<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<h3>HEALTHY INFLUENCES</h3>
<p>Though the outline I have given of the history of
Egypt under Mahomed Ali and his successors has
been of the briefest, it is sufficient for the purpose of
this volume. It would no doubt be a study of great
interest to see in some detail how the varying
characters and actions of their rulers and the events
these gave rise to affected the people, but the effects
thus produced have proved for the most part of a
purely temporary nature, and have been of such conflicting
characters that without a very elaborate study
it would be well-nigh impossible to trace their influence
upon the Egyptian of to-day. Fortunately
for my reader's patience, what we have to do with is
the influences that, broad and general in their results,
have also been lasting and are therefore still in
operation, and just as we may appreciate the force
and volume of the mighty Mississippi without studying,
as Mark Twain and his brother pilots had need
to do, its ever-varying currents and eddies, its snags
and snarls, so we may learn the strength and
tendency of Egyptian opinion without stopping to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312"></SPAN></span>
analyse all the incidents that have helped or
hindered its development.</p>
<p>As I have said in my last chapter, the full development
of the Egyptian character dates only from the
evacuation of Fachoda. As yet, indeed, the people
have taken nothing more than the very first steps
towards the adoption of a definite and clearly shaped
policy such as can alone give them a truly national
and distinctive character. During the whole of the
past century, beaten hither and thither by fluctuating
influences and impulses, the constant uncertainty that
overhung their future reacted upon their thoughts
and rendered these as unstable as the events by
which they were stirred, but since the commencement
of the English occupation influences have been
at work with steadily growing effect consolidating
and directing the thoughts and aspirations of the
whole body of the people and gradually creating a
true public opinion such as has never before existed.
These influences have been but three in number—the
increased acquaintance of the people with European
civilisation, their increased knowledge of the social
and political condition of the Mahomedan countries
of the world, and the development of the Arabic
Press.</p>
<p>Except in so far as it has contributed to the
strengthening and enlarging of these influences
through the facilities it has afforded for their operation,
the English administration of the country has
had but little effect upon its political or mental
development as a nation, although upon the personal
character of the people, that is to say upon the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313"></SPAN></span>
people as individuals, it has had a much greater and
stronger effect than either the English or the
Egyptians realise. The young Egyptian who has
grown up under English rule is of altogether a
different type to that which his father was. Whether
of the highest or of the lowest rank, he has a conception
of his personal rights and responsibilities that
places him socially and politically upon a totally
different plane to that of his elders. The general
effect thus produced is that he is more self-reliant,
more independent, and less willing to submit to
restraint of any kind than was his father. That this
change is the source of some evil is as certain as
natural, but that on the whole it is a change for the
better, and one tending to the elevation of the people,
is equally certain. Eventually it must have a powerful
influence upon the political feeling of the country.
As yet those who are most strongly affected by it
are for the most part too young to have any very
definite or influential place in the political affairs of
the country, but they are gradually swelling the
ranks of the journalists, and in but a few years will
be the men in whose hands will be gathered most of
the strings by which the people at large are likely to
be most strongly moved. Of all the tasks, therefore,
that the Government of the country and those responsible
for it are called upon to perform, if they
would ensure the future stability of the present
prosperity and the real welfare of the people, there is
none more important than that of endeavouring by
every legitimate and possible means to guide the
development of this change into healthy and
vigorous directions.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314"></SPAN></span>Joined with that loyalty to Islam and the Turkish
Empire I have shown to be dominant forces in the
country, the three influences I have just described
are those which are to-day, and must be for long
to come, the real controlling influences in the
political and social growth of the Egyptians. It
is conceivable, of course, that events might possibly
arise to divert, nullify, or even destroy the
effects of one or more of these influences; but this
is a contingency so remote and so little likely to
occur that it is needless to discuss it here. It will
be well, however, for us to see a little more of the
nature and effect of these influences as they actually
exist.</p>
<p>That these influences have been healthy will have
been gathered from what I have already said of
them, but it is necessary to show in what way and
how far they have been so. First, then, let us see
what has been the effect of the increased acquaintance
of the people with European civilisation.
