<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<h3>UNHEALTHY INFLUENCES</h3>
<p>I should have been well contented if it had
been possible for me to write this chapter as a
parody of that ever famous one on "The Snakes of
Ireland." Unhappily there are unhealthy influences
in Egypt—influences placing difficulties in the way
of the English administrators of the country, ever
discouraging and disheartening the Egyptian, ever
tending to turn him from the path of progress,
influences that have been and are holding back the
advance that is being made.</p>
<p>In my last chapter I spoke of the benefits derived
from the liberty of the Press; in this I have to speak
of the evil it produces, for first and chief of all the
unhealthy influences in Egypt is the <i>Mokattam</i>, the
newspaper that is regarded as the special organ of
English interests in Egypt. While yet Sheikh Ali
was wholly unknown, three Syrian Christians who had
established a monthly literary magazine at Beirout,
decided to transfer it to Cairo. There it acquired
a well-deserved popularity it still maintains. Possessed
of ability, and full of the energy and enterprise
that is a characteristic of their race, the proprietors<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337"></SPAN></span>
of this monthly saw in the English occupation an
opportunity of enlarging their sphere of action and
started a daily paper, the <i>Mokattam</i>, just a year
before the <i>Moayyad</i> appeared. The policy that this
new journal adopted, and has persistently maintained
to the present day, was the twofold one of supporting
English interests in Egypt and of attacking
Islam and the Turkish Empire on all possible
occasions. Caring nothing for their adopted country,
and ever mindful of the fact that it was the interference
of the European Powers that compelled
Mahomed Ali to abandon Syria, they entered upon
their task with enthusiasm, and, though the
<i>Moayyad</i> was not long in passing it in popularity,
they early succeeded in gaining for the <i>Mokattam</i>
the position it holds of undoubtedly the ablest of
all the Christian journals published in the Arabic
language. Save only as to the lines upon which
it seeks to promote the policy it advocates, it may
indeed justly claim the highest praise for the manner
in which it is written and conducted.</p>
<p>In the days when the English occupation
and the two rival journals, the <i>Moayyad</i> and the
<i>Mokattam</i>, were all still young, Egyptian politics
and therefore Egyptian newspapers were run upon
purely party lines, and as Dr. Johnson thought he
was best fulfilling his mission in seeing that "the
Whig dogs did not get the best of it," so all who
dabbled in any degree with Egyptian politics thought
it their bounden duty to admit no good or merit in
any who opposed their views. Hence, while the
English administrators were still blunderingly trying<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></SPAN></span>
to find their way through the maze of difficulties they
had to encounter, and trying first this and then that
remedy for the evils they had to contend with, from
the newspapers and people of the country they could
get no assistance whatever. It was the policy of
the <i>Mokattam</i> to support the English, and with
the editors' primitive ideas they could find no other
way of doing this than by lauding with indiscriminate
praise everything the English did or proposed
to do. It was the policy of the <i>Moayyad</i> to decry
and depreciate all that the <i>Mokattam</i> approved
or supported. Each of the two papers was thus
pursuing exactly the line most calculated to defeat
its own aim, and throw discredit on its own cause,
for as the praise of the <i>Mokattam</i> was constantly
being discounted by the admitted failure of the
measures it had lustily approved, so the discrimination
of the <i>Moayyad</i> was belittled by the success
of those it had condemned. From that day to this
the <i>Mokattam</i> has learned nothing. It pursues the
same line to-day that it did then. It has not been
so with the <i>Moayyad</i>. Sheikh Ali Youssef was
far too able a man to be long in seeing the folly
inherent in politics of this puerile type, and he
determined to adopt a higher line. It was no
easy task he thus set himself. He was still a young
man, and as such his abilities received rather stinted
acknowledgment from the greybeards, who were
the leaders of the Moslem and National party.
His journal was not yet strong enough to choose
its own position, and its existence and influence,
as well as his own future, depended wholly upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339"></SPAN></span>
the support he received from self-satisfied, self-willed
men, who thought it their province to dictate
and not to learn. And with this difficulty Sheikh
Ali had the graver one of having to find a policy
and a method of advocating it that would practically
reconcile the almost irreconcilable. Like all
Egyptians, and indeed all non-Christian Easterns,
he held then, as now, that of all the European
Powers England was the one with which friendship
was most possible. It was, however, at the
moment the approved policy of the Egyptian
National party to profess a preference for France,
and therefore the Moslem papers were expected to
hold up France and the French as the friends and
allies of Islam. Had Sheikh Ali attacked this view,
his rashness would have been the death-knell of the
<i>Moayyad</i>. He saw this clearly, but he was not a
man to be deterred by difficulties, or daunted by
dangers. That which was right and true was
right and true, and it was his duty, as one of
the Ulema, to teach and to preach that which was
right and true. But to run amuck against the
prevailing prejudices would be to ensure failure.
