Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November/December
1996, page 71
Tunisia: A Country That Works
A Personal Reminiscence
by Richard H. Curtiss
My first visit to Tunisia was in 1970 or 1971 when
I was setting up a network of correspondents for the Voice of America
Arabic service. It was a pro-forma visit because we already had
a Tunisian correspondent, the only one in the five countries of
the Arab Maghreb. The fact that I dont remember the year,
have no recollection of the first of perhaps a dozen subsequent
airport arrivals in Tunis, and that my VOA predecessors had already
succeeded in doing in Tunisia what they had failed to do in any
of the surrounding countries says everything about this small country
on the southern Mediterranean coast. Its a place where things
work without hassles, and tolerance and moderation have been elevated
to the status of a national creed in this country where 98 percent
of the people are Sunni Muslims.
That is not to say I had no problems. On my first
morning, driving from the luxurious Tunis Hilton, situated on a
wooded hill above the city, I explained in Arabic to the garrulous
taxi driver that I would understand him better if he changed from
French to his native Arabic. Oui, Monsieur, he responded
amiably, and went right on speaking French.
As it turned out, I had a lot of trouble understanding
Tunisians in either language. Most city dwellers spoke a very colloquial
North African Arabic at home, listened to radio news in French,
and therefore assumed all foreigners spoke French as easily as they
did. In those days probably not one in a thousand Tunisians spoke
English.
For this reason our VOA correspondent was a Palestinian,
one of several then working in the U.S. Embassy in Tunis where competent
Tunisian English-Arabic translators were virtually nonexistent.
This tri-lingual Palestinian became my guide and host in Tunisia,
and one of the pleasures of returning to the country many times
after my association with VOA had ended was to watch his evolution
from young man-about-town to young husband and then young father,
living the comfortable life that Tunisia offers its ever-expanding
middle class.
Two years after I left VOA to become counselor for
public affairs in the American Embassy in Beirut, I found myself
counseling U.S. Embassy Arabic-language students on the eve of their
forced evacuation from the Lebanese capital in October, 1975. The
Lebanese civil war that had begun seven months earlier had taken
a sudden turn for the worse, and they and their families were being
evacuated to a hastily organized Foreign Service Institute language
facility in Tunis, which still exists. They were incredulous when
I assured them that they would find the climate, countryside, beaches
and amenities in Tunis comparable to those in Beirut, which up to
then had been called the Paris of the Middle East.
After my return to Washington there were regular visits
to all of the Middle East countries and I soon learned that it was
best, if at all possible, to made Tunisia the last stop of any itinerary
in which it was included. I always ended up buying an extra suitcase
there to accommodate the carpets, ceramics and other handicrafts
that were so appealing and so inexpensive compared to anywhere else
in the region.
On one of those visits to chair a meeting of cultural
officers from U.S. embassies throughout the Near East and South
Asia, I took a group of them for their first visit to Tuniss
remarkable souq, situated within the old city walls and extending
for many not-so-square blocks down a gentle slope that links the
hilltop mosques and palaces of the former Beys of Tunis to the modern
city that has grown up around the port below.
A very junior officer from Washington on his first
visit to the Middle East asked me if the merchants whose shops we
were visiting would realize he was Jewish.
They dont care, I assured him.
No, no, thats not the point, he
explained. Ive heard that a lot of these merchants are
Jewish and I was wondering if there is some way of recognizing them.
Not that I know of, I said, unless
you want to start asking them.
I couldnt do that, he replied,
and I thought the subject was closed.
As the afternoon wore on, however, he kept giving
the merchants and their shops searching looks. They, in turn, took
this as evidence that he was especially interested in the goods
on display and outdid themselves in creative bargaining.
After three hours everyone in our group had a few
purchases, but my young friend had had to hire a boy to carry all
the items pressed on him by hospitable merchants only too happy
to accommodate a visitor who tarried a moment too long, and then
didnt know how to extricate himself from the offers of a
special price for your first visit to my shop.
That conference was held in a suite on the top floor
of the skyscraper Hotel Afrique, now the Meridien Africa, on Tuniss
tree-lined Avenue Habib Bourguiba, a major shopping street. With
a view that encompassed the entire downtown area, and only four
or five blocks from the warren of streets comprising the old souq,
the hotel became my favorite for subsequent visits. However, for
summer visitors there also are smaller first-class resort hotels
on sandy swimming beaches in the suburb of La Marsa, adjacent to
Sidi Bou Said, perhaps the most picturesque hillside village in
the entire southern Mediterranean.
On all of my visits there were opportunities to sample
Tunisian versions of standard Middle Eastern culinary fare. There
also were meat, fish and vegetable versions of the north African
staple, couscous (semolina); various kinds of Tajine, which can
best be compared to a cross between an omelet and a quiche; brik,
which is a sort of deep-fried chicken pot pie in which tuna and
a boiled egg are substituted for the chicken; and pastries which
vary from such Middle Eastern staples as baklava to such French
staples as miniature chocolate eclairs. The fruits also are first
class in a country where the apples, apricots, peaches, pears, grapes,
figs, dates and the bananas all are locally grown.
For still another business trip I gave myself an extra
day. When the business was concluded I rented a car and drove straight
south, stopping too often and too long at all of the picturesque
coastal cities and towns and finally reaching my goal, the bridge
to Jerba island, just as the sun was setting.