Omitting all consideration of such minor effects as
the adoption of changes in dress, in the furnishing
of their houses and other details of their daily life,
the effect that is most potent for good is one that
goes much deeper and further than such merely
superficial matters as these. This effect is the
constantly increasing desire for the improvement
of the social and political conditions that prevail.
Keenly awakened to a sense of the deficiencies
from which they have suffered in the past, the
people are more and more being influenced by the
wish and the will for self-improvement. As yet,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315"></SPAN></span>
however, their views are but vague and indefinite,
and lie rather in the direction of ambitious dreams
than of purpose-giving aspirations. But though
they are eager, rather than emulous, to be regarded
as the intellectual equals of the European
peoples, it is certain that this desire is at least one
of the most powerful of the impulses by which the
life of the nation is being stirred.</p>
<p>As we have seen, Mahomed Ali, though a Moslem
and a native of Turkey, was essentially a European.
His knowledge of and sympathy with Islamic ideals
were of the slightest. Familiar as he necessarily was
with Oriental thought and life, the Egyptian and
Arab were to him more alien than the Western
Europeans. Hence his love of European society,
his passion for innovation on European lines, and
his frequent sacrifice of Mahomedan sentiment to
European utilitarianism. All that was best in the
man was strikingly European in type and character,
all that was bad was eminently Oriental.
Had he had such advantages of early education and
such surroundings as Bonaparte had had, he would
in all probability, nay, certainly, have proved a
really great man, a man of high ambitions and
great if not glorious achievements. As it was,
hampered by the want of the most elementary
education, cramped in aspiration by the narrowness
of his experience, and with a mind vitiated
by the false ideals of those amidst whom he was
reared and lived and by the evils of the only
political system he had any knowledge of, it is
not surprising that his rapid rise quickly brought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316"></SPAN></span>
him to a point at which he became the victim
rather than the ruler of affairs. His personal influence
with the people was but small, for the
popularity that led them to choose him as their
Governor did not long stand the strains he placed
upon it, and in carrying out his schemes for the
Europeanising of the country he met with more
opposition than approval and failed to awaken any
desire for the change he was so anxious to bring
about. He succeeded, indeed, in rendering the
people more familiar with European thought and
ideals than they had been, and thus set in motion
the current of thought that is to-day leading the
Egyptian to look to the West for his standard of
social and political life. As we have seen, the people
had been quite ready and willing to adopt all that
they found good in the methods of the French,
and now that Frenchmen and other Europeans
came amongst them, not as conquerors and dictators,
but as the guests and friends of a Moslem
Governor, they were much more willing to hear
their views and profit from their advice and instruction.
The good results that might have sprung
from this cause were, however, very largely barred
by the spirit of opposition created by Mahomed Ali's
attempts to force the adoption of unwelcome innovations.
