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Michel Aflaq (Arabic: ميشيل عفلق, 9 January 1910 - 23 June 1989) was a Syrian philosopher, sociologist and Arab nationalist. His ideas played a significant role in the development of Ba'athism and its political movement; he is considered by several Ba'athists to be the principal founder of Ba'athist thought. He published various books during his lifetime, the most notable being The Battle for One Destiny (1958) and The Struggle Against Distorting the Movement of Arab Revolution (1975). Born into a middle class family in Damascus, Syria, Aflaq studied at the Sorbonne, where he met his future political companion Salah al-Din al-Bitar. He returned to Syria in 1932, and began his political career in communist politics. Aflaq became a communist activist, but broke his ties with the communist movement when the Syrian - Lebanese Communist Party supported France's colonial policies. Later in 1940 Aflaq and al-Bitar established the Arab Ihya Movement (later renaming itself the Arab Ba'ath Movement, taking the name from Zaki al-Arsuzi's group by the same name). The movement proved successful, and in 1947 the Arab Ba'ath Movement merged with al-Arsuzi's Arab Ba'ath organization to establish the Arab Ba'ath Party. Aflaq was elected to the party's executive committee and was elected "'Amid" (meaning the party's leader). The Arab Ba'ath Party merged with Akram al-Hawrani's Arab Socialist Party to establish the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party in 1952; Aflaq was elected the party's leader in 1954. During the mid-to-late 1950s the party began developing relations with Gamal Abdel Nasser, the President of Egypt, which eventually led to the establishment of the United Arab Republic (UAR). Nasser forced Aflaq to dissolve the party, which he did, but without consulting with party members. Shortly after the UAR's dissolution, Aflaq was reelected as Secretary General of the National Command of the Ba'ath Party. Following the 8th of March Revolution, Aflaq's position within the party was weakened to such an extent that he was forced to resign as the party's leader in 1965. Aflaq was ousted during the 1966 Syrian coup d'้tat, which led to a schism within the Ba'ath Party. He escaped to Lebanon, but later went to Iraq. In 1968 Aflaq was elected Secretary General of the Iraqi led Ba'ath Party; during his tenure he held no de facto power. He held the post until his death on 23 June 1989. Aflaq's theories about society, economics and politics, which are collectively known as Ba'athism, hold that the Arab world needs to be unified into one Arab Nation in order to achieve an advanced state of development. He was critical of both capitalism and communism, and critical of Karl Marx's view of dialectical materialism as the only truth. Ba'athist thought placed much emphasis on liberty and Arab socialism a socialism with Arab characteristics, which was not part of the international socialist movement as defined by the West. Aflaq believed in the separation of state and religion, and was a strong believer in secularization, but was against atheism. Although a Christian, he believed Islam to be proof of "Arab genius". In the aftermath of the 1966 Ba'ath Party split, the Syrian led Ba'ath Party accused Aflaq of stealing al-Arsuzi's ideas, and called him a "thief". The Iraqi led Ba'ath Party rejects this, and does not believe that al-Arsuzi contributed to Ba'athist thought. Born in Damascus to a middle class Greek Orthodox
Christian family, Aflaq was first educated in the
westernized schools of the French
Mandate of Syria. In 1929, he left Syria to study
philosophy abroad at the Sorbonne in Paris. During his
stay Aflaq was influenced by the works of Henri Bergson,
and met his longtime collaborator Salah al-Din al-Bitar, a
fellow Syrian nationalist. Aflaq founded an Arab Student Union at the Sorbonne,
and discovered the writings of Karl Marx. He returned to
Syria in 1932, and became active in communist politics,
but left the movement when the government of L้on Blum,
supported by the French Communist Party (FCP), continued
France's old politics towards its colonies. Aflaq, and
others, had believed that the FCP followed
pro-independence policies towards the French colonies. It had not
