In 1971, my family and I spent some time in London on our way to and from Lebanon, where I was going to visit family and conduct research for my doctoral dissertation. It was my first time outside the US and so, while in the UK, I read as many of the British dailies as I could get my hands on. I did so because I wanted to know about the events that shaped daily life and understand how people in that city viewed the world.
As it turned out, 1971 was quite eventful. There were the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland, ethnic/tribal conflict in Nigeria, tensions brewing between India and Pakistan, a coup and counter-coup in Sudan and unrest in South Africa and in Israel/Palestine.
What I remember most about the British Press coverage back then was how dismissive and even racist it all was. Terms of derision for the competing groups in the countries involved were commonplace. The conflicts, themselves, were written off as “par for the course”.
It wasn’t until we were nearing the end of our stay in London that it dawned on me that the British had played a significant role in exacerbating all of these conflicts and tensions. They had been the colonial power in each of these countries and, as had been their practice, they had either pitted one indigenous group against others or had set up settler regimes to assist their rule. When the mess they created had become ungovernable for them, they had jumped ship leaving the “natives” or the “natives” and “settlers” to their own devices.
What was, therefore, especially galling about this British Press coverage was their total lack of self-awareness and their refusal to acknowledge their country’s culpability in the tragedies they helped to create, and the derision they demonstrated toward the victims of their policies.
With some variations much the same occurred with the French in North Africa and the Levant and the domination and exploitation of Central America by my own country. While the British and French dominated, colonised, and economically exploited the far-flung regions of their empires, they also saw their role as spreading their “civilising” culture.
The American imperial role with our southern neighbours was different. We did not colonise, nor did we settle, or try to impose our culture. We were satisfied with economically dominating these areas, exploiting their resources, and insuring that whatever governments were in power were supportive of “our interests.”
It is precisely because of this sordid legacy of imperial and colonial conquest that I wax indignant when I hear political leaders in the West speak of “our values”.
Looking at the world today, it’s clear that the consequences of this imperial legacy are still with us. If anything has changed it is that we are now beyond just viewing the former “natives” as far-away oddities. They are now living within our borders, having come to find the opportunities they were denied at home. So when I hear the reactions in the West to the influx of South Asians going to the UK, or North Africans going to France, or Central Americans migrating to the US, I can only say “Guys, these are the fruits of your conquest – your chickens coming home to roost.”
A corollary to this is to understand where we are going. Our world has changed. We are now interdependent. The West is no longer apart from the world – it is a part of it: East and West, North and South, are now inextricably woven together. What the British did to Ireland, South Asia, etc.; what the French did to North Africa and the Levant; and what the US did to Central America – has forever transformed them and us. We, therefore, have a collective responsibility to examine the consequences of our history and behaviours and take corrective measures to right wrongs and bring to bear the universal aspirational values we claim to hold dear.