The following excerpts
are from an interview with former Saudi Shura Council Member Ibrahim Al-Buleihi, which
aired on Al-Arabiya TV on February 26, 2010.
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
When we want to study a religious issue, we go back to our heritage.
But when we want to study an earthy matter, such as why we are backward,
while others are prosperous, we must search for the answer elsewhere,
not in our heritage.
Interviewer: Where
is "elsewhere"?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
In the West. Without a doubt.
Interviewer: In
the West, not the East?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
The East only emulates [the West]. Take Japan, for example – if not
for its openness to Western culture, it too would have remained backward.
[...]
The individualism of
the Arab has been erased in this society...
Interviewer: What
do you mean by erased individualism?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
He is incapable of independent thinking, and therefore, he always rejects
what is rejected by society, and accepts what is accepted by society.
Interviewer: So
"team spirit" prevails?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
It is the spirit of a herd, not of a team. It is the spirit of the herd
that cannot free itself from the captivity of the prevailing culture.
Whatever society considers to be good, the individual considers to be
good. He is incapable of independent thinking, and of benefiting from
the cultures of others. He is incapable of stepping out of the mold
imposed on him since childhood.
Interviewer: Should
the Arab individual be rebellious, for example?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
Not rebellious, but he should seek the truth. He must not efface his
self and dissolve into the herd.
[...]
Interviewer: You
criticize the Arabs and praise Israel. Do you think that the Arabs should
follow the Israeli model?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
No, Israel did not create itself. It is an offshoot of the West. They
are an offshoot of Western culture. That is why I compared Israel to
Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. I want to make a very important
point.
Interviewer: Excuse
me, but I have a question. Do you consider the fact that some countries
are offshoots of Western culture to be a good thing or a bad thing?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
It's a positive thing.
Interviewer: So
we should be offshoots of the West as well?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
No, but we should benefit from this rich experience. It is the West
that produced all this prosperity. To this day, we are a burden on the
West. Even Japan admits that without benefiting from the West, it would
not have developed.
Interviewer: Prosperity
in what?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
In everything. In the value, liberties, and dignity of human beings,
as well as in the development of science, of technology, and of life.
Do you believe that life today is the same as it was ten centuries ago?
This tremendous change was produced by the West. Who else produced it?
Interviewer: But
shouldn't the notions of the West – such as human rights – be viewed
as an accumulated achievement, in which all societies played a role?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
It is not an accumulated achievement.
Interviewer: It
was achieved solely by the West?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
Undoubtedly.
[...]
Tyranny is a tremendous
obstacle, which makes any progress impossible.
Interviewer: Do
you believe that this theory applies to Iraq, after the fall of Saddam
Hussein, whom you describe as...
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
Iraq has not been permitted to achieve stability. The whole world has
intervened in its affairs, as we have seen.
Interviewer: The
West, which you praise so highly, intervenes in Iraq.
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
No, the West intervened in Japan's affairs as well, and managed to save
Japan from tyranny. Today, Japan is considered a model of democracy,
of liberties, and of all the advantages that the West has produced.
[...]
Interviewer: You
have said that during their conquests at the advent of Islam, the Arabs
emerged from the deserts in order to conquer, not to learn. What did
you mean by that?
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
In my view, over the centuries, the Arabs believed – and continue
to believe – that they have sufficient knowledge and wisdom, and that
they do not need to learn anything from others, because they appeared,
on the stage of history, in order to conquer, not to learn, to teach,
not to study...
Interviewer: As
guiders, not people seeking the guidance of others.
Ibrahim Al-Buleihi:
That's right. This delusion of the Arabs persists to this day, even
though the entire world has changed. The world has changed, but they
still believe that it is their duty to teach others, and it is the duty
of others to heed them. The truth is that the Arabs have nothing to
offer others, yet they continue... This horrible delusion, this belief
in one's own perfection, the belief that others must learn from them,
makes it impossible for them to benefit from modern culture.