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The Great Theft of the Arab Identity

Take Egypt, for example. Its official name is the Arab Republic of Egypt, a product of 20th-century pan-Arab ideology ironically, created by two Arabized Syrians, one Christian and one Muslim. But Egypt itself is not an Arabian land. Egyptians shouldn’t get to represent Arabs. Like many other arabized regions, Egypt was only briefly colonized by Arabs, just as it was by numerous other empires.

Think of it this way: Mexicans speak Spanish because of colonization, but they have their own history, traditions, civilizations, and ethnic makeup completely distinct from Spaniards. Spain doesn’t let Mexicans represent it. Similarly, most Lebanese people speak French due to colonial influence, but nobody calls them French or let them represent France. And this logic applies in countless other cases 😅

Yet somehow, the Arabian identity keeps getting stolen and misrepresented. Arabized peoples vastly outnumber actual Arabians, which means they often overshadow us, and represent us whether positively or negatively. And there’s really no excuse for this. The Arab empires that once ruled them are long long gone. Languages like Coptic and Aramaic still exist and spoken and could be taught, so there’s no reason for this. Speaking Arabic as your national language is fine, but claiming the Arabian identity is definitely not.

Ask most people to name Arabic foods, and they immediately think of foods like falafel. But falafel originated in Egypt, created by Copts long before the Arab conquest, so it has nothing to do with us Arabs. Meanwhile, dishes like thareed or jareesh which are actually authentically Arabian are unknown. Hummus and falafel are actually as new to Saudi Arabia as they are to Europe, introduced mainly in the 1900s through globalization and urbanization.

What I’m saying is simple…..Arabs are an ethnic group with a distinct culture, DNA, and identity, and this identity is unfortunately being overshadowed and misrepresented by the Arabized . True Arabians know one another through tribal ancestry and customs. Distinguishing an Arabized person from an Arabian is mostly easy, but many Arabized people particularly influenced by the Ba’ath movement in the 1970s react negatively when I point simple facts out ….

This is the Arabian Peninsula the only region and people that can truly represent the Arabs:




There are Arabs elsewhere, especially in parts like southern Jordan, but these tend to be pockets.

I’m not saying this out of arrogance and I have respect for these other lands and their histories . But As a Saudi Arabian and also deeply rooted in the Arabian peninsula from an Arabian tribe, I am simply tired of seeing my culture and identity misrepresented all the time.
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Most people have no idea how diverse the Middle East is.
Moon3624 · 22-25, F
@LeopoldBloom
True the Middle East / the Mena region is diverse.

The idea of this “Arab world “ is harmful to the indigenous populations who are resisting arabisation , the arabized themselves with their identity crisis and constant contradictions , and the Arabians who have their identity misrepresented and stolen by the arabized.
@Moon3624 People use "Arab" as shorthand to cover Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, UAE, Yemen, Djibouti, and Saudi. I suppose you could say "Middle Easterners" which would include Israel, Palestinians, and I guess Iran, Azerbaijan, and Turkey, which are neither Arab nor Arabized.

Or MENA which includes North Africans.
Moon3624 · 22-25, F
@LeopoldBloom
Middle East / Mena is not an ethnic group
It’s a made up geographical/ political region.

Meanwhile Arab is an actual ethnic group
And my entire post is explaining about how it has been hijacked.

I don’t understand your comment and it seems kinda off topic .
Moon3624 · 22-25, F
@LeopoldBloom @ChipmunkErnie
@BohoBabe @jshm2 @basilfawlty89

[media=https://vocaroo.com/16ACW1SqV8PB]
@Moon3624 Why is the League of Arab States composed of:

Algeria
Bahrain
Comoros
Djibouti
Egypt
Iraq
Jordan
Kuwait
Lebanon
Libya
Mauritania
Morocco
Oman
Palestine
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Somalia
Sudan
Syria
Tunisia
United Arab Emirates
Yemen

Apparently the handful of Arab countries don't have a problem with Arabized countries calling themselves "Arab."
Moon3624 · 22-25, F
@LeopoldBloom
Most people in Djibouti and Somalia don’t even speak Arabic lmao
Anyways
Its a league for politics ironically created by Egypt
Anyways my post is about Arabs as an ethnic group .


