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street roots July 20, 2012 Google Inc executive Wael Ghonim addresses a mass crowd inside Tahrir Square in Cairo February 8, 2011. People power against powerful people BY JOE MARTIN himself in protest. He died of his burns. Outraged Tunisians took to the streets. They arkness engulfed Cairo, Egypt. It’s soon ousted their corrupt president. past midnight. A young man walks in Suddenly Egyptians realized they might do the street’s dim light. In one startling the same. By deft utilization of the Internet, moment he is set upon by three men: “You Facebook and Twitter, Ghonim found himself will regret it if you scream,” he was told. in the vanguard of a people’s rebellion. Stuffed into a car’s backseat he is By 2010 he was already engaged in handcuffed, his belongings confiscated. His subversive activities. On viewing the image of a dead man on Facebook, Ghonim describes shirt is used to blindfold him. his revulsion: “It was a horrifying photo Thus begins Wael Ghonim’s ordeal as a prisoner of Hosni Mubarak, then president of showing the distorted face of a man in his Egypt. An unexpected revolutionary, Ghonim twenties. There was a big pool of blood behind his head, which rested on a chunk of helped spark events that would overthrow marble. His face was extremely disfigured Mubarak, who had ruled Egypt for 30 years. and bloodied; his lower lip had been ripped For 12 days he remained handcuffed, blindfolded and alone. His gripping work in half, and his jaw was seemingly dislocated. His front teeth appeared to be missing, and it “Revolution 2.0” recounts how he ignited an looked as if they had been beaten right out of uprising and endured captivity. his mouth. The image was so gruesome that Ghonim is married, a father and I wondered if he had been wounded in war.” ensconced within Egypt’s middle class. A technophile, he is a valued employee of The man was Khaled Mohamed Said, who Google. It’s a dream job: “The Internet had died in Alexandria at the hands of secret been instrumental in shaping my experiences police. It was Ghonim’s transformative as well as my character,” he says. “It was moment: “I could not stand by passively in through the Internet that I was able to enter the face of grave injustice. I decided to the world of communications (when I was employ all my skills and experience to barely 18) and network with hundreds of demand justice for Khaled Said and to help young people from my generation expose his story to vigorous public debate. It everywhere around the world. Like everyone was time to lay bare the corrupt practices of else, I enjoyed spending long hours in front the Ministry of the Interior, our repressive regime’s evil right hand.” of a screen on chat programs. I built a Ghonim created a Facebook page titled network of virtual relations with people, most “We Are All Khaled Said” and aimed it at a of whom I never met in person.” broad audience. The response was swift. Ghonim could have focused on family and Events known as “Silent Stands” were career; he could have avoided the repressive organized and encouraged involvement of a forces of Mubarak. But like many Egyptians wide array of citizens. of all classes, Ghonim had grown disgusted “Inspired by Gandhi and other advocates with the stranglehold Mubarak’s regime had of nonviolent resistance, I was keen to stress on the country. Issues of poverty and unemployment fomented anger and regularly that our activities were to remain peaceful at all costs. Gandhi is certainly one resentment at all levels of society. In late 2010 turbulent events erupted in of my heroes,” says Ghonim. “I have enjoyed neighboring Tunisia. A poor fruit seller “had reading many books about his philosophy and his cart confiscated by a police woman, and about how he revived ahimsa, the ancient when he complained to her, she allegedly Indian religious principle of nonviolence slapped his face, humiliating him in front of toward all living things.” everyone.” Later the desperate man returned But any threat to Mubarak’s rule would be to police headquarters and immolated dealt with severely. Though Ghonim had C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R D tried to remain anonymous, he was eventually captured. While stating it is difficult “to convey the psychological torture” he suffered, he admits isolation and solitary confinement is especially difficult for a technophile: “The deafening silence and blinding darkness could effectively render a human being insane, and for an Internet addict like myself, who thrived on communication and whose phone and Ofcoalm coaid h a w focused e-mail never ceased oh fa m ily and career^ he their activity, it could have avoided the really was unbearable.” repressive forces of Events took on Mubarak® Bat lik e many their own Egyptians of a ll classes^ momentum in Ghoalm had grow n disgusted Tahrir Square. Ghonim had no idea w ith the stranglehold of the eruption’s M ubaraks regim e had on the magnitude. Mubarak’s efforts at country» damage control proved futile. People demanded fundamental change. Days before the president’s resignation, Ghonim was freed: “One can only learn the value of freedom when it is lost. Imagine losing your freedom to move, to see, and to use your hands, not for a few hours but for days, with no idea what might happen next.” At the time he was writing the book, Ghonim and other Egyptians were awaiting the election of a new president: “Inevitably, in the wake of the fervor and unity of the revolution, public opinion has fractured, uncertainties have swirled, and we are still a long way from a fully established democracy. I do not pretend to have a crystal ball that can foretell Egypt s future, but I do believe that Egyptians will never again put up with another pharaoh.” Reprinted from Real Change News, Seattle Wash.,