Egyptian Feminist, Playwright and Activist Nawal El Saadawi
Defies Threats to Speak Out for
Women's Rights, Democracy in Egypt
www.DemocracyNow.org, Wednesday,
April 11th, 2007
Renowned feminist, psychologist and writer,
Nawal El Saadawi joins us in our firehouse studio to discuss Egypt's
recent constitutional amendments, the Muslim Brotherhood and she
is facing a political and religious campaign mounted against her
by the authorities at Al Azhar.
In Egypt, voter turnout for a controversial
referendum on amendments to the country's constitution was just
five percent, according to human rights groups - far lower than
the 27 percent reported by the government. Last month's vote was
boycotted by opposition groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood.
While the Egyptian government billed the
amendment package as a democratic reform, the changes are widely
seen as securing President Hosni Mubarak's hold on power. The
amendments add powers to the Constitution that would allow the
president to more easily dissolve Parliament and give him free
reign to suspend civil liberties and imprison anyone deemed a
terrorism threat. The changes also ban political activity based
on religion and water down judicial supervision of elections.
Amnesty International described the amendments as "the greatest
erosion of human rights in 26 years."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was
in Egypt meeting with President Mubarak a day before the referendum.
Rice was not highly critical of the changes. She said, "The
process of reform is one that is difficult. It's going to have
its ups and downs." Egypt receives just under two billion
dollars a year in aid from the United States.
Joining us today in one of Egypt's most
renowned human rights activists. Nawal El Saadawi is a well-known
feminist, psychologist and writer. A former political prisoner
in Egypt, she lived in exile for years due to numerous death threats
made by several organizations. Nawal El Saadawi joins us in the
firehouse studio.
Nawal El Saadawi, renowned human rights
activist, feminist, psychologist and writer.
AMY GOODMAN: In Egypt, voter turnout for
a controversial referendum on amendments to Egypt's constitution
was just 5%, according to human rights groups, far lower than
the 27% reported by the government. Last month's vote was boycotted
by opposition groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood.
While the Egyptian government billed the
amendment package as a democratic reform, the changes are widely
seen as securing President Hosni Mubarak's hold on power. The
amendments add powers to the Constitution that would allow the
president to more easily dissolve Parliament and give him free
reign to suspend civil liberties and imprison anyone deemed a
terrorist threat. The changes also ban political activity based
on religion and water down judicial supervision of elections.
Amnesty International described the amendments as "the greatest
erosion of human rights in 26 years."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was
in Egypt meeting with President Mubarak a day before the referendum.
Rice was not highly critical of the changes. She said, "The
process of reform is one that is difficult. It's going to have
its ups and downs." Egypt receives just under two billion
dollars a year in aid from the United States.
Joining us today is one of Egypt's most
renowned human rights activists, Nawal El Saadawi, well-known
feminist, psychologist, writer, former political prisoner in Egypt.
She lived in exile for years due to numerous death threats made
by several organizations. Nawal El Saadawi joins us in our firehouse
studio. Welcome to Democracy Now! It's wonderful to have you with
us.
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Thank you.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you start off by talking
about this referendum that took place? What's its significance?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Well, it is going back
to dictatorship under democracy, and that's exactly what is happening
globally, not only in Egypt. So Mubarak is just imitating what
George Bush is doing: more dictatorship under democracy -- deception.
AMY GOODMAN: What about the human rights
groups saying 5% of the people came out, the government saying
something like 27% of the people came out to vote?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: They're lying, you know.
People in Egypt are 50% under the poverty line -- 50% under the
poverty line -- because of globalization and neocolonialism. So
people, in fact, are not in politics. They just look and laugh,
and, you know, the Ministry of Interior, they put figures -- 27%,
50%, 99.9%.
AMY GOODMAN: How would you describe the
president, Hosni Mubarak?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Well, he's following
in Sadat policy -- following the Sadat policy, and Egypt became
an American colony. Going back to dictatorship under democracy,
to poverty, underdevelopment, you know, everything is upside-reversed.
It's publicity, the media, but when you go there, you find unemployment
increasing, poverty increasing, women oppression increasing, veiling
of women increasing, fanaticism, religious fanaticism. And Condoleezza
Rice comes and goes to Egypt and say, "OK, OK," you
know, or sometimes some criticism, you know, paving -- paving
the ground for more dictatorship and more poverty and more neocolonialism.
AMY GOODMAN: You are facing threats right
now, a political and religious campaign mounted against you by
the authorities of Al-Azhar. Can you explain who they are and
explain the play that has generated this controversy?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: You know, Al-Azhar,
my father graduated from Al-Azhar as an Islamic scholar, and he
was against the education, the Islamic education, in Al-Azhar.
He was critical because they were teaching Islam in a very backward
way.
AMY GOODMAN: Al-Azhar is the most famous
Islamic university.