If he were to succeed, it must be by degrees, by
the slow and patient conversion of others to his
views, by a steady and almost stealthy diffusion
of his ideas. In the East the circulation and
writings of a journal are often but little guide to
the power and influence really possessed by its
editor, for an editor is frequently able to accomplish
far more by his direct personal influence, outside
his journal, than he could by the most earnest or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_340" id="Page_340"></SPAN></span>
able advocacy of those views in its columns. It
was so with Sheikh Ali. There were men of
influence who were quite prepared to listen
attentively to anything he had to say to them
in private, and to accept and adopt his views in the
same way, but who would not have tolerated a
journal that rashly published the same ideas to the
world at large. Starting boldly, yet with due
caution, Sheikh Ali set himself to the task of
educating his supporters. Slowly, and in sugar-coated
pills of homeopathic size, he administered to them
minute doses of the ideas he wished them to digest.
Slowly, but surely and steadily, he overcame the
difficulties before him. One by one, even those who
would not consent to the <i>Moayyad</i> propagating
such ideas, admitted that the Sheikh was right.
Time went on, and with its flight the old fiery
spirits of the Nationalist party, the "No surrender"
men of the old type, gradually died out, and changes
of many kinds came to pass, and still the Sheikh was
struggling with opposition, and still he was steadily
gaining ground; but as falling bodies gather speed
and force in their descent, so intellectual movements
gather force and speed in their ascent, and
thus in spite of all difficulties, difficulties that only
undauntable pluck, unwearied patience, and ability
could face, much less triumph over, the Sheikh
accomplished his purpose, and scarcely knowing
how, or why, or indeed that it is so, the Egyptians
have adopted the Sheikh's policy, a policy that may
be summed up in the phrase, "Peace and Progress."</p>
<p>It would have been well for Egypt, and not less so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_341" id="Page_341"></SPAN></span>
for British interests, if the editors of the <i>Mokattam</i>
had followed in the wake of Sheikh Ali, but, as I
have said, their policy is to-day what it was at the
beginning, the same narrow-minded bigotry in its
pro-English partisanship and the same foolish fanaticism
in its anti-Turkish crusade. The true interests
of the country, or of their co-religionists, or of the
occupation, are all alike sacrificed to their morbid
love of wounding and hurting the religious and social
sentiments of the Egyptians, or of venting their
impotent hatred of the Turk. Thus their record is
a record of evil, a record of needless difficulties
heaped up in the way of the English administrators
of the country, of ill-will and animosity excited
among the people. The two strongest factors in the
formation of Egyptian opinion are, as I have shown,
the attachment of the people to their religion and
their attachment to the Turkish Empire. Both these
sentiments are persistently and wilfully outraged by
the <i>Mokattam</i>. It does not indulge in the rabid rant
of the anti-Turkish Press in England, but while
keeping within the limits of decent language it loses
no opportunity of saying aught that can wound the
feelings, offend the prejudices, or excite the anger
of the Moslems, and it does this as the organ of
the English occupation, as a journal universally
believed to be largely subsidised by the English, and
therefore a journal believed also to be the expression
of the real views, aims, and sentiments of the English
occupants of the country. Is it any wonder that the
pacific policy, the unbroken respect for Moslem prejudices
that Lord Cromer has always shown, should<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></SPAN></span>
assume in the eyes of the Egyptians the character of
a temporary policy—a policy to be abandoned as soon
as circumstances should permit the open adoption of
the anti-Islamic policy of the avowed organ of English
interests? The old reactionary party has almost
wholly died out; what remains of it is not less in
touch with the real sentiments of the people than is
the Young Egypt party that to a certain extent is its
successor, but neither of the two parties ever has
done, or could do, a tithe of the harm the
<i>Mokattam</i> is still doing. The attacks of the anti-Turkish
Press in England, the anti-Islamic writings
of the late Sir William Muir and other critics affect
Moslems in Egypt or elsewhere but little, for it is
known that these represent but narrow circles of
thought, but that the local journal which is spoken
of by Englishmen themselves as the "English organ"
should be for ever out-Heroding the efforts of those
circles has, and could have, but one result—a profound
distrust of the professions made as to the true aim
and object of the occupation. This is the key to the
lack of enthusiasm, the want of gratitude, for which
the Egyptians are so often rebuked. Men like Mr.
