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Huffington Post Arabic and the absurdity of ‘liberal’ expectations

Sep 08,2015 - Last updated at Sep 08,2015

What does it mean to be a “liberal Arab”?

Even in the West, definitions of the “liberal” vary.

In the American context, the demarcation of the “liberal” overlaps cultural and political lines. Republicans use the term in a derogatory way to describe their opponents. Watch Fox News to understand. (On second thought, please do not watch Fox News!).

Europeans are hardly keen on the term altogether. Many often use the term “progressive” to liberate “liberal” from its political baggage and imprecise cultural insinuations.

So when the newly launched Huffington Post Arabi — the Arabic edition of the news and entertainment portal Huffington Post — was fiercely attacked for not being “liberal” enough to match the “liberal left” views of the mother portal, it left me puzzled.

This is a title in the Independent, which was, more or less, mirrored by other publications: “Huffington Post causes outrage after Arabic edition criticises gay people, atheists and selfies.” 

The main photo with the article was that of former Tunisian president Mohamed Moncef Marzouki (2011-14) — perhaps one of the most progressive and prominent Arab politicians of all time, who presided over Tunisia’s democratic transition — looking befuddled in a low-resolution photo, with an unrelated caption (neither the caption nor the article mentions the former Arab president’s name) that reads: “The Huffington Post has been accused of letting ‘its Arabic site disgrace its brand’.”

I spent some time seeking to understand the outrage mentioned in the Independent and other publications.

Some readers’ criticism of some content published in Huffington Post Arabi was justified. Their opinions were consistent with mine, although I am sure that such opinions are not at all consistent with the views of others. But that is the nature of any opinion.

Frankly, I find selfies distasteful and I share the views of a writer in Huffington Post Arabi that Arabs should not simply mimic every Western phenomenon which many Westerners themselves may find objectionable.

It also happens that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) also agrees, as it recently classified selfies as a mental disorder, giving it an official name: “selfitis.”

It is defined as “the obsessive compulsive desire to take photos of oneself and post them on social media as a way to make up for the lack of self-esteem and to fill a gap in intimacy”.

The Independent, too, ran multiple stories on the harm of selfies, including this recent story on August 27: “Selfies cause head lice, US paediatrician warns.”

If one is to judge the Independent, which has produced some of the finest journalism in Britain regarding the Middle East in recent years, it would not be for its own strange obsession with selfies, but for running sensational stories about new Arabic media’s supposed failure to live up to some “liberal left” Western expectations.

Of course, the issue has little to do with the freedom to take selfies or, at least in the minds of some, with the rights of gays and atheists. (The opinion piece that was criticised for being homophobic was taken down and an apology regarding the matter was issued.) 

The issue is rather political, because some of those affiliated with the project are accused of being members of the Muslim Brotherhood. Naturally, this raises fear that the editorial line will follow suit. 

In case one has not noticed, there is a media war in the Arab world that is as dirty as that of the actual wars raging from Syria to Yemen.

The moment a new media venture is announced, each side determines its position from those behind the project. If its editorial line is not to the liking of this or that group, an organised media war is instantly launched, using every dirty trick to defame, slander and vilify.

The attacks are often mounted using the same usual suspects, for example, the likes of JihadWatch.org and Breitbart.com: “The two men leading Huffington Post’s new Arabic-language site have in the past been accused of having direct involvement with the Muslim Brotherhood and radical clerics; and one has openly expressed conspiratorial views that have been interpreted as having an anti-Semitic connotation.”

Others get involved, perhaps unaware of how their views could be utilised in the media war.

Buzzfeed, not particularly known for its high journalistic standards, was one of the first to attack Huffington Post Arabi, again using sententious headlines, imbalanced text and irrelevant photos. 

Tom Gara of Buzzfeed drew similar conclusions — that Huffington Post Arabi is “heading in a different direction” from the “liberal, progressive politics and embrace of popular culture” offered by the English edition.

These substantial conclusions were mostly drawn from the single article that warned of a war against Islam and made a fleeting reference to gays in Egypt.

Of the 14 different offshoots of The Huffington Post, its Arabic edition must be the most scrutinised.

Its critics wasted no time in drawing massive conclusions about the entire editorial line of the Arabic website, based on an article and alleged affiliation of some of its managers to a political party that was forced out of power in Egypt; accusations which are mere allegations.

The politics behind much of the attack (especially by Arab Twitter users and some in the media) notwithstanding, what puzzled me most is the assumption that being a progressive or liberal Arab should automatically mean a word for word translation of the political and cultural norms of Western culture.

This is the height of intellectual bankruptcy, and no self-respecting and truly progressive Westerner should hold such expectation.

I spent some time browsing both websites, Huffington Post Arabi and the English version, to find out for myself whether the “outrage” over Huffington Post Arabi’s supposed regressive coverage is justified.

There was much in the English version that was worth reading, while other content was, frankly, of no use to me — or even objectionable altogether.

I disdain the sexual objectification of women, even if done with a “liberal” agenda in mind.

I will continue reading it, however, simply because I trust the publication’s overall editorial agenda.

The Arabic was more relatable and unmatchable in terms of its authentic understanding of the Middle East region; rather humane in its approach to politics and, in some ways, progressive, although less activist than the English edition.

That was refreshing. However, some of the content was of no use to me and a few of the opinions were quite misguided, in my view.

Aside from the article mentioned above, I hardly noticed a war on freedom, gays or atheists. 

But that said, should not Huffington Post (Arabic, English and all other editions) allow for views that are not consistent with one’s own understanding of being leftist, liberal or progressive?

Why shouldn’t the Arabs face their demons heads on?

Debating, using their own language and cultural references, freedom, democracy, human rights, women’s rights, gays’ rights, minority rights, role of religion in politics, authoritarianism, globalisation, even the very role of media in politics?

Buzzfeed, the Independent and Jihad Watch should not determine the limits of Arab political thought or cultural norms. Nor should we expect the Arabic edition of Huffington Post to replicate the English version, in which case an Arabic edition would be unnecessary.

However, what one should expect from Huffington Post Arabi is to challenge the media polarisation and operate outside the destructive framework of the media war under way in the Middle East.

Huffington Post Arabi should open an equitable platform for ideas and encourage debate, bringing the arguments of all sides to the fore, allowing its readers to decide for themselves, not to appease any particular definition of what a liberal is or is not, but to espouse urgently needed dialogue at a time of senseless wars and protracted conflicts.

 

The writer, www.ramzybaroud.net, has been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an internationally syndicated columnist, a media consultant, author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is “My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London)”. He contributed this article to The Jordan Times.

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