It was therefore rather in spite, than in
consequence of his European tendencies that
during his reign the Egyptians began to have a
clearer conception of and more friendly feelings
towards European civilisation as a whole. Under
the French, with all the faults of their administration,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317"></SPAN></span>
a conviction had spread in favour of the
advantages of a regularly constituted and properly
organised government, and with this had also come
the recognition of the principle that it should be
the aim of a government to protect the interests
of the people, and that it was for the good of all
that the various classes should be treated with
equity. These are things taught indeed as part
of the law of Islam, but they were parts of that
law of which the people had had no practical
experience, and the discovery they had thus made
that Christian nations and peoples could and did
hold out as ideals, and still more, to a certain
extent bring into actual practice the teachings of
the Moslem faith, awakened in them a new interest
in the civilisation to which they had so long felt
the most irreconcilable hostility. It was under the
French that these thoughts first began to impress
the people. Under Mahomed Ali they were extended
and grew more familiar, but still, hindered
and checked by the unfavourable conditions that
encompassed them, they made but little substantial
progress. Yet, in defiance of all difficulties, they took
solid root, and when later on, under the successors
of Mahomed Ali, they were presented under a more
favourable aspect, they began to sway even the
classes that had at first most strenuously opposed
them.</p>
<p>The steady growth of the desire for reform that
has thus gone on from the time of the French
invasion, has been almost entirely spontaneous. It
has sprung, as I have said, from the increased<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318"></SPAN></span>
acquaintance of the people with European ideals
brought about by the presence of Europeans in
their country, but this presence, which has been the
chief cause of the progress made, has at the same
time been the greatest obstacle in the way of that
progress. To the present day this is so. All that
is reactionary in the spirit of the country to-day
is almost wholly and directly due to the presence
of Europeans in it, and the consequences entailed
by that presence. Again and again have I heard
some enthusiastic advocate of progress and reform
silenced and put to shame by some quietly made
allusion to some of the evils nurtured by the
European Consulates, or some of the anti-Islamic
laxities, the presence of Europeans, and the political
influence they possess, force upon the people. This
is indeed the great hindrance to progress, the drag
that stops the Egyptian from advancing as he might
and could. Yet, in spite of all difficulties, that
which is really good in the intercourse of the two
peoples is bearing fruit. Of necessity the first
produce of the new feelings, thoughts, and aspirations,
stirring to activity the long latent abilities
of the people, has been little more than a few
weak saplings of progress, too frail and immature
to send forth aught more than a few fragile
blossoms; but the crop is thriving, and though as
yet rich in neither quality nor quantity, it is the
fair promise of a sound, healthy, and abundant
harvest to come. It was not until the first half
of the nineteenth century had passed that the
appreciation of European civilisation became at all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_319" id="Page_319"></SPAN></span>
general; it is to-day almost universal. Nor is it
less powerful for good that it appeals to various
classes with varying aspects. To many it is no
doubt nothing more than an appreciation of the
physical advantages offered to the individual by
railways, electric tramways, telegraphs, and telephones,
and the hundreds of other minor inventions
that add to the pleasure or tend to the comfort or
convenience of life; to others it is the higher side
of civilisation, its intellectual and social advantages
that appeal most forcibly, but these are at the same
time appalled and repelled by its evils, and thus
the very men that it is most desirable should be
most strongly influenced are held back from accepting
much that they would otherwise welcome. And
these men, while always candid and open in their
intercourse with Europeans in the expression of
their sense of the merits of European civilisation,
and of the backward condition of their own countrymen,
are withheld, by their fear of appearing discourteous
or offensive, from even hinting at their
perception of its evils. Thus, left in ignorance of
one of the chief reasons why the Egyptian does
not more enthusiastically adopt and practise that
which he so freely commends, Europeans are
wrongly led to believe that the appreciation he
expresses is not sincere. It is not so. He thoroughly
comprehends the advantages he commends,
but at the same time he sees clearly enough, what
most strangely the European seems incapable of
perceiving, that the unrestricted adoption of
Western standards could not fail to set loose a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320"></SPAN></span>
flood of evils far outweighing all the benefits it
could confer. Hence at the present day the
problem that of all others attracts discussion in
native circles in Egypt is, How may we secure
the benefits, without incurring the evils of European
civilisation?</p>
<p>This, then, is the net result of a century of almost
daily increasing acquaintance with the people of
Europe and the civilisation of which they boast.
