Tony Horwitz, in Baghdad Without a Map, experiences different cultures of the Arabic Middle Eastern world. An important part of his struggling journey is fitting into the culture of the unfamiliar place. He raises questions about many differences between America and Yemen, one of which is the safety and hostility issue: “Mindful of my mission, I asked Abdul why everyone carried a dagger. “Yemen not safe,” he said.” One probably cannot imagine a group of people all carrying daggers in the streets of Newburyport in order to protect themselves from uncertain possibilities of danger. As Horwitz senses more and more examples of carrying weaponry around him, he comes to a realization that protecting oneself is a natural part of the Arab society, because of the chaos caused political and military situations in its countries. For the people of Yemen it is a part of everyday life. They view the ‘tools of violence’ as a means to protect themselves, not to threaten the others. For first-time visitors like Horwitz, the AK-47’s, daggers, and sea mines are a major source of threat and discomfort, while they are safer to have ready considering the bigger danger that can haunt the people any time.
SL
Friday, February 16, 2007
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I agree that it is necessary for most of the people in the Middle East to carry weapons on a daily basis. It is necessary for protection but it is also part of their culture just as carrying a cell phone is a necessity of life in America. They use daggers and guns and we used credit cards and cups of Starbucks coffee as our daily dosage of familiarity or “Americanism”. It is of course scary to think that it is essential to carry a weapon at all times in the Middle East but then again we have the NRA in America who would love it if we could have guns on us at all times. For me that is an equally scary thought. Imagine walking down the street in Boston and seeing everyman with a gun or knife. Now imagine the gun related death rates skyrocketing because now everyman has a gun to defend his family both at home and in public. The United States would become the Middle East on redbull. But what motivates an American to kill and a Middle Eastern to kill really is not that different. Both people are motivated by fear, anger, and perhaps confusion. Confusion leads to the deaths of the innocents that we read about in the paper. Confusion is the little girl who was gunned down during a drug deal in Lawrence. Confusion is the little boy who was gunned down during an artillery deal in Saudi Arabia. Theses crimes are the same, caused by the same motives but in America this crime is front page news while in the Middle East it is like another other death.
H.C.F.
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