w - -Mw ll I I N A IME O DISINT ) UNIL1 of- A NOTED EDUCATOR RE-EXAMINES THE VALUE AND 3 This New African State Is Working To Gain Stability in an Area of the World Plagued by Many Problems A Liberal Jiduca tio By HAROLD TAYLOR By AUMED BELKHODJA Fate gave Tunisia a privi. leged position, in the center of the sea which has nurtured civilization. From the balcony of the Maghreb, Tunisia looks both toward Europe and the East. The hospitable coast wel- comes both men and ideas from either direction. Tunisia is also, however, a cape which reaches far out into the Medi- terranean, providing shelter when its waters are troubled by the storms of men. --Bourguiba INDEED, the Tunisian coast of- fers an unending arabesque of wild capes and enticing bays. Against an enchanted backloth of sails, olive trees and vibrant light, vestiges of Rome, Arab Ribats, Turkish citadels and Span- ish forts stand outlined, bearing witness to the many waves of in- vaders which have come to her shores. For several decades a strong republican tendency had been ap- parent in Tunisia. One of its aims was realized in 1957 by deposing the last Bey of the ruling house of Turkish descent. This gesture made room for a republic with a strong executive power. The president of the re- public, assisted by a cabinet of twelve secretaries and three under- secretaries with cabinet rank, forms the executive power in Tuni- sia today. All bills must have the final approval of the president before becoming laws. HE SHAPE of the New Regime in Tunisia has been determined by the political group which cre- ated it. Its basis is the Neo-Destour Party, led by Habid Bourguiba, with its 1,600 odd cells, its uni- formed "Neo-Destour Youth," and its powerful party direction. The Intellectual outlook of these young radicals should be defined as ra- tionalist, non-clerical, republican, so It Is of no surprise that on July 25, 1957, theBeyswas ousted In a bloodless revolution and the nation declared a republic. The religious leaders for their part have been complaisant enough to waive the Islamic laws against usury so that Bourguba was able to issue a national loan. Their ap- proval was satisfactory also when the government abolished polyg- amy and modified divorce for the interests of the woman. GENERALLY speaking, the Neo-. Destour Party is solidly rooted among all classes and especially among the worker and peasant groups, This was not achieved without friction - after independence in 1956, the solid, bluff labor leader, Habib Achour, tired of being an appendage to a political party, started his own independent union. At the other end of the scale, Ahmed Ben Salah, the young in- tellectual leader of the UGTT (the labor union), began to put some pressure on the government to carry out a more dogmatically socialist program. But in the end Bourguiba won Ahmed Ben Salah, and the in- tellectuals have been silenced and replaced by more orthodox figures. Habib Achour led his union back Tunisian Ahmed Belkihodja is at the University this year as the Foreign StudentLeader. skio Proiect rebresentat ve. into the official fold, pledged to support the government. The more serious attack on the regime was attempted by the ex- treme nationalists, led by the ex- Secretary of the Neo-Destour, Salah Ben Youssef. But this abor- tive revolution was crushed in a few weeks, largely by armed de- tachments of Neo-Destour Youth. Ben Youssef was driven into exile to Libya and Egypt and his fac- tion disappeared from the political scene. THE MAJOR political problem in Tunisia today, more than in Morocco, lies in the Algerian question. Tunis is closer in many ways to Algiers than is Rabat, and Tunisia is moreover caught between the exigencies of Algeria on the west and Egypt on the east. Morocco has been able to take a more detached view, although vitally interested in a settlement, but when H. E. Mongi Slim, the Tunisian Ambassador, speaks for the Algerian cause and North African unity in the United Na- tions, it is a life-and-death issue for Tunisia. "The war will go on in Algeria," said Bourguiba, "until France is ready for the idea of Algerian in- dependence." THE FRENCH occupied Tunisia in 1881, having previously oc- cupied the neighboring state of Algeria. From 1881 until 1954, France maintained complete colo- nial control over the country's domestic as well as external af- fairs. Five days after gaining inde- pendence in 1956, general elections were held in Tunisia for a Na- tional Constituent Assembly. On April 14, 1956, Bourguiba became Premier of the new nation; on July 23, 1956, Tunisia was ad- mitted to the United Nations; and one year later, on July 25, 1957, the NCA deposed the Bey, pro- claimed the nation a republic, and elected Bourguiba as its first pres- ident. The NCA's primary task is the completion of a new constitution for the republic. Once this is com- HERE ARE MANY ways of i thinking and talking about the present generation, and I think there are more people talking about them than there are mem- bers of the younger generation. This is all to the good, provided the talk is based on understanding and direct acquaintance with the young people being talked about. This is not often the case, and the cliches - security-minded, con- formist, silent, beat, tired - fall like rain on the heads of the young. But it is true that each genera- tion has its own truth, its particu- lar reality, its private world, and its own way of looking at life. If educators and parents are to help the young, and if education is to be effective, it must begin with an understanding of these truths. We need to listen to the young as we listen to music, sympathetically, expectantly, appreciating the in- dividual sounds and recognizing the total intention of the music. THERE IS, in fact, a new atti- tude in the present