A world redrawn: Tunisian philosopher calls for contemplation
TUNIS: Under confinement in the capital, Tunisian philosopher and anthropologist Youssef Seddik has been spending time dissecting the meaning of words, and with them, the world.
From the coronavirus pandemic, he hopes to witness the birth of a rediscovered spirituality.
"It has changed me by making me think about words, about sayings that were self-evident and that we thought were automatic.
"For example: killing time. What is time killed? It is no longer positive," he told AFP in Tunis.
"Confinement must change our automatic response to language and force us to reflect more, to no longer trust the obvious and ready-made formulas.
"Perhaps we are about to inaugurate another way of thinking, rather like when we went from the Middle Ages to the Age of Reason.
"It would entail a revolt against the imperialism of method, gain, profit and monopolisation of wealth by the few.
"We are fed up with our time which gave us two (world) wars.
"To this day, we are living out the rest of this period, the division of the world into rich countries, developing countries and countries that are former colonies.
"This has negatively coloured humanity. Now is the time, during this pandemic, that we can completely change the data.
"I’ve found something very common to all nations experiencing the pandemic today, it is the relationship with death.
"Citizens of all countries and even young people, children, have more humility to say they are alive and more courage to look at death.
"For Islam, the four religious pillars (Ramazan, the hajj, giving of alms and prayer) have become more individual, they have been confined to the person himself.
"This is very important because for a very long time in our Muslim countries, the collective and religious dimension have taken precedence over the contemplative dimension of the individual.
"If this continues, it’s a very good thing.
"This will help Islamic societies get rid of all that is collective, what I call the belief of the herd, one that is easily led by a leader, a sheikh or whatever ideology.
"I believe this heralds a very broad future for Islam and a way of thinking about Islam that many thinkers, works and creations since the start of the last century have failed to stir up.
"Today, with the ban for hygiene and health reasons of most collective practices, I believe people will reflect on this forgotten truth that the relationship must be direct and without mediation between the divine and oneself.
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