Dicey may build up theories of their own on what,
to the Englishman at home, may seem at least
plausible arguments, but they are only drawing
herrings across the trail of the true explanation.
Thus the journal which, as Mr. Hartmann says, has
"gained favour with Lord Cromer," has been of all
other causes the one which has most freely and
wantonly strewn his path with needless difficulties.
Face to face with the anti-Islamic sentiments of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_343" id="Page_343"></SPAN></span>
English organ in Egypt, it is utterly hopeless to
expect Moslems in Egypt or elsewhere to regard the
English occupation with any other feelings than
those of distrust. Had the <i>Mokattam</i> been conducted
upon conciliatory lines, had it striven to guide
the English with the healthy, honest advice it could
have given, had it endeavoured to promote an intelligent
appreciation of the good work that has been
done and is doing, it would have rendered a service
of incalculable value to the English and to the
Egyptians alike, and with their undoubted ability
its editors would have taken their place among the
greatest benefactors of the country. As it is they
have wrought no service and much ill, and may pride
themselves upon having been the greatest obstacle in
the way of the progress that has been made. The
one thing that Lord Cromer has needed most of
all throughout his long, brilliant, and self-devoting
struggle has been the cordial co-operation of the
people. The one thing that more than all else has
tended to deprive him of that co-operation has been
the anti-Islamic attitude of the Arabic organ of the
occupation. Had I been writing this a year ago it
would have been possible for me to say that happily
the growing confidence of the people in Lord Cromer
and in the intentions of the English Government was
steadily, if very slowly, undoing and counteracting the
evil thus done. Unfortunately I cannot say so to-day.
Events have occurred that have almost wholly
scattered all the fruit of the progress that had
been made in this direction.</p>
<p>We have seen that, little inclined as the Egyptians<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></SPAN></span>
were to welcome any prolongation of the occupation,
they had accepted the evacuation of Fachoda as at
least a temporary resolution of all the doubts and
uncertainties that had worried them for so long. It
was what those who understand them might have
expected. They are essentially an impulsive people.
In every emergency their decision is made without
hesitation or faltering, too often without consideration
or thought of any kind but the impulse of the
moment. To such a people nothing could be more
trying, more irritating than that they should be kept
on from month to month and year to year helplessly
waiting on the decision of others, or on a development
of events they were powerless to control. This cause
was alone almost sufficient to stay all progress, social
or political, prior to the evacuation of Fachoda. For
years they had been "waiting to hear the verdict,"
and when it came, the mere fact of the ending of
their long, anxious suspense, took much of the sting
from the bitterness the verdict itself might otherwise
have created. And apart from all political and
religious feeling there were two causes that greatly
intensified the Egyptian's burthen during that trying
wait. These were his love of freedom and his love of
peace and concord. As an individual there is nothing
the Egyptian prizes more than his freedom—not his
liberty, but his freedom; not the legal and formal
admission of his rights, but the absence of restraint
that gives a sense of unfettered ease; not the liberty
that is the birthright of every British subject, be he
master or man, but the freedom the master enjoys as
master. For this the Egyptian can and will make<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></SPAN></span>
many sacrifices, even bartering much of his liberty
that he may enjoy it. And this freedom he could
not enjoy while yet the fate of the country was in
the balance. Reticent to his nearest kin in the expression
of his thoughts, he yet loves to speak freely
within the limits he allows himself, and this he could
not do while yet he had to guard against exciting the
animosity of rival parties and interests. He was
neither sitting on the wall nor trimming. On the
broad general question at issue he was clear in his
own mind and did not hesitate to say what he
thought, but he could not get beyond that. He
could not discuss men and matters as he should have
liked to have done. Once the die was cast and the
supremacy of the English settled, he was no longer
tossed on the horns of the dilemma, Which of two
evils is the least? but free to take a side and say as
he would, This thing is good or bad. It was the
same with his love of peace and concord. Hospitable
and kindhearted, ever ready to surrender his own
comfort and convenience, not only for his friends but
for the stranger, the universally prevalent discord was
to him a real grievance, so real that he would have
accepted almost any solution provided only that it
offered a reasonable hope of the re-establishment of
harmony. When after the revolt of Cairo, and again
after the siege, truce was declared, the people of the
town accepted it loyally and kept it faithfully. They
submitted to the rule of the French most unwillingly
and only under compulsion, but having done so they
adhered without murmur or quibble to the pact. It
was the same after Marchand had left the Nile behind<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></SPAN></span>
him on his homeward way. Finding themselves definitely
under the English, they accepted the inevitable,
and were, as they still are, ready to loyally,
honestly, and fully discharge their acceptance.</p>
<p>There was therefore a complete change in the
attitude of the people towards the English, and it
was not unnatural for them to look for a corresponding
change on the part of the English. No such
change occurred. Up to Fachoda the Egyptians had
been courted and flattered by the anti-English
Europeans in the country. The English, with a
few rare exceptions, held aloof from them. After
Fachoda the anti-English quietly dropped the Egyptians.
