JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1995, Pages 31, 89-90
Maghreb Mirror
Berberism: An Historical Travesty in Algeria's
Time of Travail
By Aicha Lemsine
Looking over Western press coverage of the terrorism
and violence wracking Algeria, one finds headlines announcing, "Islamism
Provoking Ethnic Troubles in Algeria," and "The Berber
Movement Threatens Algeria With Total War."
The unwritten subtext in such headlines is that Berbers,
the autochthonous inhabitants of North Africa, are not really Algerians.
Knowing that such headlines emanate from the French press, one is
forced to conclude that the old demons of colonialism and colonial
historiography are returning to the scene of their crimes.
Such media depictions of the Berbers reflect the colonial
ambitions of France's Cardinal Lavigerie, who said in 1867, "Our
mission is to take our civilization, which was that of their fathers,
to the Berber populations. We cannot leave these people with their
Qur'an. France must give them the Gospel or else they will roam
the desert, far from the civilized world. This program of forced
conversion will be coupled with the confiscation of land and the
expulsion of the inhabitants to the mountainous and rocky areas,
as per the injunction of Governor-General Tirman. It is necessary
to instill terror in the natives!"
French colonial policy was designed to make Algeria
an extension of Metropolitan France on the southern side of the
Mediterranean Sea. This could be accomplished only by sowing division
between Arabs and Berbers and eradicating Arab-Muslim values and
civilization from Algeria. This, in turn, could only be accomplished
by a rewriting of North African history.
Under the French, use of the Arabic language became
the symbol of backwardness, while the status of the non-Arab Berbers
was elevated. This "brainwashing" was perfected in the
schools where, for 132 years of French occupation, the "little
natives" were made to repeat phrases like, "The Gauls
were our ancestors" and "The nomadic and warlike Arabs
still live in tents." French-prepared history books described
the invaders of "Romano-Christian Barbary" as the curiously
"Asiatic" Muslim Arab tribe of Beni Hilal who, armed with
long swords and sporting shaved heads save for one long plait of
hair, menaced a terrified Berber population.
However, this curriculum of division did not prevent
the outbreak of the Algerian war for independence, which began in
the Aures mountains, home to the Shawia Berbers. The rallying cry
for both Arab and Berber insurgents who fought the French from 1954
to 1962 was the phrase of Sheikh Abdelhamid Ben Badis, the Algerian
religious reformer who was himself a Berber: "Algeria is our
nation, Arabic is our language, Islam is our religion."
An Historical Journey
French efforts to drive a wedge between Arab and Berber
failed, in part, because they were in blatant contradiction to actual
history. To trace the roots of the Berbers, one must travel back
to the Classical period and the Kingdom of Numidia, which extended
from Carthage in present-day Tunisia to Mauritania on the Atlantic
coast. The proud and independent Numidians, with their capital in
what is now eastern Algeria, fought ceaselessly against the imperial
invaders of antiquity. The third century B.C. Numidian king Syphax
battled valiantly against the Roman conqueror Scipio Africanus,
while Jugurtha in the second century B.C. fought Roman legions,
only to lose to Marius Gaius.
In the first century B.C., the Numidian Massinissa
allied himself with Rome and Numidia became a Roman protectorate.
The Numidians were then known to Rome as Berbers, from the Latin
barbarus, meaning an alien land or people. Later, under the
Numidian kings Juba I and Juba II, the Romans colonized Numidia,
or Barbary, displacing a vast number of Berbers from the region's
most fertile land, which became known as "the breadbasket of
Rome."
The Berbers, impoverished and stripped of their lands,
found refuge in the wildest, rockiest and most inhospitable terrain
of the country. Some Berbers became quasi-nomads, others worked
for the Romans in the colonial cities or in the fields, while the
Numidian princes assimilated with their Roman conquerors.
Before long, one of the most famous early Christian
Fathers, St. Augustine of Hippo (now Annaba, Algeria), was predicting
a "time of catastrophe" for the apartheid system of Roman
domination. This came to pass between 340 and 535 A.D., when the
Vandals and the Visigoths systematically destroyed the Roman Empire
and its social system. When the Germanic Vandals surged south from
the Iberian peninsula and into Numidia, the Berbers were forced
even deeper into the barren interior of North Africa.