helped that the Syrian - Lebanese Communist Party (SLCP)
supported the FCP's decision. From then on Aflaq saw the
communist movement as a tool of the Soviet Union. He was impressed
by the organization and ideology of Antun Saadeh's Syrian
Social Nationalist Party. Upon their return to Syria, Aflaq and al-Bitar became teachers at Tajhiz all'-Ula, "the most prestigious secondary school in Syria". Aflaq taught history, while al-Bitar taught maths and physics. By 1940, Aflaq and al-Bitar had managed to set up a student circle, which usually met on Fridays. That year, the Arab Ihya Movement, a political party, was established by Aflaq and al-Bitar. They used most of their spare time in 1941 to agitate for the party. It was in 1942 that Aflaq showed his skills as "a compelling speaker" who was able to utilize the "theatrical pause" to great effect. The party changed its name to Arab Ba'ath Movement to signify the radical changes which were sweeping the Middle East; Rashid Ali al-Gaylani, the Prime Minister of Iraq, had challenged Britain's domination over Iraq. The replacement of the word "Revival" with "Ba'ath" (Arabic: بعث, literally means resurrection/rebirth) signified that Arab revival had been replaced ideologically by the need for an Arab rebirth. The change of name led to Zaki al-Arsuzi, leader of the Arab Ba'ath Party, to accuse Aflaq and al-Bitar of stealing his party's name from him. Though both men were promoting a party platform based on an Arab nationalist stance, Aflaq and al-Arsuzi became bitter rivals. On 24 October 1942, both Aflaq and al-Bitar resigned from
their teaching positions, now determined to devote
themselves fully to the political struggle. In 1941 the Syrian
Committee to Help Iraq was established to support the Iraqi Government led by
Rashid Ali al-Gaylani against the British invasion during
the Anglo - Iraqi War.
Al-Arsuzi, the leader of the other Arab Ba'ath movement,
was skeptical of the new committee, and opposed helping
the Iraqis on the ground that they would lose anyway. In 1941 the
movement began publishing documents under the name the
"Arab Ihya Movement". Later, in 1945, Aflaq and al-Bitar
asked the French Mandate authorities to grant the movement
a party license. The Arab Ba'ath movement did not become
an official party until 1947, when it merged with
al-Arsuzi's Arab Ba'ath Movement to found the Arab Ba'ath
Party. The Arab Ba'ath
Movement, led by Aflaq and al-Bitar, drew supporters from
al-Arsuzi's Ba'ath Movement; during the 1940s, al-Arsuzi
started to seclude himself from the public eye, he
developed a deep distrust of others and became, according
to some of his associates, paranoid.
When the two Ba'ath movements merged and established the
Arab Ba'ath Party in 1947, the only subject discussed was
how much socialism to include; Wahib al-Ghanim and Jalal al-Sayyid from the al-Arsuzi
led Ba'ath movement wanted Aflaq and al-Bitar to adopt
more radical socialist policies. The Arab Ba'ath Party's first congress was held in Damascus in 1947. Aflaq took the pre-eminent position of Amid, sometimes translated as 'doyen' or as 'leader'; and was elected to a four-member executive committee, under the constitution adopted at the congress, this made him effective leader of the party, with sweeping powers within the organization; al-Bitar was elected Secretary General of the National Command. Zaki al-Arsuzi, the leader of the Arab Ba'ath, was not given any position, or membership in the party. Aflaq as Amid was responsible for ideological affairs and became the party's mentor, while al-Bitar controlled the party's day-to-day management. The merger would prove problematic, several members of the al-Arsuzi led Ba'ath Party were more left leaning, and would become, later in Aflaq's tenure as leader, highly critical of his leadership. In the late 1940s, Aflaq and al-Bitar gave free lessons on Ba'athist thought, and in 1948 they established al-Ba'ath (English: rebirth / resurrection). Aflaq tested the Ba'ath Party's strength during the 1948 Arab - Israeli War after early Syrian defeats he led several demonstrations against the government led by President Shukri al-Quwatli. He personally led demonstrations, and claimed that al-Quwatli, a landowner, was a corrupt and capitalistic