If Not Him, It Would Have Been His Brother |
| |
Authors: | Héchmi Dhaoui |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Groupe Tunisien d'etudes de la psychologie analytique, USA |
| |
Abstract: | The Arab-Muslim countries have remained pre-modern as opposed to other countries that have been able to find a balance between their local culture and a universal culture. Arab-Muslims have remained tied to their cultural specificity, a fact which, in my opinion, is related to a complex based on the defensiveness of the former colonized. This complex drives them to remain closed to any cultural communication and therefore to any opening capable of allowing the emergence of a sensibility to their rights as human beings, or even the development of a will to bring about a democratic environment in their countries. |
| |
Keywords: | Muslim (one who believes in God and Mohamed his Prophet) Islamist (one who turns Islam into a reactionary political ideology lacking democracy in corrupted regimes) |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|