Worse was to come, however. In the sixth century,
the Vandals were supplanted in North Africa by the Byzantines, who
sought to reconstruct a Romanized empire. The Byzantine general
Belisarius carried out devastating massacres of Berbers, sowing
the seeds for centuries of religious disputes, famine and persecution
in North Africa. According to the Byzantine historian Procopius,
five million inhabitants of Numidia perished during the reign of
the Emperor Justinian alone.
Consigned to barren lands or working as slaves to
export the land's milk, honey and wheat, Berber communities survived
only as scattered tribes in the mountains and deserts. Therefore,
when the Arab Muslim conquerors swept across North Africa in the
seventh century, it was not the "war between Arabs and Berbers"
described in French colonial literature, but rather a strategic
operation by the young Muslim empire to dislodge the remnants of
Byzantine military power from the Mediterranean shores.
The expedition of Abdallah Ibn Sarh against what is
now Tunisia was launched in 647, only 15 years after the death of
the Prophet Muhammad. The objective was to secure newly conquered
Egypt and Syria through control of the southern coast of the Mediterranean,
thus preventing a Byzantine attempt at reconquest.
The loss of Carthage to forces under Hassan Ibn Nu'man
marked the beginning of the end for the Byzantines in North Africa.
In 670, under the new Umayyad caliphate, Okba Ibn Nafi founded the
city of Kairouan in Tunisia as a base for the conquest of the central
Maghreb. Muslim troops quickly reached the Atlantic in what is now
Morocco, but the Berber tribes of the Aures rose up under the leadership
of Kosseyla, inflicting serious losses on the Muslims and killing
Okba Ibn Nafi in 683.
The Kahina
Following the death in battle of Kosseyla, leadership
of the Aures Berbers passed to the Kahina, a title meaning "priestess"
or "prophetess," who sought revenge and fought skillfully
against the Muslims. After she first engaged the Muslims in battle,
the Kahina adopted one of her Muslim prisoners as a brother to her
two sons. Before the final battle, when the Kahina, facing defeat,
committed suicide by throwing herself into a well (known today as
"Bir al-Attar," or the "Well of Perfume"), she
sent her sons into the camp of the Muslim commander, Hassan Ibn
Nu'man. After the battle, Hassan made the eldest son governor of
the Aures.
The episode of the Kahina was seized upon by the French
and Berber separatists alike to portray antagonism between the "Romano-Christian"
Berbers and the Arab Muslims. In fact, the Kahina was an aberration.
Relations between the Berber inhabitants of the region and the Muslim
invaders were not marked just by struggle, but also by alliances
and mutual recognition. Only the tribes of the Aures, with their
history of prior harassment by Romans, Vandals and Byzantines, continued
to resist the Arab incursion into their territory. It is in this
context that the episode of the Kahina must be placed.
It is also instructive to look at the transformation
of North Africa a century after the arrival of Islam in comparison
with the preceding five centuries of what the colonialist historians
termed "harmonious Romanization." The pre-Islamic Berbers
were by and large pagans, some of whom had some notion of Christian
beliefs, but they converted en masse to Islamand adopted the
use of Arabicwithin a century of the death of the Prophet.
Islam permitted North Africa to maintain its independence
while at the same time providing a political framework into which
tribal loyalties were subsumed. The Maghreb became the base for
Islam's expansion into Spain, and Berber contingents spearheaded
the Muslim victories of the eighth century, which brought Islam
into the heart of Europe. The North African Berber Tariq Ibn Ziyad
commanded the force which crossed over from the Maghreb to sweep
the Visigoths from Spain. This crossing is immortalized in the name
of Gibraltar, derived from the Arabic Jabal Tariq, meaning
"Tariq's Mountain."
As a result of their conversion to Islam, the Berbers
were not dislodged from their lands, nor did they become vassals
of the Muslims. Instead they were full and equal participants in
one of the greatest civilizations in human history. While Berbers
continued to speak their language among themselves, as a written
language they adopted Arabic, the language of the universal Qur'an
and the liturgical language of Islam.
From that time on, the artistic and scientific life
of North Africa became inseparable from that of Muslim Andalusia
and the eastern Arab world. The great cities of the MaghrebFez,
Sijilmasa, Tlemcen, Tiaret, Bejaia, Constantine, Tunis, Ghadameswere
also great cities of Islam and the Muslim world.
