Lawrence Wright
The Looming Tower:
Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11
Alfred A.
Knopf
About the Book
A sweeping
narrative history of the events leading to 9/11,
The Looming Tower is a groundbreaking look at
the people and ideas, the terrorist plans and
the Western intelligence failures that culminated
in the assault on America.
About
the Author
Lawrence
Wright graduated from Tulane University and spent
two years teaching at the American University
in Cairo, Egypt. He is a staff writer for The
New Yorker and a fellow at the Center on
Law and Security at New York University School
of Law. The author of five works of nonfiction
– City Children, Country Summer;
In the New World; Saints and Sinners; Remembering
Satan; and Twins – he has
also written a novel, God’s Favorite,
and was co-writer of the movie The Siege.
He lives in Austin, Texas.
Suggested Links
http://www.lawrencewright.com/
Backlist
- Twins: And What
They Tell Us About Who We Are, John Wiley
& Sons
- Noriega: God's
Favorite, Simon & Schuster
- Remembering Satan,
Knopf
- Saints & Sinners,
Knopf
- In the New World:
Growing Up in America, 1964-1984, Knopf
- City Children,
Country Summer, Scribner
Excerpt from The Looming
Tower by Lawrence Wright
Copyright © 2006 by Lawrence Wright.
The Martyr
In a first-class stateroom
on a cruise ship bound for New York from Alexandria,
Egypt, a frail, middle-aged writer and educator
named Sayyid Qutb experienced a crisis of faith.
“Should I go to America as any normal student
on a scholarship, who only eats and sleeps, or
should I be special?” he wondered. “Should
I hold on to my Islamic beliefs, facing the many
sinful temptations, or should I indulge those
temptations all around me?” It was November
1948. The new world loomed over the horizon, victorious,
rich, and free. Behind him was Egypt, in rags
and tears. The traveler had never been out of
his native country. Nor had he willingly left
now.
The stern bachelor was
slight and dark, with a high, sloping forehead
and a paintbrush moustache somewhat narrower than
the width of his nose. His eyes betrayed an imperious
and easily slighted nature. He always evoked an
air of formality, favoring dark three-piece suits
despite the searing Egyptian sun. For a man who
held his dignity so close, the prospect of returning
to the classroom at the age of forty-two may have
seemed demeaning. And yet, as a child from a mud-walled
village in Upper Egypt, he had already surpassed
the modest goal he had set for himself of becoming
a respectable member of the civil service. His
literary and social criticism had made him one
of his country’s most popular writers. It
had also earned the fury of King Farouk, Egypt’s
dissolute monarch, who had signed an order for
his arrest. Powerful and sympathetic friends hastily
arranged his departure.
At the time, Qutb (his
name is pronounced kuh-tub) held a comfortable
post as a supervisor in the Ministry of Education.
Politically, he was a fervent Egyptian nationalist
and anti-communist, a stance that placed him in
the mainstream of the vast bureaucratic middle
class. The ideas that would give birth to what
would be called Islamic fundamentalism were not
yet completely formed in his mind; indeed, he
would later say that he was not even a very religious
man before he began this journey, although he
had memorized the Quran by the age of ten, and
his writing had recently taken a turn toward more
conservative themes. Like many of his compatriots,
he was radicalized by the British occupation and
contemptuous of the jaded King Farouk’s
complicity. Egypt was racked by anti-British protests
and seditious political factions bent on running
the foreign troops out of the country—and
perhaps the king as well. What made this unimposing,
midlevel government clerk particularly dangerous
was his blunt and potent commentary. He had never
gotten to the front rank of the contemporary Arab
literary scene, a fact that galled him throughout
his career; and yet from the government’s
point of view, he was becoming an annoyingly important
enemy.
He was Western in so
many ways—his dress, his love of classical
music and Hollywood movies. He had read, in translation,
the works of Darwin and Einstein, Byron and Shelley,
and had immersed himself in French literature,
especially Victor Hugo. Even before his journey,
however, he worried about the advance of an all-engulfing
Western civilization. Despite his erudition, he
saw the West as a single cultural entity. The
distinctions between capitalism and Marxism, Christianity
and Judaism, fascism and democracy were insignificant
by comparison with the single great divide in
Qutb’s mind: Islam and the East on the one
side, and the Christian West on the other.
America, however, stood
apart from the colonialist adventures that had
characterized Europe’s relations with the
Arab world. America, at the end of the Second
World War, straddled the political chasm between
the colonizers and the colonized. Indeed, it was
tempting to imagine America as the anticolonial
paragon: a subjugated nation that had broken free
and triumphantly outstripped its former masters.
America’s power seemed to lie in its values,
not in European notions of cultural superiority
or privileged races and classes. And because America
advertised itself as an immigrant nation, it had
a permeable relationship with the rest of the
world. Arabs, like most other peoples, had established
their own colonies inside America, and the ropes
of kinship drew them closer to the ideals that
the country claimed to stand for.
