A great moment for the
long targeted,
colonized, subjugated,
tyrannized and
dehumanized Hammitic
Nations of Africa was
marked a few days ago,
when the Movement for
Autonomy of Kabylia, led
by the famous Kabyle
intellectual, artist and
political activist
Ferhat Mehenni,
officially requested
Autonomy Status for
Kabylia.
The Kabyles are the
Western Berbers, the
brethren of the Eastern
Hammitic nations of
Africa who belong to the
Cushitic (Kushitic)
family. Culturally and
linguistically original,
the Western Berbers are
the most authentic
descendents of the
Ancient Atlas, namely
the entire circumference
of Northwestern Africa.
Their ancestors formed
the outright majority of
the population of the
Carthaginian state,
which expanded over most
of the Mediterranean
coast of Africa, Sicily,
Sardinia, Corsica, the
Mediterranean coast of
Spain, and the NW
African coastland down
to Senegal.
Relatives of the Ancient
Egyptians and the
Kushitic / Meroitic
Ethiopians, the Ancient
Berbers excelled in
Arts, Letters, Sciences,
Philosophy, Commerce and
…. Democracy. Down to
our days, despite their
adhesion to Islam, the
Berbers preserved a
democratic social
structure that has many
parallels with the
Eastern Hammitic social
organization systems,
notably the Gadaa system
of the Oromos and the
Luwa system of the
Sidamas.
As the Ancient Egyptians
called them Rebu, the
entire NW Africa was
called after them, and
the term was taken by
the Ancient Greeks and
Romans (pronounced as
Libya, Libyans) and for
some time used as name
for the entire African
continent. Highly
literate, the Ancient
Berbers had introduced
their own Tifinagh
alphabet (also known as
Libyco-Berberic) which
is still in use today,
along with other
Berberic alphabets.
Close relatives to the
Southern Berbers, known
as Tuareg, the Kabyles
are the cousins of the
Hausa and Fulani
speaking peoples, the
brothers of the Sidamas,
the Oromos, the Afars
and the other Eastern
Hammitic nations of
Africa.
As much as the Oromos,
the Ogadenis, the Afars
and the Sidamas have
been oppressed by the
Semitic Amhara and
Tigray Abyssinians, as
much as Sudan´s Nubians,
Bejas and Furis (of
Darfur) have been
tyrannized by the
(linguistically but not
ethnically) arabized
Kushites of Modern
Sudan, so much the
ethnically conscious and
culturally committed
Berbers of Kabylia have
been persecuted by the
colonial French, and the
postcolonial regimes
setup by the French in
the shamefully divided
Atlas.
Not a single drop of
Arab blood can be found
in African veins…
The historical reality
throughout Northern –
Northwestern Africa is
simple: all the Arabic
speaking populations of
Libya, Tunisia, Algeria,
Morocco, and Mauritania
are not Arabs but
Berbers who gradually
got linguistically
arabized because of
their adhesion to Islam.
The official status that
Arabic had as religious
language in the times of
the Caliphates down to
the Ottoman era, and the
radiation of Arabic as
international
diplomatic, academic and
commercial language
throughout the Islamic
World contributed to the
fact of the slow
linguistic arabization
of the Berbers. However,
this fact did not imply
either cultural or
ethnic – racial
arabization, as very few
Arabs settled in the
entire area of Atlas
following the Islamic
Explosion (7th century
CE).
One has to underscore at
this moment that the
arrival of the Islamic
armies in the area of
today´s Libya, Tunisia,
Algeria and Morocco did
not involve many Arabs.
As early as 650 CE, all
the Yemenites (non
Arabic Semites), many
Aramaeans (non Arabic
Semites – forming then
the quasi-totality of
the population in the
area of today´s Syria,
Lebanon, Israel,
Palestine, Jordan, SE
Turkey, Iraq, SW Iran,
Northern Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Qatar and the
Emirates), many Copts
(Egyptians - Khammitic)
and many Persians
(Indo-Europeans) had
already adhered to
Islam, and participated
indeed in the Islamic
military expeditions in
NW Africa (less than 10%
of the Islamic invaders
of NW Africa were Arabs,
originating from Hedjaz).
