Abstract:
This thesis examines Antoun Saadeh' s national ideas by using Benedict Anderson's
concept of "imagined community." It aims at unpacking Saadeh's thoughts by using a
new perspective to clarify his vision of what a nation is and the basis on which he had
constructed his theory on Syrian nationalism.
The study examines critically Saadeh's concept of nationalism with particular
emphasis on the relationship of this concept to both Arabs and Islam. It also traces the
origins of Saadeh's thought and the sources from which he derived his national and
historic.al writings to formulate the concept of Syrian nationalism. The current research
also provides an epistemological evaluation of Saadeh's ideas via resorting to scholarly
studies which reveal some of his historical fallacies. The main contribution of this thesis
is meant to expose the way through which Saadeh had formulated the Syrian "imagined
community".
The current study unveiled that Saadeh's version of Syrian nationalism was a novel
case. It is a form of what Benedict Anderson considered to be an "official nationalism."
In this case Saadeh's political party, the Syrian Social Nationalist Party, was and remains
to be a "state within a state." By implementing Anderson's model, Saadeh's ideology
attempts to place the inhabitants of the "fertile crescent" in one "organic body," by
providing them, through its propaganda and party discipline, with a new vision on "life,
the universe and art." This was conducted through reviving the heritage of the ancient
civilizations in the region and avoiding the Arab-Islamic tradition. SU,ch a view overlooks
the Arab presence and assumes that it was both trivial and unnecessary within the realm
of the Syrian nation. Accordingly, Saadeh vigorously indicated that Syrian nationalism proved to be a channel through which segments of minority groups within the Arab
Middle East were able to illustrate their vision of the past, the present and the future.
Saadeh's nationalist discourse sought to create a unifying identity for the inhabitants
of the "Fertile Crescent" region. This was conducted through promoting an
anthropological biological interpretation of what nation is, based on the effect of
geography and racial fusion on the course of development of the Syrian nation.
The current study also proved that Benedict Anderson's interpretation of the rise of
nationalism remains to be viable even in colonial states. Saadeh was one example of the
validity of Anderson's historical paradigm. He was indulged in creating a specific
"Syrian" nation by attempting to impose his national theory through his party.
"Syrian" nationalism remains to be a source of understanding contemporary Arab
intellectuals' mindset. This is evident in the eclectic nature of both Saadeh's social and
economic ideas. He is an example of what can be perceived as the "Arab attitude of
mind," where western ideologies are fused with traditional ones. The implications of this
ideological process are embedded in the formation of hybrid ideology that neither
represents the old ideas nor the modern ones. Instead such an outlook creates a distorted
form of intellectual consciousness.
Finally, the study proves that Saadeh's ideology and historical perspective regarding
the existence of a unique civilization in the Fertile Crescent extending from the ancient
past, intersects with several modern Arab historians and writers' studies and research.
This clarifies that Saadeh's national ideology is currently active in the Arab Middle East
notwithstanding the fact that Saadeh's party is politically weak.