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Arabia without T. E. Lawrence

By

JOHN RICE,

of Associated Press, in Amman, Jordan

There is little of Lawrence in Arabia.

No street, no town, no statue commemorates T. E. Lawrence, the World War I British officer whose name, in the West, still evokes the romance of the desert and of guerrilla campaigns with Arabian tribesmen.

Not a single shop or cafe named for Lawrence is listed in the national telephone directory of Jordan, location of his bestknown exploits. “Lawrence of Arabia was made a legend in the West. He was never a legend here,” said Sari Nasir, a University of Jordan sociologist who has written on Western views of the-Arabs.

A wartime propaganda effort, a classic book, and a celebrated movie made the camel-riding Englishman in Arab garb more famous in the West than the cause he fought for — the liberation of the Arabs from centuries of Turkish rule.

Mr Nasir said few Arabs knew who Lawrence was. For those who do, the memory is tainted by association with the broken promises of British colonialism. Lawrence, in his book, “Seven Pillars of Wisdom,” grossly exaggerated his own role in the Arab revolt, Arab historians say. "He did not lead the revolt. It was an Arab revolt. He was one among many,” said Suleiman Mousa, a Jordanian historian who wrote “T. E. Lawrence: An Arab View,” which documented errors in Lawrence’s book. Sensitivities are so strong that Jordan banned the Academy Award-winning “Lawrence of Arabia,” the 1962 motion picture in which Peter O’Toole played the title role.

Travellers can still see the rail lines that Lawrence dynamited, and guides will point out to Western tourists the rooms Law-

rence occupied in the crumbling Roman fort at Azraq. "But if I came and suggested a street should be named for him, or a cafe or a road, they would look at me as having a very strange idea,” Mr Mousa said.

Lawrence was an Arabicspeaking archaeologist who found his way into British intelligence in World War I and enlisted in the British effort to aid the Arab revolt

To divert Turkish and German energy away from Europe, Britain supported the rebellion launched by the Hashemite Sharif of Mecca, Hussein ibn Ali. The British promised to work for an independent Arab nation at war’s end in modern Syria, Palestine, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Iraq. The Sharif’s sons rallied a fierce army of desert tribesmen that, with British advisers such as Lawrence, fought their way 1370 kilometres to Damascus, ending centuries of Ottoman rule.

The victorious European allies put Syria under French rule and left Palestine, Jordan, and Iraq under British tutelage. Only the modern Saudi Arabia was made fully independent. Mr Nasir said the Lawrence legend fed on racial stereotypes and on Western beliefs that Arabs needed foreigners to guide them.

An American journalist, Lowell Thomas, made Lawrence a hero in 1919 with a series of lectures in the United States and Britain portraying the blue-eyed Englishman, in full Arab robes, leading wild tribesmen on daring raids against the Turks. The legend grew with “Seven Pillars,” which Winston Churchill said ranked with the greatest books, ever written in the English language.

Lawrence’s driving, poetic language captivated Western readers, but his descriptions were not always kind to his battlefield comrades.

“They were a limited, narrowminded people,” he wrote, “whose inert intellects lay fallow in incurious resignation.”

His alliance with one of Hussein’s sons, Feisal, and his expressed mistrust of another, Abdullah, also undermined his later standing among Arabs, for it was Abdullah who founded modern Jordan and who was grandfather of the present king, Hussein. Abdullah saw Lawrence as meddlesome and accused him of helping the Wahabis of ibn Saud take what is now Saudi Arabia away from Abdullah’s father, Hussein, after the war. Mr Mousa said the trauma of Arab disappointments, and European assistance for the creation of Israel, played against Lawrence’s reputation. “It is a matter of pride,” Mr Mousa said. “Had we achieved unity, had we not been defeated by the Israelis, I don’t think we would be so sensitive about Lawrence.”

He said his own opinion of Lawrence had mellowed since he wrote his book 20 years ago. "To my mind, he did his best to foster the Arab cause, as far as he was able, and within the framework of being a British officer,” Mr Mousa said. “For example,” he said, “Lawrence talked the British into giving the Arabs seats at the post-World War I peace conference.

“But he retained a colonialist view,” Mr Mousa said. “He thought that the Arabs should be guided by a Western Power, and that the British were the best for it.”

In spite of what he believes are its inventions and distortions,

the Arab historian said, “I should confess that the ‘Seven Pillars of Wisdom’ was a great service to the Arabs ...”

“It was, to my mind, the most important medium to bring ... the aspirations of the Arabs to the Western world.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19860826.2.103

Bibliographic details

Press, 26 August 1986, Page 18

Word Count
830

Arabia without T. E. Lawrence Press, 26 August 1986, Page 18

Arabia without T. E. Lawrence Press, 26 August 1986, Page 18

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