It is a problem that many earnest men are studying
in various parts of the Mahomedan world, and
which is tending to solve itself by slow but yet
perceptible steps. In Egypt the most hopeful
feature of the difficulty to be faced is, that no
one appreciates the need of reform more than, or
indeed as much as, the Egyptian himself. Fortunately
he is by no means inclined to accept too
hastily the often ill-considered advice Europeans
are prone to give him, for he can see, as they
cannot, the real difficulties to be overcome. Rightly
comprehended, then, the very slowness of the progress
being made, so far from being discouraging
or to the discredit of the Egyptians is quite otherwise,
for it shows that the advance being made is
sure and well-grounded, and not a mere passing
impulse, and it is a guarantee that all further progress
will be well-considered and deliberate, and
will thus be certain of producing more enduring
benefit than any hastily adopted reforms, however
brilliant their first effects might seem to be, would
be likely to secure.</p>
<p>Directly connected with the healthy influence<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321"></SPAN></span>
which is thus at work in Egypt and other parts
of the East is another of a very different character
in some respects, but tending in exactly the same
direction—the elevation of the moral, social, and
political standards of the peoples affected by it.
It is, however, of much more recent origin, for it
was not until after the English occupation that the
Egyptians, profiting from their increased intercourse
with Europeans, and the development of the native
Press, of which they are such avid readers, began
to give attention to the condition of Islam outside
the narrow limits of the Ottoman Empire. To the
present day the fellaheen indeed are indisposed to
credit the fact that a majority of the Moslems of
to-day are not only not subjects of the Turkish Sultan
but do not speak either the Arabic or Turkish
language. Naturally the English occupation turned
the attention of the more enlightened classes to
the question of England's relations with her
Mahomedan subjects in India and elsewhere.
Their conception of those relations were at first
drawn from uncertain and most unreliable sources,
and were scarcely less accurate than unfavourable.
Thanks mainly and directly to the honesty of the
<i>Moayyad</i>, the leading Mahomedan journal of the
country, the ignorance that formerly existed has
largely disappeared, and the news-reading public
are now able to follow the progress of events in
India and other Moslem lands with a fair knowledge
of the circumstances affecting them.</p>
<p>The interest thus excited in the affairs of their
brother Mahomedans in other lands is steadily<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322"></SPAN></span>
increasing, and this has led the Arabic journals to
pay special attention to all that appears in the
European Press with reference to any matter in
which Moslems are concerned. The outcome of
this is clearly marked. The Egyptians no longer
regard their country as they did a few years ago,
as an isolated unit, but see it as part of a great
whole of which it is its right and privilege to be the
head. And with this increased knowledge of the
Islamic world has grown side by side an increased
knowledge of the condition of the European nations
and more particularly of the Great Powers. Throughout
Islam it is now recognised that if these Powers
are no longer inclined to enter upon crusades against
the Moslem states it is not from any enlarged
tolerance for Islam nor from any peace-decreeing
doctrines of Christianity or civilisation, but because
they are restrained by the political conditions controlling
their relations with each other. This is
a matter on which it is no use saying smooth
things that have no basis of actual fact. There
is not a single Mahomedan in any part of the
world who believes any of the many protestations
of friendship for Islam made by nations or peoples
or governments. That these professions are genuine
enough for the moment, that they are not based
upon either falsehood or dishonesty of intention
is not asserted. Under existing conditions they
are honest and true enough, but they depend wholly
upon the continuance of those conditions. Side by
side with the growth of this knowledge and the
diffusion of the ideas to which it gives rise, there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323"></SPAN></span>
has been a similar increase in the knowledge that
the various Moslem peoples have of each other
and a growing perception of the causes that have
led to the decadence of Islam. Of these latter, as
every student of history knows, the two principal
have been disunion among the Mahomedan peoples
and the stagnation of social and intellectual progress
that followed the overthrow of the political power
of Islam. The recognition of these facts by the
Moslems themselves has pointed them directly to
the obvious remedy—the reunion of Islam and the
development of the social and intellectual capacities
of its peoples. Hence the rise of that Pan-Islamism
which has of late been so much discussed and is
as yet so completely misunderstood in Europe and
by Europeans living in the East.</p>
<p>The journalism of to-day is a very different thing
to that of the past. Its writers are for the most
part young men of the day essentially out of touch
with the days of their fathers. Whence we find
them presenting to us as novelties ideas that were
familiar to all newspaper readers of the last generation
and asking us to solve problems that we had thought
buried with our grandfathers. But in the modern
craze for rush and hurry and inefficiency the public
have no time to stop to inquire the history of the
topics brought before them. To some extent
conscious of this defect in themselves and others,
the modern journalist turns to the first comer who
can show any pretence of special knowledge on any
subject of the day and, accepting him at his own
valuation, takes him as an expert and builds up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324"></SPAN></span>
his own theories and speculations on his authority.
