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Page 24 text:
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it will end up in hatred and frustration, but if we teach the youth to do the work themselves we shall gain their confidence and help them reform their countries” ' ’ 0 V Conclusion In conclusion, a few general observations can be made. The cold war which seems to have become a chronic part of our everyday life has, in recent months, particularly in the Korean area, shown some sign of abatement. However, neither side has made any positive, sincere attempt to bring it to and end. As part of a general overall attempt to iron out world diffi¬ culties, which would, directly or indirectly, ease tensions in the Middle East, a Big Four confer¬ ence of the leaders of the various states is neces¬ sary. That the American State department, fear¬ ing the cry of “appeasement” and “softness to communism” from certain quarters, should con¬ tinue to deny this possibility, is a great tragedy. Mr. Churchill’s proposal of last spring remains a dead letter. The results of such a conference defy prophecy, they might be small, but we have little to lose and much to gain in this type of approach. Even to take the initiative, if it is sincere and genuine, and meet with refusal from Russia, it would serve to indicate to the people of the world the peaceful intentions of the West. If a peaceful solution to our differ¬ ences ■ could be worked out it would mean a great deal to the Middle East, for in this area peace is a prime necessity for a development program. It need hardly be pointed out that up to this time the record of the West in the Middle East is scarcely an enviable one. On the whole, it is a record of conquest, broken promises, expedi¬ ency, and exploitation. The time has come for a revolutionary change in our approach. As Mr. Dulles has pointed out, “The day is past when their aspirations can be ignored”. 00 Since the war ended, the Western nations have con¬ sistently underestimated the power of national¬ ism ' in underdeveloped areas. We must not allow the fiasco of China to be re-enacted in another area of critical international concern. Nationalism and the drive for independence can no longer be stemmed by piecemeal agree- 13. Dodge, B .—Western Education in the Middle East. Pro¬ ceedings of the American Academy of Political Science, Vol. xxiv, No. 4, January 1952, page 53. ments which will only be broken when the next stage is reached. The fact is that as long as the misery of the people produces a smouldering unrest, unprincipled politicians have full sup¬ port for any number of new demands. Ultimate independence, peace between Arabs and Jews, and internal improvements is the final answer. If we fail to place ourselves on the side of popular movements in these countries and con¬ tinue to support our reactionary allies in the Middle East, allies whose policy is “oil diplo¬ macy,” de can prepare ourselves for the next stage of education through salamity. Most of the suggestions of help that we in the West can give to the countries of the Middle East is in the form of economic aid to satisfy the material needs of those countries. To be sure this type of aid is fundamental, but we must not make the mistake of believing that the answer to communist materialism is another form of materialism. We must make democracy in the West something more than the tmpty phrase that it often appeals to people of foreign countries when they see that McCarthy’s con¬ ducting investigations into the lives of everyone, from former presidents and university pro¬ fessors to Sunday school teachers. The West should carefully consider the well-known Bibli¬ cal admonition, “Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not see the log that is in your own”? Let us make clear the spiritual values of liberty, equality and fraternity before we try to foist them upon peoples of lesser political experience. Unless a new enlightened policy, based on liberal principles, is adopted in our approach to the problems of the Middle East, the area which gave birth to Western civilization may well be¬ come its graveyard. (£)’Nnll Sc iimttn GUILD OPTICIANS Serving the Eye Physician and his patients 427 Graham Avenue Near The Bay Winnipeg Phone 92-6932 22
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value of the Middle East. This will be difficult, particularly with the Arab, who “blames the United Nations for his plight, feeling that its intervention prevented the realization of his hopes for an independent Palestine. He blames the British for allowing Jewish strength to grow prior to May 15, 1948, and for allegedly prevent¬ ing the Arab Legion from following up its vic¬ tories over the armies of Israel. He bitterly blames the United States for its support of Israel”. (8) Neither British nor the United States are treated without suspicion in the Middle East and in fact the United States has succeeded in five years in doing what took Britain thirty years, namely, to antagonize the Middle East¬ erners. Though the proble mseems almost impossible, the West must not despair. “Israel has made no secret of its desire and need for peace. The Arab world needs it just as urgently, and Western security is tied up in it inextricably”. (0 Leader¬ ship in producing a peace settlement must be taken by the Big