- YEMEN
UPDATE
-
- YEMEN
ARTICLES
A Historical
Genealogy of Socotra as an Object of Mythical Speculation,
- Scientific Research
& Development Experiment
-
-
- by Serge D. Elie, MS, MPA
-
- D.Phil Candidate in Social
Anthropology
- The Centre for Culture,
Development & Environment
- University of
Sussex
- Brighton,
UK
- Yemen Update 44
(2002)
-
-
- Introduction
-
- At the verge of the third
millennium, Soqotra still enjoys the rare status of being one
of the world's most remote and inaccessible places.
Undoubtedly, this is a mixed blessing: the beautiful concept of
sustainable development
may soon face one of its ultimate
tests, when and if plans for the development of the island are
turned into reality (Dumont 1998:11).
-
- Indeed, the above quote captures the
challenge &endash; or more aptly, the dilemma &endash; entailed by
the contemplated attempts to rescue Socotra from its generalized
oblivion in terms of cultural insularity, relative economic
isolation, and until now its very superficial engagement with
notions of development. In fact, Socotra may well represent one of
the few remaining places in the world that have managed to escape
the gaze of development. However, plans are afoot to catapult
Socotra, literally and perhaps unwittingly, from its general
obscurity, into an international destination for ecotourism. This
isolated speck of land, seen on a map, evokes the image of a
doorknob to the Bab al Mandab, the gateway to the Suez Canal as it
straddles the entrance of the Red Sea while simultaneously
demarcating the beginning of the Indian Ocean in the Gulf of Aden.
As such, it has occupied a strategic position in an area, which
for millennia constituted the center of international trade among
the great empires of the East as well as between them and a then
backward West. This position ensured Socotra's entry into the
annals of ancient history.
-
- Socotra's rediscovery, or preferably,
rehabilitation to something approximating its former status, is
perhaps justified on a number of grounds. With an area of 3,625
km2, Socotra is the largest island in the Arab world, out of an
estimated total of 258 islands that occupy a total area of 6,811
km2 and are dispersed throughout an area stretching from the
Maghreb in the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf (Al Hity
1998:285). Moreover, in terms of the world's oceanic islands,
which are distinguished by the richness of their biodiversity,
Socotra is considered the tenth richest of them all, and compares
favorably with the much more famous islands, such as Galapagos,
Mauritius, and the Canary Islands. More specifically, in terms of
its plant species, out of a total of over 900 species there are
293 that are endemic, which gives Socotra a 34% rate of endemism;
thus ranking it in the top five islands in terms of endemic flora.
Socotra' biodiversity is considered to be of global significance,
and, as a result, the island is being widely described as the
Galapagos of the Indian Ocean. However, the Socotra Archipelago
with an estimated human population ranging from 40 to 80,000
people, is described as "one of the poorest and most disadvantaged
group of islands anywhere" in the world.
-
- Interestingly, it is precisely this
peculiar situation of a place with a unique biodiversity of global
significance that needs to be preserved, and with a human
population characterized by excessive material deprivation that
must be remedied. This situation constitutes simultaneously an
environmental challenge as well as a development imperative that
the Government of Yemen in collaboration with international
development agencies and environmental organizations are about to
address. What follows below, is a succinct historical overview
that provides the background necessary to put into context the
process of social transformation that will be generated by a most
ambitious attempt to incorporate the Socotra Archipelago into an
environment-led development discourse and practice. What is at
stake here, is the extent to which the case of Socotra will prove
to be an exception from experience elsewhere. An exception that
would be characterized by a truly successful implementation of an
environmental management regime driven by an ecological
conservationist ethos inspired primarily by existing indigenous
practices, and articulated within a sustainable development
programme that seeks only to stabilize and marginally improve
local good practices without changing the prevailing life ways of
Socotrans. The dilemma involved here is perhaps best captured in
the following question: "What can be done to end the isolation of
the island and offer its human inhabitants their right share of
modern commodities, while, at the same time, ensuring that its
unique landscapes, their fauna and flora, remain as intact as
possible?" (Dumont 1998:11).
-
-
- History in Four Phases:
Socotra as an Idyllic Portemanteau
-
- Enfolded within persons are the
histories of their environmental relations; enfolded within the
environment are the histories of the activities of persons.
Thus, to sever the links that bind any people to their
environment is to cut them off from the historical past that
has made them who they are (Ingold 1992:51).
-
- The above epigram provides a
justification, if any were needed, as to why the appeal to history
is not a perfunctory digression but an integral part of Socotra's
narrative, given the fact that renewed interest in the island, is
linked to its environmental resources. For reasons that perhaps
encompass more than just the archipelago's strategic location and
its natural resources such as incense known as the "gold of the
East," Socotra has exercised a kind of symbolic domination on the
imagination of men for millennia. Indeed, Socotra served as a
vehicle for their projective fantasies: For the
travelers-historians (mythologists really) in pursuit of the
exotic to enrich their fantastic tales; for the merchants driven
by their pecuniary imagination in search of tradable commodities;
for the would be conquerors seeking territorial expansion and
possession; for the men of science (mostly naturalists doubling as
ethnologues) groping for explanations as to the origin of man and
the original location of the Garden of Eden; and last but not
least for the men of the cloth, imbued with a proselytizing urge,
gathering converts for the kingdom beyond. All seem to have made
their obligatory pilgrimage to Socotra in search of their
particular fulfillment. The renewed interest in Socotra seeks
perhaps to rekindle the island's power to mesmerize in the hope of
appealing to the new breed of heroes of the postmodern age, namely
the biomarketeers and their relentless pursuit of ecological
capital accumulation, and the tourists and their search for
re-enchantment through visual consumption of nature. Hence the
brief historical overview below provides the context to understand
the emergent development-with-conservation narrative of Socotra.
This overview also serves as a kind of exegesis of the process
through which Socotra was appropriated by the western imagination.