The English maintained their attitude of indifference,
and to the Egyptian seemed rather to assume
a haughtier air, to adopt more and more the tone of
conquerors in a hostile land, to treat the people as
enemies, and as enemies scarce worthy of a thought.
The Boer War broke out, and in the torrent of disasters
that pursued the British troops the Egyptians found
excuse for the reserved and chilling manners of the
English. But the closing of the war brought no
change, and the Egyptians began to ask themselves,
Of what avail is it that we seek to conciliate the
English when they make no response? None the
less they adhered to the position they had taken,
and hoped, as they still do, that Englishmen would
wake up to a sense of the injustice with which they
were acting. Meanwhile the utter failure of the
English to understand the real attitude and feelings
of the people towards them lends weight and force to
the evil wrought by the <i>Mokattam</i>. If, the Egyptians<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_347" id="Page_347"></SPAN></span>
ask, the English are really anxious to benefit us,
how is it that they thus hold us at arm's length?
How can they benefit us without knowing or understanding
what are our hopes, our wishes, our aspirations,
our prejudices, our predilections? And how
can they know aught of these while they sedulously
avoid all intercourse, friendship, or familiarity with us?</p>
<p>But it is not simply English aloofness of which
complaint is made, but the vulgar and aggressive self-assertion,
the rudeness and want of common civility
so many are constantly guilty of in their accidental
intercourse with the people of the country. These
are things complained of by Europeans, and, as is
well known, in Europe as well as in Egypt. The
Englishman flatters himself that these complaints are
due to envy and fanaticism. Nothing could be more
contrary to the fact. It is the expression, not of
envy, but of contempt, the utter scorn of the man of
the world for the uncultivated boor. That this is so
is proved by the fact that this antipathy is felt and
shown only towards two classes of Englishmen:
classes that have unfortunately of late years grown—as
other unhealthy excrescences are prone to do—rapidly,
the cads and those who ape these under the
guise of "good form." Men of the latter type are
much too numerous in Egypt, and may claim the
credit of placing endless difficulties and obstacles in
the way of Lord Cromer and English interests. The
men who have made the Empire were men cast in
another mould. They were masterful men; men
who could and did command respect through inherent
force of character and ability; men born to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></SPAN></span>
command; men whom others followed and obeyed
as a privilege. The men I speak of are of a different
type. Lacking in the high qualities of their predecessors,
and sensible of their defects, these seek to
obtain by arrogance the respect they cannot command.
With many it is their misfortune. The true
cad owes his contemptible character to his narrow
training and the want of a healthy, manly brain.
"Born of a butcher, by a bishop bred, how high he
holds his haughty head!" But the great majority of
those who by their caddish behaviour, like the ill-birds
of the old adage, foul their own nests, have
not this excuse to offer. They sin wilfully, deliberately
choosing to act as cads in toadying compliance
with what the monied cads whose society
they crave are pleased to consider "good form."
Like the pariah dogs of the street, fawning upon all
who perchance may have a bone to throw to them
and snapping and snarling at all others, the true cad
can never rise above his brainless, soulless self, but the
man whose caddish manners are as the mud-stained
garb of he who has rolled in the gutter is, often
enough, at heart a sound and healthy-minded man, a
brave and honest gentleman, a lion wrapped in the
skin of an ass! Verily a wondrous spectacle, most
strangely reversing the old fable! I have seen and
known such men in times of stress and danger to be
all that men should be, and I have marvelled to see
them return to the old false, lying lives.</p>
<p>Happily the evil is one that will not last. Already
he who hath eyes to see may see that once more a
great revolution is in progress. The old English<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_349" id="Page_349"></SPAN></span>
aristocracy of men who ruled at home and abroad
by right of their high qualities is fast dying out.
