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T. E. Lawrence, Twenty-seven Articles
Arab Bulletin, 20 August 1917
The following notes have been
expressed in commandment form for greater clarity and to save words.
They are, however, only my personal conclusions, arrived at gradually
while I worked in the Hejaz and now put on paper as stalking horses for
beginners in the Arab armies. They are meant to apply only to Bedu;
townspeople or Syrians require totally different treatment. They are of
course not suitable to any other person's need, or applicable unchanged
in any particular situation. Handling Hejaz Arabs is an art, not a
science, with exceptions and no obvious rules. At the same time we have
a great chance there; the Sherif trusts us, and has given us the
position (towards his Government) which the Germans wanted to win in
Turkey. If we are tactful, we can at once retain his goodwill and carry
out our job, but to succeed we have got to put into it all the interest
and skill we possess.
1. Go easy just for the first few
weeks. A bad start is difficult to atone for, and the Arabs form their
judgments on externals that we ignore. When you have reached the inner
circle in a tribe, you can do as you please with yourself and them.
2. Learn all you can about your Ashraf
and Bedu. Get to know their families, clans and tribes, friends and
enemies, wells, hills and roads. Do all this by listening and by
indirect inquiry. Do not ask questions. Get to speak their dialect of
Arabic, not yours. Until you can understand their allusions, avoid
getting deep into conversation, or you will drop bricks. Be a little
stiff at first.
3. In matters of business deal only
with the commander of the army, column, or party in which you serve.
Never give orders to anyone at all, and reserve your directions or
advice for the C.O., however great the temptation (for efficiency's
sake) of dealing direct with his underlings. Your place is advisory, and
your advice is due to the commander alone. Let him see that this is your
conception of your duty, and that his is to be the sole executive of
your joint plans.
4. Win and keep the confidence of your
leader. Strengthen his prestige at your expense before others when you
can. Never refuse or quash schemes he may put forward; but ensure that
they are put forward in the first instance privately to you. Always
approve them, and after praise modify them insensibly, causing the
suggestions to come from him, until they are in accord with your own
opinion. When you attain this point, hold him to it, keep a tight grip
of his ideas, and push him forward as firmly as possibly, but secretly,
so that no one but himself (and he not too clearly) is aware of your
pressure.
5. Remain in touch with your leader as
constantly and unobtrusively as you can. Live with him, that at meal
times and at audiences you may be naturally with him in his tent. Formal
visits to give advice are not so good as the constant dropping of ideas
in casual talk. When stranger sheikhs come in for the first time to
swear allegiance and offer service, clear out of the tent. If their
first impression is of foreigners in the confidence of the Sherif, it
will do the Arab cause much harm.
6. Be shy of too close relations with
the subordinates of the expedition. Continual intercourse with them will
make it impossible for you to avoid going behind or beyond the
instructions that the Arab C.O. has given them on your advice, and in so
disclosing the weakness of his position you altogether destroy your own.
7. Treat the sub-chiefs of your force
quite easily and lightly. In this way you hold yourself above their
level. Treat the leader, if a Sherif, with respect. He will return your
manner and you and he will then be alike, and above the rest. Precedence
is a serious matter among the Arabs, and you must attain it.
8. Your ideal position is when you are
present and not noticed. Do not be too intimate, too prominent, or too
earnest. Avoid being identified too long or too often with any tribal
sheikh, even if C.O. of the expedition. To do your work you must be
above jealousies, and you lose prestige if you are associated with a
tribe or clan, and its inevitable feuds. Sherifs are above all
blood-feuds and local rivalries, and form the only principle of unity
among the Arabs. Let your name therefore be coupled always with a
Sherif's, and share his attitude towards the tribes. When the moment
comes for action put yourself publicly under his orders. The Bedu will
then follow suit.
9. Magnify and develop the growing
conception of the Sherifs as the natural aristocracy of the Arabs.
Intertribal jealousies make it impossible for any sheikh to attain a
commanding position, and the only hope of union in nomad Arabia is that
the Ashraf be universally acknowledged as the ruling class. Sherifs are
half-townsmen, half-nomad, in manner and life, and have the instinct of
command. Mere merit and money would be insufficient to obtain such
recognition; but the Arab reverence for pedigree and the Prophet gives
hope for the ultimate success of the Ashraf.