In a similar way, the
Islamic armies that
invaded Spain in the 8th
century were formed by
sizeable part of Berbers
– new adepts of Islam.
It is noteworthy that as
late as the beginning of
the 19th century Arabic
speakers did not
outnumber Berberic
speakers throughout this
area that, with the
exception of Morocco and
Mauritania, belonged to
the Ottoman Empire. It
is only because of the
vicious colonial plans
of the French Apostate
Freemasonic Lodge that
arabization schemes have
been overtly and
covertly implemented,
systematically
supported, criminally
encouraged and inhumanly
promoted. The French
plan consisted in utter
spiritual genocide
against the Berber
Nation; it has however
failed.
However, with the
determined, courageous
and truly revolutionary
Request for Autonomy,
MAK ushers us into the
Era of the Berberic
Rehabilitation of the
Atlas which is meant to
destroy the criminal
colonial plans for a
vast state of confused
pseudo-Arabs whereby
there is no more
historical
individuality, cultural
traditional values,
sense of ethnic
belongingness, and
national identity.
Far in the African West,
the Dawn of a United
Berberic Atlas heralds
the most auspicious
perspectives for the
ongoing battle for
Independence of the
Berbers´ brethren in the
African East, the Oromos,
the Ogadenis, the
Sidamas, the Shekachos,
the Bejas and many
others.
The Era of Originality
closes down the criminal
colonial times of
mongrelism, confusion,
ignorance, and lack of
true identity. I
republish here
integrally the text of
the Official Request for
an Autonomy Status for
Kabylia, promising to
further expand in the
future.
Official Request for an
Autonomy Status for
Kabylia – 23 June 2008
http://www.north-of-africa.com/article.php3?id_article=509
7 years after having
formulated its first
claim, MAK (Movement for
Autonomy of Kabylia) has
formally officialised
its request for a
regional autonomy to
state authorities; a
copy was addressed to
international
authorities and to
Nelson Mandela. Adekar
was choosen by the
autonomist movement to
send the registered
mail, this locality is
located at 1000 meter
above the sea , mid-way
between Vgayet and
Tizi-Ouzou and close to
Amirouche´s headquarters
at Akfou. The delegation
was headed by Mr. Ferhat
Mehenni president,
Mouloud Merbaki Chief
secretary; Mohand Larvi
Tayev Head of the
National Council and Dr.
Djillali Bouzouane. The
delegation, then held a
press conference, around
3.30 p.m at Tizi-Ouzou´s
mediatheque; it was
lived up by Ferhat
Mehenni, in addition to
the presence of MAK
delegates, other members
among the lecturers were
present, such as : Mr
Ait Chebbib Bouazziz,
Said Laimchi and Mrs
Kamira Nait Cid. Other
initiatives will be
taken in the weeks to
come.
Timanit I Tmurt n
Iqvayliyen, Movement for
the Autonomy of Kabylia
Official Request for an
Autonomy Status for
Kabylia - M-A-K
To: The Presidency of
the Algerian Republic,
Algerian Authorities,
Popular Algerian
Assembly, Algerian
Senate, Algerian
Constitutional Council
Copy:
United Nations, UOA,
European Union, Human
right watch, Amnesty
International, FIDH,
GITPA, CAF
(Confederation des
autochtones francophones),
07/13/2008 Mediterranean
Union Summit, Nelson
Mandela
The ´kabyle´ issue has
poisoned the political
climate in Algeria since
it acceded to
independence. After
forty five years of
confrontation, the
difficult relations
between the Algerian
authorities and Kabylia
have created on each
side, conditioned
reflexes of mistrust,
which with time have
radicalised respective
positions. Their
relations have been
eroded by a mechanism
that one could call
"miming rivalry", those
from irreducible
enemies. The future,
according to this logic
and the process
initiated by the 1963´s
armed rebellion - that
triggered the "Black
spring" (2001-2003) and
the "Berber spring" of
1980 - is heavily loaded
and carry a burden of
risks if the two parties
do not come to an
agreement.
