A Comic Book that Changed a Nation

A Comic Book that Changed a Nation

Activists in Egypt find inspiration in an almost forgotten comic.

By bgharcourt - Feb 14, 2011 04:02 AM EST
Filed Under: Other
Source: History News Network

For those who have been following the recent events in Egypt, the world saw the people rise up to voice their opposition to the what they believed was an unjust and tyrannical government. While I am not Egyptian, nor do I live in their country, I'm still in awe of their accomplishment. They showed that change can happen, without the need for violence.

There has been much debate on the U.S role in the events in Egypt. Dalia Ziada, Egypt Director of the American Islamic Congress, is giving credit an American who she claims to have inspired a generation of Egyptians to take to the streets in a nonviolent protest that has changed the course of their nation. That man is Dr.Martin Luther King,Jr.,and his message was transmitted by way of a 50-year-old comic book recently translated into Arabic and distributed throughout the Middle East.

Publlished in 1958 by the Fellowship of Reconciliation, "The Montgomery Story" was a comic book that dealt explicitly with Dr. King's philosophy of non-violent civil disobedience, specifically with respect to the legendary Montgomery Bus Boycott. The book included a how-to section that demonstrated how the practice can actually yield results. According to the website, The Montgomery Story sold more than 250,000 copies.


The American Islamic Congress is a non-profit group founded in the wake of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 to confront intolerance against Muslims, and later to promote peace and civil rights throughout the Arabic world. The AIC's HAMSA initiative - designed to link civil rights groups throughout the Middle East, undertook the project in 2008 to translate The Montgomery Story into Arabic (and later Farsi). With the endorsement of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, Ziada distributed 2,000 copies of the comic throughout the Middle East.

Speaking to the History News Network Ziada stated,"The main message I hope that Arabic readers will take from the MLK comic book is that: change is not impossible. It is time to stop using our muscles blindly. Let's try using our intellect in innovative, creative ways to pressure decision makers and end dictatorship, tyranny and the suppression practiced against us."

And in a recent newsletter to AIC supports, Ziada shared this story:
"When, at first, we went to print the comic book, a security officer blocked publication. So we called him and demanded a meeting. He agreed, and we read through the comic book over coffee to address his concerns. At the end, he granted permission to print and then asked: "Could I have a few extra copies for my kids?"
"The comic book has been credited with inspiring young activists in Egypt and the larger region (we have a Farsi version as well). Last week I distributed copies in Tahrir Square. Seeing the scene in the square firsthand is amazing. Despite violent attacks and tanks in the street, young people from all walks of life are coming together, organizing food and medical care, and offering a living model of free civil society in action."
New Academy Rules State Generative AI Use Will Not Impact Oscar Eligibility
Related:

New Academy Rules State Generative AI Use Will Not Impact Oscar Eligibility

David Zaslav Received Raise Of Millions Despite WB's Hard Times
Recommended For You:

David Zaslav Received Raise Of Millions Despite WB's Hard Times

DISCLAIMER: As a user generated site and platform, ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and "Safe Harbor" provisions.

This post was submitted by a user who has agreed to our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. ComicBookMovie.com will disable users who knowingly commit plagiarism, piracy, trademark or copyright infringement. Please CONTACT US for expeditious removal of copyrighted/trademarked content. CLICK HERE to learn more about our copyright and trademark policies.

Note that ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

satanors
satanors - 2/14/2011, 9:10 AM
first???? i did not even read this crap.... but first. what did i win?
shaddowkhan
shaddowkhan - 2/14/2011, 9:54 AM
cool find man really feel great for the people of Egypt.
Dusk
Dusk - 2/14/2011, 11:38 AM
Did you say that it was a NON VIOLENT protest?! REALLY?! Have you even been watching the news?
ManThing
ManThing - 2/14/2011, 1:12 PM
lol If the Muslim Brotherhood manages to weasle their way into power somehow the Koran will be as close to a comic book as any one will be able to get in Egypt.