Thus the Cook-conducted tourist who rushes through
Egypt and the East without ever exchanging a word
with any native, save perhaps Cook's dragoman or
donkey-boy, is invited to give his ideas on the
"Egyptian Question" and so forth, and in doing
so very often quotes as an authority some European
who has been living in the country for heaven only
knows how many years, and who, if the truth were
known, knows scarcely less of the people than the
tourist himself, since all that he has gained by his
years of residence has been the accumulation of a
number of prejudices which are to him the explanation
of all things touching the past, present, or
future of the land and its peoples. If the blind thus
lead the blind whither can their progress tend? As an
answer look at the recent comments upon Pan-Islamism
in the European Press. Journals that
years ago spoke of Pan-Islamism as an idea full
of lofty promise for the future, not of Islam only
but of the world, have taken it up as a new subject,
treated it as a new movement, and hastened to point
out that it is a menace to civilisation. Some thirty
years have passed since Lord Beaconsfield, speaking
as the Minister for Foreign Affairs at the Guildhall
dinner in London, drew a brilliant picture of the
effects that might spring from the regeneration of
Islam under the protection and with the aid of
England. His speech created a world-wide interest,
but, as I pointed out in the <i>Bombay Gazette</i> of the
time, I had previously drawn attention to the same
idea, and I was thus one of the first, if not the very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325"></SPAN></span>
first, to discuss the subject in an English newspaper.
In India and in England, after filling the public mind
for a brief space of time, the subject was dropped and
the truly Imperial views of Lord Beaconsfield were
relegated to a pigeon-hole in the Foreign Office,
where, if the rats have not yet devoured them, they
are probably still lying. But if England thus
neglected the idea that as the <i>Globe</i>, if I am not
betrayed by memory, described as the offspring of
a "stupendous intellect," it was not so with the
statesmen of other countries, and from that day to
this more than one of the Foreign Offices of Europe
has not lost sight of the subject, needless to say, not
with any intention of promoting the views of Lord
Beaconsfield. Nor among Moslem peoples has the
subject ever been dropped. The yearly increasing
facility of travelling in the East and the growth of
the Arabic and Indian Mahomedan Press, have
naturally tended to help forward the efforts of the
more enlightened Moslems in various lands who
were first stirred to movement by the discussion in
the European Press, and to-day wherever Islam
exists there is a Pan-Islamic party, generally small,
but always having as its leaders the most enlightened
and most advanced men. Under the guidance of
these men Pan-Islamism is essentially a defensive
and not an aggressive movement—one for the elevation
of the people, and therefore an intellectual and
peace-promoting and not a military or war-provoking
one. That a few of the most ignorant of the people
should attach some hazy idea of Moslem conquest to
their conception of Pan-Islamism is but natural, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326"></SPAN></span>
to assume that because their vague, ill-formed, and
wholly undigested thoughts now and then find
expression in the columns of irresponsible journals,
run for the most part by men of no position,
education, or influence, these are to be taken as
the true exponents of Moslem thought is absurd.
