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Egypt - A Story of Sadness

جمهوريّة مصر العربيّة

EGYPT - NOVEMBER 2011



محمد حسين طنطاوى سليمان‎

Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi

Mohamed Hussein Tantawi Soliman - born October 31, 1935) is an Egyptian Field Marshal and statesman.
He is the commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces and since February 11, 2011, he has been simultaneously the Minister of Defense, and Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, the de facto head of state of Egypt.
Tantawi has served in the government as Minister of Defense and Military Production since 1991 and was also Deputy Prime Minister in January–February 2011.

Tantawi, who is of Nubian origin, received his commission as a military officer on April 1, 1956 serving in the infantry.
He took part in the Sinai War of 1956, the Six-Day War of 1967, and the Yom Kippur War of 1973, all against Israel.
He held various commands and was assigned as military attaché to Pakistan.
Tantawi has served as Commander of the Presidential Guard and Chief of the Operations Authority of the Armed Forces.
In 1990/1991 he also took part in the U.S.-led Gulf War against Iraq to force it to pull out its troops from Kuwait, which it invaded on 1990 by commanding an Egyptian army unit deployed in the Gulf theater of operations.
On May 20, 1991, following the dismissal of Lt. General Youssef Sabri Abu Taleb, Tantawi was appointed as Minister of Defense and Military Production and commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces.
He was also appointed as Field Marshal.
It is believed that Tantawi would have succeeded Mubarak as president of Egypt, had the assassination attempt in June 1995 been successful.
Early in 2011, Tantawi was seen as a possible contender for the Egyptian presidency.





ميدان التحرير‎


Tahrir Square - Cairo - Egypt

Tahrir Square (English: Liberation Square) is a major public town square in Downtown Cairo, Egypt.
The square was originally called Ismailia Square, after the 19th-century ruler Khedive Ismail, who commissioned the new downtown district's 'Paris on the Nile' design.
After the Egyptian Revolution of 1919 the square became widely known as Tahrir (Liberation) Square, but the square was not officially renamed until the Egyptian Revolution of 1952, which changed Egypt from a constitutional monarchy into a republic.
The square is a focal point for the Egyptian Revolution of 2011.
At the centre of Tahrir Square is a large and busy traffic circle. On the north-east side is a plaza with a statue of nationalist hero Omar Makram, celebrated for his resistance against Napoleon I's invasion of Egypt, and beyond is the Omar Makram Mosque.
The square is the northern terminus of the historic Qasr al-Ayni Street, the western terminus of Talaat Harb Street, and via Qasr al-Nil Street crossing its southern portion it has direct access to the Qasr al-Nil Bridge crossing the nearby Nile River.
The area around Tahrir Square includes the Egyptian Museum, the National Democratic Party-NDP headquarters building, the Mogamma government building, the Headquarters of the Arab League building, the Nile Hotel, Kasr El Dobara Evangelical Church and the original downtown campus of the American University in Cairo.
The Cairo Metro serves Tahrir Square with the Sadat Station, which is the downtown junction of the system's two lines, linking to Giza, Maadi, Helwan, and other districts and suburbs of Greater Cairo. Its underground access viaducts provide the safest routes for pedestrians crossing the broad roads of the heavily trafficked square.



Tahrir Square - Cairo - Egypt - 22 November 2011

REFLECTIONS

The so called Arab Spring seems to be achieving very little.
Tunisia has had its election - but then no one is very interested in what happens in Tunisia.
In Libya the internal 'coup', disguised as a revolution, continues on its way with the announcement of a provisional government.
With the leaders of the Gaddafi tribe either killed, missing, or, in the case of the leader, Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar Gaddafi, brutally tortured and murdered, the Western backed  coup is yet another Arab case of 'moving the deckchairs on the Titanic'.
The foolish Egyptians deluded themselves into believing that the removal of the geriatric Mubarak would suddenly bring with it a torrent of Mercedes, designer jeans and Nokia and Apple i-phones, and maybe some much wanted jobs.
Instead the Army simply ushered Mubarak into the dictator's retirement home, and continued to rule Egypt, with the promise of elections in the near future.
I have watched, first hand, during the rule of Mubarak, as many Egyptians went from mud brick hovels to concrete and brick houses - from black and white televisions to wide screen, colour satellite TVs. From bicycles to motorbikes, and from motorbikes to cars. From no telephone to mobiles, even for the children.
And what thanks did Mubarak get for all that ?
Egypt is one of the most inefficient countries in the world, and the only institution that operates with any degree professionalism is the armed forces, and in particular the Army.
Whilst guaranteeing the security of the country, and guaranteeing law and order, the Army also controls about forty percent of the Egyptian economy.
Undoubtedly many of the officers in the army are corrupt - but then that is the norm in all Arab countries.
Equally, I can say from my own experiences in Egypt, that almost all Egyptians are corrupt, from the lowliest stall-holder to the highest officials in the Azhar.
When the rioters (protesters or freedom-fighters ?) accuse the military of corruption, it is like the 'pot calling the kettle black' - but of course, what the rioters really want is their grab at the power, and their resulting share of the corruption.
When the new round of rioting began, the rioters began by tearing down the election posters - so what hope for a fair and free election in the near future ?
And if Tantawi goes, and the army goes, as the rioters demand, who will hold the state together ?
The parties are ramshackle groups of amateurs, with no real plan for Egypt's future.
These groups are in no way capable of bringing order, stability and prosperity to to country which has, for as long as I have known it, been on the brink of disaster.
Only one group - the sinister Muslim Brotherhood - الإخوان المسلمون/المسلمين - stands quietly in the wings, waiting for disaster.
And them it will probably step in, and impose a theocratic regime, a Sunni version of the Iranian regime - and then we will see how the Egyptian people will like that !

