![]()
|
|||||||
|
©
2002 |
Afghan
native brings unsettling ideas to Sisters
Zaher Wahab is an American college
professor with a message. Like the prophets of old, however, his words aren't
necessarily greeted with a great deal of enthusiasm.
Wahab, who has been with Lewis
and Clark College for more than a quarter of a century, is a native of
war-torn Afghanistan.
In fact, he plans to travel
there this week and, among other things, meet with interim Afghan President
Hamid Karzai. He has been invited by the United Nations and the Afghan
Ministry of Higher Education to help reshape Afghanistan's education system.
On Thursday of last week,
however, Wahab was relaxing at Coyote Creek Café in Sisters.
Wahab was in Central Oregon
as the guest of the High Desert Forum.
The High Desert Forum, which
seeks to bring high-caliber speakers to the area in order to promote public
debate and discussion, created more than a little of that by hosting Wahab
last week.
On the night before his visit
to Sisters, Wahab received a surprisingly warm reception from an apparently
liberal-minded packed house of more than 200 listeners.
The presentation took place
at the First Presbyterian Church in Bend, as part of the High Desert Forum's
continuing lecture series.
After giving a brief history
of Afghan-American relations over the last 30 or so years, the naturalized
American citizen proceeded to champion such controversial proposals as
partial surrender of American sovereignty to international courts and
reparations payments to the Muslim world for injustices inflicted over
the last 500 years.
Citing a recent Gallup Poll
that surveyed 10,000 individuals in seven different Muslim countries,
he said that the Muslim world views the United States as "ruthless and
arrogant."
He also attacked the American
media for its docility and suggested that more reliable news could be
obtained from BBC, Radio Canada, and even Radio Havana.
After the presentation, one
of Wahab's questioners suggested that the proposals set forth were "utopian,"
but the speaker stood by his assertions.
"If we want to stay on friendly
terms with the rest of the world," Wahab said, "we have to change our
foreign policy."
He said that Americans comprise
only 5 percent of the world's population, yet consume 40 percent of the
world's resources.
Similarly, he said that the
Western World, as a whole, consumes more than 80 percent of the resources
for just 20 percent of the world's people.
"We can't expect to use those
resources," he said, "without people getting angry and jealous."
In addition to reparations,
Wahab advocates the general transfer of wealth to the poorer countries
-- where many people, he says, subsist on the equivalent of a dollar a
day.
He called for "fair trade,
not free trade."
Using the price of gasoline
as an example, he suggested that prices of $6-7 per gallon are more appropriate,
with the difference going to the people of the countries that provide
the resource.
"What we need," he said, "is
the just redistribution of the world's resources to achieve peace and
prosperity for everybody."
Wahab has an uphill battle.
An American society accustomed to a lavish way of life isn't likely to
embrace his proposals, but he knows that. Privately, he admitted to being
a realist.
"Think of these arguments
as the opening offer in a bargaining session," he told The Nugget.
Wahab has a lot at stake in
Afghanistan and identifies strongly with both the country of his birth
and the country he now calls home.
"Half of me is at war with
the other half," he said.
He spoke of 23 years of ongoing
war in Afghanistan and millions of people killed or just "disappeared."
Included among the dead he listed classmates, playmates, neighbors, a
brother and a brother-in-law.
He said that the house in
which he was raised lies in ruins; and his mother, fearing for his safety,
warned him not to come home this week.
Wahab is concerned for the
legitimacy and stability of the interim Afghan government and plans to
discuss that with Karzai.
He also doubts that the government
of Pakistani President Pervez Musharef will survive, a situation that
would destabilize the entire region.
As a Pashtun, he is distrustful
of the tribes of the Northern Alliance, which -- he says -- dominate the
interim government, even though Karzai, himself, is Pashtun.
All of this will be weighing
on his mind as he journeys to the country of his birth.
Just as he hopes to make a
difference by speaking out in America, now he will try to make a difference
in Afghanistan.
|
|
|||||