We know that for such
initiative, elected
members of the
government could have
appointed legitimate
representatives of
Kabylia and their
Algerian authorities´
counterpart.
Unfortunately, until
those do not recognise
the existence of the
Kabylia people, them as
well as History have
already disqualified
such representatives
many times. Once
integrated into the
Algerian electoral game,
these parties and their
elected members have
career and power
objectives that are far
away from the will of
their society and
people. If that was not
the case, the Algerian
authorities would not
have been forced to
negotiate at least twice
(School boycott
1994-1995, and black
spring 2003-2004) with
"unofficial" popular
kabylian organisations:
The "Mouvement Culturel
Berbčre" (MCB) and the "Mouvement
des Ârchs" !
The democratic
representation of the
kabylian people will be
solved by polls, in a
more opportune time. The
most important for the
time being is to
identify the problem
correctly and bring an
adequate solution. This
is at least, our duty
before mankind and with
regards to history
before this solution is
overtaken by events on
the field.
Between Kabylia and the
Algerian authority there
is more than a
misunderstanding, there
is an abyss.
On one side, Kabylia
that had its own
organisation before the
French colonisation of
1830 - which the Algiers
Regency stumbled on -
believed either in the
new Algerian state based
on the autonomy of
independence war ´s
Wilayas, or in a federal
Algeria with a
citizenship far from the
"two colleges" of the
colonial period in the
benefit of Europeans. In
short, she believed,
even partially, in a
recovery of its
sovereignty lost to
France. The independence
war initiated on
November 1st 1954 and
its declaration were
more dictated by the
emergency of ending the
colonial system than the
restoration of a
mythical Algerian state.
The future of liberty
was badly defined.
Worse, it has never been
discussed by the writers
of the November 1st 1954
Declaration which only
enumerate general
principles to enrol the
rest of the regions of
the country other than
Kabylia and Aures which
were already ready. The
essential was to engage
in an armed process
which goal was the
independence of Algeria.
Internal political
disagreements were
immediately (i.e. sine
die) postponed. At the
Soummam Congress, held
in Kabylia in the midst
of war, at the
initiative of Abane
Ramdane, a Kabylian, was
already concerned by the
same emergencies amid
protests - on the
content as well as on
the modality - from
already declared
Kabylia´s opponents,
among them some after
reaching the supreme
authority, continuing to
contest up to today the
spirit and the terms.
This has not prevented
Kabylia to commit itself
- soul and body - during
the war, until its end,
on March 19th 1962.
At that point of time,
the politico-military
kabylians who survived
seven years of war,
realised that their
ideal of liberty - for
which their people paid
high price -was slipping
through their fingers.
They engaged in a war
against the new Algerian
state under control of
the FFS and its
charismatic leader Ait
Ahmed qualified by
regime leaders of
"secessionist" and
"separatist". After
their defeat against
Algiers´ regime, the
Kabylians never
recognised themselves in
the Algerian State,
which is mistaken for
its Government. Since
the Algerian
independence, the
Kabylian has no choice
but to turn his back on
the government and its
oppressive institutions.
Fighting for his
identity, his language
and his culture in a new
country that claims to
be ´Arab´ where he is a
minority, requesting
democracy and human
rights in order to get
some minimum space to
survive. Kabylia has
given the more decisive
strokes to the "Parti
Unique" through the
"Berber spring" in April
1980 and the creation of
the first Algerian Human
rights League.
After 1989, Kabylia is
isolated and its dream
to get along with the
democratic Algeria
vanishes in the smoke of
burnt tyres and
barricades, general
strikes, sit-in,
truncheons and
repression which will
leave their mark for at
least a century. This
refusal to be
incorporated into an
arabo-muslim Algeria -
antechamber of a fascist
and arabo-islamist
Algeria as we can see it
these days - was
demonstrated at the
January 25th 1999 walk,
the school boycott of
1994/1995, the uprising
following the muder of
Matoub Lounes on
25/06/1998, and the
"black spring" in 2001.