AND THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT HAS HAPPENED !



 محمد محمد مرسى عيسى العيا
24 June 2012

Muhammad Morsi Isa' al-Ayyat, is now the President-elect of Egypt.
Since April 30, 2011 he has been Chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), a political party that was founded by the Muslim Brotherhood after the 2011 Egyptian revolution.
From 2000 to 2005, he was a Member of Parliament.
He stood as the FJP's candidate for the May–June 2012 presidential election.
On June 24, 2012, Egypt's election commission announced that Morsi has won Egypt's presidential runoff.
Morsi won by a narrow margin over Ahmed Shafiq, the last prime minister under deposed leader Hosni Mubarak.
The commission said Morsi took 51.7 percent of the vote versus 48.3 for Shafiq.

Morsi was born in the Sharqia Governorate, located in the northern area of Egypt.
He received a Bachelor's and Master's Degree inengineering from Cairo University in 1975 and 1978, respectively.
He received his Ph.D. in engineering from the University of Southern California in 1982.
He was an Assistant Professor at California State University, Northridge from 1982 to 1985.
In 1985, he returned to Egypt to teach at Zagazig University.
Two of his five children were born in California and are U.S. citizens.

Morsi served as a Member of Parliament from 2000 to 2005; he was elected as an independent candidate because the Brotherhood was technically barred from running candidates for office under President Hosni Mubarak.
He was a member of the Guidance Office of the Muslim Brotherhood until the foundation of the Freedom and Justice Party in 2011, at which point he was elected by the MB's Guidance Office to be the first president of the new party.
After Khairat El-Shater was disqualified from the 2012 presidential election, Morsi, who was initially nominated as a backup candidate, emerged as the new Muslim Brotherhood candidate.

Following the first round of Egypt's first post-Mubarak presidential elections where exit polls suggested a 25.5% share of the vote for Morsi, he was officially announced as the president on the 24th of June 2012 following a subsequent run off vote.
Morsi supporters in Cairo's Tahrir Square celebrated, and angry outbursts occurred within the Egypt Election Authorities press conference as the result was announced.
He came in slightly ahead of former Mubarak-era prime minister Ahmed Shafik and has been noted for the Islamist character of his campaign events.
Since the initial round of voting on May 23–24, 2012, Morsi has attempted to appeal to political liberals and minorities while portraying his rival Ahmed Shafik as a Mubarak-era holdover.
On May 30, 2012, Morsi filed a lawsuit against Egyptian television presenter Tawfiq Okasha, accusing him of "intentional falsehoods and accusations that amount to defamation and slander" of Morsi. According to online newspaper Egypt Independent, an English-language subsidiary of Egyptian daily Al-Masry Al-Youm, Okasha spent three hours on 27 May criticizing the Muslim Brotherhood and Morsi on air.
After Okasha aired a video allegedly depicting Muslim extremists executing a Christian whilst asking "how will such people govern?", some analysts suggested that this was in reference to Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood party.
On 24 June 2012 he was annouced as a winner in the election.
جماعة الاخوان المسلمين‎

Is this the future for Egypt ?
The Muslim Brotherhood - (gammāʿat al-ʾiḫwān/al-ikhwan/el-ekhwan al-muslimūn) in Egypt is an Islamist religious, political, and social movement.
Following the 2011 Revolution the group was legalized, and with an estimated 600,000 members or supporters it's considered the largest, best-organized political force inEgypt.
Its credo is, "God is our objective; the Quran is our constitution, the Prophet is our leader; Jihad is our way; and death for the sake of God is the highest of our aspirations."

