1948 they upheld the establishment
of the Zionist state in Palestine.
But at the time, the future trajectory of the Egyptian society
was not predestined. Millions of the Egyptian oppressed wanted
a social overturn, and there was an intense focus by artists and
intellectuals on the potential for social change from ordinary
people.
An anticipation of freedom, democracy and genuine national
independence caused an artistic ferment among Egyptian writers.
The first fruit of this had been Midaq Alley, but Mahfouz
was able to give an even more penetrating view of the lives of
the lower middle class through his famous Cairo Trilogy, Palace
Walk, Palace of Desire and Sugar Street.
The Cairo Trilogy takes place in the period from 1917 to 1944.
It relates the fortunes of three generations of the al-Jawad family
as their most personal desires are molded by the social development
of Egypt, especially the struggle to free the country from British
imperialism. Other aspects of social life are meticulously interwoven,
including the changing status of women and the arrival of an urban
working-class on the scene in a largely pre-capitalist economy.
On the one hand, the sons of the patriarch, al-Sayyid Ahmad,
are pulled back and forth by the development of science, by Marxism,
and on the other, by the sanctity of religion and tradition, including
the rising fundamentalism of the Muslim Brotherhood. Ideas destined
to play a crucial role in the future of Egypt figure in the daily
lives of the characters.
These novels are subversive. There is a yearning in everyone
for something different, even when it is suppressed in the most
obedient and passive characters. Mahfouz accurately depicts the
impact of social life on the feelings, consciousness and behavior
of his characters. He shows how contradictory and uneven it is.
But Mahfouzs genius can show us the interrelations of the
historical activity of human beings and their most private desires.
Mahfouzs view of love especially strikes one as a historically
conditioned complex of feelings.
It has been pointed out that the Cairo Trilogy deals with universal
themes such as authority within the family and society, and it
is true that one learns a good deal about authority. But this
accomplishment results from Mahfouzs expert portrait of
the concrete social-historical underpinnings of authority. It
is not abstract.
Again in 1951 workers led by various left-wing groups staged
strikes and demonstrations. But the development of a revolutionary
situation was suffocated by the coup of the Free Officers
Movement in July 1952, led by Gamel Abdul Nasser.
The Stalinists again played a disorienting role. They already
had a record of support for the Wafd in 1928 and, initially, had
no problem supporting Nasser, until he illegalized the party.
Eventually, the Stalinists liquidated themselves into Nassers
Arab Socialist Union in 1965.
Mahfouz, like many Egyptians, at first welcomed Nasser; his
Free Officers Movement spoke in the name of socialism as well
as nationalism, and challenged the British and French over control
of the Suez Canal. But disillusionment set in when the dictatorial
nature of the regime became clear. Mahfouz looked to religion,
although he never embraced it as a world-view or abandoned his
democratic views.
Within the conditions of censorship imposed by Nasser and his
inheritors, Anwar Sadat, and Hosni Mubarak, Mahfouz continued
to write discordant books. In 1959 he published Children of
Gebelawi, serialized in Al-Ahram, which turned Biblical
and Koranic figures such as Adam, Jesus and Mohammed into historical
human beings. This was an effort to compromise religion and secularism.
The government banned it. Islamic fundamentalists never forgave
Mahfouz. Two fundamentalists stabbed him in the neck in 1994.
He survived but was incapacitated for the rest of his life.
The novella The Day the Leader Was Killed (1985) is
an indictment of the regime of Anwar Sadat (assassinated by Islamists
in 1981), particularly his economic policies. The narrator, shedding
light on life in Egypt at this period, says of the Sadat character:
his victory constituted a challenge which gave rise to new
feelings, emotions for which we were quite unprepared. The
book points to the exhaustion of the older generation and the
confusion of the younger generation.
Mahfouz found it difficult to come to a new analysis of Egyptian
life after the 1950s. He continued to write on contemporary themes,
but also returned to ancient settings. A feeling for the great
panorama of life in which history shapes peoples innermost
selves seems to have slipped away from his grasp.
Mahfouz still wrote with a social consciousness and was able
to see many truths about Egyptian life. Miramar (1967),
a novella about a grand hotel of colonial times in Alexandria
that has become a rooming house, is a successful, though somewhat
grim, work.
There is also something that stimulates the imagination in
The Journey of Ibn Fatouma (1983), set in the Caliphate
period of Arab history, about a merchant who travels, like Gulliver,
to several other societies, searching for the best conditions
of life, but finding them all unsatisfactory.
Mahfouz has been accused of being a censor when he worked for
the Egyptian state film industry. He also censoredand justified
censoringhis own work. He was widely criticized, with justification,
for supporting the 1978 Camp David Accords. Still, an element
of discontent and subversion remained in his fiction to the end
of his life.
The complex history of the postwar ex-colonial world was disorienting
for many writers and intellectuals in the Arab world and elsewhere.
Stalinism and bourgeois nationalism were incapable of attending
to the needs of ordinary people for national liberation and social
equality. After all was said and done, these movements accommodated
themselves to imperialism. The people of the Middle East have
passed through a bitter and often tragic period as a result. This
made it difficult for Mahfouz and many other Egyptian writers
to move beyond the confines of nationalism.
It is probably no accident that Naguib Mahfouz produced his
best work in the freshest, most hopeful moment of mass struggle
against colonialism as it was becoming genuinely popular and increasingly
socialist-minded.
Note:
1. Jabra Jabra, Modern
Arabic Literature and the West in Boullata, Issa J.
(ed.). Critical Perspectives on Modern Arabic Literature,
Three Continents Press, 1980.
See Also:
Pramoedya Ananta Toer, novelist
of the colonial oppressed, dead at 81
[5 May 2006]
The US war drive and
the destabilisation of Egypt
[8 November 2001]
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