Instead of being a danger to Europe or civilisation
Pan-Islamism is a movement that should have the
support of every lover of peace and civilisation, and
the fact that it is making progress in Egypt is but
a proof that the Egyptians have awakened to a
sense of the only way in which the best and truest
interests of their country and their religion can be
served. If the world at large is ever to see that
higher and truer civilisation of which it is capable,
the Powers must abandon that lust of conquest that
is but a drag on all true progress, they must cease
to look upon the interest of each as a claim to which
the interests of all others must yield, and combine
to seek the benefit of all. The more nearly that
ideal is reached the more important will it be that
Islam should be prepared to take its fitting place
in the grand scheme of regeneration. That it should
do so it must follow now and for ever the ideas
that are the mainspring of Pan-Islamism.</p>
<p>The third and last of the healthy influences I have
named is the development of the Arabic Press. Were
we to consider merely the number of years the
occupation has lasted, it might seem reasonable to
suppose that it has been the most powerful of all the
influences affecting the general character of the
people, but, as I have pointed out in the last chapter,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327"></SPAN></span>
it was not until after the evacuation of Fachoda that
it had any really solid or lasting effect. Prior to
that event the Egyptians had undoubtedly learned
to appreciate the principles illustrated in the administration
of the country by the English, but the
uncertainty that overhung the future prevented
even the warmest admirers and advocates of English
methods taking up a strong or definite position
in their favour. During the earlier part of the
occupation which as yet has been by far the longest,
the greatest benefit conferred upon the Egyptians
was therefore the freedom it gave them to profit
from the influences with which I have already dealt.
When the change came it found the great majority
of the people ready and willing to accept the friendship
and guidance of England, and the strength
and honesty of this feeling was clearly visible in
their attitude during the disastrous opening of the
South African War which followed so soon after.
While the Armenians openly and offensively rejoiced
at every fresh telegram of disaster and defeat,
the Egyptians not only preserved in public the
calm they had shown during the Fachoda incident,
but among themselves were not slow in expressing
sympathy. The reactionary party and some of the
lower classes were, perhaps not unnaturally, pleased
to see English pride humbled, but the one and only
class that really rejoiced at the humiliation was, as
I have said, the Christian Armenians. Among
Pan-Islamic circles there was a sincere wish for
the triumph of the English, for these knew that
the interests of the Moslems of South Africa were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></SPAN></span>
bound up with theirs, and that though the Moslems
had many just grounds of complaint against the
treatment accorded them by the colonists, and the
lack of protection afforded them by the Home
Government, they knew that the tyranny of the
colonist was, after all, better than the friendship of
the Boer. In this view the majority of the people
shared, and though the reactionary Press thought
it good policy to profess a desire for the collapse
of British rule, and to laud the Boers as heroes
fighting for liberty and so forth, they knew well
enough that the Boers would have laughed to
scorn any idea of granting social or political freedom
or equality to any Egyptian, or Mahomedan,
however high his rank.</p>
<p>Under the Mamaluks, as we have seen, contrary
to the commonly held idea that the people dare
not even protest against the injustices by which
they were oppressed, it was no unusual thing for
them to do so, and if they did not profit more
from the power of resistance they possessed, it was
because they were too indifferent to, or too ignorant
of, their own interests to defend these as they
might have done. Under Mahomed Ali and his
successors they were not only tongue-tied, but
enslaved in a far worse manner than they had
ever been by the Mamaluks. Under the English
they have enjoyed the most perfect liberty of speech—a
liberty that is only slowly subjecting itself to
the self-restraint that alone can render it as serviceable
to their true interests as it ought to be.
