|  Lebanese protesters demonstrate at a Starbucks in 
              Beirut
 
    Tempest 
              in a Coffee Cup
 By Christopher DickeyNEWSWEEK
 26 June 2002
 
 The Arab boycott of American products wont 
              do much economic harm. But it is a powerful symbol of new grass-roots 
              activism in the Middle East
    It took a couple of minutes for the Saudi newspaper editor to notice 
              that his 21-year-old daughter was standing outside the Starbucks 
              window. Veiled, as most women are on the street in Jeddah, she was 
              gesturing furiously for him to come talk. He excused himself from his majlis, as he calls his morning coffee 
              klatsch with friends. How could you? his American-educated 
              daughter demanded. The editor was a little puzzled. Dont 
              you know, she scolded, that the CEO of Starbucks is 
              a terrible Zionist? Actually, the editor hadnt given 
              it much thought. Promise me, said his daughter, youll 
              never drink coffee here again. And so, since April, the editor 
              has been finding his cappuccinos elsewherethough he admits 
              he still misses Starbucks. 
 These days, such scenes are common throughout the Arab and Islamic 
              world, and Starbucks is only one of the targets. Since last spring, 
              any product identified with the United Statesand therefore 
              with American support for Israelmay suddenly find itself unwanted 
              by consumers in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Indonesia and Lebanon. Arabs 
              have long seen themselves as Marlboro men. No longer. McDonalds 
              and KFC also have taken hits. In the supermarket, all you 
              hear people talking about is whats made in America, and not 
              to buy it, says one Saudi housewife. 
 The boycott of U.S. goods, at once trivial and massive, populist 
              and postmodern, is unlike any other grass-roots political movement 
              the Muslim world has ever seen. And its a remindereven 
              as President Bush calls for democratic elections as a condition 
              for a Palestinian statethat when people really learn to speak 
              out, they may not say what the United States and its friends want 
              to hear.
 A veteran U.S. official in the region recently drafted an extraordinary 
              memo that tried to put the phenomenon in perspective for American 
              businessmen as well as his superiors in Washington. For the 
              first time (maybe ever) the least-enfranchised elements of a harshly 
              repressed society feel that they as individuals can make a difference, 
              says the memo, privately e-mailed to executives and diplomats with 
              interests in the Middle East and obtained by NEWSWEEK. They 
              feel that even a 5-year-old child has an opportunity to do something 
              meaningful, and can influence domestic and international events.
 Details about which American products to boycott are spread with 
              lists posted on the doors of mosques, to be sure, but also on Web 
              sites and even through the little digital text messages that teenage 
              boys and girls send each other from mobile phones. Everyone 
              is wired now, as the U.S. official puts it. Popular sentiment 
              for the boycotts is built in the media, with Arab satellite television 
              stations showing graphic footage of Israeli violence in the occupied 
              territories. The images inflame the commonly held opinion that poorly 
              armed Muslims are under ferocious attack by an enemy using American 
              guns, American helicopters, American jet fighters. The effect is 
              an emotional and visual conflict reaching to the heart of 
              the identity of every citizen as an Arab or a Muslim, says 
              the memo.
 Yet the anti-everything-made-in-America sentiment on the ground 
              in the Arab world is distinct from organized efforts by Muslims 
              in the United States to focus the issue on Starbucks, even if the 
              diatribes of one sometimes feed the other. On the American Muslims 
              for Global Peace and Justice Web site, for instance, Starbucks 
              CEO Howard Schultzs support for various Jewish charitable 
              organizations and his warnings about rising anti-Semitism around 
              the world are denounced as fueling an already tense situation 
              by using inciteful [sic] language to legitimize Israels 
              actions. 
 Schultzs spokespeople emphasize his interest in finding a 
              peaceful solution to the conflict. Starbucks is deeply saddened 
              by the current events in the Middle East, says Peter Maslen, 
              president of Starbucks Coffee International. With business 
              partners worldwide, Starbucks believes it is important to embrace 
              diversity as an essential component in the way we do business and 
              treat each other with respect and dignity. Other Schultz defenders 
              claim to detect a more prosaic motive behind the American boycott. 
              One Starbucks competitor, Caribou Coffee, with 185 outlets in the 
              United States, sold 87.8 per cent of its capital to Bahrains 
              First Islamic Investment Bank in December 2000.   The Bahrain bank lists among its guiding principles: Above 
              all, ensuring that all activities conform to Islamic Shariah [religious 
              law], which means, in the financial context, not paying or 
              receiving interest, and not investing in companies that manufacture 
              or sell alcoholic beverages. Conservative syndicated columnist Debbie 
              Schlussel notes in the New York Post that among members of the banks 
              religious advisory board is the controversial cleric Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, 
              who defends our brothers and children in Al-Aqsa and the blessed 
              land of Palestine generously sacrificing their blood, giving their 
              souls willingly in the way of Allah. Schlussel claims that 
              in the war on terrorism, choice of coffee may be definitive. 
              (Schlussel, whose Townhall.com online biography describes her as 
              having unique expertise on radical Islam, professional sports 
              and a host of other political, social and pop culture topics, 
              fails to note that Al-Qaradawi issued a fatwa, or religious edict, 
              approving the American war in Afghanistan. Hes often been 
              cited by the Bush administration as a supporter of the war on terror.)
 A representative of First Islamic in the United States says Al-Qaradawi 
              is resigning from the advisory board in July. Were not 
              a political institution, and we dont believe political statements 
              by an outside advisor should be attributed to us, says David 
              Crosland, executive director of the banks U.S. affiliate. 
              Boycott promoter Raeed Tayeh of American Muslims for Global Peace, 
              for his part, has said he never heard about the Caribou connection 
              until Schlussel brought it up on a Fox News shoutfest.
 This sort of talk-show tempest-in-a-coffee-cup misses the point, 
              according to people in the Middle East. The boycott is about popular 
              expression in societies where theres been little or none. 
              And questions of corporate ownership are not the issue, its 
              the power of the symbols that counts. American consumerism is part 
              of the Arab dream, or has been, even in places like Gaza. Hatred 
              for the Israeli occupiers there is as intense as anywhere in the 
              world. Yet until a few weeks ago, enormous billboards along the 
              main highway in Palestinian-administered areas advertised cigarettes 
              with THE BIG TASTE OF AMERICA. Now, even that dream is fading and 
              many people would rather do without. Palestinian political scientist 
              Marwan Bishara likens boycotting to fasting, Its like 
              a soul-cleansing thingI wont smoke Marlboros today. 
              