politician, who was to blame for the Syrians army's defeat. Aflaq called for al-Quwatli's resignation, and wrote several al-Ba'ath articles criticizing his presidency and his prime minister, Jamil Mardam Bey. Aflaq was later arrested on the orders of al-Quwatli's prime minister Bey. Al-Quwali's government was brought down in a coup d'้tat led by military officer Husni al-Za'im. Al-Za'im banned all parties, claiming that Syria was not ready to establish a liberal democracy yet. Aflaq, who had been set free, was rearrested during al-Zai'm's presidency and sent to the notorious Mezzeh Prison. Al-Za'im's rule did not last for long, and in August 1949, he was toppled, and Hashim al-Atassi, who was democratically elected, took his place. Al-Atassi established a national unity government, and Aflaq was appointed to the post of Minister of Education, the only government post he would ever hold; he held it from August to December 1949. Al-Attasi's presidency did not last for very long either, and in 1951 Adib Shishakli took power in a military coup. Aflaq at first extended his support to the new
government, believing that he and the Ba'ath Party could
collaborate with Shishakli because they shared the same
Arab nationalist sentiments. His analysis of Shishakli
proved to be wrong, and one of Shishakli's first decisions
as ruler was to ban all political parties, including the
Ba'ath Party. The Ba'ath Party leadership, and several
leading members, escaped to Lebanon in the wake of
increased government repression. In Lebanon Aflaq and
al-Bitar agreed to a merger of the Arab Ba'ath Party and
the Arab Socialist Party
(ASP), led by Akram al-Hawrani, to establish the Arab
Socialist Ba'ath Party in 1952. The newly formed
party worked as a base of operation against Shishali's
rule Aflaq and the rest cooperated with non-Ba'athist
opposition forces too. Shishakli was toppled in February
1954. Following the overthrow of al-Shishakli, Syria held its first democratic elections in five years. The Ba'ath Party, led by Aflaq, al-Bitar and al-Hawrani, had 22 members elected to parliament. This increase in influence can largely be attributed to al-Hawrani several old ASP strongholds voted for the Ba'ath Party because of al-Hawrani's presence. By this time Aflaq was losing much of his power to al-Hawrani and his supporters, who were in a majority in the party. A proof of this was the decision of the Ba'ath Party to collaborate openly with the Syrian Communist Party (SCP), a move Aflaq opposed. Aflaq was elected the party's Secretary General of the newly established National Command, a title equivalent to 'party leader', by the party's Second National Congress. When, under the United Arab Republic (UAR), Aflaq was forced by Nasser to dissolve the party, he disbanded the party by himself, instead of convening a congress on the matter. The UAR proved to be disastrous for the Ba'ath Party the party was sidelined to a great extent by Nasser's regime. The Ba'ath movement, which was on the verge in 1958 of becoming the dominant Arab nationalist movement, found itself in disarray after three years of Nasserist rule. Only a handful of Ba'athists were given public office in the UAR's government, al-Hawrani became Vice President and al-Bitar became Minister of Culture and Guidance. Several members, mostly young, blamed Aflaq for this situation; it was he who dissolved the party in 1958 without consulting the National Congress. Hafez al-Assad and Salah Jadid among others, eventually established the Military Committee to save the Syrian Ba'ath movement from annihilation. The party's Third National Congress in 1959 supported Aflaq's decision to dissolve the party, but a 1960 National Congress, in which Jadid was a delegate representing the then unknown Military Committee, reversed the decision and called for the Ba'ath Party's reestablishment. The Congress also decided to improve relations with Nasser by democratizing the UAR from within. A faction within the party, led by al-Hawrani, called for Syria's secession. When the UAR broke-up in 1961, some members applauded the dissolution, among them was al-Bitar. The Ba'ath Party captured 20 seats, down from 22, in the
1961 election. In 1962, after
four years, Aflaq convened the Fifth Congress in Homs.