حسن أحمد عبد الرحمن محمد البنا‎
Hassan al Banna
Founded in Egypt by حسن أحمد عبد الرحمن محمد البنا‎ (Hassan al-Banna) in March 1928, the group spread to other Muslim countries but has its largest, or one of its largest, organizations in Egypt despite a succession of government crackdowns in 1948, 1954, 1965 after plots, or alleged plots, of assassination and overthrow were uncovered.
Banna was born in 1906 in Mahmoudiyah, Egypt (north-west of Cairo in the Nile delta).
His father, Sheikh Ahmad 'Abd al-Rahman al-Banna al-Sa'ati, was a local imam (prayer leader) and masjid teacher of the Hanbali rite. His brother is Gamal al-Banna. He was educated at Dar Al-Uloum school in Cairo.
He wrote and collaborated on books on Muslim traditions, and also had a shop where he repaired watches and sold gramophones.
Though Sheikh Ahmad al-Banna and his wife owned some property, they were not wealthy and struggled to make ends meet, particularly after they moved to Cairo in 1924.
Like many others, they found that Islamic learning and piety were no longer as highly valued in the capital, and that craftsmanship could not compete with large-scale industry.
When Hasan al-Banna was twelve years old, he became involved in a Sufi order, and became a fully initiated member in 1922.
At the age of thirteen, he participated in demonstrations during the revolution of 1919 against British rule.

It was to spread this message that Al-Banna launched the society of the Muslim Brothers in March 1928. At first, the society was only one of the numerous small Islamic associations that existed at the time.
Similar to those that Al-Banna himself had joined since he was 12, these associations aimed to promote personal piety and engaged in charitable activities.
By the late 1930s, it had established branches in every Egyptian province.
A decade later, it had 500,000 active members and as many sympathizers in Egypt alone, while its appeal was now felt in several other countries as well.

Unrest in Egypt -1930s
The society's growth was particularly pronounced after Al-Banna relocated its headquarters to Cairo in 1932. The single most important factor that made this dramatic expansion possible was the organizational and ideological leadership provided by Al-Banna.
In Ismaïlia, he preached in the mosque, and even in coffee houses, which were then a novelty and were generally viewed as morally suspect.
At first, some of his views on relatively minor points of Islamic practice led to strong disagreements with the local religious élite, and he adopted the policy of avoiding religious controversies.
He was appalled by the many conspicuous signs of foreign military and economic domination in Isma'iliyya: the British military camps, the public utilities owned by foreign interests, and the luxurious residences of the foreign employees of the Suez Canal Company, next to the squalid dwellings of the Egyptian workers.

He endeavored to bring about the changes he hoped for through institution-building, relentless activism at the grassroots level, and a reliance on mass communication.
He proceeded to build a complex mass movement that featured sophisticated governance structures; sections in charge of furthering the society's values among peasants, workers, and professionals; units entrusted with key functions, including propagation of the message, liaison with the Islamic world, and press and translation; and specialized committees for finances and legal affairs.
In anchoring this organization into Egyptian society, Al-Banna relied on pre-existing social networks, in particular those built around mosques, Islamic welfare associations, and neighborhood groups.
This weaving of traditional ties into a distinctively modern structure was at the root of his success.
Directly attached to the brotherhood, and feeding its expansion, were numerous businesses, clinics, and schools.
In addition, members were affiliated to the movement through a series of cells, revealingly called usar (families. singular: usrah).
The material, social and psychological support thus provided were instrumental to the movement's ability to generate enormous loyalty among its members and to attract new recruits.
The services and organizational structure around which the society was built were intended to enable individuals to reintegrate into a distinctly Islamic setting, shaped by the society's own principles.
Rooted in Islam, Al-Banna's message tackled issues including colonialism, public health, educational policy, natural resources management, Marxism, social inequalities, Arab nationalism, the weakness of the Islamic world on the international scene, and the growing conflict in Palestine.
Symbol of British Rule in
Egypt - Sheperd's Hotel
By emphasizing concerns that appealed to a variety of constituencies, Al-Banna was able to recruit from among a cross-section of Egyptian society — though modern-educated civil servants, office employees, and professionals remained dominant among the organization's activists and decision-makers.
Al-Banna was also active in resisting British rule in Egypt.