By the time I had crossed the bridge and reached the
island it was pitch dark, and I found a hotel with difficulty. It
was winter and my plane from Jerba back to Tunis left the next morning
at 6 a.m., long before sunup. So I became one of the few Americans
who up to that time had ever visited Jerba, now a tourist Mecca,
which houses one of the oldest synagogues in the world. I probably
also was the only visitor to the island who left without seeing
it except in the dark.
I made only one visit to Tunisia in the 1980s, and
that was on a U.S. AID-funded contract to find outlets in 19 Middle
East countries for distribution of publications on demographics,
maternal health and family planning. While such a mission was politically
sensitive in such countries as Algeria and Yemen, and politically
impossible in Saudi Arabia and some of the Arab states of the Gulf,
that visit to Tunisia reminded me of my first arrival in that most
progressive of Arab countries. Tunisia had had an active family
planning program since the 1960s. My outlet already existed in the
government-sponsored family planning agency.
So, with time to spare, I found myself sitting as
in the past at a lunch table at the top of the souq with my old
friend from VOA days, but this time accompanied by our wives and
chatting animatedly as vendors of all manner of things Middle Eastern
padded amiably by.
Retired from the foreign service and back in journalism
in Washington, I met Ossama Rhondami, the U.S. representative of
the Tunisian news agency and one of the few Tunisians I had met
who spoke excellent English. He occasionally brought me good photo
stories for our magazine. Later, as press attache at the Tunisian
Embassy in Washington, he invited me for a visit to his country
the same kind of visit I had arranged as a U.S. Information Agency
officer for hundreds of official visitors from the seven different
countries in which I had served.
That 1993 visit was backstopped by Tunisias
newly created Agency for External Communication, which arranged
any interviews I requested, and then made sure that I got there
on time. That visit also marked the end of my language difficulties.
Tunisians by now seemed much more attuned to my Levantine Arabic,
and I to theirs, because by then most of their radio listening was
to stations broadcasting in modern standard Arabic, which does not
vary from Morocco to Oman.
More pertinent, however, was the fact that I was accompanied
to all of my interviews by one or the other of two interpreters.
One was a young man who had spent summers with a sister who lives
in the United States. His English flowed easily but he was not familiar
with all of the jargon of national development. The other interpreter
was a young housewife and mother who had taken a degree in English
literature but who had had little practical experience in using
it. She knew exactly what my interlocutors were talking about, but
had trouble keeping up with the rapid flow of their answers to my
questions.
Nevertheless I was beguiled by the whole experience
of visiting a country Id always admired at exactly the time
when the dreams of its visionary leaders were starting to come true.
Perhaps even more exciting was having all this explained by two
enthusiastic members of that countrys younger generation,
neither of whom were shy about describing their own hopes and aspirations
for the future.
By 1996, my old friend Ossama Rhondami had become
the dynamic new director of Tunisias Agency for External Communication,
and as a result my latest visit to his country was both exhausting
and exhilarating. I arrived knowing what and whom I wanted to see.
So I saw them, assisted by an interpreter so skilled that he monitored
my note taking to make sure that as I recorded the simultaneous
translation he provided at conversational speed I did not leave
any key point unrecorded.
When I worried that my packed interview schedule might
not leave me enough time to take the photos I needed, I was introduced
to an archive of slides and prints that, I suspect, is the largest
and most accessible in any Arab country.
Most exciting of all, however, was my realization
that, for the first time, almost half of my interviews were being
conducted in English. Those pioneer Tunisian students who broke
the pattern of education in French at Tunisian universities, followed
by graduate work in France, have come back from technical or liberal
arts courses in Britain or graduate work at American universities.
Now at the higher reaches of the Tunisian government
there are ministers and heads of agencies who speak and read English
easily and who are familiar with American progress in their own
fields of specialization. There may even be some who have a feel
for the strengths and weaknesses of Americans, with their undiluted
good intentions, unabashed ignorance of history, alien cultures
and even foreign geography, and unalloyed pragmatism that does,
somehow, get important things done.
In many positive ways Tunisia is becoming more and
more like the United States. According to Mr. Rhondani, 60 percent
of Tunisians now belong to the middle class, and only 5 percent
now fall below the poverty line. Education is compulsory and as
a result, virtually everyone born after independence (1956)
is literate today, he explained.
Not only is there a generalization of education,
he continued, but there is a generalization of basic amenities
adequate housing, public transportation, electricity, clean water.
Once you have experienced this, you can only accept something better.
You are witnessing an emerging young nation that accepts only the
same standards of freedom and dignity that are enjoyed by certain
developed countries.
Tunisias forthcoming association with the European
Union is a manifestation of this. So is the increasing use of English.
Again, according to my friend Rhondani: The English language
is seen increasingly as a vehicle with which to engage the outside
world. The challenge that has become one of the distinctions of
Tunisias 40 years of independence is the ability to forge
a kind of stable and dynamic identity for Tunisia: a new modernizing
nation state that is also Arab and Islamic.
It was not done easily, but I think we have
earned the right today to be proud. Our accomplishments are the
result of human effort and not extensive natural resources. We already
have become an intermediate level country and we hope by the turn
of the century to reach the level of the countries of Northern Europe.
But, as much as we keep our eyes on that prize, we remain committed
also to who we are.
America, with its 200-plus years of history, has become
the biggest kid on its block, well-meaning but sometimes arrogant,
and increasingly unconcerned about the feelings of others. Tunisia,
with its 3,000-plus years of history, is the nice kid in a tough
neighborhood who has to be smarter, better educated, and always
careful in order to survive among jostling, oil-rich giants. In
the Middle East, Americans couldnt have better friends than
the Tunisians. |