-
-
- i. Antiquity: Symbolic
Encapsulation through a Utopian-Aesthetic Discourse
-
- Its history has yet to be written,
and must be compiled from references dispersed in a
multiplicity of books and records, not so much in Arabic as in
Greek, Latin, Syriac, Portuguese, Dutch, English, French and
even Danish
It will be long before all significant
allusions have been collected from chronicles, travel
narratives, and the archives of European trading companies
(Beckingham 1983:172).
-
- From the above statement, the sheer
diversity and number of those who have had dealings on the island
should be noted, and it is most probably this aspect, which is at
the root of the uncertainty about, and thus divergent
representations and interpretations of, the most basic features of
the place, such as its name, origin of its inhabitants, the source
of its language, nature of its economy, and its relations with the
Southern Arabian mainland, etc.,. As Beckingham noted above, the
formidable task of shedding light on that period (i.e., from 5th
century BC or earlier to the 15th century AD) through the
collections of all "significant allusions" that are free of, or
uncontaminated by, "legendary accretions" is yet to be taken up.
Paradoxically, it is this very uncertainty about the "real"
Socotra that has exercised the imagination of many and maintains
its attraction up until now.
-
- Concerning the name of the island, the
tendency has been to prioritize its source as being of Greek
origin. This is undoubtedly due to the greater availability of
written records left by roaming Greek travelers and picked-up by
latter historians for whom the absence of written records is
tantamount to being a "people without history." Accordingly, the
"first event" in the history of Socotra &endash;that is, an event
for which there is a published record, even if contaminated by
"legendary accretions"- is the colonization of the island by the
Greeks at the time of Alexander the Great when he was
contemplating the invasion of India, about 330 BC (King 1890:191).
Interestingly, this story was related by the Arab historian
al-Masudi writing in the tenth century AD. He suggested, that it
was Aristotle, the tutor of Alexander, who titillated the latter's
interest in Socotra by referring to the availability of myrrh,
which was widely used for medicinal purposes. Moreover, the Greek
colonists were handpicked by Aristotle and came from his native
town. "They overcame the Indians who were there and took hold of
the island" (al-Masudi quoted in Ubaydli 1989:150). It was the
legacy of this Greek community, who converted to Christianity when
it became the adopted religion of the Greco-Roman world, that was
bequeathed to the Socotrans. Indeed, it is reported that it was St
Thomas the Apostle who converted and preached on Socotra while on
his way to India around 50 AD (King 1989:198). It is worth noting
that one of the motivating factors of the many trade excursions
during the 16th century and the many scientific expeditions in the
late 19th century was partly the search for "the survival of
vestigial Christianity among its people" and the remains of its
physical evidence on Socotra's landscape, such as churches
(Beckingham 1997:225).
-
-
- To return to the origin of the name
Socotra, King's (1890:189) philological deconstruction of it seems
to provide a plausible account of its origin as well as suggest a
hierarchy in terms of which appellation came first. Summarizing
the accounts of various authors and asserting his own, King notes
that the original name of the island was Dvipa Sukhadhara, which
is Sanskrit, and when its roots are examined &endash;dvipa refers
to island, sukha, to happiness, and adhara to support- they yield
the meaning of "Island of Bliss" or "Abode of the Blest."
Subsequently, the contracted version of this name, Diuskadra, was
further corrupted by the Greeks, who turned it into Dioscorides
(or Dioscorida). Another possible lead, according to King, is the
Greek word Dioscuri, which refers to two Greco-Roman heroes,
Castor and Pollux, who were worship by sailors as their
protectors, because they had power over winds and waves. Finally,
in the case of the Arabic source of the island's name, it is
attributed to a derivation of the term Suqutra which breaks down
as follows: Suq, means market or emporium, and qutra is a vulgar
form of qatir, which refers to "dragon's blood." (See note two
below). Indeed, the capital city of Socotra was "Suq" as reported
by the Portuguese in the 16th century, which they referred to as
"Zocco." A new cycle of name corruption was to begin again as the
new occupants sought to appropriate the island according to their
peculiar imaginary. To bring to a closure this discussion on the
origin of the island's name, I would surmise that the Arabic
origin is the most plausible because it captures and relates to
one of the main traded resources for which the island has been
known for millennia &endash;i.e., the resin of the Dragon
tree.
-
- Regarding the origin of Socotra's
inhabitants, in the book Periplus of the Erythrean Sea, there is
an oft quoted description of these inhabitants as follows: "The
inhabitants are few and they live on the coast toward the north,
which faces the continent. They are foreigners, a mixture of Arabs
and Indians and Greeks, who have emigrated to carry on trade
there" (Schoff 1912:34). This rather cryptic reference to
"foreigners" suggests that perhaps there were other inhabitants
who were not foreigners, or that all of them were, which leaves us
without a meaningful clue, except that three kinds of people were
inhabiting the island during the first century AD. The search for
"white colonies" or their archaeological remains that were
established by Alexander in Arabia including Socotra, became a
persistent "romantic daydreams among the more fanciful antiquaries
of the nineteenth century" and up until late in the twentieth
century (King 1890). The sheer promiscuity that the location of
the island, as a staging post for traders, may have given rise to,
in terms of the admixture of people, renders such a search rather
foolhardy. However, during the period under discussion in this
section, the focus was not on determining racial genealogy, but on
identifying the regional provenance of populations (e.g., Greeks,
Indians, Africans etc.,). The obsession with classification came
later in the eighteenth century, perhaps as a consequence of the
taxonomic classification system for plants developed by the 18th
century naturalist Linnaeus and subsequently grafted unto human
population. The Orientalists seem to have deployed their
philological discourse in an analogous manner, and the
anthropologists as well through their kinship algebra. In fact,
historians of anthropology (e.g., Kuklick 1991) have noted that
the naturalists were the kindred precursors of the
anthropologists; making the latter into the "natural historians of
people" with a "taxonomic imagination."
-
- The manifestation of this obsession in
the context of anthropology is noted by Asad (1991:314) when he
suggested that the discipline's concerns during the colonial
period were "to help classify non-European humanity in ways that
would be consistent with Europe's story of triumph as 'progress'."
