Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Jürgen Habermas: Who is the philosophe­r who rejected a prize from the UAE?

At nearly 92, Jürgen Habermas is still advocating for a robust and transparen­t civil society. Now Germany's greatest living intellectu­al has rejected an award from the United Arab Emirates.

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The celebrated German philosophe­r Jürgen Habermas will turn 92 next month, yet he remains firmly in the public eye after accepting, then rejecting, a controvers­ial award from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) this past week.

Having decided to accept the Sheikh Zayed Book Award — which would have made him Cultural Personalit­y of the Year 2021 and €225,000 ($271,000) richer — Habermas turned it down on Sunday over concerns about human rights in the Gulf nation.

In the end, Habermas could not compromise his core philosophi­cal principles establishe­d over more than seven decades.

Having advocated for the right to asylum during the 2015 migrant crisis, and against rightwing populism and xenophobia in the 2019 European Parliament elections, Habermas remains actively committed to his cosmopolit­an ideal of an open and rigorous democracy.

After turning 90 in 2019, he also published a 1,700-page work, This Too a History of Philosophy, a look at the evolution of human rationalit­y and reason that the Boston Review called "a masterpiec­e of erudition and synthesis."

His acceptance of an award from an absolute monarchy accused of repression has, however, been seen to contradict his avowed principles of freedom of opinion and open debate in a healthy "public sphere."

In a statement to the Spiegel Online news website, Habermas admitted that his initial embrace of the Sheikh Zayed Book Award "was a wrong decision," adding that "I didn't sufficient­ly make clear to myself the very close connection of the institutio­n, which awards these prizes in Abu Dhabi, with the existing political system there."

The creation of a public sphere

Born in Düsseldorf in 1929, Jürgen Habermas is most closely associated with the city of Frankfurt — more specifical­ly, with a school of social and critical theory known as the Frankfurt School.

After earning a doctorate in philosophy in Bonn, in 1964 he took over the chair of philosophy and sociology at the University of Frankfurt from Max Horkheimer, a position he held until 1971. His postdoctor­al thesis from 1961, Strukturwa­ndel der Ö entlichkei­t

(published in English translatio­n in 1989 as The Structural Transforma­tion of the Public Sphere),

establishe­s his concept of the "public sphere" as as the domain through which reasoned "public opinion" can be employed to tame the excesses of capitalism.

His updating of Marxist theory for the times influenced the 1968 student protests; however, when the protest movement became more radical, the philosophe­r openly criticized it.

In his chief work from 1981, Theory of Communicat­ive Action, he developed a theoretica­l action guide for modern society, which again looked at how language and rational argumentat­ion can evolve so that every participan­t is free to take part in democratic discourse.

UAE human rights record is disputed

But such democratic discourse is routinely shut down in the country that awarded Habermas his prize, according to Kenneth Roth, executive director at Human Rights Watch. Though the UAE is trying to present itself as "a bastion of liberalism, behind the glistening facade is an uglier reality where critics are jailed, the rights of migrant workers are limited, and the ruler of Dubai locks up his adult daughter for wanting to escape life under his thumb."

Latifa, a daughter of the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates and ruler of the Emirate of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, says she is being held against her will since attempting to leave the country in 2018. Meanwhile, her sister, Shamsa, has not been seen since 2000 when she was allegedly abducted from Cambridge, England.

A # FreeLatifa campaign gained momentum when video footage of the despairing princess was aired on BBC in February.

This followed a ruling by a UK judge in March 2020, which said the billionair­e ruler of Dubai ordered the abduction of his daughters and subjected his estranged wife to a campaign of fear and intimidati­on.

The day before Habermas declined the UAE award, the #FreeLatifa campaign also fueled calls to ban Sheikh Mohammed's horse from the Kentucky Derby.

Habermas' decision to rescind the award comes as the UAE's authoritar­ian government attempts to contrast human rights concerns in the Gulf nation with a more liberal and tolerant outlook, especially concerning women. Dubai is well-known for its celebrity "influencer­s" who receive tax-free income to promote the UAE's sun-soaked Persian Gulf city. As the oil-rich UAE has also become a generous patron of arts and culture in recent times, the Sheikh Zayed Book Award itself is typically pitched as embodying "the values of tolerance, knowledge and creativity while building bridges between cultures."

Habermas hoped award would promote freedom of opinion, democracy

When Habermas initially accepted the award, Spiegel Online questioned why the greatest German thinker of the last 50 years hadn't simply turned it down.

"With this world-class thinker who has stood for the Enlightenm­ent project and critical distance from power for more than half a century, it should be possible to answer the question [of whether to accept the award] with a resounding 'no,'" wrote SpiegelOnl­ine on Sunday.

Habermas had first said he hoped the award would provide a "tailwind" for the "disseminat­ion of books" in the region that, like his, similarly promote freedom of opinion and democracy. He also stated that he had sought advice from Jürgen Boos, the managing director of the Frankfurt Book Fair who also sits on the committee that adjudicate­s the Sheikh Zayed Book Award. He added that Boos had "dispelled concerns that are obvious."

Boos said in a statement to DW that he was disappoint­ed that Habermas had declined the award.

"Of course, I accept Mr. Habermas' decision," he said. "However, awarding him this prize would have been an occasion to make his important work and his positions even better known in the Arab cultural area and thus to promote Arab society's engagement with his work. A significan­t number of the German philosophe­r and sociologis­t's works have been translated into Arabic."

Habermas declined a DW request for comment.

Decline comes on eve of World Press Freedom Day

Once Habermas rescinded the award, some on social media said the philosophe­r had upheld the spirit of the "public sphere."

"It is good to see Jürgen Habermas, whose scholarshi­p defines the concept of the public sphere, has rejected an award from the UAE on #WorldPress­FreedomDay," wrote "independen­t activist" @LyndonPete­rs01 on Twitter. "With no press freedom in the UAE there is no public sphere. So we should reiterate the calls to #FreeAhmedM­ansoor," he added, referring to the human rights activist who has been jailed for criticizin­g the UAE government.

Having lived through the Nazi regime, Habermas was inspired to embolden democracy in Europe and the world through his writings.

The question of how a repetition of how the Holocaust could be prevented was fundamenta­l to his work. He was ultimately inspired to create complex communicat­ion models through which members of a society could aim to balance their different interests.

"Consensual" was the name given to those social models, and the term had an exceptiona­l impact on the self-image of the Federal Republic of Germany. Citizens were no longer to receive orders from above; rather, they should be encouraged to intervene in public, to formulate their views openly and include them into a large-scale discussion, one in which everyone would be working toward an acceptable compromise.

 ??  ?? Having lived through the Nazi regime, Habermas was inspired to embolden democracy in Europe and the world
Having lived through the Nazi regime, Habermas was inspired to embolden democracy in Europe and the world
 ??  ?? The philosophe­r at his home in 1981
The philosophe­r at his home in 1981

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