Mahmoud
an-Nukrashi
Pasha
 
Between 1948 and 1949, shortly after the society sent volunteers to fight against Israel in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the conflict between the monarchy and the society reached its climax.
Concerned with the increasing assertiveness and popularity of the brotherhood, as well as with rumors that it was plotting a coup, Prime Minister Mahmoud an-Nukrashi Pasha disbanded it in December 1948.
The organization's assets were impounded and scores of its members sent to jail. Following Pasha's assassination, Al-Banna promptly released a statement condemning the assassination, stating that terror is not an acceptable way in Islam.
This in turn prompted the assassination of Al-Banna.
On February 12, 1949 in Cairo, Al-Banna was at the Jamiyyah al-Shubban al-Muslimeen headquarters with his brother in-law Abdul Karim Mansur to negotiate with Minister Zaki Ali Basha who represented the government side.
Minister Zaki Ali Basha never arrived.
By 5 p.m., Al-Banna and his brother-in-law decided to leave.
As they stood waiting for a taxi, they were shot by two men. He eventually died from his wounds.
In honor of his death in 1949, he was often referred to as "As-Shaheed Imam Hassan Al-Banna" (Martyr Imam Hassan Al-Banna).











for more information about Egypt go to 'Mustafa's Egypt'











Legacy of the Ottoman Empire


دَوْلَتِ عَلِيّهٔ عُثمَانِیّه
OSMANLI İMPARATORLUĞU

THE LEGACY OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE


Many people are puzzled by all the turmoil, confusion and bloodshed that exists in the Middle East today, and seek answers in the complexities of current events, however, the root of the Middle eastern problem lie in the past, and in particular in that entity known as the Ottoman (Osman) Empire - the great Empire of the Turks created by the Osman dynasty.
The Osmans were Sultans (سلطان)‎ (holders of power) and Caliphs, (خليفة‎ ḫalīfah/khalīfah -  title for the ruler of the Islamic Ummah), over all of what is now known as the Near and Middle East.

The Ottoman Empire, or Sublime Ottoman State, which lasted from 27 July 1299 to 29 October 1923, is one of 16 Turkish empires established throughout history.
The Ottoman Empire was one of the largest and longest lasting empires in history.
It was an empire inspired and sustained by Islam, and Islamic institutions.
At the height of its power, in the 16th and 17th centuries, it controlled territory in southeast Europe, western Asia, and North Africa.

Osmanlı İmparatorluğu Haritası
Map of the Ottoman Empire - 1914

Osmanlı İmparatorluğu
 (The Ottoman Empire)

The Ottoman Empire contained 29 provinces and numerous vassal states, some of which were later absorbed into the empire, while others were granted various types of autonomy during the course of centuries.
With Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, - Kostantiniyye) as its capital city, and vast control of lands around the eastern Mediterranean during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent (ruled 1520 to 1566), the empire was at the center of interactions between the Eastern and Western worlds for six centuries.


The Ottoman Empire came to an end, as a regime under a monarchy, on 1 November 1922.
It formally ended, as a de jure state, on 24 July 1923, under the Treaty of Lausanne.
The Republic of Turkey, which was officially proclaimed on 29 October 1923, became one of the successor states of the Ottoman Empire as part of the treaty.


Palace of Nations
Milletler Lwague Sarayı
League of Nations
The League of Nationa
Milletler Lwague
At the end of the First World War, the Allied powers were confronted with the question of the disposal of the former German colonies in Africa and the Pacific, and the several non-Turkish provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The Peace Conference adopted the principle that these territories should be administered by different governments on behalf of the League – a system of national responsibility subject to international supervision.
This plan, defined as the mandate system, was adopted by the "Council of Ten" (the heads of government and foreign ministers of the main Allied powers: Britain, France, the United States, Italy, and Japan) on 30 January 1919 and transmitted to the League of Nations.
League of Nations mandates were established under Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations.
The Permanent Mandates Commission supervised League of Nations mandates, and also organized plebiscites in disputed territories so that residents could decide which country they would join. There were three mandate classifications: A, B and C.
The A mandates (applied to parts of the old Ottoman Empire) were "certain communities" that had
...reached a stage of development where their existence as independent nations can be provisionally recognised subject to the rendering of administrative advice and assistance by a Mandatory until such time as they are able to stand alone.
The wishes of these communities must be a principal consideration in the selection of the Mandatory.