Al-Hawrani was not invited; cells that had stayed active
and defied Aflaq's orders, and Ba'athists who become
Nasserists during the period of the UAR, were not invited
to the congress. Aflaq was reelected the National
Command's Secretary General, and ordered the
reestablishment of the Syrian regional Ba'ath
organization. During the congress, Aflaq and the Military
Committee, through Muhammad Umran, made contact for the
first time; the committee asked for permission to initiate
a coup d'้tat; Aflaq supported the conspiracy. Following
the success of the February
1963 Iraqi coup d'้tat, led by the Ba'ath Party's
Iraqi cell, the Military Committee hastily convened to
hatch a coup against Nazim al-Kudsi's presidency. The 8th of March Revolution, a
military coup launched in 1963, proved successful, and a
Ba'athist government in Syria was established. The
plotters first order was to establish the National Council of the Revolutionary
Command (NCRC), consisting entirely of Ba'athists
and Nasserists, and controlled by military personnel
rather than civilians from the very beginning. The relationship between the Ba'athists and the Nasserists were at best, uncomfortable. The Ba'ath Party's rise to power in Iraq and Syria put Nasser, as he put it, "between the hammer and the anvil". The establishment of a union between Iraq and Syria would weaken his credentials as a pan-Arab leader. Nasser started launching bitter propaganda attacks against the party; Aflaq was dismissed as an ineffectual theorist who was mocked as a puppet "Roman emperor" and accused of being a "Cypriot Christian". In several Ba'ath Party meetings Aflaq responded with pure anger, and became an anti - Nasserist. Because of the position he took, Aflaq had a falling out with al-Bitar who still believed there was a chance to reestablish good ties with Nasser. The break with Nasser weakened the original leaders of the Ba'ath Party, which in turn gave the Military Committee room to expand. After taking power, the Military Committee looked for theoretical guidance, but instead of going to Aflaq to solve problems (which was usual before), they contacted the party's Marxist faction led by Hammud al-Shufi. At the Syrian Ba'athist Regional Congress, the Military Committee "proved" that it was rebelling equally against Aflaq and the traditional leadership, as against their moderate social and economic policies. The Military Committee was bent on removing Aflaq from a position of power, believing that he had become old and frail. At the Sixth National Congress held in October 1963, Aflaq was barely able to hold on to his post as Secretary General the Marxist factions led by al-Shufi and Ali Salih al-Sadi, in Syria and Iraq respectively, were the majority group. Another problem facing Aflaq was that several of his colleagues were not elected to party office, for instance al-Bitar was not reelected to a seat in the National Command. Instead of the traditional civilian leadership, a new leadership consisting of military officers was gradually growing; Jadid and Amin al-Hafiz from Syria and Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr and Salih Mahdi Ammash from Iraq were elected to the National Command. While the Military Committee was in fact taking control over the Ba'ath Party from the civilian leadership, they were sensitive to such criticism, and stated, in an ideological pamphlet, that civilian-military symbiosis was of major importance, if socialist reconstruction was to be achieved. To the outside world Aflaq seemed to be in charge. As the Tunisian newspaper L'Action put it; "The philosopher who made two coups [Iraqi and Syrian coups] in a month". The Ba'ath movement was not running as smoothly as the rest of the world believed; the Ba'ath Party cell in Iraq was already starting to lose membership. The Iraqi military and the party's militant arm, the National Guard, detested each others. Al-Sadi, leader of the Iraqi-Ba'ath Party cell, was eventually exiled to Madrid on 11 November by several military officers and moderate Ba'athists. An anxious Aflaq hastily traveled to Syria and dissolved the Iraqi cell's Regional Command, exclaiming that the National Command would rule Iraq in its place until a new Regional Command was elected. This was not greeted warmly by the majority of Iraqi military officers and Ba'athists the idea that a Christian was to rule over a Muslim country was considered "insensitive". The situation in Iraq did not improve, Abdul Salam Arif,
the President of Iraq and a Nasserist, plotted a coup
against the Ba'ath Party on 18 November, which succeeded.