The critical issue about population was with "assessing the
anthropological formation of present-day Socotrans." That is,
which group of people and their provenance could be considered the
"core population," which first settled on Socotra and became
aboriginal through endogamy due to isolation and therefore led to
the development of specific features that can be associated with
the particular ecological milieu of Socotra (Naumkin 1993). A
tentative hypothesis advanced in the literature suggests that the
Socotran population is the result of three migratory waves: The
first wave resulted from the emigration of Southern Arabia's
indigenous population following the demise of their civilization.
The second wave brought people from North Eastern Yemen, namely
from Hadramawt and Mahra. To this population were added sailors
from Southern India as well as Greeks, to the extent that they did
establish a colony in Socotra, as well as the Portuguese who mixed
with the local population. Finally, the third wave consisted of
the immigration of Northern Arabs at the dawn of the Christian
era. This particular hypothesis was to be subjected to an analysis
of the morphology of Socotrans in order to determine its validity
(Naumkin 1993).
-
- While the issue concerning the origin of
Socotra's population may appear to be an obsession of
antiquarians, it is however of fundamental importance to
understanding the nature of the island's language. Since the
formation of language tends to be framed within a genealogical
paradigm, which means it is linked with the migration of people.
Soqotri, which is the language spoken in Socotra, is part of a
group of languages known as the Modern South Arabian Languages
(MSAL) that includes six different languages, namely Mehri,
Harsusi, Bathari, Jibbali, Hobyot, and Soqotri. They are used in
the provinces of Mahra (Yemen), Zafar (Oman), and the Socotra
Archipelago. All of them are incomprehensible to an Arabic
speaker. They represent isolated forms that were never touched by
Arabic until the modern period. The MSAL are said to be related to
the Old South Arabian Languages, which included Sabean, Minaean,
Qatabanian among others that were the languages of the advanced
civilizations, which were established in the Southeastern part of
Yemen during the period between the 13th and 10th centuries BC.
They died out soon after the Islamic conquests and the spread of
Arabic (Versteeg 1997: 12, 23, 94). Interestingly, Soqotri is the
first among the MSAL to be discovered (Simeone-Senelle 1998:309).
In 1834, Lieutenant Wellsted of the Indian army effectuated a
surveying mission of the Island of Socotra on behalf of the East
India Company. An account of this mission was published in the
Journal of the Royal Geographical Society in 1835, which contained
a wordlist of 236 Soqotri terms (Wellsted 1835). It was the first
time that Soqotri was brought to the attention of modern
Orientalists. Subsequently, according to Simeone-Senelle, the
"historical turning point" for more extensive knowledge of the
MSAL including Soqotri was initiated by the missions of the
members of the Imperial Academy of Sciences of Vienna, under the
rubric of the Sudarabische Expedition, from the end of the 19th
century to the beginning of the 20th. (Muller, et al. 1899). The
results provided the basis for a number of seminal publications on
Soqotri.
-
- Given the larger context of this
discussion of the language of the Socotrans, perhaps it is worth
pondering the fate of the Old South Arabian Languages once they
came in contact with Arabic and the spread of Islam. It seems that
there is a parallel between that scenario and the planned rescue
of Socotra from isolation and poverty through development, whose
predominant language will be Arabic as the language of government
planning, and to a significant extent English as the language of
development funding, with Soqotri relegated to a perfunctory
medium of instruction regarding decisions taken by speakers of the
two aforementioned languages. As Lonnet (1998:297) has suggested,
"The language [will be] in agony, unless an effort to
think about its future is made by the community
and
understood by the authorities. Anything that might contribute to
rescuing Socotra from its insularity should be examined within
careful cultural policies."
-
- Finally, I turn to a discussion of the
economy of Socotra. When Diodorus of Sicily, writing in the 1st
century BC, stated that Socotra kept the entire world provided
with myrrh, ladanum among other aromatic plants, he was asserting
a fact and not uttering a significant allusion laced with
legendary accretions &endash;or at least, not entirely. For
example, Socotra's aloes (Aloe perryi) "was from very early
times an important article of commerce, and was produced almost
entirely on Socotra" (Schoff 1912:129). Moreover, its central
location in the sea-born trade routes of the Indian Ocean made the
island an important incense production zone as well as an
obligatory staging post for the incense trade and other
commodities. As one commentator explains: "The shores of the
Arabian Gulf produced an ever-rising value of frankincense and
myrrh; while the cloths and precious stones, the timbers and
spices &endash;particularly cinnamon- brought from India largely
by Indian vessels, were redistributed at Socotra or Guardafui
[Somalia], and carried to the Nile and the Mediterranean"
(Schoff 1912:4). Marco Polo writing in the 13th century AD of his
observations (or hearsay) on Socotra remarked that there was still
"a great deal of trade there, for many ships come from all
quarters with goods to sell the natives" (Schoff 1912:135).
-
- On the basis of information similar to
those noted above on the economic activities being carried out on
the island, there was an attempt to characterize the prevailing
mode of production during the 1st millennium AD. Robert Doe's
(1992) extensive archaeological research revealed the past
existence of miles of walls indicating large, individual
enclosures setup as production units for frankincense groves, as
well as for aloes and dragon blood trees. Thus suggesting the
presence in the past of organized and extensive agricultural
production on Socotra. As he explained: "The foundations of the
ancient farms and their boulder lined fields, sometimes vast
irregularly shaped tracts of land, remain as a testimony of the
period when Socotra was an important producer of luxuries desired
by traders for the wealthy countries of those ancient times"
(1992:12). On that basis, he hypothesized that "The inhabitants of
Socotra were farmers, working in conditions similar to a
co-operative farm, whose produce was monopolized by the Hadrami
Kingdom on behalf of the temple dedicated to the moon deity SYN,
for trading purposes on the mainland" (Doe ibid:41). He
further suggested that most of the inhabitants tending trees and
collecting resin were seasonal workers from Mahra and the Qara
mountains of Dhufar in South Arabia, who migrated to Socotra when
the incense trade was flourishing between the Hadramawt
(Southeastern Yemen) and the Mediterranean (p.41). He concluded
that the nature of Socotra's economic transition was from a
co-operative agricultural mode of production to pastoral-nomadism.