10. Call your Sherif 'Sidi' in public
and in private. Call other people by their ordinary names, without
title. In intimate conversation call a Sheikh 'Abu Annad', 'Akhu Alia'
or some similar by-name.
11. The foreigner and Christian is not
a popular person in Arabia. However friendly and informal the treatment
of yourself may be, remember always that your foundations are very sandy
ones. Wave a Sherif in front of you like a banner and hide your own mind
and person. If you succeed, you will have hundreds of miles of country
and thousands of men under your orders, and for this it is worth
bartering the outward show.
12. Cling tight to your sense of
humour. You will need it every day. A dry irony is the most useful type,
and repartee of a personal and not too broad character will double your
influence with the chiefs. Reproof, if wrapped up in some smiling form,
will carry further and last longer than the most violent speech. The
power of mimicry or parody is valuable, but use it sparingly, for wit is
more dignified than humour. Do not cause a laugh at a Sherif except
amongst Sherifs.
13. Never lay hands on an Arab; you
degrade yourself. You may think the resultant obvious increase of
outward respect a gain to you; but what you have really done is to build
a wall between you and their inner selves. It is difficult to keep quiet
when everything is being done wrong, but the less you lose your temper
the greater your advantage. Also then you will not go mad yourself.
14. While very difficult to drive, the
Bedu are easy to lead, if you have the patience to bear with them. The
less apparent your interferences the more your influence. They are
willing to follow your advice and do what you wish, but they do not mean
you or anyone else to be aware of that. It is only after the end of all
annoyances that you find at bottom their real fund of goodwill.
15. Do not try to do too much with
your own hands. Better the Arabs do it tolerably than that you do it
perfectly. It is their war, and you are to help them, not to win it for
them. Actually, also, under the very odd conditions of Arabia, your
practical work will not be as good as, perhaps, you think it is.
16. If you can, without being too
lavish, forestall presents to yourself. A well-placed gift is often most
effective in winning over a suspicious sheikh. Never receive a present
without giving a liberal return, but you may delay this return (while
letting its ultimate certainty be known) if you require a particular
service from the giver. Do not let them ask you for things, since their
greed will then make them look upon you only as a cow to milk.
17. Wear an Arab headcloth when with a
tribe. Bedu have a malignant prejudice against the hat, and believe that
our persistence in wearing it (due probably to British obstinacy of
dictation) is founded on some immoral or irreligious principle. A thick
headcloth forms a good protection against the sun, and if you wear a hat
your best Arab friends will be ashamed of you in public.
18. Disguise is not advisable. Except
in special areas, let it be clearly known that you are a British officer
and a Christian. At the same time, if you can wear Arab kit when with
the tribes, you will acquire their trust and intimacy to a degree
impossible in uniform. It is, however, dangerous and difficult. They
make no special allowances for you when you dress like them. Breaches of
etiquette not charged against a foreigner are not condoned to you in
Arab clothes. You will be like an actor in a foreign theatre, playing a
part day and night for months, without rest, and for an anxious stake.
Complete success, which is when the Arabs forget your strangeness and
speak naturally before you, counting you as one of themselves, is
perhaps only attainable in character: while half-success (all that most
of us will strive for; the other costs too much) is easier to win in
British things, and you yourself will last longer, physically and
mentally, in the comfort that they mean. Also then the Turks will not
hang you, when you are caught.
19. If you wear Arab things, wear the
best. Clothes are significant among the tribes, and you must wear the
appropriate, and appear at ease in them. Dress like a Sherif, if they
agree to it.
20. If you wear Arab things at all, go
the whole way. Leave your English friends and customs on the coast, and
fall back on Arab habits entirely. It is possible, starting thus level
with them, for the European to beat the Arabs at their own game, for we
have stronger motives for our action, and put more heart into it than
they. If you can surpass them, you have taken an immense stride toward
complete success, but the strain of living and thinking in a foreign and
half-understood language, the savage food, strange clothes, and stranger
ways, with the complete loss of privacy and quiet, and the impossibility
of ever relaxing your watchful imitation of the others for months on
end, provide such an added stress to the ordinary difficulties of
dealing with the Bedu, the climate, and the Turks, that this road should
not be chosen without serious thought.
21. Religious discussions will be
frequent. Say what you like about your own side, and avoid criticism of
theirs, unless you know that the point is external, when you may score
heavily by proving it so. With the Bedu, Islam is so all-pervading an
element that there is little religiosity, little fervour, and no regard
for externals. Do not think from their conduct that they are careless.