The dream of cornering Nasser's pan-Arab project was over;
instead, it was Nasser and the Nasserists who were
cornering the Ba'ath movement. On hearing the news, Aflaq
and several Ba'athists fled Iraq for Syria. After a falling out with the Military Committee, of which he was a member, Muhammad Umran told Aflaq about the Committee's secret plans to oust the civilian leadership, led by Aflaq, and take over the Ba'ath Party. Shortly after, Umran was sent into exile as Ambassador to Spain for supporting the Aflaq faction. Aflaq responded to the threat posed to his leadership by invoking his office as Secretary General, and calling for the National Command to dissolve the Regional Command. He was forced to withdraw his request, when the majority of Ba'ath Party members proved to oppose such a move. A contest for power, between Aflaq and the Military Committee, ensued in the open; but it was a struggle Aflaq was losing. It was plain from the very beginning that the initiative lay with the anti - Aflaq forces. To counter the military threat, Aflaq invoked party rules and regulations against them. To counter this, the Military Committee befriended a staunchly anti - Aflaq civilian faction calling themselves the "Regionalists" this group had not dissolved their party organizations as ordered by Aflaq in the 1950s. The Regional Congress of the Ba'ath Party's Syrian cell,
in March 1965, devolved power from the center, the
National Command, to the Regional Command. From then on,
the Regional Command was considered Syria's ex officio's head of
state. The Regional Secretary had the power to appoint the
Prime Minister, the cabinet, the chief of staff and top
military commanders. Aflaq was unsettled by the way things
were moving, and in May he convened the Eighth National
Congress to get a showdown between his followers and those
of the Military Committee. However, this never came to
fruition. Several civilian members of the National
Command, such as the Lebanese Jibran
Majdalani and the Saudi Ali
Ghannam, advised caution, believing that if he
pressed the Military Committee too hard the military would
take over the Syrian cell, and then the Ba'ath Party as
had happened in Iraq following the ousting of the Ba'ath
Party's Iraqi cell. Because of their concerns, Aflaq kept
quiet. But to his astonishment, keeping quiet caused him
to lose his post as Secretary General Aflaq was
succeeded as Secretary General of the National Command by
Munif al-Razzaz, a Jordanian of Syrian origin. However,
the power between the two camps was unexpectedly
reshuffled when Amin al-Hafiz defected to Aflaq's camp. In
contrast to other military officers al-Hafiz had very
little influence within or outside the party. Al-Hafiz's
defection led to a resurgence of activity within Aflaq's
faction, al-Bitar and Umran were brought back from Spain
to form a new government. Al-Razzaz, Aflaq's successor as Secretary General, came from the pro-Aflaq faction. With the defection of al-Hafez, he ordered that the National Command was the de jure ruling body of the Ba'ath Party. He appointed al-Bitar Prime Minister, Umran defense minister, Manseur al-Atrash as Chairman of the National Council of the Revolutionary Command and al-Hafiz retained his post as President of Syria. Salah Jadid, the Military Committee's strongman, responded by arresting several Umran supporters. Umran responded by dismissing a handful of pro-Jadid officials. The most important of these dismissals was the removal of Ahmad Suwaydani from the post of head of the country's military intelligence to head of the Officer Administration. On 23 February a coup d'้tat led by Jadid and Hafez al-Assad overthrew the Syrian Government and the Ba'ath Party leadership. Aflaq was exiled from Syria, and ordered to never to return his homeland. Members of the party's other factions fled; Aflaq was captured and detained, along with other pro-Aflaq supporters, in a government guest house. When the new rulers launched a purge in August that year, Aflaq managed to make his escape, with the help of Nasim Al Safarjalani and Malek Bashour, both closely trusted friends and colleagues, and hence was able to flee to Beirut, Lebanon, and later to Brazil. Aflaq's downfall caused a split within the Ba'ath Party; the party was de facto dissolved and two Ba'ath Parties were established, one Iraqi led Ba'ath Party and one Syrian led Ba'ath Party. The Syrian led party was led by Jadid and his supporters and hailed Zaki al-Arsuzi, the founder of the Arab Ba'ath in 1940, as the father of Ba'athist thought, while the Iraqi led party led by Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr and Saddam Hussein, still proclaimed Aflaq to be the founder of Ba'athist thought. In February 1966 at the Ninth National Congress, held after the coup which ousted the