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: The Azhar University,
it is the highest Islamic institution in Egypt, in the Islamic
world, like the Vatican to the Christians. And, in fact, they
spoiled Islam. They educated people Islam in a very distorted
way.
And my father graduated and then started
to rebel against Al-Azhar. And they collaborated with the British
colonialism. While we were students fighting against the British
and against the king, they were collaborating with us -- with
the British and with the king. So their history is black.
And they fight any intellectual, any writer
that is a bit critical. And, you know, what I did in my play --
my play, the title is God Resigns at the Summit Meeting. And it
is, in fact, the conflict between two conceptions of God. My grandmother,
who came from the village -- illiterate woman -- she told me when
I was young, "God is justice, and we know him by our brain.
God is not a book." God is not scripture that people differ
in interpretation and then kill each other, like Sunni and Shia
in Iraq and Christians and Muslims, etc. So I understood Islam
in a very, very, you know, liberal way, that God is justice. We
fight for justice. If we fight for justice, we are more religious
than those who go to pray. So Al-Azhar didn't like my play, because
it's against the education of Azhar in the university, and they
don't want people to understand that God is just justice. They
want only the scripture, you know, the Koran, the book, the Bible.
AMY GOODMAN: Nawal El Saadawi, you are
leading a campaign for children to be able to take their mother's
names. Explain the context of this and why.
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: You know, in fact, it's
my daughter who's a writer and a poet. Her name is Mona Helmi.
And she is a columnist in a weekly magazine in Cairo called Rose
El-Youssef. On Mother's Day, she said, "What am I going to
give my mother, a present? A shoe or a dress? So my present to
my mother is to carry her name." So her name will be Mona
Nawal Helmi.
And she said this will solve the problem
of two million illegitimate children in Egypt. You know, in Egypt,
according to the law and according to Islamic law and to the legal
law, if a child has no father, he carries the name of the mother,
but he is considered illegitimate with no human rights. But if
we give back the owner to the mother and the child can have the
name of the mother, then he can have human rights, and we can
really omit the word "illegitimate" from our law.
So the country was divided: 50% with her
and 50% against her. And some Islamic scholars were against her.
But, of course, Al-Azhar and the traditional Islamic institutions
and the political institution were against that.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the recent
visit of, really, the number two man in the US Congress in the
House, Steny Hoyer -- Nancy Pelosi, the House Speaker's right-hand
man -- meeting with the head of the Muslim Brotherhood, apparently
at the home of the US ambassador to Egypt? The significance of
this? The US congress member meeting with the head of the Muslim
Brotherhood at the home of the US ambassador in Egypt, Cairo.
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Yes. Well, the history
-- if we go back to the history of the Muslim Brothers in Egypt,
they were supported by the British colonialism, and they negotiate
with the American neocolonialism. You know, we know their history.
You know, we know the history of the Muslim Brothers. And they
work for power, for power, at any expense. And they can -- since
they collaborated with the British, why not -- with the British
colonialism, why not collaborating with the American neocolonialism?
AMY GOODMAN: They are currently banned
in Egypt?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Well, sometimes banned.
I can say semi-banned.
AMY GOODMAN: Though tolerated?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Semi-banned, tolerated.
Like, you know, usually I say George Bush and bin Laden are twins,
you know. The Muslim Brothers and neocolonialism are twins, like
George Bush and bin Laden.
AMY GOODMAN: And what role do they play
in Egypt? And what kind of repression do they face?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Well, they use Islam.
Under the name of Islam, under the name of God, they can do anything
-- you know? -- deceive people; do some services, superficial
services, to people in order to brainwash them, you know; create
a conflict between Christians and Muslims; veil women. So women,
instead of being really fighters against political oppression,
they veil their heads. So it's a lot of deception under the name
of religion, which is very dangerous, because the veil of the
mind is very serious in Egypt now, veiling the mind of women and
men by the Muslim Brothers.
AMY GOODMAN: What do you think it's most
important for Americans to understand? What is most important
for Americans to understand about Egypt today?
NAWAL EL SAADAWI: Well, they should know
it's useless: they cannot colonize Egypt. They cannot, economically
or politically. And even Iraq. America, US government, in a mess
in Iraq now, even more than Vietnam. So they should know that
it is impossible to invade a country against the will of the people,
even if the people are not organized.
The problem of Egyptians, they are not
organized. We are prevented from political organization. Our association,
which was a women's association, was banned by the Egyptian government
in 1991, because we stood against the Gulf War of George Bush,
the senior, the father.
So, in fact, the US should know -- I mean
the US government, not the people, because I like the American
people, like you, fighting with us. So, the US government, George
Bush administration, should know it's useless. They have to come
out of Iraq [inaudible]. They have to come out of Egypt politically
and economically, because the people will win.
AMY GOODMAN: Nawal El Saadawi, too little
time, but thank you so much for being with us, renowned Egyptian
feminist, human rights activist, writer, former political prisoner
and presidential candidate.
Amy
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