Article 22, The Covenant of the League of Nations



Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nun çözülme
(The Dissolution of the Ottoman Empire)

The Dissolution of the Ottoman Empire (24 July 1908 – 30 October 1918) included the watershed events of the Young Turk Revolution and the establishment of the Second Constitutional Era, and ended with the Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire by the victorious sides of World War I.
The initial peace agreement with the Ottoman Empire was the Armistice of Mudros.
This was followed by Occupation of Constantinople.
The partitioning of the Ottoman Empire brought international conflicts which were discussed during the Paris Peace Conference, 1919.
The peace agreement, Treaty of Sèvres, was signed by the Ottoman Empire and Allies.
The Treaty of Sèvres presented one of the thorniest problems before the Paris Peace Conference, 1919.
The text of the treaty with Ottomans was not made public until May, 1920. Contrary to general expectations, Sultanate was not terminated and allowed to retain Constantinople and a small strip of territory around the city.
The shores of the Bosporus and the Dardanelles planned to be internationalized, so that the gates of the Black Sea kept open.
The interior of Asia Minor (Anatolia), the first seat of Ottoman power six centuries ago, continues to be under Turkish sovereignty.
The United Kingdom obtained virtually everything it had sought—according to the secret Sykes-Picot Agreement made together with France in 1916, while the war was still going on—from the empire's partition.
The subsequent years showed that it was impracticable.
Sèvres was the end of the Ottoman Empire.

Question of the İttihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti (إتحاد و ترقى) (CUP)

 İttihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti 
Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) was the ruling party during this period.

The Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) (İttihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti) began as a secret society established as the "Committee of Ottoman Union" (İttihad-ı Osmanî Cemiyeti) in 1889 by the medical students İbrahim Temo, Abdullah Cevdet, İshak Sükuti and Ali Hüseyinzade.
It was transformed into a political organization by Bahaeddin Sakir aligning itself with the Young Turks in 1906, during the period of the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire.
At the end of World War I most of its members were court-martialled by the sultan Mehmed VI and imprisoned. A few of the members of the organization were executed in Turkey after trial for the attempted assassination of Atatürk in 1926. Members who survived continued their political careers in Turkey as members of the Republican People's Party (Turkish: Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi) and in other political parties as well.

Turkish Courts-Martial of 1919–1920 were courts-martials, which the leadership of the CUP and selected former officials were court-martialled with/including the charges of subversion of the constitution, wartime profiteering, and the massacres of both Greeks and Armenians.
The courts-martial became a stage for political battles. The trials helped the Liberal Union root out the CUP from the political arena.

Question of the Sultanate

Mehmed VI Ayrılış
1922, Departure of Mehmed VI who was the last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
The Treaty of Sèvres was destined never to be ratified.
Elections were held throughout Anatolia and with the participation of some parliamentarians, who had escaped from Constantinople, a new government was formed in Ankara.
The rest of the story is the Turkish War of Independence
The Treaty of Lausanne made the new Turkish State internationally recognized.
This new state gave the 'coup de grâce' to the Ottoman state, in 1922, with the overthrow of Sultan Mehmet VI Vahdettin by the new republican assembly of Turkey.

The Question of the Caliphate

Abdülmecid, II
Osmanlı hilafetinin son halifesi
Abdülmecid II, the last Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate
Besides the control of the physical lands, another question of importance was originated from the Ottoman Caliphate.
The Ottoman Caliphs never claimed to be religious descendant of the Prophet but they were nonetheless an important authority figure within the Ottoman Empire.
Muslims of India and of Anatolia supported and recognized the Ottoman caliphate for instance.

حسین بن علی
Sayyid Hussein bin Ali
As Sultans of the Empire, the Ottoman rulers had a very strong position, but the Sultan of Morocco, the Mahdists of the Egyptian Sudan, the Senussi in the Libyan Desert, the Wahabis in central Arabia, never acknowledged the title of Caliph as being higher than the Sultans' as the leader of state.
Such recognition was also not given by the Arabs of the Hedjaz, Palestine, and Syria, which contain the holy places of Mecca, Medina, and Jerusalem.
The last official remnant of the empire—the title of caliphate—was constitutionally abolished on 3 March 1924.
With the abolishment of the Ottoman Caliphate by the Grand National Assembly of Turkey, throughout the country from Mecca to Aleppo, the Ottoman Caliph's name was replaced in the Friday liturgy by that of Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca, the hereditary guardian of the holy cities of the Hedjaz, who briefly assumed the title of caliph.
حسین بن علی (Sayyid Hussein bin Ali, GCB 1854 – June 4, 1931) ( Ḥusayn bin ‘Alī), was the Sharif of Mecca, and Emir of Mecca, from 1908 until 1917, when he proclaimed himself King of the Hejaz, which received international recognition.
He initiated the Arab Revolt in 1916 against the increasingly nationalistic Ottoman Empire during the course of the First World War.
In 1924, when the Ottoman Caliphate was abolished, he further proclaimed himself Caliph of all Muslims.
He ruled Hejaz until 1924, when, defeated by Abdul Aziz al Saud, he abdicated the kingdom and other secular titles to his eldest son Ali.