The stately old oak that has weathered the storms
and stresses of so many long years is withering and
perishing, smothered under the unhealthy growth of
parasites that are sucking its life-sap. The old
aristocracy is almost gone, the new with nothing
but its money-bags to sustain it, has not succeeded,
and never can succeed, to the political or social power
of its predecessors, and these, therefore, are passing on
to the strong men of the plebeian world, men who,
without the polish, have much, if not all the virtues
of the Empire-building classes of the past. For the
last time that history will ever record a government
that might by any just use of terms call itself
"Conservative" has sat in the English House of
Commons. Look back at the life of France ere yet
the hurricane swirl of the red flag of revolution had
scattered its aristocracy as a fierce autumn storm
scatters the lingering leaves of the bygone summer.
The lesson is an old, old one—one taught in many
pages of history, one coming down to us from those
far-off days wherein men first heard the proverb,
"Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty
spirit before a fall."</p>
<p>The evil is one that will not last. Pharaohs,
Ptolemies, Mamaluks, Cesars, Bonapartes; patricians,
feudal lords, aristocracies; in short, all caddisms and
flunkeyisms and falsities and other abominations,
however they may flourish and thrive for the
moment, if it were not for the clamour and
blare of their own conceit, would ever hear Time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_350" id="Page_350"></SPAN></span>
tolling the passing bell that tells of their open
graves.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, in Egypt and elsewhere, the two cads,
the real and the mock, are among the most potent
and the most active of the enemies of England and
the English Empire, and the most costly luxury that
the easy-going British taxpayer allows himself. This
is so, for the ill-will and hatred that these excite leads
thousands who might be the friends and promoters of
English interests to devote themselves to hindering
and counteracting those interests in every possible
way. And this same dislike serves as a bond of
union between the enemies of England everywhere.
It is doing more than all else to unite the people
of India of all races and creeds in one compact
nationality, and is elsewhere, and in other manners,
working evil for the Empire.</p>
<p>There are other unhealthy influences retarding the
work of the administration of the country and the
progress of its people. Notable among these is
the education question, or rather questions, for there
are several. The system adopted in the Government
schools is objected to as tending to the formation of
a class separated from the rest of the people by special
aims and interests, and having standards of life, of
morals, of religion, entirely different from those of
their own kith and kin; a class whose manners,
customs, and habits are at variance with those of all
their countrymen and co-religionists; a class slowly
but surely drifting more and more apart from all who
do not belong to it, and which is thus losing all possibility
of exerting the healthy influence upon others it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_351" id="Page_351"></SPAN></span>
should be easy for them to do with the advantages
they possess, or of becoming the leaven in the mass
tending to raise the whole. There are men who have
passed through the schools who are doing good work,
but they are few in number, and the good they are
doing is largely due to their having been subjected to
influences counteracting the pernicious effects of their
school training. A part of the evil thus charged to
the schools, Government and others, is that they are
destructive of the religious sentiments and aspirations
of their pupils. They do not convert these to
Christianity nor, as is so often said, to atheism, but
they do lead them to despise the duties of their
religion, to mock at its obligations, and to ignore
its social and moral restraints, and thus destructive
of all that goes to make the Moslem a worthy citizen
and man, gives them nothing in exchange, and leaves
them to go through life like wanton children drawn
hither and thither by every passing whim or fancy.