Powers, who up to the present have made no sustained, positive and construc¬ tive attempt to decrease Arab-Israel tensions, let alone promote a peace settlement. But this leadership must be exerted through the too often forgotten agency of the United Nations. We must return to the position of President Truman, when in a 6peech on April 16, 1946, he said: “No country, great or small, has legitimate interest in the Near East which cannot be recon¬ ciled with the interests of other nations through the United Nations” 10 ’ Only through greater emphasis on the United Nations can the stigma of imperialism be removed from benevolent attempts by the West to aid in the development of the Middle Eastern area into stable nations which can aid in the cause of maintaining peace throughout the world. If at the same time as the United Nations is taking leadership in initiating peace negotia¬ tions, a carefully planned program of economic development is begun, a sound basis for sane nationalism in the Middle East can be laid. We in Egypt. “Decency and selflessness, vigorous 8. Richardson, C. B.— The Refugee Problem. Proceedings of the American Academy of Political Science, Vol. xxiv, No. 4, January 1952. 9. Ibid.— Nation, page 344. 10. Quoted by Black, C. E.— Old Problems in New Hands. Current History, Vol. 21, No. 119, July 1951, page 29. 11. Issawi, C.— Prospects of Economic Development in the Middle East. Procedings of the American Academy of Political Science, page 29, January 1952. 12. Ibid. Stevenson, A. E., page 39. must keep clearly in mind that at present “the greater part of the land belongs to absentee landlords who let it out on short leases, which deprives the share-croppers of any incentive to introduce improvements” 11 ’ Leaders of the Middle Eastern nations must follow on their own initiative or on urging from United Nations technical advisors, the example set by Neguib land reforms, relentless attacks on corruption, economic control measures, political house clean¬ ing and social improvement have won Neguib widespread public support and given Egypt a new sense of national pride, purpose and hope” 12 ’ A program of this nature is most neces¬ sary to fill the vacuum that will be left after the Middle East is rid of foreign encroachments. Iran provides a good contrast to Egypt, for as someone has observed acutely “Mossadeq failed because he succeeded”. He came to power on the swell of a great wave of nationalism, gained national control for Iranian oil, but today finds himself on trial for his life. He lost public sup¬ port because nationalization of oil did not pro¬ duce the expected result and he failed to turn nationalistic ferver into constructive channels, such as the much-needed land reforms. Accompanying land reform irrigation is neces¬ sary, for the limiting factor in the Middle East is not land but water. Through planned irriga¬ tion developments, much of the land, now un¬ productive, can be fertile, making the refugee re-settlement problem considerably less difficult, as well as greatly raising the standard of living in many of the countries. Up to the present foreign influence in the Middle East has more often than not been exercised to block neces¬ sary reform and hold up progress, and more im¬ portant has provided an irritant that has detract¬ ed from the basic social and economic problems. By a greater emphasis on the United Nations, and a willingness on the part of the West to spend money for constructive social ends, rather than destructive military ones, reactionary policies can be reversed. Much of the initiative in such a combined pro¬ gram of peace negotiations and economic de¬ velopment must rest with the United Nations. However, the final responsibility must rest with the Middle Eastern people, for as a former pre¬ sident of the American University at Beirut points out “If we try to reform the Middle East by coercing members of the older generation, 21
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Poems by Carle Brothers Winnipeg, After a Hoar Frost Slowly and stealthily the Artificer came As the solemn city slept; Unaware of the Visitor who crept Upon them. I gaze from my window and meet Dawn, ghostly and grey Which has chased away The ebony. Blankets of crystals before me lie On roofs, and each motionless tree In utter tranquility And peace Is garbed in an octopus robe of white Silent Artificer of the frost-bitten night! The sun shines and stands on the horizon It shines’ Now the star-spangled city sparkles and dances Every roof, street, park and steeple, To whom the Artificer spoke, glimmers; While each dome on United College stands Like a gleaming, glistening pyramid On a desert’s burning sands. Dusk The sun has set in his scarlet bed, Dust mingles with the mist overhead, Dusk has rendered gray the blue, The rustic road has a dappled hue. In the oak tree an owling owl, And all is quiet in the village now; Save for the call of the hawk of night As he proudly pursues his winged flight . The croak of a frog the stillness breaks, A flickering firefly his leisure takes In the humid air—the only light. Dusk, dusk, soon you’ll fade into night. A soaring bluejay screams his song, And seems to say he has done no wrong, While the rest of the weary world may be In the deeper realms of solemnity. 23
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