The Euro



'THERE MAY BE TROUBLE AHEAD'


'It'll all end in tears !', as Eddie (1), the shipboard computer on the starship 'Heart of Gold', in Douglas Adam's 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy' (2), remarked on landing on the planet of Margathea (see right).

Currencies can be very useful for the majority of people, as long as one's attention is not focussed on them - those little intrinsically worthless pieces of paper and disks of base metal - which smooth our way through life.

The problem, of course, is that they are intrinsically worthless, as the Germans found out to their cost in the 1920s.
(see left a fifty million mark note -
which might have just bought a loaf of bread !)

And the solution ?

First the Rentenmark,
(see right - which surprisingly restored the value of the German currency),
and then the Reichmark, (see right), and finally World War,

which eventually gave birth to the mighty Deutschmark (see left).

And was the Deutschmark the precursor of the Euro ?


Well by the way that Angela (3) is behaving the answer is probably yes.

And what, you may ask, is the Rentenmark (here I am writing for the non historians and non economists) ?

The Rentenmark (literally, "Debt Security Mark") (RM) was a currency issued on 15 November 1923 to stop the hyperinflation of 1922 and 1923 in Germany.
The Rentenmark replaced the Deutsche Mark.
Due to the economic crises in Germany after World War I, there was no gold available to back the currency, therefore the Rentenbank, which issued the Rentenmark, mortgaged land and industrial goods worth 3.2 billion Rentenmark to back the new currency.
The Rentenmark was introduced at a rate 1 Rentenmark = 1012 Deutsche Mark, establishing an exchange rate of 1 United States dollar = 4.2 RM.
The Rentenmark was only a temporary currency and was not legal tender.
It was, however, accepted by the population and effectively stopped the inflation.
The Reichsmark became the new legal tender on 30 August 1924, equal in value to the Rentenmark.

The monetary policy spearheaded by Hjalmar Schacht (4) (see left) the Central Banker and Hitler's economic miracle worker - together with the fiscal policy of German Chancellor Gustav Stresemann (5) (see right) and Finance Minister Hans Luther (below left) brought the inflation in Germany to an end.


Now why was the Rentenmark so effective in bringing German hyperinflation to a halt, and producing a stable economy ?

The simple answer is that mortgaged land and industrial goods, instead of gold, was was offered as collateral on the currency - thus guaranteeing its value - and perhaps the present European leaders could learn something from that position.

The problem of the Euro is that while the economies of some states can 'represent' a realistic guarantee of the currency's value - ie Germany, other states, ie Greece cannot.

In addition those countries tainted with 'orientalism' in the past, - Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy, have developed an economic culture of excessive credit and non-payment of tax.
These states, on becoming part of an organisation which has been dominated by a culture built on a 'Teutonic/Protestant' work ethic have now found that their excessive debt can no longer be disguised by currency manipulation, and now find themselves exposed to demands for repayment which their total assets cannot cover.

The author of this blog would suggest, therefore, that the eventual result of this situation will probably be the 'shrinkage' of the European Union - to exclude low productivity economies, and the removal of such economies from the Euro Zone.

________________________________________

Notes


(1) Eddie is the name of the shipboard computer on the starship Heart of Gold.
Like every other system on the spaceship, it has a Sirius Cybernetics Corporation Genuine People Personality. Thus, Eddie is over-excitable, quite talkative, over-enthused and extremely ingratiating, or alternatively a coddling, school matron-type as a back-up personality.
Shipboard networking interconnects Eddie with everything on the Heart of Gold; at one point, the whole ship is effectively crippled by Arthur Dent's request for tea from the Nutrimatic drinks dispenser; the computation of which nearly crashed Eddie and everything connected to him.

(2)The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a science fiction comedy series created by Douglas Adams. Originally a radio comedy broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1978, it was later adapted to other formats, and over several years it gradually became an international multi-media phenomenon. 

(3) Angela Dorothea Merkel née Kasner; born 17 July 1954 is the current Chancellor of Germany (since 22 November 2005).
Merkel, elected to the Bundestag (German Parliament) from Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, has been the chairwoman of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) since 2000, and chairwoman of the CDU-CSU (Christian Social Union) parliamentary coalition from 2002 to 2005.
From 2005 to 2009 she led a grand coalition with the Christian Social Union (CSU), its Bavarian sister party, and the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), formed after the 2005 federal election on 22 November 2005.
In the elections of 27 September 2009, her party, the CDU, obtained the largest share of the votes, and formed a coalition government with the CSU and the Free Democratic Party (FDP). Her government was sworn in on 28 October 2009.
In 2007, Merkel was also President of the European Council and chaired the G8.
She played a central role in the negotiation of the Treaty of Lisbon and the Berlin Declaration.
In domestic policy, health care reform and problems concerning future energy development have thus far been major issues of her tenure.
Merkel is the first female Chancellor of Germany.
In 2007, she became the second woman to chair the G8, after Margaret Thatcher. In November 2011 she became the longest-serving leader of a G8 country.