It was but natural therefore that the Press, for a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329"></SPAN></span>
large part written and conducted by men of no
position or influence, and actuated by no higher
desire than to gain the momentary applause of
their readers, should put the <i>Eatanswill Gazette</i> to
shame in its own particular line, and that the folly
and ineptitude of its articles should make the
Egyptians ridiculous in the eyes of all intelligent
people. But these are the faults of youth and
inexperience and lack of education, and are largely
due to the bad example of European papers of
little if any higher merit. Slowly but steadily the
Egyptian Press has moved, and is still moving,
towards a worthier standard, and the fact that its
movement is a spontaneous and voluntary one is
an incontestable proof that the Egyptians are a
people not only capable of, but anxious for, self-improvement,
and a people entirely deserving of
liberty. It is a maxim in mechanics that the
weakest link in a chain is a measure of the strength
of the whole. Of the newspaper Press of a country
I think it may be said that its strength and merit
are to be judged by its best. So judged we
cannot but think well of the Egyptian Press. That
the liberty accorded to it is still abused by journals
on a par with the lowest type of journalism in
Europe is to be regretted. It is an evil that will
eventually cure itself. Meanwhile the liberty
granted to the Press has undoubtedly been the chief
boon conferred by England upon the country. It
is a gift that has done more to educate and
elevate the people and promote healthy progress
than all else, or aught else, that has been done for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></SPAN></span>
the attainment of these ends. Slowly but surely
it is doing the great work accomplished in England
mainly through the establishment of Sunday and
"Ragged" Schools—the raising of the intellectual
standard of the people, the formation and nurturing
of healthy ambitions, and the creation of a higher
and purer conception of all the relations of life.
All that England has done for the financial, commercial,
and general material welfare of the country
and of its inhabitants, almost immeasurably great
and good as this work has been, is but a trifle
to the results that may ultimately spring directly
from the liberty given to the Press. As I have
said, the progress being made is slow, so slow that
European critics fail to grasp its real extent and
value, but it is steady, widespread and real, a progress
that will not be easily checked, and one that
is doing more to change the character of the
Egyptians in a healthy, life-giving manner than any
other influence tending in the same direction.</p>
<p>The good work that is thus being done is due
in the first place to the sound and enlightened
views of Lord Cromer, who has persistently refused
to be guided, or rather misguided, by the suggestions
of those who would fain see a censorship
established. By the course he has adopted Lord
Cromer has thrown upon the journalists of the
country a degree of responsibility of which, though
as yet its obligations are not fully recognised by
those on whom they lie, must tend, and is indeed
tending, to render the Press worthy of the trust
reposed in it. It is due to the sense of this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></SPAN></span>
responsibility already felt both by journalists and
the public, that the serious journalists find themselves
compelled more and more to justify the
policy they advocate, and to maintain it with consistency.
Thus instructed by experience, the people
are yearly exacting a higher standard of excellence
from the Press, and the demand is being met by
a corresponding improvement. We must not forget,
however, that the possibilities inherent in Lord
Cromer's wise policy might have still been lying
dormant and unproductive, if among the Egyptians
there had been no one to see these, and, taking
them up, render them in some degree an actuality.
Fortunately the occasion brought the man. It was
in the year 1887 that a small weekly Arabic paper
styled the <i>Adab</i> was first established at Cairo.
This rapidly becoming known for the ability with
which its articles were written, continued to grow
in favour with the Mahomedan public, to which
it was specially addressed, as a journal devoted to
science, literature, and religion, until the year 1890
when its editor joined the staff of the daily newspaper,
the <i>Moayyad</i>, of which, three years later, he
became the sole proprietor. From that date onward
the <i>Moayyad</i> progressed rapidly, and becoming
the recognised organ of the Ulema of the Azhar,
took the position it still maintains as the leading
Arabic and Islamic journal, not only in Egypt
but throughout the Mahomedan world. Various
journals have been started from time to time in
opposition to or rivalry with the <i>Moayyad</i>, but
none have ever succeeded in impairing its supremacy.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332"></SPAN></span>
From first to last this success has been attained
and preserved by the Sheikh Ali Youssef, its
proprietor and editor. Well read in all learning
that qualifies a man to take his place among the
Ulema, but ignorant of every language save his
own, the Sheikh, as a newspaper man and a leader
writer, is not only foremost among the journalists
of the East, but one who in his chief merit has
few, if any, rivals among the journalists of the
world. "His paper," says Mr. Hartmann in his
"Arabic Press of Egypt," "is a power to be reckoned
with. Moslems read it with pleasure, finding in
it what most delights their hearts. There they
read in strong, well-chosen and simple language
their own thoughts, or rather, what they imagine
to be their own thoughts; for such is the art of
the cunning journalist, that the unsuspicious reader
follows in the track of the writer's thoughts and
fancies them to be his own." When I add that
this man is a man of thought, of great self-restraint,
endowed with patience, energy, and perseverance, I
have drawn the picture of one who, in any community,
must exercise a large influence as a journalist,
but amidst a people like the Egyptians, so little
prone to think for themselves, must indeed be a
power to reckon with. As a fact, he has done more
to guide and mould Moslem opinion in Egypt
than any other ten men that could be named.
