A year of a
great revolution
Mohamed
Kamel*
January 20th,
2012
A
year has passed since the great Egyptian day, January 25th, 2011
when a mass of millions of Egyptians took to the streets in a huge protest.
A protest that turned into 18 days of a peaceful pacifist
revolution, starting with a demo and ending with the unity of the Egyptians demanding
one thing, Mubarak has to go. They insisted on the removal of Mubarak
and his gang and they were united, so they won.
A
year later, people are asking themselves what has been achieved. Some think
that nothing was achieved because the people who protested in Tahrir are not in
power and they are lead by a mistaken assumption or by the dream that a
revolution is to change the earth’s direction in one day. Others understand that a revolution is multiple
steps starting with a revolt and now it is time to build.
A
year later, it is very clear, Mubarak is not in power, and his family is not in
control. Recently, Egypt had its first free election in its entire history. A
people elected parliament is to sit in its first session in a few days. A new
constitution is to be written. A president will be elected. So the building
started and Egypt needs all its daughters and sons to build it.
While
we are preparing to celebrate a year of a continued revolution, I got to see
Egypt very close through a short and an overdue visit. I visited Egypt for the
first time after the revolution and touched every coroner of its society
exposing myself to all views and ideas from the far left to the far right, from
the revolutionaries to the allusions of the minority in support of an ex-dictator.
I
felt a country that is revolting on its entire. People who never spoke politics
are now practicing politics. People have been changed. Not a fully
satisfactory change, but they changed, because they all agree that the past
will not comeback.
All
but minority participated in the election. They got their fair share of the
people’s vote, a fair election that the entire world witnessed and braised. Its
fairness is very clear from the outcome where only a handful from the old guard
have been voted back.
The
few who didn’t participate are the same few that think that the country can be
run from the street. The street is a tool to change but the ballet boxes is the
only tool to govern.
Am
I satisfied with everything going on in Egypt? Am I fully satisfied of the
developments in the last year? For sure not! We are just starting and it is a
very long process to rebuild what a gang in power destroyed in the last 35
years.
Some
think that they can take the revolution hostage for their own narrow minded
dreams, and as the new leftist president of Tunisia said yesterday that the
extreme left are destroying the revolution*, it is the same story in Tunisia
and Egypt as well.
While
we celebrate a year of this historic revolution we shouldn’t forget the price
paid for our freedom, a freedom that was bought as usual by the blood. We
should remember our martyrs and our injured in respect, promising them not to
give up our freedom to anyone anymore. We should remember them in respect not
by exposing their suffering to achieve a narrow minded goal.
What
is going in Tahrir in the last few months is not a revolution. It is a counter
revolution. Some might have a good intention but it is misguided with extreme
elements and some of the old regime gangs.
That
is why they don’t represent me anymore and don’t represent the revolution and they
shouldn’t represent any of us. Some might disagree, that is the freedom we gain
after January 25th revolution, a freedom we should keep and
maintain.
Happy
anniversary to all Egyptians and the entire world
* Mohamed S. Kamel: is a
Freelance writer, the editor of http://forafreeegypt.blogspot.com/,
he is a professional engineer, a LEED Green Associate and a recognized project
manager professional, he is Member of several civil society organizations, a
co-founder of the Canadian Egyptian for Democracy (CEFD), National Association
for Change in Egypt (Taghyeer – Canada), Association of the Egyptians of
Montreal (AEM), Alternative Perspective Media (APM-RAM), , Quebec Antiwar
movement “Échec à la Guerre”, Coalition for Justice and Peace in Palestine
“CJPP”, ex-president and co-founder of the Canadian Muslim Forum (CMF), member
of the board of trustee in the Canadian Muslim for Palestine (CMP) and
Community Center for Montreal Muslims (CCMM) . He could be reached at public@mohamedkamel.com
Please
read my earlier articles on the Egyptian revolution
22
نوفمبر 2011
المراهقة
السياسية
November 19th,
2011
In the name
of the revolution they are killing it
October 22nd, 2011
Revolution to build, not to revenge
23 يوليو 2011
لا تجهضوا الثورة
June 12th, 2011
The Arab Spring- a real people revolution
2
يونيو 2011
الثورة المصرية بن الحلم و الواقع
April 3rd,
2011
Palestine and the Egyptian Revolution
March 4, 2011
الشعب يريد تطهير البلاد... كل البلاد
February 13th,
2011
It is a Revolution that is changing the face of the Middle East
23
يناير 2011
الخوف..والوهن..ولقمه العيش في عيد الشرطه
January 15,
2011
و... لتكن تونس والسودان عظة لمصر
January 8th, 2011
(Witten on December 10, 2010)
Is this Egypt that we knew?