That's the same bunch that spawned Hamas.
Dmon
Dmon - 2/14/2011, 2:47 PM
LOL NON VIOLENT my a$$. Under the Muslim Brotherhood they are trading in one Totalitarian regime for an even worse one. Look at what they have been doing to all the non-muslim people there. Peaceful? Bull $hit. Not to mention all the artifacts from the Egyptian Museum of Cairo that have gone missing and have been destroyed.
Yasn7
Yasn7 - 2/14/2011, 3:22 PM
Great find!
Wow the level of ignorance is ridiculous. If only people with actually informed opinions, rather than just the information from the quick snippets they get from the pundits, commented this would be a much better world.
Long live a free Egypt!
Coats
Coats - 2/14/2011, 3:33 PM
twilight/dmon@ I'd say that the demonstrations were largely non-violent, for a political overthrow of its size. Much of the violence seemed to be perpetrated against the protesters, not by them. For a coo, this was incredibly smooth, in contrast to most upheavals of it's size. No one beheaded the former leader, there was no military storming of a castle... It wasn't without violent outbursts, but the majority of the people came out to be heard and seen, not to hurt others.

It's wonderful to think that King's words are still resonating, even outside the borders of the US. How cool that it was in comic book form, too!
Good find!
esmerillon
esmerillon - 2/14/2011, 4:47 PM
twilight/dmon - are you joking? Look at the non-violent protests led by MLK. Guess what? Violence happened. Against them. This doesn't mean that MLK wasn't non-violent or that his movement was not predominantly nonviolent.

Also, dmon, if you actually go to what Egyptians themselves are saying rather than US-American editorializing, you'd realize that the protest movement is predominantly pro-democracy and anti-economic-inequality.
Dmon
Dmon - 2/14/2011, 4:50 PM
@Yasn7 you must be part of the religion of peace. The one that only has 3 choices for the non-muslim Death, Give up your property and pay a tax or convert. The one where your prophet never did one miracle and slaughtered his own tribe the "Quraish" not to mention all the others the warlord slaughtered and forced a 9 year old and many others into marriage and beat them. Talk about ridiculous.
Dmon
Dmon - 2/14/2011, 4:59 PM
@Coats and esmerillon I hope it does turn out to be pro-democracy but looting, destroying museums and killing Christian Coptic families does not sound like sun-shine and rainbows
Yasn7
Yasn7 - 2/14/2011, 11:31 PM
This is exactly what I am talking about. Nothing I said had anything to do with religion and yet that is the first thing that is commented on without knowledge and merely assumptions. Regardless of what religion I or anyone else affiliate themselves with it is clear that has nothing to do with the discussion at hand. The pro-democracy protests were started from various sectors of the Egyptian population with the people not caring about petty things like faith or political affiliation. The muslim brotherhood did not enter the protests until they had already begun and therefore are not the focal point of the protests as you seem to suggest.
Just like any other people the people of Egypt deserve to live under a democratic regime rather than a propped up dictatorship.
They must decide who their representatives are.
And it is very doubtful that the Muslim Brotherhood will take over in either democratic or non-democrati fashions. They lack the popular support amongst Egyptians. And regarding the looting of the museums that occurred due to a few people taking advantage of chaos, this is bound to happen in a situation like this. The Egyptian army thankfully stopped any other attempts and arrested the majority of looters recovering the stolen items.
So please before you go around spewing whatever 'thoughts' that come into your mind please pause and think critically.
Secular democracy is the right of all peoples and I truly hope that it spreads throughout the Middle East and all other areas where dictators and fascists exist.
Yasn7
Yasn7 - 2/14/2011, 11:35 PM
@Dmon. No hard feelings regardless. It doesn't help anything. I was gonna pick the same avatar on a side note. At least we can agree on that!
Badawi
Badawi - 2/15/2011, 7:30 AM
@dmon I am Egyptian, and I am Muslim, and what you said is extremely ignorant, arrogant and offensive and what you said is wrong to the core, the violence during the revolution was all carried out by police and their thugs against us the protesters. I am there I know what I'm talking about. And no we are a secular state and we will remain so, so shut up about the Muslim brotherhood

And with regards to the article, no offense but I don't think that that is what gave us inspiration to protest. We've always had non violent protests from long before this was translated into Arabic. The primary drive was that we were inspired by Tunisia and we were suffering. It was the right time to do this. And I am proud to be and Egyptian.
View Recorder