Accordingly, by the 4th century AD, when demand for frankincense
dwindled and the incense trade in South Arabia declined, the
islanders who remained had to rely on their own resources as
fishermen, goat herders and subsistence farmers. Upon the invasion
of the coastal zones of the island by the Mahris from the Southern
Arabian mainland, these farmers retreated to the hills and
mountains of Socotra and their descendants are today's Bedouins of
Socotra.
-
- This is, of course, a set of audacious
conjectures; but perhaps not sufficiently so, as they constitute
mere significant allusions that are under-theorized. There are no
comparative references to cases elsewhere that could have gone
through a similar evolutionary path, and thus enlisted in
elaborating the case of Socotra. This task remains to be
accomplished. However, Naumkin (1993) took issue with Doe's thesis
of an economy dominated by large but privately held co-operative
farms supplemented by seasonal workers whose produce was
obligatorily sold to something resembling a central agricultural
purchasing board owned by the tributary Hadrami Kingdom. In
contrast, Naumkin emphasizes the "priestly or temple economy"
which existed on the mainland as confirmed, he argues, by
excavations carried out by Soviet archaeologists. He offers no
further elaboration on this assertion. Moreover, he seems to be
suggesting &endash;(the argument is not fully elaborated as his
epistemic concerns lie elsewhere as discussed in section iv
below)- that the cultivation of incense-bearing trees was always a
supplemental activity to the traditional pastoralism of the
island's inhabitants. Indeed, he argues that from the 7th century
BC to the 1st century AD, "the island had a cohesive original
culture with a powerful autochtonous base. This applies equally
both to the material and the spiritual domain," and this is
confirmed by the continuity and longevity of Socotra's two basic
economic-cultural types: the herders and the fishermen (Naumkin
1993:363-4). The fact is that the hypotheses of Doe and Naumkin
are unsatisfactorily elaborated, and thus remain unsubstantiated.
Nevertheless, they provide interesting leads for further research.
-
- Finally, I should conclude this section
on antiquity on a note that is evocative of the type of discourse
prevalent during that time, namely mythical speculation or, put
differently, significant allusions laced with legendary
accretions: Euhemerus of Messina who lived in the period between
late 4th to early 3rd centuries BC, described in his Sacred
History of Utopia the island of Panchaia (also said to refer to
Socotra) as a kingdom of equality that knew nothing of private
property (Naumking 1993:27; Schoff 1912:135). Whether or not this
is a mythical allusion it is nevertheless a goal worthy of pursuit
by any development plan for Socotra.
-
- ii. Portuguese Experiment:
Integration into an Emergent Global Regime of
Accumulation
-
- In mediaeval Europe Socotra was
probably more famous, even if not better known, than it is now.
It was famous for several things, for its aloes, its dragon's
blood, its ambergris, the proficiency of its inhabitants in
witchcraft, and, perhaps above all, for the fact that they were
Christians (Beckingham 1983:172).
-
- Toward the end of the 15th century,
under the reign of King Manuel (1496-1521), Portugal was an
emergent power, having established a beachhead across the Atlantic
it was eager to pursue its expansionary adventure eastward. Since
that was the source of the most coveted commodities in Europe,
namely spices (i.e., pepper, ginger, nutmeg etc.). In effect,
pepper "the substance of the Indies" replaced frankincense and the
other aromatic plants constituting the "gold of the East." Indeed,
pepper came to serve as money in parts of Europe, attaining a
value equal to gold and was used in the payment of taxes (Wolf
1982:236). It was in this context that Socotra, after a long
period of absence in travelers' reports for over 200 years since
Marco Polo's description of trade activities in the 13th century,
made its return in the annals of mediaeval history. This was
occasioned by the Portuguese's attempt at establishing an
organized network of maritime ports of call as military
strongholds and trading posts along the Southern Arabian and
South-East Asian shores, in order to increase their participation,
and if possible achieve hegemony, in the Indian Ocean trade (Wolf
1982:237). Given Socotra's strategic location, it was coveted as a
potential base from which to disrupt trade of enemy vessels and
thus control the lucrative trade in an area central to
international commerce. It is worth noting that the imperial
ideology of the day was steeped in proselytizing fervor and still
imbued with a crusading spirit; hence Muslims were regarded as
"hereditary foes." Indeed, one commentator explains what was at
stake thus: "Granted that the principal object of the Portuguese
ambitions was the capture of economic supremacy and even the
monopoly of the eastern trade, there was always an underlying
emotional consciousness of a holy war" (Serjeant
1963:2).
-
- Accordingly, the order to occupy
Socotra, which turned out to be an adventure of exceedingly short
duration with disappointing results, was given by King Manuel
himself, upon being informed that the "Socotrans were Christians
in subjection to Muslim Arabs" (Beckingham 1983:173). The
assumption was that a "liberated" Socotra would be a natural ally,
and thus provide a safe base, in an otherwise hostile environment,
from which Portuguese ships could attempt "to close the Gulf of
Aden to Muslim Commerce" (Beckingham ibid:173). It appears that
King Manuel accorded this mission a great deal of importance, as
he selected Alfonso de Albuquerque, who had earlier returned from
a triumphant journey to India in 1503 and was promised the
viceroyship of the Portuguese possession there. The importance
attached to the occupation of Socotra is explained by the fact
that it was part of a larger plan stemming from the reconquest of
Iberia from the Muslims, and the subsequent desire on the part of
some Europeans to destroy the underpinnings of Muslim power,
namely the Indian trade. As Serjeant (1963:4) explains,
"Portuguese penetration into the Indian Ocean was no chance
venture, but the result of long preparation and carefully matured
plans." He mentions two such plans: One was by a certain Marino
Sanuto in the early 14th century, who proposed the establishment
of an alliance with Nubia and the maintenance of a fleet in the
Indian Ocean and to conquer all of the islands and coast. The
other plan was put forth by Guillaume Adam who advised the
building of four galleys to be used for blocking the Red Sea from
Socotra Island, where the Christians inhabitants were thought to
be willing collaborators.