 The boycotts economic impact on the multinationals is slight, 
              and the effect on the U.S. economy is negligible, at least so far. 
              According to Charley Kestenbaum, commercial counselor at the U.S. 
              Embassy in Riyadh, American exports to Saudi Arabia may decline 
              from $6 billion to $4 billion in 2002, but that has at least as 
              much to do with slumping oil prices and slowing growth as with the 
              boycott. A typical franchise fee to the parent companies of fast-food 
              outlets is about 4 percent of revenues. The merchants who get hurt 
              are local suppliers of beef for McDonalds, or cream for Starbucks 
              coffeeand the local people who used to work behind the counters. 
              Nor are the policies of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon likely 
              to be swayed by Kuwaitis foregoing their KFC. But in a political 
              culture where individuals feel helpless, this new collective action 
              is reassuring. I believe in any form of passive resistance, 
              says Samar Fatany, a radio journalist in Saudi Arabia and mother 
              of five. We have to put the message across that we are angry. 
              
 The boycott has taken on a sociopolitical momentum and importance 
              way beyond the issue of supporting Palestine itself, says 
              the memo by the U.S. official. The regimes have tolerated 
              this grass-roots boycott as an alternative to resorting to violence 
              or civil disobedience. I wonder what this will lead to for future 
              domestic or foreign-policy issues when the people disagree with 
              their political leadershipsthe Pandoras box of civil, 
              political activity has been opened irrevocably.
 U.S. critics of the Saudis and the Arab world have focused 
              on the religious intolerance and the lack of democracy, the 
              memo concludes. Few things are more democratic than popular 
              actions of nonviolent political expression through economic activity. 
              We should be standing back and applauding the obvious long-term 
              positive implications of the emergence of a social activism unthinkable 
              only a few years ago in this region. That it exists at all is where 
              we want these societies to go. That it is directed at the U.S.A. 
              is our problem.
 
 
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