The news that Morocco's favourite liberal magazine Nichane (Arabic for "straight ahead") has closed, has been greeted with dismay across the country and overseas. While Nichane pushed the boundaries, it should have been supported by the establishment as a fine example of modern Islam. Yet, the magazine has closed, not by court order, but by a boycott by advertisers, prompted by some in the establishment. Ibn Warraq reflects on the events.
The forced closing of Nichane is a major miscalculation by those in power, and it is to be hoped that they come to their senses and realise that Nichane was a tremendously good example to the world of just how progressive Morocco has become. Social reforms have been extremely positive, but closing Nichane is not just a bad look, it is a step backwards. Morocco should be mature enough to embrace total press freedom.
The reaction around the world has been swift, strong and critical. Even the mild mannered Guardian weighed in with a major article that points out that the boycott was "absurd to the point of hilarity." However the editor of Nichane, the respected journalist Ahmed Benchemsi, is not laughing.
For Benchemsi, the real loss is his prominent platform for spotlighting some of the Middle East's top young liberal journalists. Nichane – one of very few Arabic-language publications broaching such topics as gay rights and religious freedom – offered average north Africans a powerful cultural counterpoint to growing Islamist forces. The real winner from Nichane's untimely demise is thus the very Islamists the Moroccan monarchy claims to hold at bay. Perversely, autocrats and Islamists share an interest in silencing the liberal voices that threaten their respective power bases: the state apparatus and the "Arab street".
Benchemsi might seem a provocateur who overstepped the boundaries of his "native culture". But it bears noting that he launched his publishing venture the same year Osama bin Laden launched the September 11 attacks. Middle Eastern "culture" remains up for grabs, with both Islamist and liberal voices vying for market share. To defeat extremism, the west must help nurture genuine liberals like Benchemsi, who offer their audiences authentic alternatives to both the Islamists' poisonous ideological brew and the autocrats' stifling vision of modernity without freedom.
5 comments:
To be expected.
With the bunch of children running Morocco they have done just what five year olds would do.
Ironic: the same blog that just a few months ago was bemoaning scantily clad tourists on the streets of Fes is now fretting about empowering Islamists.
The closure of Nichane is a shame, but if you are going to engage in political commentary I suggest you think a little more clearly.
Or else just stick to promoting fancy Fes riads.
Anonymous - your cynicism is staggering! The View from Fez team represents a variety of views. The dress code in the Medina is a local issue which effects the people of the Medina and which they feel strongly about. The Nichane issue is a national one and therefore worth commenting on. As to your last remark ~ just silly. Of the thousands of stories on The View from Fez, a tiny fraction are about riads as information for tourists. We suggest you read the blog a little more carefully before running off at the mouth!
There is always an "anonymous. Some people is given with envy. Like dust in wind, they soon go. We welcome what you do.
Some people don't know when to stop being childish and stupid. Keep up the good work.
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