-
- In 1506 an occupying force was
dispatched to Socotra to "liberate" the Christians. Subsequent to
some valiant resistance put up by the Arabs in a fort located in
Suq, then the capital of Socotra, they were overrun. The fort was
restored and the mosque converted into a church that was named Our
Lady Victory. The Socotrans dedicated the church to St. Thomas,
the presumed founder of Socotran Christianity. Contrary to
expectations, the Socotran Christians did not collaborate with the
Portuguese, and in collusion with the Arabs undermined the will of
the occupiers to pursue their ill-fated search for communion with
fellow Christians. The occupation was abandoned in 1511. However,
Portuguese ships continued to call for water and shelter, although
more haphazardly, and Christian notables &endash;among them St.
Fracis Xavier and St. Ignatius of Loyolla founder of the Jesuit
Order- are reported to have visited the island, presumably to
shore up the faltering faith of the natives, given their failure
to collaborate with the "right side" in their liberation. While
the Portuguese occupation of Socotra failed, it resulted in their
targeting of Aden as an alternative base, as Albuquerque launched
an attack on Aden in 1513. One chronicler of the event, with a ken
for hagiography, describes the event as follows: "He failed to
reduce Aden, but he put such fear into the Sultan of Egypt, who
had never seen a hostile fleet in his waters, that the latter
remained henceforth on the defensive. Albuquerque called it 'the
greatest blow in the house of Mohammed for a century'" (Prestage
1933:298).
-
- In terms of this brief account of the
Portuguese episode, perhaps a few summarizing observations may be
offered: First, it highlighted the fact that the prized
commodities of international trade were no longer the aromatic
plants of the East, but the spices of the Indies, and this led to
the relative decline in the wealth and power, indeed relevance, of
the South Arabian Kingdoms in the larger scheme of things. Second,
it heralded the entrance of Europe in that part of the world
bringing along with it a new mode of commerce &endash;through the
mechanism of State-sponsored trading companies- which entailed the
incorporation of countries and continents in a globalizing trading
system that shifted permanently (?) the balance of power from the
Orient to the Occident. Socotra was among the first places in the
East to experience a foretaste of this emergent system, however
minor a prize it might have been to the mercantile powers of that
era, given its modest resources. Finally, and perhaps most
importantly from a cultural perspective, is the fact that the
Portuguese had reinforced the hold of Christianity in Socotra
&endash;or at least, that is the impression conveyed- and had left
their progeny among the population, seemed to have nurtured an
intellectual curiosity among a mixed group of Western
antiquarians, naturalists and ethnologues for that part of the
world that persists even today.
-
- iii. British Laboratory:
Integration into an Evolving International Environmentalism
Discourse
-
- Alongside the emergence of
professional natural science, the importance of the island as a
mental symbol continued to constitute a critical stimulant to
the development of concepts of environmental protection as well
as of ethnological and biological diversity (Grove 1995:9).
-
- The British encounter with Socotra maybe
said to have been the by-product of a new era in terms of the
changing nature of international commerce, characterized by the
transition from a mercantilist to a colonialist mode of capitalist
domination and exploitation. This era represented a continuing
evolution in the trading system initiated by the Portuguese, both
in terms of the prioritized commodities as well as an improvement
in the technology of transport (i.e., the coming of steam
navigation and the need for coaling depots), and also in the
corresponding realignment in the geography of power and
readjustment in the economic system of production. In relation to
the grounds covered thus far in our genealogy of Socotra, this
evolution could be schematically put as follows: The incense trade
was the defining feature of Antiquity, the spice trade defined the
emergent global trading system of the 16th century, and,
simplifying somewhat, the textile and stimulant trade &endash;with
its new bundle of commodities: cotton, sugar and coffee- could be
said to characterize the consolidating global regime of production
in the 19th century when the British decided to engage Socotra in
the early 1800's. The principal features of this regime are worth
highlighting as they provide the broader context which partly
explains the motivation of the British in the island of Socotra:
(i) A system of regional specialization in terms of the production
of particular commodities and/or the contribution of particular
resources &endash;e.g., foodstuff, industrial crops, stimulants,
gold, and slaves etc. (ii) Rise of extractive industries and the
development of commercial agriculture through the establishment of
monocrop plantations system worldwide, and their destructive
environmental impact (Wolf 1982). (iii) To accompany this global
production system, there emerged an interest in the search for an
appropriate framework for systematic classification of all the
world's fauna and flora, which was facilitated, if not generated,
by the involvement of the East India Companies (English, Dutch and
French). For them, "the collection of globally derived material on
a systematic basis had a strategic and commercial attraction"
(Grove1995:312). Perhaps the predominance of naturalists and
botanists in the scientific missions during the late 19th and
early 20th centuries to Socotra is explained by this new global
interest. We will return to this point below. First, however, it
is worth noting that the 19th century British-Socotra encounter
was preceded by multiple contacts starting in the 17th
century.
-
- The initial encounter with Socotra was
made possible only after December 1600, when Queen Elizabeth
granted a monopoly to the East India Company to trade beyond
Africa, thus allowing the Company to venture into the Indian Ocean
in search of new markets, nearly one hundred years after the
Portuguese made their initial incursion in that area. On the third
voyage of the Company's ships in the first decade of the 17th
century, it was decided that the port of Aden should be visited.