A North African Synthesis
Over time there was osmosis between Arab and Berber,
creating a new and specifically North African blend of cultures.
This synthesis can be seen in "Mauresque" architecture,
poetry and literature, theology and Sufi mysticism. As a counterpart
to the wonders of Andalusian Spain, the Arabophone Berbers of North
Africa erected a series of brilliant dynasties: the Rustamids, Fatimids,
Idrissids, Zirids, Almoravids, Almohads, Merinids and Hafsids all
had their days in the sun, and all contributed to the patrimony
of the Maghreb.
In the 14th century, however, North Africa was plunged
into the struggle between the Christian and Muslim worlds. It was
the era of the Crusades in Palestine and the Reconquista in Spain.
Threatened by the rise of Christian Europe, the small powers of
North Africa sought refuge with the Ottoman Empire, which governed
most of the central Maghreb until the 19th century.
Then, a quarrel between the French consul and the
Ottoman representative in Algiers (the dey struck the consul with
a fly whisk during an argument) provided the pretext for an invasion
by the French in 1830. Their rule lasted for 132 years until they
were expelled from Algerian shores by the same Arabs and Berbers
they had come to conquer.
Today, when one speaks of the "Arab Maghreb,"
it is not a reference to a narrow ethnic definition, but to a shared
Arabo-Berber history. When discussing the current political situation
in Algeria, it is important to look realistically, not romantically,
at the nation's past, which is simultaneously Berber and Arab.
There is no contradiction in this. For the Shawia
Berbers of the Aures mountainsof which I am one, having been
born in the very fiefdom of the Kahinathere is no disruption
of identity. Having spoken Berber and Arabic at home and French
at school, my education and that of all of the pre-independence
generation was rooted in an Arabo-Muslim Algerian identity. We were
told by our forebears for centuries, "You are Algerians freed
by the Arabic of the Qur'an" or, as it was said in the Aures,
"Ana Shawi-Arbi Hour!" (I am a free Arabic Shawi Berber!).
If there is a people that is proudest of the Arab and Muslim blood
that runs in its veins, it is the Shawia of the Aures, for whom
it is an insult to deny our Arab heritage, as Arabic is intimately
tied to the Qur'an and thus to Islam itself.
In Algeria, we remember "who we are." The
patron "saint" of the capital, Algiers, is Sidi Abd al-Rahman
al-Jurji, a theologian and founder of the Sufi order of the Rahmaniyyaand
a Kabyle Berber. Algeria was the first country in post-independence
North Africa to broadcast radio and television programming in Berber.
Attempts to portray the country's current political
crisis as ethnic in origin, with Islamist Arabs pitted against secularist
Berbers, are disingenuous at best. Even the most prominent Islamist
groups, including the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) and the Armed
Islamic Group (GIA), have leaders who hail from the Berber regions
of the Aures, the Kabylie and the Sahara. Algerian Islamism is neither
an "anti-Berber" manifestation nor a religious virtue,
but rather a political and social phenomenon.
The right to learn Berber languages in school is a
legitimate demand, given Algerian history. If they are not now being
taught, it is due to the lack of imagination of the government,
and not a case of political suppression. Algerians speak French,
for example, without a second thought. Language alone does not imply
ethnic tension and antagonism.
There is no denying that Algeria is in the midst of
a great upheaval. The political, social and economic destiny of
the nation is being decided, but this does not extend into the realm
of personal or communal identity. Algerians recognize that Berber
separatist elements seeking to take advantage of the current weakness
of the government to promote their own agenda are, wittingly or
unwittingly, pointing their own followers in the direction of national
suicide.
If Islamic fundamentalism is in the process of physically
and morally destroying the Algerian people, Berberist anti-Arab
fanaticism is in the process of dissolving the Algerian nation itself.
In doing so, the separatists are repeating Berber historynot
the glorious past of Jugurtha or the Kahina, but the dismal example
of Juba I and Juba II, the "slave princes of the Romans"
who dispersed their people and tribes into tiny villages in an inhospitable
and fractured country. The Maghreb is ashamed of Berberism just
as Islam is ashamed of Islamism.
Aicha
Lemsine is an award-winning Algerian author. She lives in Algeria
and publishes political analyses in the Algerian and international
Arab press. She is a member of the PEN Club's International Women's
Committee and vice-president of WORLD, the Women's Organization for
Rights, Literature and Development. |