And so, Qutb, like many
Arabs, felt shocked and betrayed by the support
that the U.S. government had given to the Zionist
cause after the war. Even as Qutb was sailing
out of Alexandria’s harbor, Egypt, along
with five other Arab armies, was in the final
stages of losing the war that established Israel
as a Jewish state within the Arab world. The Arabs
were stunned, not only by the determination and
skill of the Israeli fighters but by the incompetence
of their own troops and the disastrous decisions
of their leaders. The shame of that experience
would shape the Arab intellectual universe more
profoundly than any other event in modern history.
“I hate those Westerners and despise them!”
Qutb wrote after President Harry Truman endorsed
the transfer of a hundred thousand Jewish refugees
into Palestine. “All of them, without any
exception: the English, the French, the Dutch,
and finally the Americans, who have been trusted
by many.”
The man in the stateroom
had known romantic love, but mainly the pain of
it. He had written a thinly disguised account
of a failed relationship in a novel; after that,
he turned his back on marriage. He said that he
had been unable to find a suitable bride from
the “dishonorable” women who allowed
themselves to be seen in public, a stance that
left him alone and unconsoled in middle age. He
still enjoyed women—he was close to his
three sisters—but sexuality threatened him,
and he had withdrawn into a shell of disapproval,
seeing sex as the main enemy of salvation.
The dearest relationship
he had ever enjoyed was that with his mother,
Fatima, an illiterate but pious woman, who had
sent her precocious son to Cairo to study. His
father died in 1933, when Qutb was twenty-seven.
For the next three years he taught in various
provincial posts until he was transferred to Helwan,
a prosperous suburb of Cairo, and he brought the
rest of his family to live with him there. His
intensely conservative mother never entirely settled
in; she was always on guard against the creeping
foreign influences that were far more apparent
in Helwan than in the little village she came
from. These influences must have been evident
in her sophisticated son as well.
As he prayed in his stateroom,
Sayyid Qutb was still uncertain of his own identity.
Should he be “normal” or “special”?
Should he resist temptations or indulge them?
Should he hang on tightly to his Islamic beliefs
or cast them aside for the materialism and sinfulness
of the West? Like all pilgrims, he was making
two journeys: one outward, into the larger world,
and another inward, into his own soul. “I
have decided to be a true Muslim!” he resolved.
But almost immediately he second-guessed himself.
“Am I being truthful or was that just a
whim?”
His deliberations were
interrupted by a knock on the door. Standing outside
his stateroom was a young girl, whom he described
as thin and tall and “half-naked.”
She asked him in English, “Is it okay for
me to be your guest tonight?”
Qutb responded that his
room was equipped with only one bed.
“A single bed can
hold two people,” she said.
Appalled, he closed the
door in her face. “I heard her fall on the
wooden floor outside and realized that she was
drunk,” he recalled. “I instantly
thanked God for defeating my temptation and allowing
me to stick to my morals.”
This is the man, then—decent,
proud, tormented, self-righteous, and resentful—whose
lonely genius would unsettle Islam, threaten regimes
across the Muslim world, and beckon to a generation
of rootless young Arabs who were looking for meaning
and purpose in their lives and would find it in
jihad.
Qutb arrived in New York
Harbor in the middle of the most prosperous holiday
season the country had ever known. In the postwar
boom, everybody was making money—Idaho potato
farmers, Detroit automakers, Wall Street bankers—and
all this wealth spurred confidence in the capitalist
model, which had been so brutally tested during
the recent Depression. Unemployment seemed practically
un-American; officially, the rate of joblessness
was under 4 percent, and practically speaking,
anyone who wanted a job could get one. Half of
the world’s total wealth was now in American
hands.
The contrast with Cairo
must have been especially bitter as Qutb wandered
through the New York City streets, festively lit
with holiday lights, the luxurious shop windows
laden with appliances that he had only heard about—television
sets, washing machines—technological miracles
spilling out of every department store in stupefying
abundance. Brand-new office towers and apartments
were shouldering into the gaps in the Manhattan
skyline between the Empire State Building and
the Chrysler Building. Downtown and in the outer
boroughs, vast projects were under way to house
the immigrant masses.
It was fitting, in such
a buoyant and confident environment, unprecedented
in its mix of cultures, that the visible symbol
of a changed world order was arising: the new
United Nations complex overlooking the East River.
The United Nations was the most powerful expression
of the determined internationalism that was the
legacy of the war, and yet the city itself already
embodied the dreams of universal harmony far more
powerfully than did any single idea or institution.