However, according to one account (Geddes 1964) knowledge of how
to reach Aden was lacking, so it was decided to visit Socotra and
inquire from its inhabitants. In April 1608 the first British East
India Company ship reached the port city of Tamarida, the new
capital city of Socotra, which replaced the port city of Suq of
the Portuguese era. As of that date, Socotra "was to become to the
English merchants
a standard port of call for the purchase
of the island's chief export, the Socotra aloes, and a supplier of
meat and fruit en route to the ports of the Red Sea and the
western coast of India" (Geddes 1964:70). However, it is not clear
for how long it remained a port of call; it seems to have lasted
until the end of the first quarter of the century. As the British
established a trading post (called then "factories", that is
points of settlement and commerce) in 1618 in Mokha on the Red Sea
coast of Yemen, in order to participate in the coffee trade. The
move to Mokha and into the coffee trade was perhaps a direct
result of the visit to Socotra. As it happened, aboard the ship
there was a merchant named William Finch, who remained at Socotra
for over three months, prior to continuing to India. As was
customary for certain passengers on the East India Company's
ships, journals were maintained and the contents shared with the
Company's agents, and later became part of its archives. According
to Geddes, "His description is not only the earliest made by an
Englishman but is also the most complete for the entire century"
(1964:72). This characterization maybe slightly hyperbolic as
there were other visitors to Socotra in subsequent years who left
accounts of their visits; some of which have been collected in
Samuel Purchas, Purchas His Pilgrimes . Two points I wish to make
about Finch's account. The first is related to the coffee trade.
In his journal Finch described a scene as follows: "Their best
entertainment is a China dish of Coho, a black bitterish drink,
made of a berry like a Bay berry, brought from Mecca
[Mokha], souped off hot, good for the head and stomach"
(Geddes 1964:77). It turns out that he was describing coffee
drinking by the Socotrans, and which came from the port city of
Mokha in Yemen, the center of the coffee trade at the time. It was
"the first mention of it in the records of the East India
Company." The point here is that the British East India Company
appears to have discovered the existence of coffee through the
"ethological" account of Socotrans drinking the brew.
-
- The second observation concerns the
nature of the description or representation of local settings and
their inhabitants in Finch's journal. It is a descriptive strategy
or representation practice that was to become a kind of modus
operandi of traveler's tales and it encompassed the following
aspects: (i) The local social stratification scheme is portrayed
with a particular emphasis on the heads of government, or what
passes for one, to show, if not to mock, the lack of competence in
such matters and the absence of due process accorded to the
concerns of their subjects. (ii) This stratification scheme is
usually articulated with a racial categorization of the population
according to an explicit color hierarchy. (iii) Women's appearance
and mannerism are described in terms of their sexual desirability
and they tend to be characterized as always wearing a lustful
gaze. (iv) Religious and dietary customs are framed within a
condescending gaze that is tinged with a mild disdain. (v)
Economic activities are surveyed with the intent on ascertaining
opportunities for commerce and accumulation. (vi) Landscapes are
scrutinized in order to assess how far removed are their
inhabitants from an Edenic environment, and thus their degree of
civilization: Nobles Savages or Misanthropic Bourgeois? These
aspects are the recurrent themes presented in travel accounts with
varying emphasis depending on their authors' imaginative (poetic?)
inclination as well as their linguistic skills or that of their
informants'. Indeed, during this period of early contact with the
new world, one could argue, perhaps harshly but not unreasonably,
that linguistic skills were not always necessary as these
commentators seemed to have been engaged, for the most part, in
the practice of a kind of human ethology, that is observing the
"Others" as if they were uncommunicative lower primates, and
formulating cultural representations that were overdetermined by
the imagination of the observer than by the perception of the
observed. Needless to observe that such predisposition renders
doubtful the reliability of translation that purports to explain
the natives' thinking and thus the authenticity of the
representation of local realities.
-
- By the time the 19th century is reached,
the cumulative effect of these accounts is a kind of incestuous
intellectual discourse, leading to the social construction and
textualization of Socotra that has constituted the frame of
reference or, to overstate the matter slightly, the paradigmatic
framework for what constituted knowledge of the island: A kind of
discursive mixture of projective fantasy and empirically
superficial observations. Interestingly, J. R. Wellsted, already
referred to above, a Lieutenant in the Indian Army employed the
East India Company, one of the first European, at least in the
modern period, to venture in the interior of Socotra and not just
its capital city or perusing its coast from the deck of a ship,
observed, "Notwithstanding these several visits" referring to the
visits of travelers from Antiquity up to his time, "our accounts
of the inhabitants, and of the appearance and produce of the
island, have been always hitherto vague and contradictory"
(Wellsted 1835:132). His mission to Socotra, as dictated by his
superior at the Company, was contained in the terms of reference,
which read as follows:
- It being the wish of the Government to
obtain all possible information regarding this island not only as
to its correct geographical position and harbours but its
government, population, produce, fertility and quality of its soil
as well as the religion, customs, manners, power and wealth of its
inhabitants you are hereby directed for the purpose of more
correctly ascertaining the latter to travel
Any information
you may be able to collect either in geography, botany, zoology,
indeed any science that may assist us in a thorough knowledge of
the island and its productions will be of utmost service (Haines,
Wellsted & Crutenden 1834-35).
-
- Two additional tasks not clearly defined
in the terms of reference but noted in Wellsted's journal were (i)
to ascertain the feasibility of establishing a coaling depot on
the island, and (ii) to determine the availability of coal through
geological observation of the island. Clearly Wellsted's mission
literally was to lift the veil of myths that have shrouded Socotra
and to pierce through its mysteries with the empirical gaze of
science. Accordingly, his account ranged over a number of topics
with an economy of detail sufficient to arouse the diverse
scientific interests of his countrymen: From botanists,
Orientalist-philologists, naturalists, archeologists, geologists
etc. It seems as if the publication of his journal has had that
very effect. All of the scientific missions that succeeded his,
have made obligatory reference to his account, and most have
sought to retrace his path in order to confirm or disconfirm his
findings as well as to expand upon them. Indeed then, it was as a
potential laboratory for scientific investigation of the
man-nature dialectic that Socotra re-entered the 19th century and
maintained the curiosity of many during the 20th century as well.
It is certainly more than a mere coincidence that botanical
research in Socotra during that period was the most extensive
among all of the scientific missions, both in terms of the number
of expeditions involving botanists (e.g., Balfour 1880,
Schweinfurth 1881, Forbes 1899, Botting 1956 among others), and
the comprehensive, if not exhaustive, nature and number of the
plant species inventoried. Indeed, the seven weeks expedition by
Dr. Bailey Balfour of Glasgow University, which was sponsored by,
among others, the British Association for the Advancement of
Science, seems to have catalogue over three-quarters of the plant
species on the island. Interestingly, universities at the time
were unknowingly perhaps positioning themselves, through the
development of biological resources bank with their botanical
collections, to assume the role of intermediaries in today's
commercialization of biodiversity.