(4) Dr. Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht (22 January 1877 – 3 June 1970) was a German economist, banker, liberal politician, and co-founder of the German Democratic Party.
He served as the Currency Commissioner and President of the Reichsbank under the Weimar Republic.
He was a fierce critic of his country's post-World War I reparation obligations.
He became a supporter of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, and served in Hitler's government as President of the Reichsbank and Minister of Economics.
As such, Schacht helped implement Hitler's policies of redevelopment, reindustrialization, and rearmament.
He was forced out of the government by disagreements with Hitler and other prominent Nazis in December 1937, and had no role during World War II.
After the war, he was tried at Nuremberg and acquitted.
In 1953, he founded his own bank, and advised developing countries on economic development.

(5) Gustav Stresemann (help·info) (May 10, 1878 – October 3, 1929) was a German politician and statesman who served as Chancellor and Foreign Minister during the Weimar Republic.
He was co-laureate of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1926.
Stresemann's politics defy easy categorization.
Arguably, his most notable achievement was reconciliation between Germany and France, for which he and Aristide Briand received the Peace Prize.




Arab Spring


3rd August 2011 - Egypt - From President to Criminal

When the author of this blog first visited Egypt about 15 years ago he found village people living in mud-brick houses, with a fan to keep cool in the summer, with black and white televisions, if they were lucky an ancient 'phone, and maybe a bicycle.
Now they live in brick and concrete houses, with air conditioning, with colour and satellite television, - even the children have mobile phones, many have computers, and many have cars, or at least a motor-bike.
Hospitals are better, shops are full of copies of designer clothes and most people are decidedly better off.
But the man who led the government which provided these improvements is in a 'cage', awaiting a trial and undoubtedly punishment.
It's unlikely he was responsible for more deaths than the still deeply revered Nasser, and while he and his family were undoubtedly 'corrupt', then so are the majority of the Egyptian people - they always have been - from the time of the Pharaohs, - and probably always will be - the Mubaraks were just corrupt on a presidential scale.
In the civilised world we don't put 83 (?) year old men (even if we think they are murderers) in cages, even before they have been found guilty - so the Egyptian people - who seem to want this - seem to be as barbaric as the so-called 'criminals' whom they are so keen to humiliate and punish.

And punishing Mubarak and his sons will not solve any of Egypt's intractable problems.
The most likely outcome of all this lunacy will probably be a fundamentalist (Salafist) Muslim government, which will topple Egypt into the mire at present occupied by Sudan and Somalia - but then, as the author of this blog has always said - 'the Egyptians are good at shooting themselves in the foot !'




The New Arms of Egypt ?

And as for the much vaunted 'Arab Spring' - it's the beginning of an 'Arab Night' - plunging the whole area into conflict and economic disruption - that is, even more conflict and more economic disruption - which in the end will undoubtedly be unjustly blamed on the West and the Zionists.

23rd August 2011 - Libya

Never trust an Arab ! - Good advice from John Stokes Crawford.

In Libya, as Gaddafi grew old, certain members of his government decided that they didn't want to be passed over as Gaddafi sons took over - and so the broke away - moved to Bengazi - and set up an alternative government. Just another Arab coup.
They said they were creating a democratic, free Libya - but Arabs have no understanding of the words - they only understand the family and the tribe.
All the nonsense about freedom and democracy was simply for Western consumption - a ploy to get money and military support.
Now they have entered Tripoli, claiming to have captured two of Gaddafi's sons, whom they claim they have sent to the International Criminal Court of Justice. - Just another Arab lie !
What should the West do ?
Have nothing to do with these Arab family squables !
Leave them to stew in their own internecine conflicts.


The new dictator of Libya ?

Mustafa Abdul Jalil  (left) (born 1952) is a Libyan politician.
From 2007 to 2011, he was Minister of Justice (unofficially, the Secretary of the General People's Committee) under Colonel Muammar al-Gaddafi.
It was he who sentenced to death the Bulgarian nurses.
During the 2011 Libyan civil war, Abdul Jalil has been identified as the Chairman of the National Transitional Council based in Benghazi, which controls much of the country in opposition to Gaddafi in Tripoli.
Now the new, unelected government of Lybia has accused neighbouring Algeria of an 'act of war' - and have declared that they wish to execute Gaddafi by firing squad.