Their conviction of the truth of their faith, and its share in every act
and thought and principle of their daily life is so intimate and intense
as to be unconscious, unless roused by opposition. Their religion is as
much a part of nature to them as is sleep or food.
22. Do not try to trade on what you
know of fighting. The Hejaz confounds ordinary tactics. Learn the Bedu
principles of war as thoroughly and as quickly as you can, for till you
know them your advice will be no good to the Sherif. Unnumbered
generations of tribal raids have taught them more about some parts of
the business than we will ever know. In familiar conditions they fight
well, but strange events cause panic. Keep your unit small. Their
raiding parties are usually from one hundred to two hundred men, and if
you take a crowd they only get confused. Also their sheikhs, while
admirable company commanders, are too 'set' to learn to handle the
equivalents of battalions or regiments. Don't attempt unusual things,
unless they appeal to the sporting instinct Bedu have so strongly, or
unless success is obvious. If the objective is a good one (booty) they
will attack like fiends, they are splendid scouts, their mobility gives
you the advantage that will win this local war, they make proper use of
their knowledge of the country (don't take tribesmen to places they do
not know), and the gazelle-hunters, who form a proportion of the better
men, are great shots at visible targets. A sheikh from one tribe cannot
give orders to men from another; a Sherif is necessary to command a
mixed tribal force. If there is plunder in prospect, and the odds are at
all equal, you will win. Do not Waste Bedu attacking trenches (they will
not stand casualties) or in trying to defend a position, for they cannot
sit still without slacking. The more unorthodox and Arab your
proceedings, the more likely you are to have the Turks cold, for they
lack initiative and expect you to. Don't play for safety.
23. The open reason that Bedu give you
for action or inaction may be true, but always there will be better
reasons left for you to divine. You must find these inner reasons (they
will be denied, but are none the less in operation) before shaping your
arguments for one course or other. Allusion is more effective than
logical exposition: they dislike Concise expression. Their minds work
just as ours do, but on different premises. There is nothing
unreasonable, incomprehensible, or inscrutable in the Arab. Experience
of them, and knowledge of their prejudices will enable you to foresee
their attitude and possible course of action in nearly every case.
24. Do not mix Bedu and Syrians, or
trained men and tribesmen. You will get work out of neither, for they
hate each other. I have never seen a successful combined operation, but
many failures. In particular, ex-officers of the Turkish army, however
Arab in feelings and blood and language, are hopeless with Bedu. They
are narrow-minded in tactics, unable to adjust themselves to irregular
warfare, clumsy in Arab etiquette, swollen-headed to the extent of being
incapable of politeness to a tribesman for more than a few minutes,
impatient, and, usually, helpless without their troops on the road and
in action. Your orders (if you were unwise enough to give any) would be
more readily obeyed by Beduins than those of any Mohammedan Syrian
officer. Arab townsmen and Arab tribesmen regard each other mutually as
poor relations, and poor relations are much more objectionable than poor
strangers.
25. In spite of ordinary Arab example,
avoid too free talk about women. It is as difficult a subject as
religion, and their standards are so unlike our own that a remark,
harmless in English, may appear as unrestrained to them, as some of
their statements would look to us, if translated literally.
26. Be as careful of your servants as
of yourself. If you want a sophisticated one you will probably have to
take an Egyptian, or a Sudani, and unless you are very lucky he will
undo on trek much of the good you so laboriously effect. Arabs will cook
rice and make coffee for you, and leave you if required to do unmanly
work like cleaning boots or washing. They are only really possible if
you are in Arab kit. A slave brought up in the Hejaz is the best
servant, but there are rules against British subjects owning them, so
they have to be lent to you. In any case, take with you an Ageyli or two
when you go up country. They are the most efficient couriers in Arabia,
and understand camels.
27. The beginning and ending of the
secret of handling Arabs is unremitting study of them. Keep always on
your guard; never say an unnecessary thing: watch yourself and your
companions all the time: hear all that passes, search out what is going
on beneath the surface, read their characters, discover their tastes and
their weaknesses, and keep everything you find out to yourself. Bury
yourself in Arab circles, have no interests and no ideas except the work
in hand, so that your brain is saturated with one thing only, and you
realize your part deeply enough to avoid the little slips that would
counteract the painful work of weeks. Your success will be proportioned
to the amount of mental effort you devote to it.

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