-
- Regarding England's colonial interest in
the island, it seems to have been merely for its use as a
flagpole. When the island was leased in 1876 from the Sultan of
Quish, a Sultanate in the Hadramawt area on the mainland, and thus
became a British protectorate, it was merely as a precautionary
measure to prevent other powers from acting on their potential
interest vis-a-vis the island, given its strategic location. Aden
had been occupied by 1839 and the search for coal turned up empty
in Socotra, thus its utility as a coaling depot was found wanting.
Although on various occasions Socotra came up as a potential
alternative "annex" if Palestine could not absorbed the Jews, and
the idea of separating the island from Aden's jurisdiction in
order to maintain it as a British dependency after South Yemen's
independence; both ideas were momentarily entertained but
abandoned (Ingrams 1993). In effect, Socotra was a colony with an
absentee landlord. The British presence was through its Aden
resident officers (e.g., political, agricultural etc) who
regularly visited the island to formulate experimental project
proposals for the development of irrigated agriculture as well as
fisheries that were never implemented.
-
- In light of the above, it can be
asserted that the particular emphasis on scientific investigation
on Socotra during the 19th and 20th centuries was most probably
motivated, first, by the prescient realization on the part of the
trading companies, the precursors of today's global corporations,
that the globe's biological resources were the commodities of the
future, and second, by the emergent or, more aptly, consolidating
discourse on the man-nature dialectic and of its negative
consequences. This was part of a shift from the utopian-aesthetic
discourse prevalent from Antiquity but reaching greater intensity
during the Renaissance for the search of the "Eden of the East",
toward an attitude emphasizing European-caused degradation of
tropical environment couched in a new environmentalism as an
oppositional discourse in direct response to colonial rule. As
Grove explained, this was motivated by a "major shift in European
tropical botany and a growing empiricism derived from the
incorporation of local indigenous botanical and medical knowledge
into European epistemologies of nature" (1995:72). It is this last
point that was barely initiated in the 19th century during the
scientific investigation on Socotra, and that has become the
primary justification and objective &endash;in the form of
biodiversity conservation, in which ethnobotany research is given
priority- for the renewed interest in Socotra in the 21st century
as a precautionary discourse against indiscriminate
development.
-
- iv. Soviet Ethnography: The
Adaptation of "Ethnos" Theory
-
- Socotra
may after all be
the missing intermediate link in the race-genetic 'west-east'
gradient for which anthropologists search in order to fill the
gap between the African Negroids and the Australo-Veddo
Melanesian types in the equatorial race area (Naumkin
1993:67).
-
- As is to be expected at this point in
our genealogy, Socotra also had a central role in the era of the
Cold War. When the British were forced to concede independence to
South Yemen in 1967, within three years the country had assumed a
new name, the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) as well
as a new ideology, Marxism, and thus became the first and only
Marxist state in the Arab world. Strong economic and military ties
were established with the Soviet Union and the countries of the
Socialist bloc. This transformed South Yemen into a theater in the
Cold War and heightened tension in the region due to the sensitive
trade routes -especially for oil- of the Red Sea and the Suez
Canal. In 1977 when the Soviet Union was forced to vacate the port
of Berbera in Somalia due to a policy reversal by the Somali
government, there was frantic search for an alternative base in
the area. The PDRY ceded Socotra to the Soviet Union in 1979 and
the island was converted into a military base. The impression was
given that sophisticated underground facilities were established
and that the island was bristling with sophisticated weaponry. All
ships were prohibited from venturing near the island, which was
inaccessible to most people. In the meanwhile, one could imagine,
Socotra was most certainly under the gaze of spy satellites and
its awkward half-moon shape was prominently displayed in some war
rooms with a red pin on it. All of this, however, turned out to be
cunning cold war theatrics; as there was no major military
investment made to change Socotra's landscape, and only through
cosmetic camouflage the Soviets succeeded in conveying a contrary
impression (Guebourg 1998). Or perhaps, the other protagonist knew
all along that it was a bluff, but its political interest was
served by acting as if a threat existed in the region!
-
- More to the point, however, is that in
spite of the cordon sanitaire established around Socotra, a
Yemeni-Soviet team of researchers was allowed to sojourn on the
island from 1974 to 1987, or more precisely to undertake several
research expeditions during that period. The leader was Vitaly
Naumkin a Russian Anthropologist-Orientalist, at the Institute of
Oriental Studies in Moscow. These research excursions to Socotra
resulted in the publication of three monographs: The first
published in 1977 is entitled Where the Phoenix Rose from Ashes,
the second is a collaborative work with V. Y. Porchomovski, Essays
in the Ethnolinguistics of Socotra was published in 1981, and the
only ethnographic monograph on the Socotrans available in any
language, Island of the Phoenix: An Ethnographic Study of the
People of Socotra was published in 1988 and translated into
English in 1993. For those with an interest in Socotra, at least
the human dimensions of it, this book remains an obligatory
reference, and beckons a critical engagement. In essence, the book
offers an encounter with Soviet Ethnography. And for those of us
unfamiliar with the latter's disciplinary idiosyncrasies, in terms
of its particular conceptual repertoire, theoretical framework and
methodological approach, some of its emphases and findings may
induce a mild intellectual shock, or more aptly a "culture shock."
One reviewer upon encountering the passage quoted as epigram above
seems to have had that experience, when he exclaims that it
"illustrates only that the Soviets are still mired in 19th century
racial thinking. It is slightly unnerving that such outmoded
ideas, devoid of genetic reality, should be published in 1993"
(Varisco 1994). "Outmoded ideas" no doubt, but their underpinnings
must be understood if only to gain a glimpse of how the world can
be differently construed, and more importantly to understand the
Soviet's textualization of Socotra's reality.