generation of Western youth. Having been brought up in the Western world to have no illusions, the present generation is not so much disillu- sioned, since it had none to start with, but unillusioned. It accepts the world as it finds it, having been taught to do so. This can have one of two effects. As in the case of the angry young men of England celebrated by John Osborne, it can have the effect of creating a tough-minded minority who attack the com- placency and the closed-in quality of the life around them. Or, as in the case of American writers and students, who aren't mad at anyone, it may involve a movement away from internal issues of politics, social conditions or controversy, into analytical thinking and introspection. As soon as Tunisia achieved independence in 1956, the new government began gathering together thousands of children from poor families and sent them to a private village where they were fed, educated and trained in practical skills. These young people today are known as "Bourguiba's children." pleted and ratified, the NCA will be dissolved and new elections will be held for the legislative body established by the constitution. S WEEPING reforms in the judi- cial system have abolished the traditional religious (Sharia) courts and integrated these tri- bunals with the secular courts into a united judiciary operating on three levels: courts of primary jurisdiction, courts of appeal, and the High Court. French magistrates will con- tinue to be attached to Tunisian courts to assist Tunisian magis- trates in cases involving French citizens. These newly unified courts re- cognize modern legal codes guar- anteeing freedom of opinion and of worship. Particularly note- worthy is the Personal Status Code of August 17, 1956, which revolu- tionized the position of women by abolishing polygamy, instituting a minimum age for marriage, sub- jecting divorce to court proceed- ings, and guaranteeing women's personal and property rights, Because it is relying upon in- creased industrialization to raise the standard of living, the govern- ment is giving special emphasis to the training of technical personnel and to higher education. A new' Center for Economic Studies now organizes research on economic problems, while two teachers' training colleges (one for men and one for women) meet the critical shortage of educators. THE GOVERNMENT has work- ed to modernize and unify the existing school systems as well as to increase the total number of schools. For example, the famous Mos- lem University of Zitouna, which is older than the 'Azhar' in Egypt, has now become a public univer- sity, placed under a rector re- sponsible to the Secretary of Edu- cation. Besides the Zitouna University, there is now the Institute of High- er Education, with faculties of arts, sciences, and law, In Tunis, also, are located the Administra- tive College and the National Agri- cultural College. The percentage of the" budget used for education, which was 14 per cent before the independence, is now 20 per cent. A large number of literary and scientific reviews, both in Arabic and in French, are published in Tunis, and the city is host to numerous lectures, theatrical per- formances, concerts, and art exhi- bitions. A vigorous school of Tunisian art has already produced painters like Amar Farhat, Jellel Ben Ab- dallah, Moses Levy and Hatim Elmekki. Many writers and artists make their home on the heights of Sidi Bou Said, a picturesque suburb which commands a mag- nificent view of the Mediterra- nean. THE ENTIRE economy of Tuni- sia revolves essentially upon its primary production. Agriculture and mines provide two-thirds of the nation's total output. Unfortunately, the most important source of primary pro- duction, agriculture, is extremely unstable-in 1952 the wholesale price for the major agricultural products, cereals and olives, was 40 billion francs as against 23 billion in 1951. These variations determine the rhythm of local economic activity. THE MI They also determine the exports of agricultural products. The mineral industries present a more stable pattern of produc- tion. There is much room for de- velopment. The most important mineral is phosphates. However, with the exception of the Djerissa iron mines, where the high metal content of the ore and ease ofeworking have favored in- vestments, mining concerns are generally under-equipped and in many cases are only exploited in- termittently. There are untouched resources, particularly of iron, lead and zinc. The major unknown factor is oil. Prospection has held out some promise. There is enough natural gas in Cap Bon to supply Tunis for many years to come. All hope is far from being abandoned, despite a certain amount of pes- simism. The mines occupy 14,000 work- ers on a permanent basis. They provide the preponderant share of rail and port traffic. GOVERNMENT action is direct- ed towards a rapid intensifica- tion of production through the improvement of agriculture (mod- ernization of methods, increase of the area of arable land), the de- velopment of fixed capital both public and private, the creation or improvement of energy resources and the equipment of those in- dustries which not only satisfy local demand but can export part of their production and, finally, the organization of foreign trade with a view to making the quality of Tunisian products better known and to expanding export markets. In order to attain these aims, the public investment policy of the government is supplemented by a private investment policy in the Tunisian economy, Public investment programs amount to many millions of dollars each year and are largely devoted to the development of agriculture, whereas the expansion of Tunisia's industrial resources is largely left to private initiative. Tunisia possesses