Don’t give up on young Arabs. By David Ignatius. Washington Post, April 19, 2016. Also at Real Clear Politics.
Ignatius:
As President Obama travels this week to Saudi Arabia, here’s a surprising snapshot of what young Arabs think: They’re scared about the Islamic State and terrorism; they yearn for more freedom and gender equality; they fear that the Arab Spring has made life worse; and they’re increasingly skeptical about the role of traditional religious values.
As President Obama travels this week to Saudi Arabia, here’s a surprising snapshot of what young Arabs think: They’re scared about the Islamic State and terrorism; they yearn for more freedom and gender equality; they fear that the Arab Spring has made life worse; and they’re increasingly skeptical about the role of traditional religious values.
If
these Arab reactions seem similar to what people would say in the West, maybe
that’s the real takeaway. Despite all the violence and extremism that plague
the region, most young Arabs have sensible modern reactions. This isn’t a world
apart: Arab youths hate the turmoil that’s wrecking their countries and want a
better, more stable life.
This
portrait of the Arab world emerges in a remarkable survey by the public relations company ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller and the
polling firm Penn Schoen Berland. It’s actually a time-lapse photo, because
this “Arab Youth Survey”
has been conducted annually for the past eight years. By reading the back
issues, you can see hopes rising with the Arab Spring in 2011, and then
crashing against the reality of violence and disarray.
Let’s
start with this year’s headlines: In face-to-face interviews with 3,500 young
people ages 18 to 24 in 16 countries, 77 percent of
participants said they were concerned about the rise of the Islamic State and
76 percent said the group would fail in its ultimate goal of establishing a
caliphate. Asked to explain why young people were attracted to the group, 24
percent cited lack of jobs, but a larger 25 percent chose the answer: “I can’t
explain it — I don’t understand why anybody would want to join.”
One
intriguing finding of this study is that Arab youths are increasingly dubious
about the role of religion and traditional values. Asked if they agreed with
the statement “Religion plays too big of a role in the Middle East,” 52 percent
said yes this year, with 61 percent of those in Arab Gulf countries, including
Saudi Arabia, sharing that view.
Women’s
rights also get strong support: 67 percent of young Arabs said their leaders
should improve the personal freedom and human rights of women. This progressive
view had roughly equal support from young Arab men (66 percent) as women (68
percent). By the way, an even number of men and women were surveyed.
What
kind of country do these young Arabs want to live in? The overwhelming answer
in 2016, for the fifth year running, was the United Arab Emirates — a Muslim
country that is increasingly open, tolerant, prosperous and adapting to the
modern world.
The
previous installments show how far the region has traveled over the past
decade. In the 2009
and 2010 surveys, there was a
yearning for democracy, with at least 90 percent of the respondents in most
countries saying that living in a democratic country was important to them. But
they still embraced a traditional world: 68 percent said their religion defined
them as a person in 2010, and men were far less likely than women to support
equal opportunity in the workplace. This Arab conservatism had eroded by 2014,
when the percentage who agreed that “traditional values mean a lot to me” had
fallen to just 54 percent from 83 percent in 2011.
The
hurricane of the Tahrir Square uprising that toppled Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak in February 2011 was vividly captured by the survey. In January that
year, 82 percent of Arab youth supported “traditional values.” A month later,
that number had fallen 11 points. Those describing their political views as
liberal jumped from 20 percent in January to 51 percent the next month. Young
people overwhelmingly supported the overthrow of Mubarak in Egypt and the
autocratic rulers of Libya and Yemen.
The
optimism and idealism of the Arab Spring were real. But so was the
disillusionment that followed. The share who agreed that “Following the Arab
Spring, I feel the Arab world is better off” collapsed from 72 percent in 2012
to just 36 percent in 2016. Egyptians bucked that pessimistic trend, with 61 percent
still positive this year about their revolution.
Here’s
what I draw from this survey: Young Arabs are sadder but wiser; they want a
freer, more modern life; and they’re skeptical about easy answers from religion
or democratic elections. They know they’re in a long transition, and they’ve
become more pessimistic, but they still affirm in each survey, “Our best days
are ahead of us.”
A simple
summary: Don’t give up on the Arabs. They’re living through hell, but they want
the same modern, secure world that most people do.