There is Organisation internationale de la Francophonie (OIF)
It’s political cooperation between countries that speak French

Includes France, Canada (Quebec), many African states (Senegal, Ivory Coast, DR Congo, etc.), Lebanon, etc

Will you say that French people are ethnically same as people from Lebanon or Senegal?
Nope.

That’s my whole point.

And yes they are arabized 🥱
@Moon3624 The difference is that they refer to themselves as French speaking (which they are), and not French. So to be more accurate, the Arab League should be renamed to "The Arabic Speaking (mostly) League."
Moon3624 · 22-25, F
@LeopoldBloom
The whole point of this post is explaining the hijacking and theft of the Arab ethnic group
Making your entire comment illogical and irrelevant


I made the point that there is a league for all French speaking communities and world however that doesn’t make them French in the ethnic sense.
Just because there is an Arab league doesn’t mean those lands and peoples are Arabs in the ethnic sense

No matter how much you and them whine
, You don’t get to hijack it.

You seem eager to disagree with me on everything , well I sent a 9 min voice message in here explaining the hijacking how about you refute a single point mentioned in it 🤔
@Moon3624 I agree with you that the word "Arab" has been hijacked to refer to non-Arab "Arabized" people. However, the meaning of words changes and good luck convincing people to stop using the word in that way. I get it, it sucks, you're Arab and your unique identity is being used to refer to people who are not Arabs. Imagine how people in Central and South America and Canada feel when we in the US call ourselves "Americans" as if we're the only people on this continent. But if someone from Chile called himself an American (which he would be since Chile is in South America, he shouldn't be surprised if people assume he's from the United States.

Speaking of which, do you know that the full name of Mexico is The United States of Mexico? But if a Mexican said they were from the United States, most people would assume that meant Mexico's northern neighbor. My point is that the names of groups of people are not always accurate, but there's not much you can do once a particular usage catches on.

It's also clear that other Arabs don't agree with you. The Arab League isn't for Arabic speaking countries the way the word Francophone refers to French speakers. So before you start on me, call your government officials and tell them that they are contributing to the hijacking of Arab identity.
Moon3624 · 22-25, F
@LeopoldBloom


I don’t need to convince people of facts I simply share them.
Just like I don’t need to waste time trying to convince flat-earthers that the earth isn’t flat. No matter how much proof you show them, some people are wired to reject simple logic and facts.

There’s actually an Arabic poem that, when translated into English, goes something like this:

“You would have been heard had you called a living one, but there is no life in whom you call.
And if it were a fire you blew upon, it would shine, but you are blowing into ashes.”

After this, you gave a very poor analogy.

America is not an ethnic group
it’s a continent. And these continental divisions are modern constructs, arbitrary borders drawn on a map. For example, Asia and Europe are a single connected landmass, as are North and South America. These are geographical labels, not ethnic groups.

Native Americans themselves never called themselves “American.”
As for the United States, Mexico, and Canada, those are modern nation states and not ethnic groups . When you say you are Canadian, you mean you are a Canadian citizen that’s not an ethnic identity. This is why you can be Pathan by ethnicity but Canadian by nationality, or Kurdish by ethnicity yet a U.S. citizen by nationality. Jamal Khashoggi, for example, was ethnically of Turkish origin but Saudi by nationality. Saudi is a nationality not an ethnic group.

The European settlers, while they can be criticized for many things, did not hijack the identity of Native tribes. They didn’t claim to be Cherokee or Sioux or represent Indigenous populations. Instead, they defined themselves as “white.” So in fact, your analogy works against you.

You also ended your comment by saying “even your own people in Saudi support it.” That is not true. I can easily provide examples of Saudi academics, podcasts, and even historical sources discussing this issue. The very first King of Saudi Arabia addressed it, and a Saudi prince and governor even wrote a poem about it.


Yes, we are part of the Arab League in a political sense, but it was founded by Egypt, and naturally we would join any kind of alliance.