Is it a retribution that for the most part they go to
swell the ranks of the anti-English party?</p>
<p>The direct result of this evil is that the whole
of the people are being gradually divided into two
classes—the so-called (and very much mis-called)
"educated" class and the, by contrast of terms,
uneducated class, the class which, by the perversity
of facts, includes almost all who are really and truly
educated, those who have had moral and religious
training, have been taught to comprehend the most
essential fact that can be taught, that every man has
duties to perform, that he is not an isolated unit
with nothing to think of but his own pleasure and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_352" id="Page_352"></SPAN></span>
profit, but one of the vast congregation of humanity
whose members are linked together by the recognition
of the obligations of their common duties to God and
their fellow-men. It is true that the schools give their
pupils lessons to this effect, but all the circumstances
that surround the giving of those lessons and the
whole tendency of the life of the schools is to render
these lessons ineffective, mere tasks to be learned as
part of the daily routine, pretty theories to be
applauded and admired, not verities to be believed
and put in practice. And since the education given
in the schools is held up as the very life-blood of all
progress, it follows that all that is best in the country
turns aside and says, "If this is progress, then give us
stagnation; if to be an 'educated,' 'advanced,' 'enlightened'
man means to be a man who ridicules
duty, despises religion, and mocks at piety, then, in
the name of God, let us remain ignorant so only that
we still worship Him, and strive as best we may to
fulfil what we believe to be His law!"</p>
<p>Nor are the schools the only things mainly, if not
wholly, due to the occupation that offend Moslem
sentiment, and thus retard progress and decrease the
sympathy there might be between the people and
their rulers. I can only just mention two or three
of these without staying to comment upon them, as
perhaps the most active among many others. The
sale and consumption of intoxicating drinks in the
open streets, the almost unchecked promenading of
brazen-faced European women in the busiest and
most crowded thoroughfares; the open eating, drinking,
and smoking during the Ramadan fast; quarantine<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_353" id="Page_353"></SPAN></span>
and other sanitary measures frequently trenching
upon Moslem sentiment, such as restrictions upon
the pilgrimage and the holding of the religious
festivals of the people. These things are to the
Egyptian as the breaking of the Sabbath to the
Scotchman. What would the Scotch Sabbatarians
say if a number of Englishmen were to settle among
them, and insist upon carrying on business, opening
the theatres, and breaking the Sabbath in a dozen
other openly offensive ways? Would they be considered
"unreasonable" if they protested? Would
they be regarded as "ungrateful" because they did
not thank the invaders for the financial benefit they
were conferring on the country? Yet when the
Egyptians protest, however faintly, against such outrages
upon their sentiments, they are told that they
are "unreasonable," "backward," "unenlightened,"
"narrow-minded," and "fanatical."</p>
<p>There is another influence for evil to which my
reference to Sabbatarianism naturally leads me—the
Christian missions and their agents. Of the magnificent
social and humanitarian work done by Christian
missions and Christian missionaries in India no one
has a higher opinion than I have. Years ago I spent
a couple of days in one of the wildest parts of the
Bengal Presidency as the guest of a grand old man
who, with his wife—a worthy mate for him—were
dwelling, as they had been for years, among the
semi-savage tribes of the jungle, isolated from all
the comforts and conveniences of civilisation, seeing
no European faces other than their own save once or
twice in the year when the Commissioner made his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_354" id="Page_354"></SPAN></span>
annual rounds. A grand old couple—labouring with
endless self-devotion for the good of the stolid,
stunted-brained, almost naked people, more than half
savage in nature and habit, and by dint of tedious
toil and never-resting effort lifting some few of these
out of the depths, and winning them to humanity.
I have met many men and many women in my life,
but none that have claimed from me a more sincere
or lasting respect than these. But there are missionaries
and missionaries; and in Moslem lands there
are some who do much ill, and not less by their speech
than by the literature they circulate. In this they are
backed up by missionary and other journals, which
take a pleasure in representing Islam as a religion
that inculcates bigotry and fanaticism. I have myself
heard a missionary undertake to prove to Mahomedan
hearers that unless they hated Christians they were
no better than infidels. Taking passages from the
Koran, ignoring their context and the teaching and
interpretation placed upon them by the orthodox
Ulema, he had little difficulty in apparently justifying
his promise, with the result that some of his
hearers went away filled for the first time with the
conception that it was their duty to hate Christians.
Such incidents are by no means rare, and it would be
difficult to estimate the mischief they do. A few
years ago the late well-known Canon MacColl
flooded the Press at home for a brief time with
speeches and writings of this kind. Every word of
what he wrote was reproduced in oriental languages,
and did far more to excite fanaticism than any of the
most inflammatory articles that have ever appeared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_355" id="Page_355"></SPAN></span>
in any portion of the Moslem Press. How often have
Pan-Islamists, advocating friendship with England and
other European nations as a means of advancement
for Moslems, been met with the reply, "But they
themselves say that it is our duty to hate them"!
So the bigotry that takes unholy pleasure in misrepresenting
the truth reacts with fatal effect upon
the cause it pretends to serve.</p>
<p>The unhealthy influences of which I have spoken
so far all originate from sources outside the direct
action of the Government. None the less, they are
perhaps all influences that it lies within the province
of the Government to correct, and so long as they
are permitted to flourish so long will their existence
be regarded by the people as subjects of grievance
against the rulers of the land. It may be, and is,
said that some of these matters are things in which
it is wiser for the Government not to interfere.