pro-Aflaq faction, the Iraqi delegation split with the Syrian Ba'athists. The Iraqi's held the true Ninth National Congress in February 1968 in Beirut, and elected Aflaq as Secretary General of the National Command. Aflaq's election to the Secretary Generalship also proved to be his final break with al-Bitar; before the congress convened al-Bitar announced that he had left the Ba'ath Party and given up on the Ba'athist movement as a whole. Aflaq moved to Baghdad following his reelection to the Secretary Generalship in February 1968. He stayed there until 1970, when the Jordan - Palestine War broke out, he criticised the Ba'ath leadership of doing too little to help Palestine during the conflict. During the conflict, Aflaq lobbied extensively for Yasser Arafat and the Palestine Liberation Organisation. Aflaq wanted Iraqi intervention; al-Bakr, however, refused to get Iraq involved in such a conflict. Because of this, Aflaq returned to Lebanon in self imposed exile. The government of Hafez al-Assad, the President of Syria, condemned Aflaq to death in absentia in 1971. After four years of self imposed exile Aflaq returned to Iraq In 1974, a year before the Lebanese Civil War broke out. He refrained from taking part in Iraqi politics. He published several works during this period, the most notable being The Struggle Against Distorting the Movement of Arab Revolution in 1975. Aflaq regained some of his influence when he befriended Saddam Hussein, President of Iraq from 1979 until 2003. During the Iran - Iraq War the Iranian leadership accused Hussein of being under the control of a Christian, and Aflaq himself was labelled "a Christian infidel". Effectively, throughout his tenure as Secretary General in Iraq, Aflaq was given all due honor as the founder of the Ba'ath movement, but on policy making, he was ignored. Aflaq died on 23
June 1989 in Paris, after undergoing heart surgery there. Saddam Hussein
claimed that Aflaq had converted to Islam prior to his
death a claim that was later disputed by Aflaq's own
family. Even so, Aflaq was given an Islamic funeral.
Aflaq's alleged conversion is considered by his family as
a tool used by Saddam to disassociate Ba'athism with
Christianity. The tomb constructed on the orders of
Hussein was later used by American soldiers after the 2003 American invasion of Iraq
as a military barracks for troops stationed within the
Green Zone.
According to Aflaq's family, the tomb was badly damaged
during the invasion. "Unity, liberty, socialism"
The Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party slogan "Unity, liberty, socialism" is the key tenant of Aflaq's and Ba'athist thought. Unity meant the unification of the Arab people into one nation, the Arab Nation. The creation of an Arab Nation would have direct implications on Arab development. The establishment of this new state would lead to an Arab Ba'ath (literally meaning "rennaisance"). The Arab nations of his time could only progressively "decline" if not unified; these nations had various ailments "feudalism, sectarianism, regionalism, intellectual reactionism". The only way to "cure" the Arab nations was, according to Aflaq, through a revolutionary movement. Aflaq was influenced by Marxism in that he saw the need for a vanguard party to rule the Arab Nation for an indefinite period of time (the period would be a transition from the old to the new). The need for liberty was one of the defining features of Ba'athism, however, liberty not in the sense used by liberal democracies. Aflaq was a strong believer in pluralism of thought, but paradoxically, against pluralism in the form of votes. In theory, the Ba'ath Party would rule, and guide the people, in a transitional period of time without consulting the people because the party knew what was right. The last tenet, 'socialism', did not mean socialism as it is defined in the West, but rather a unique form of Arab socialism. Aflaq coined the word Arab socialism for his variant of socialism. Socialism, in its original form in the Arab world had, according to Aflaq, first come into being under the rule of Muhammad. The point of Arab socialism was not to answer questions such as: how much state control was necessary, or economic equality; but instead Arab socialism was a system that freed the Arab people from oppression and enslavement, which in turn created independent individuals. Aflaq opposed Marx's view that dialectical materialism
was the only truth, but believed that the "importance of
material economic conditions in life" was one of the
greatest discoveries in modern history. Even so, Aflaq was
critical of both capitalism and communism, and did not
want either of the two power blocs to collapse during the
Cold War believing that the Cold War was a sort of check and balance on their