public, semi- public, and private credit agencies, granting short, medium, and long- term financing. In this respect, its organization is technically adequate and its financial policy, both stable and prudent, can give every possible guarantee to foreign capital looking for suitable invest- ments. ICHIGAN DAILY'MAGAZINE WE NOW HAVE in the American colleges the first generation of understood children brought up by understanding parents. Being understood by parents puts a spe- cial kind of burden on the child- the burden of personal decision. In the absence of a strong line of parental authority, the child has little to rebel against, and in a world in which he is not ordered around but told to choose his way," he may stifle in an atmosphere of kindly over-all approval. In such a liberal atmosphere of acceptance and freedom from re- striction, young people often feel a deep emotional fatigue from continually being forced to make1 their own decisions before theyI have had enough experience to feel able to do so. In the previous generation, whatt children needed was a release from the constrictions of authority laidI down by tradition, academic con-f vention, parental rights and social custom. They received such release.; But having received it, and having1 also received a higher degree of1 self-understanding combined with1 a higher degree of tolerance for deviations in all human behavior,I they now wish to be relieved of1 some of the burden of self-respon- sibility, and even of the burden} of self-understanding. As a result we often find college students bored by discussion, tired "a studs 4, of asking questions. Give us the word, they will say. You know more than I do, what is the an- swer? Tell me. R, ON THE other hand, stu- dents will say - What is the point in so much student self-gov- ernment? We had all that in high school. Let's get on to the more interesting things, I don't have time for making rules about cur- few and bicycle permission. In some colleges the machinery of student government has run. down simply because many re- sponsible students do not wish to run for office. They would prefer an orderly arrangement of stu- dent life which worked fairly and automatically. They would prefer to have some one other than inex- perienced students do the ad- ministration of student affairs. Having been imbued with the spirit of liberalism, having been given their freedom, they find that it works well, but is a bore to ad- minister. THERE ARE other effects of modern liberalism in its psy- ant .. is granted the priceless advantage of looA openly at the world to discover its secrets." chological dimension. Here is one of them, stated by a young man who seems to me to have come close to defining a large segment of his age: "We are the generation of the third eye," he says, "the eye of self-consciousness, the eye of self-criticism- The char- acteristic fear of our genera- tion is our horror of finding ourselves ludicrous." The person who acts sincerely, boldly, enthusiastically, can be brought down in full flight by a sneer or a cynical smile, and in a negative time like ours, it is wiser for the young not to risk their self-confidence by a show of public enthusiasm or idealism. I believe that this may be an- other effect of "understanding" by the older generation. Being sensitive to the psychological im- plications of behavior, parents andI their children have become ac-, customed to thinking of strong; action or assertion as some form of aggression, or ego gratification, and have tended to create a degree of self-consciousness in personal relations which makes every action a subject for discussion rather than an occasion for delight, praise or blame. Thus we get a, monotone of feeling, with no one risking the larger emotions of joy,' anger, dramatic action, and pre- ferring the gentler pleasures of approval and adaptation. The level of ideal is thereby lowered, and the young, having{ been taught to do so by their parents, do not choose the bigger issues, the difficult way, the higher ideal, and are absorbed in whato has been called a "fun morality" in a period of high prosperity. ANOTHER STUDENT, among those at Princeton who have, been said to be the unsilent gen- eration, states a common ideal! for young and old alike when hel says: "Success for me would mean 1 a job that I could leave after I eight hours and that would l provide for self - fulfillment I within a framework of in- l conspicuous luxury." Now surely this is a modestr demand and surely this is much less a demand than the young should be making. We and they can ask much morel than this. But we have not asked' much more than this of ourselves,I and therefore our children, having been understood rather than in- spired, have not learned to look beyond the limits of their presenti lives.! This is not because this genera-t tion is less idealistic than its pre- decessors. In my judgement it is more talented, better educated, better able to handle its problems,1 and genuinely concerned with hu-t man values. It has been taught to1 recognize the advantages of ma- terial and personal security, it has been taught the meaning of liberal democracy, but not the m PI r tr w C of t.- cr k er 'to in h hl p th in w1 of I ii in a ti h h si Harold Taylor is president of Sarah Lawrence College and one of the most provocative and articulate spokesmen for liberal education and academic freedom in the country today. The article printed here is part of a speech, the Hey- awrd Keniston Lecture, delivered at the University in No- vember. The first part of the address, which has been omitted here, was devoted to a discussion of liberalism as a philosophy. SATURDAY, JANUARY 17 Tunisia has organized an efficieit, well-trained police force. Here the traffic police march in the 1957 independence day celebration.