The world was pouring into New York because that
was where the power was, and the money, and the
transforming cultural energy. Nearly a million
Russians were in the city, half a million Irish,
and an equal number of Germans—not to mention
the Puerto Ricans, the Dominicans, the Poles,
and the largely uncounted and often illegal Chinese
laborers who had also found refuge in the welcoming
city. The black population of the city had grown
by 50 percent in only eight years, to 700,000,
and they were refugees as well, from the racism
of the American South. Fully a fourth of the 8
million New Yorkers were Jewish, many of whom
had fled the latest European catastrophe. Hebrew
letters covered the signs for the shops and factories
on the Lower East Side, and Yiddish was commonly
heard on the streets. That would have been a challenge
for the middle-aged Egyptian who hated the Jews
but, until he left his country, had never met
one. For many New Yorkers, perhaps for most of
them, political and economic oppression was a
part of their heritage, and the city had given
them sanctuary, a place to earn a living, to raise
a family, to begin again. Because of that, the
great emotion that fueled the exuberant city was
hopefulness, whereas Cairo was one of the capitals
of despair.
At the same time, New
York was miserable—overfull, grouchy, competitive,
frivolous, picketed with No Vacancy signs. Snoring
alcoholics blocked the doorways. Pimps and pickpockets
prowled the midtown squares in the ghoulish neon
glow of burlesque houses. In the Bowery, flophouses
offered cots for twenty cents a night. The gloomy
side streets were crisscrossed with clotheslines.
Gangs of snarling delinquents roamed the margins
like wild dogs. For a man whose English was rudimentary,
the city posed unfamiliar hazards, and Qutb’s
natural reticence made communication all the more
difficult. He was desperately homesick. “Here
in this strange place, this huge workshop they
call ‘the new world,’ I feel as though
my spirit, thoughts, and body live in loneliness,”
he wrote to a friend in Cairo. “What I need
most here is someone to talk to,” he wrote
another friend, “to talk about topics other
than dollars, movie stars, brands of cars—a
real conversation on the issues of man, philosophy,
and soul.” Two days after Qutb arrived in
America, he and an Egyptian acquaintance checked
into a hotel. “The black elevator operator
liked us because we were closer to his color,”
Qutb reported. The operator offered to help the
travelers find “entertainment.” “He
mentioned examples of this ‘entertainment,’
which included perversions. He also told us what
happens in some of these rooms, which may have
pairs of boys or girls. They asked him to bring
them some bottles of Coca-Cola, and didn’t
even change their positions when he entered! ‘Don’t
they feel ashamed?’ we asked. He was surprised.
‘Why? They are just enjoying themselves,
satisfying their particular desires.’ ”
This experience, among
many others, confirmed Qutb’s view that
sexual mixing led inevitably to perversion. America
itself had just been shaken by a lengthy scholarly
report titled Sexual Behavior in the Human Male,
by Alfred Kinsey and his colleagues at the University
of Indiana. Their eight-hundred-page treatise,
filled with startling statistics and droll commentary,
shattered the country’s leftover Victorian
prudishness like a brick through a stained-glass
window. Kinsey reported that 37 percent of the
American men he sampled had experienced homosexual
activity to the point of orgasm, nearly half had
engaged in extramarital sex, and 69 percent had
paid for sex with prostitutes. The mirror that
Kinsey held up to America showed a country that
was frantically lustful but also confused, ashamed,
incompetent, and astoundingly ignorant. Despite
the evidence of the diversity and frequency of
sexual activity, this was a time in America when
sexual matters were practically never discussed,
not even by doctors. One Kinsey researcher interviewed
a thousand childless American couples who had
no idea why they failed to conceive, even though
the wives were virgins.
Qutb was familiar with
the Kinsey Report, and referenced it in his later
writings to illustrate his view of Americans as
little different from beasts—“a reckless,
deluded herd that only knows lust and money.”
A staggering rate of divorce was to be expected
in such a society, since “Every time a husband
or wife notices a new sparkling personality, they
lunge for it as if it were a new fashion in the
world of desires.” The turbulent overtones
of his own internal struggles can be heard in
his diatribe: “A girl looks at you, appearing
as if she were an enchanting nymph or an escaped
mermaid, but as she approaches, you sense only
the screaming instinct inside her, and you can
smell her burning body, not the scent of perfume
but flesh, only flesh. Tasty flesh, truly, but
flesh nonetheless.”
The end of the world
war had brought America victory but not security.
Many Americans felt that they had defeated one
totalitarian enemy only to encounter another far
stronger and more insidious than European fascism.
“Communism is creeping inexorably into these
destitute lands,” the young evangelist Billy
Graham warned, “into war-torn China, into
restless South America, and unless the Christian
religion rescues these nations from the clutch
of the unbelieving, America will stand alone and
isolated in the world.”
Excerpted
from The Looming Tower by Lawrence Wright Copyright
© 2006 by Lawrence Wright. Excerpted by permission
of Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. All
rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be
reproduced or reprinted without permission in
writing from the publisher.
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