power. What Aflaq saw in Islam was a revolutionary movement. In contast to other nationalities, the Arab awakening and expansion was attributed to a religious message. Because of this, Aflaq believed that the Arab's spirituality was directly linked to Islam, therefore, one could never take Islam out of the equation of what is, and is not, an Arab. Arab nationalism, just as Islam had been during the lifetime of Muhammad, was a spiritual revolutionary movement which was leading the Arabs to a new renaissance: Arab nationalism was the second revolution to appear in the Arab world. All Arab religious communities should, according to Aflaq, respect and worship the spirituality of Islam, even if they did not worship Islam in a religious sense Aflaq was a Christian who worshipped Islam. Aflaq did not believe it was necessary to worship Muhammad, but believed that all Arabs should strive to emulate Muhammad. In the words of Aflaq himself, Arabs "belong to the nation that gave birth to a Muhammad; or rather, because this Arab individual is a member of the community which Muhammad put all his efforts into creating [...] Muhammad was all the Arabs; let us today make all the Arabs Muhammad." The Muslim of Muhammad's days were, according to Aflaq, synonymous with Arabs the Arabs were the only ones to preach the message of Islam during Muhammad's lifetime. In contrast to Jesus, who was a religious leader, but not a political leader, Muhammad was both the first leader of Islam and of the Arab world. Therefore, secularisation could not take the same shape in the Arab world as it did in the West. Aflaq called on all Arabs, both Muslim and non-Muslim
alike, to admire the role Islam had played in creating an
Arab character. But his view on Islam was purely
spiritual, and Aflaq emphasised that Islam "should not be
imposed" on state and society. Time and again Aflaq
emphasised that the Ba'ath party was against atheism, but
also against fundamentalism; the fundamentalists
represented a "shallow, false faith." According to
Ba'athist ideology, all religions were equal. Despite his
anti - atheist stance, Aflaq was a strong supporter of
secular government, and stated that a Ba'athist state
would replace religion with a state "based on a foundation
Arab nationalism, and a moral freedom." Fouad Ajami criticised Aflaq for a lack of real substance, stating, "Nearly three hundred pages of text yield no insight, on his part, into what went wrong and what needed to be done; there is only the visible infatuation with words" and "Aflaq summons the party to renounce power and go back to its 'pure essence'". There is some truth in this critique. Aflaq spent much time writing optimistically about the future, and the past, of the Arab Nation, and how the Arab World could be unified. As Kanan Makiya, the author of Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, notes: for "Aflaq, reality is confined to the inner world of the party." In contrast to other philosophers, such as Karl Marx or John Locke, Aflaq's ideological view of the world makes no clear stand on the materialistic or socioeconomic behavior of humanity. While other philosophers usually separate between what is real and what is not real, Aflaq does not define what is and what ought to be, instead both are molded into the same category, what is attainable. In contrast to his longtime friend and colleague Salah al-Din al-Bitar, who was more practical when it came to politics, Aflaq was a "visionary, the dreamer rather unfitted for political life". Aflaq was described by his associates as an "ascetic, shy and intense figure living a simple and unpretensious life." He has been accused of seeking help from other people instead of fulfilling his goal by himself or with others he led; Aflaq collaborated with Gamal Abdel Nasser, Abd al-Karim Qasim and Abdul Rahman Arif in 1958, to Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr and Ali Salih al-Sadi in 1963 and finally in the 1970s to Saddam Hussein. There are several Ba'athists, mostly from the Syrian led Ba'ath Party, who believe Aflaq stole Ba'athist ideology from its original founder, Zaki al-Arsuzi. These individuals have denounced, and labelled, Aflaq as a "thief". In his writings Aflaq had been stridently in favor of free speech and other human
rights and aid for the lower classes. During the Military
Committee's gradual take over of power in Syria, Aflaq
rallied against what he saw as the establishment of a
military dictatorship, instead of the democracy for which
Aflaq had planned. These ideals were
never realized by the regimes that used his ideology. Most
scholars see the Assad regime in Syria and Saddam's regime
in Iraq to have only employed Aflaq's ideology as a
pretense for dictatorship. In short, Aflaq's
Ba'athism was used to create dictatorships in Syria and
Iraq. |