مُعَمَّر القَذَّافِي‎ 
Muʿammar al-Qaḏḏāfī

Muammar al-Gaddafi was raised in a bedouin tent in the desert near Sirt.
According to most conventional biographies, his family belongs to a small tribe of arabized Berbers, the Qadhadhfa.
They are mostly stockherders that live in the Hun Oasis.
According to Gaddafi, his grandfather, Abdessalam Bouminyar, fought against Italian occupation of Libya and died as the "first martyr in Khoms, in the first battle of 1911".
Gaddafi attended a Muslim elementary school as a youth, during which time he was profoundly influenced by major events in the Arab world.
He was passionate about the success of the Palestinians and was deeply disappointed by their defeat to Israeli forces in 1948.
He admired Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, and looked to him as hero during his rise to power in 1952.
In 1956 Gaddafi took part in anti-Israeli protests during the Suez Crisis.
He finished his secondary school studies under a private tutor in Misrata, concentrating on the study of history.
In Libya, as in a number of other Arab countries, admission to a military academy and a career as an army officer only became available to members of the lower economic strata after independence.
A military career offered an opportunity for higher education, for upward economic and social mobility, and was for many the only available means of political action.

For Gaddafi and many of his fellow officers, who were inspired by Nasser's brand of Arab nationalism, a military career was a revolutionary vocation.
Gaddafi entered the Libyan military academy at Benghazi in 1961 and graduated in the 1965–66 period, along with most of his colleagues from the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC). Gaddafi's association with the Free Officers Movement began as a cadet.
The frustration and shame felt by Libyan officers at the time of Israel's defeat of the Arab armies on three fronts in 1967 fueled their determination to contribute to Arab unity by overthrowing the monarchy.
An early conspirator, Gaddafi began his first plan to overthrow the monarchy while in military college.
Gaddafi pursued further studies in Europe, and false rumors have been propagated with regards to this part of his life—for example Gaddafi did not attend the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, though he did receive further military training in the United Kingdom.
On 1 September 1969 a small group of junior military officers led by Gaddafi staged a bloodless coup d'état (bloodless - unlike the revolution against Gaddafi which has shed an ocean of blood - with the help of the European powers) against King Idris while he was in Turkey for medical treatment.
His nephew, the Crown Prince Sayyid Hasan ar-Rida al-Mahdi as-Sanussi, was formally deposed by the revolutionary army officers and put under house arrest; they abolished the monarchy and proclaimed the Libyan Arab Republic.

Gaddafi looked to Gamal Abdel Nasser as a role model and based his government on Nasser's Egypt.
Gaddafi's ideology was largely based on Nasserism, blending Arab nationalism, aspects of the welfare state, and what Gaddafi termed "popular democracy", or more commonly "direct, popular democracy".
He called this system "Islamic socialism", as he disfavored the atheistic quality of communism. While he permitted private control over small companies, the government controlled the larger ones.
Welfare, "liberation" (or "emancipation" depending on the translation), and education was emphasized.
He also imposed a system of Islamic morals and outlawed alcohol and gambling.





Death of Muʿammar al-Qaḏḏāfī



On 20 October 2011, a National Transitional Council (NTC) official told Al Jazeera that Gaddafi had been captured that day by Libyan forces near his hometown of Sirte.
He had been in a convoy of vehicles that was targeted by a US Predator Missile which was followed by a French air strike on a road about 3 kilometres (2 mi) west of Sirte, killing dozens of loyalist fighters.
Gaddafi survived but was shortly afterwards captured by a rebel militia.
At least four mobile phone videos showed rebels beating Gaddafi and manhandling him on the back of a utility vehicle before his death.
One video pictured Gaddafi sodomized "with some kind of stick or knife" or possibly a bayonet, after his capture.
In another video, he was seen being rolled around on the ground as rebels pulled off his shirt.
Later pictures of his body showed that he had wounds in the abdomen, chest, and head.
A rebel who identified himself as Senad el-Sadik el-Ureybi later claimed to have shot and killed Gaddafi. He claimed to have shot Gaddafi in the head and chest, and that it took half an hour for him to die.
Gaddafi's body was subsequently flown to Misrata and was placed in the freezer of a local market alongside the bodies of Defense Minister Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr and his son and national security adviserMutassim Gaddafi.
The bodies were put on public display for four days, contrary to Islamic law, with Libyans from all over the country coming to view them.
Many took pictures on their cell phones.