Make Wine Not War: Wineism’s recipe for a sustainable political future
Source: CNN
By James M. Dorsey
When Miguel Torres, scion of an iconic
Spanish winemaking dynasty, described the impact of the Catalan quest for
independence on his more than a century-old business in a letter to wine writer
Andrew Jefford, little did he realize that he had put his finger on one of the
current world’s most fundamental battles: nationalism and populism vs.
inclusive multi-culturalism. It is a
struggle that is tearing countries apart and rewriting the international order.
Mr. Torres worried that in the unlikely case
of secessionists succeeding in taking Catalonia out of Spain, his business
would grapple with the same problem UK-based companies are struggling to come
to grips with as Britain prepares to leave the European Union. The winemaker’s
letter made Mr. Jefford realize that the culture of wine embraced the very principles
that were being challenged by US President Donald J. Trump’s America First
principle and his opposition to multi-trade agreements, Britain’s Brexit, and nationalism
and populism’s agitation against the other.
Mr. Jefford’s concept of Wineism that
celebrates the existence of multiple identities, difference, trans-nationalism
and the breaking down of trade barriers is as applicable to non-Muslim nations
where alcohol is not religiously questioned as it is to the Islamic world that
despite the faith’s ban boasts numerous winemakers.
At the core of the mayhem of death, destruction
and brutal repression that has engulfed multiple Middle Eastern and North
African nations is the failure of decades of autocratic rule that not only
failed to deliver public goods and services, but also to build inclusive
societies that took account of religious, ethnic and regional differences and
ensured that all segments of society had a stake.
In contrast to Mr. Torres’ business that
has yet to feel what the rise of Catalan nationalism and Spanish nationalism
would have on its business, many wine and alcohol producers in the Middle East
and North Africa that include Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, Turkey, Egypt, Morocco and
Algeria, have succeeded to stay in business despite war, upheaval and militant
religious opposition.
In doing so, they wittingly or
unwittingly testify to the very principles that are at stake in their region’s
volatile transition and ultimately will need to constitute the basis for
sustainable economic, social and political development.
In contrast to Spain whose territorial
integrity is questioned but not seriously threatened by Catalonian nationalism,
several Middle Eastern and North African countries, including Syria, Iraq,
Libya, and Yemen, could emerge from crisis having given birth to multiple new
statelets. Yet, even without a redrawing of the region’s political map,
international trade and inclusive domestic policies will be key determinants of
its success. And irrespective of religious attitudes, wine culture may be one
guide for the way forward.
Winemakers in Lebanon like Elie Maamari of Chateau Ksara
and the daughters of General Joseph G. Bitar, who translated
his passion for Italian wine culture into a business after returning from his
post as Lebanon’s military attaché in Rome and Lebanese-born Syrian producers Karim and Sandro Saade, producers of what has been dubbed ‘the world’s most dangerous wine,’
can tell Mr. Torres what it is like to keep their business going under
circumstances far worse than his worst nightmare. So can Iraqi beer and arak producers who after
decades of war saw parliament ban their wares in 2016.
Nonetheless, in Mr. Jefford’s reading
wine says it all. Contemplating a bottle of one of France’s premier wines, Chambolle-Musigny
les Amoureuses, he asks: “What is its identity?
An Amoureuses? A Chambolle? A Côtes de Nuits? A red burgundy? A French wine? A European wine? A red wine? The answer, of course, is all of these. What
is true for wines is still more true for human beings. When I begin to enumerate my own identities,
I soon lose count.”
Nowhere is this truer than in the Middle
East and North Africa where the attempt by political and religious groups as
well as opportunistic autocrats to impose a singular identity has brought the
region to the brink. Iraq aided by Turkey and Iran may have halted Kurdish
secession in its tracks but has done little to squash Kurdish aspirations in
any of the three countries.
The same is true for the quest of
Palestinians, another regional wine producer, for an independent state despite
US-backed Israeli policies and Palestinian divisions that threaten to defeat a
two-state solution as an option for solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Similarly, the jury is still out on Shiite majority Iraq’s ability to convince
Sunni Muslims that they have an equitable place in the country.
Mr. Jefford’s notion of wine’s multiple
identities goes to the core of another reality that autocrats in militants in
the Middle East and North Africa conveniently brush aside.
“If you like wine, you love difference;
difference should therefore be accepted as an absolute good. If you drink branded vodka, whisky or beer,
you replicate the same experience each time.
If you drink wine, you dive into a world of multiple differences – of
vintage, of origin, of variety, of wine-making techniques, of ageing practices,
of level of maturity. Wine teaches us
the valuable lesson that nothing is ever truly the same twice, either in place
or time, and that differences merit respect,” Mr. Jefford says.
Finally, the history of wine is the
history of a world that was open to international trade and open borders.
French wine historian Philippe Roudie noted that medieval Europe’s largest
trade sector was wine. Today’s wines are its legacy. “Its sensual intricacy and
refinement, and the prosperity of those involved in farming, creating and
trading it, would collapse without international trade,” Mr. Jefford said.
Commenting on Mr. Jefford’s theory of
Wineism, journalist Laura Lakeway noted that
the traits he describes are valid among wine lovers irrespective of their
politics. “I know people in the wine trade who are politically conservative.
Yet while they might not lean to the left as Jefford does, they invariably
share the generous spirit that unites wine lovers,” Ms. Lakeway said.
Dr.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture,
and co-host of the New Books in
Middle Eastern Studies podcast. James is the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title as well
as Comparative
Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North
Africa,
co-authored with Dr. Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario, Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and
Politics in the Middle East and North Africa, and
the forthcoming China
and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom
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