Since then, Kabylia
displays its political
discord with Algiers by
the Boycott of All
Electiona (Referendum,
presidential,
legislative, or general
elections).
On the Algerian State
side, actions are more
serious. Inheriting of
the colonial French
State, the Algerian
regime pursues its
methods, its colonialist
vision and reflexes, at
least against Kabylian
whose identity, language
and culture are declared
as subversive and are
furiously fought by the
young Algerian State.
The latest aims to
eradicate those
permanently by adopting
a policy of cultural
genocide through Arabism
of their School who has
half opened doors - to
the "amazigh" language
and not to the kabyle
langage - for only 12
years. The Algerian
constitution integrated
it as "national langage"
in 2002 only, but not as
official and without any
drastic change to the
fate of the Tamazight
language in people´s
daily life. Therefore,
there culturally and
linguistically exist,
first class and second
class Algerian citizens.
The "two colleges"
policy - largely
disparaged during the
colonial period - has
been largely renewed
since 1962. Arabs are
first-class citizens in
Algeria, Amazigh in
general and Kabylian
more specifically are
second-class citizens.
They get killed, jailed,
tortured, watched, are
subject to provocations,
insults and racket and
exposed to national and
public condemnation for
their refusal of Arabism
and Islamism, two
elements that are for
the Algerian
authorities, the
exclusive features of
the Algerian identity.
Until now, those who ran
Algeria have tirelessly
pursued a policy to
depersonalise Kabylia´s
millennial identity,
through an always
renewed and
sophisticated
arabisation. They never
hesitated to oppress,
kill, jail and torture
opponents or protesters
willing to celebrate
their kabyle identity.
The incredible
resistance of Kabylia to
these renewed attacks
increases tenfold each
time the authorities´
hostility and will to
destroy the social
structure of Kabylian
people. At this time,
Army´s setting up
controls throughout
Kabylia, to prevent
intentions that she does
not have. Do these
intentions exist on
Algerian authorities´
side?
As seen, mutual
suspicion and distrust
are the expression of a
long close presence
where the chain of
mistrust has led the two
parties to a point of no
return (dead-end). The
Algerian authorities
consider that the
kabylian requests can
not be addressed at a
State level. Kabylians
who constitutes the
native people of its
land do not trust
anymore the Algerian
State whatever its
declarations are, that
are immediately refuted
by its acts. One can not
erase or mop up easily
decades of suffering,
discrimination and
injustice against a
People. A people has
always a memory, even a
formal request asking
forgiveness for all it
has go through would not
be enough to make it up
for the crimes committed
against it. The healing
process will only be
possible the day Kabylia
can proclaim its
regional autonomy. It is
vital to restraint the
use of force and drifts
of violence to solve the
legitimate recognition
of every people, the
kabyle issue.
Negotiations are more
difficult during a
crisis as the strength
imbalance would penalise
one party. It is now, a
relatively calm time in
Kabylia, when
authorities should
behave with a sense of
human values and
responsibility for a
solution of reason.
Hence, before the
national and
international opinion,
on behalf of the
Movement for autonomy of
Kabylia, (M.A.K) we
suggest :
1. The recognition by
the Algerian State, of
the Kabylian People
2. The implementation of
an autonomy status for
Kabylia
Under the international
treaties signed by
Algeria, compelling this
one to accommodate with
such request coming from
a kabyle organisation,
which claims the
principle of people´s
right to have themselves
at their disposal.
If some doubts remain on
the will of Kabylia to
assume its destiny
through an autonomous
regional State linked to
a central Algerian
State, we suggest to
hold a referendum as
soon as possible,
preceded by debates in
all villages and cities
of the Region. For every
democrat, the verdict of
the pool is the only way
to know the will of a
people.
Note
Translated from French
by Lazare for north-of-africa.com