There is much to be said on both sides, but in all
matters thus admitting of discussion there cannot be
the least doubt that the deciding consideration should
be the effect they produce upon the people at large.
That which would be best in a country like England,
the people of which have long been accustomed to
look upon themselves as the final arbiters in all
questions, is entirely out of place in a country like
Egypt in which, almost for the first time, the people
find themselves absolutely impotent to enforce their
wills in any matter whatever. Under the Mamaluks,
as we have seen, they had this power, and they did
not lose it until Mahomed Ali had succeeded in
enslaving them. If they exercised the power they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_356" id="Page_356"></SPAN></span>
possessed but rarely, to a limited degree, and mostly
in a futile manner, this was largely due to the ignorance
that prevailed, and to the violent methods of
suppression to which their attempts in this direction
were always liable. To-day the people no longer
suffer from the crass ignorance of those of the past.
The most illiterate peasant in the country is an
enlightened man compared to his ancestor of the
eighteenth century. Increased knowledge has brought,
as it should do, increased desires and aspirations, and
there is nothing that could testify to the sterling
merits of the Egyptian character more than the fact
that these desires and aspirations are such as the most
enlightened cannot but approve. That the people, as
a body, are not yet capable of giving their new-found
ideas a healthy, practical issue without the aid of those
more advanced than themselves is nothing to their
discredit. The path of political progress is a long
and difficult one to tread, and it is trodden most
successfully by those who, like the Egyptians, advance
diffidently rather than daringly, and the Egyptians
have made such progress as entitles them to be heard.
As yet, however, they have no adequate means of
making known their views. The Press of the country
is yearly filling better and better its duty in this
respect, but under the occupation the true voice of
the people—the Ulema, who in all times and in all
countries have always been the natural and most
fitting representatives of the people—has been, and
is, practically silent. Among Moslems the authority
of the Ulema is greater than that of the ruling prince
of their country, and the Ulema, drawn from among<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_357" id="Page_357"></SPAN></span>
the body of the people, have always exercised the
beneficent influence Macaulay has ascribed to the
Catholic priesthood, for, like it, the conditions of their
existence are such that, as Macaulay expressed it,
they "invert the relations between oppressor and
oppressed, and force the hereditary master to kneel
before the spiritual tribunal of the hereditary serf."
So in the days of the Mamaluks, we see the people
going for the redress of their wrongs to the Ulema,
and these going to the Beys, and rarely failing to
obtain some concession. Since the English occupation
this primitive, but in its essentials most
complete, measure of representative government,
has been in abeyance.</p>
<p>The Ulema are no longer regarded as the spokesmen
of the nation. Their voices are heard only
indirectly, and then not as speaking for the people
but as those of individuals. It is quite true that the
people of to-day belong to a generation that has never
had any experience of conditions other than those
practically such as now exist; but that they do feel
the need for some such system is certain, and it is
their sense of this need that is giving force and body
to the demand made by some of the "reformers" for
the introduction of a representative government, after
the pattern of those in being in Europe. For this the
people have no real desire. What they want is what
their ancestors had—an informal but ever-present
means of making their wishes known to their rulers.
No formally established body could supply their need.
They have now the Legislative Council, which is
intended expressly to be the voice of the people, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_358" id="Page_358"></SPAN></span>
while, like the Press, this is yearly growing in merit
and utility, it is not, and never can be, to the people
that which the Ulema have been in the past, and
should always be to the people of a Mahomedan
country—the representatives to whom these can go at
any time and in any manner to seek counsel and
advice, and to consult with that they may act as their
intermediaries with the administrative body of the
country.</p>
<p>It may seem to the reader that in my last paragraph
I have been wandering somewhat widely from the
subject of unhealthy influences, but it is not so, for
the Egyptians' sense of their inability to make their
wishes known is unquestionably not only an unhealthy
influence but one that is very steadily growing. The
Press does much to instruct the Government as to
what are the thoughts and feelings moving the people,
but at best it can only do this as the Press of other
countries does, rather as the expression of individuals
or classes than of the masses, and while it thus acts
as spokesman for the people to only a limited extent,
it can never be, what is most needed, an intermediary
that can not only speak for them but bring them a
reply.</p>
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