Like the historian Gabarty, of Arabic origin he is
personally a reserved, thoughtful man, leading a
quiet, studious life, adverse to ostentation and
parade of every kind, and yet possessing keen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333"></SPAN></span>
business instincts. The position he has won for
his journal has been gained by the steady pursuit
of the policy which he from the first adopted—the
love of justice and the desire to promote the
interests of Islam and of Egypt. He has again
and again had to meet the open hostility of different
classes of the people he has been trying to serve,
for he has not hesitated to advocate unpopular
measures and ideals when these have commended
themselves to his judgment, and yet he is persistently
set down by Europeans as a fanatic and
intriguer! Recognising as fully as any man can
do the advantages that the English occupation has
conferred upon the country, he is yet as a Moslem
compelled to weigh these against the disadvantages
due, not specially to the presence of the English
but to the influence of the European Powers generally.
Striving always to hold a just balance, never
hasty to judge, fearless though moderate in the
expression of his views, he is the one and only
journalist in the country who for years past has
steadily and with absolute honesty of purpose
endeavoured to promote harmony and goodwill
between the people and their English rulers. The
Egyptians have long since recognised this. There
was a time, indeed, when not a few of them cried
out that he had been bought by the English.
Unfortunately Europeans understand neither the
man nor his policy, and seizing upon some extract
from his paper, as often as not wrested from a
qualifying context, and possibly written by an outside
contributor, paint him as a firebrand and fanatic.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></SPAN></span>The best gift that England has yet given Egypt
is, then, the freedom of the Press, for this has been
and is the influence tending more and more strongly
than any other towards the healthy development of
the character of the people. There are some, if not
many, who, claiming to know the country, will be
inclined to deny this, but should no malign counter
influence arise to stay the progress now being made,
I am confident the verdict of the future will justify
my view.</p>
<p>The three healthy influences I have thus described—the
the increased knowledge of European civilisation,
and of the present condition of the Islamic world,
and the development of the Arabic Press—are each
stimulating and correcting the other, and are those
which of all others are working to modify and
improve the national character. The result they
have so far jointly produced has been that the
Egyptian is learning to take a broader and therefore
a healthier view of himself and his surroundings, and
has acquired new and nobler aspirations. His ideals
are no longer what they were but a quarter of a
century ago, and, in recognising this fact, he
recognises that the change has been brought about
very largely through the English occupation, and
that it is a change for the better. Nor is the
Egyptian ungrateful, as he is often and unjustly
accused of being. If his gratitude is not more
pronounced, unfortunately there is too ample reason
for its moderation.</p>
<p>Long years ago my old nurse once showed me a
pot of my favourite jam and promised that my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></SPAN></span>
watering lips should feast upon it without restraint
provided I were a good boy and first took a spoonful
of Gregory's Powder. I can still remember how my
lips dried up at the very mention of that most
abominable of all the medicines ever thrust upon
suffering humanity, and I turned with loathing from
the jam that a moment before had been so lusciously
appetising.</p>
<p>Let us see what is the Gregory's Powder that
taints the sweetness of the benefits that England
has conferred upon Egypt.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336"></SPAN></span></p>
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