-
- It is interesting to note that while
American anthropology was compiling the Human Relations Area Files
based upon a division of the world into culture areas, Soviet
Ethnography was putting together its Ethnic Atlases of the World
according to racial areas. Moreover, while "culture" was the
defining concept of Western anthropology, "ethnos" was the key
concept of ethnology as a discipline in the Soviet Union (Shanin
1989:409). Indeed, this focus on ethnos (or ethnicity) may be
understood as the Soviet Union's own attempt to address the
problems associated with managing its internal "Others," being one
of the most complex multi-national states in the world. Let me
define ethnos as I reconstitute the discussion of the term by
Bromley & Kozlov (1989) and proceed to identify some of its
constitutive elements as a discursive practice, and then link both
to a discussion of how they relate to the representation of
Socotrans in Naumkin's ethnography. Ethnos is more than just
ethnicity, it refers to a biosocial community defined by having
the following characteristics: (i) common origin in terms of a
genetic pool; (ii) occupies a remote territory or a geographically
delimited space; (iii) exhibits actual economic interaction or is
united by relations of production; (iv) practices endogamy, which
is a defining element in an ethnos as it acts as stabilizer and
"genetic barrier" and thus enables the development of traits
specific to a given community; (v) all of the above are
articulated around culture and everyday life. The concept then
tends to be more of a biological than a social category. Finally,
on this view the evolution or transformation of an ethnos is
historically and ecologically linked to a process of adaptation to
the particular conditions of a landscape.
-
- If ethnos is the key concept as well as
the subject matter of Soviet ethnology, how is it studied? In my
reading of Slezkine (1991) the following answer is proffered: It
entails the deployment of a "practical ethnography," which is the
"historical study of temporally and spatially specific human
societies and cultural phenomena." This is characterized by a
pragmatism in terms of its focus on everyday life and a certain
level of "scientific" rigor as it makes use of survey
questionnaires and formal interviews; the results of which are
treated statistically. The emphasis is on material culture and the
role of migration and diffusion in the shaping of this culture is
stressed. What is the theoretical framework within which this type
of ethnography is practice? Such a framework is contained in the
concept of "ethnogeography" which is the representation of culture
as the historical resultant of geographical, anthropological and
economic factors. A key concept in this analytical scheme is that
of "ethnogenesis," which is concerned with the formative processes
as well as the distribution of ethnic groups across region and
time. In effect, the ethnographer making use of this analytical
apparatus is essentially an "ethnosociologist."
-
- Indeed, this ensemble of conceptual
tools constitutes Soviet Ethnography, and it can be understood as
a response to the problematique peculiar to a multi-national
state. It was this set of discursive practices which appropriated
the realities of the places the ethnographers of the Soviet Union
encountered as they follow the trail of the adventures of the left
imperialism of the Soviet state, just as their fellow
anthropologists in the West did in following the colonial
conquests of their respective states. Socotra was one of those
encounters and it offered grist to the mill of Soviet Ethnography
as it responded to the characteristics of an ethnos as defined
above, and was subjected to varied migratory movements as well as
diffusionary processes. Also, its different agro-ecological zones
gave rise to different livelihood systems and thus a certain level
of social differentiation between the Bedouins of the mountains,
the people of the plains and those of the coastal zones. Creating
a set of separate "ethnospheres" (my term). Interestingly, it is
only through reference to the background just presented above that
sense can be made of some of the emphases and analytic foci in
Naumkin's ethnography of Socotra. As another reviewer remarked,
"What is consistently missing is explanatory context" (Weir 1994).
Quite so, as it is not contained in the book, but in the
conceptual apparatus of Soviet Ethnography, which the primary
audience of the book, namely other Soviet ethnographers, is
presumed to possess. Lest the impression be given here that such
an approach is not problematic, it has been argued that it tends
to give rise to "social racism" as well as excessive biologisation
of social processes. Moreover, one Soviet social scientist
describing Soviet ethnography as in a state of crisis declared,
"It is becoming clear that without a rigorous critical analysis of
the past, a detailed discussion of the present, and the creation
of an agenda for the future, our discipline will not be able to
sort itself out" (Tishkov 1992:371). In other words it will
collapse. Some would argue that it already has.
-
- I should like to illustrate briefly how
the above framework is grafted onto Socotra's "ethnospheres." Over
one third of the book is taken up with topics which one reviewer
describes as being "of doubtful relevance in an ethnography."
Which or whose ethnography one should ask, as if there is only one
kind. For Naumkin's ethnography is addressing a metropolitan
audience namely that of his colleagues in the Soviet Union, which
excludes the one to which the reviewer belongs. And he is
elucidating a theoretical problematic which is of particular
relevance to that audience as it shares the same conceptual scheme
with which it constructs the world. Accordingly, the book starts
with a description of the physical features of the landscape as a
by-product of geological processes that shaped an ecological
milieu to which population will have to adapt through the
development of particular systems of livelihood. Second, it
provides an historical overview of Socotra from Antiquity up to
the time the Soviet mission arrived to the island. The intent, not
clearly articulated in the book, is first to understand the
migratory patterns of the settlers on the island in terms of their
origins and to envision the kind of "racial crossing" (Naumkin's
term) it has given rise to. The result of this "racial crossing"
is analyzed in the book's next chapter, which contains a
morphology of Socotra's population, where the author seeks to
apply the notion of "ethnogenesis" as it is articulated with
Socotra's landscape. The latter is categorized in terms of a
three-tiered "ethnospheres" composed of a distinct racial typology
linked to the mountain areas, the high plateaux, and the coastal
zones. One could, of course, characterized this formulation as
theoretical imperialism in its most absurd manifestation. But my
focus here is merely on elucidating the Soviet ethnographic
paradigm and its appropriation of Socotra. Lastly, in terms of the
aspects that some may find of dubious pertinence to ethnographic
analysis, as already noted above, there is an account of the
archaeology of Socotra. Contrary to the reviewer quoted above,
such investigation is fundamental in the case of Socotra, if only
to put an end to speculation, especially about the scale of the
production of incense and aloes, and the vestiges of Christianity
and more generally to ascertain the cultural level of previous
settlers on the island. However, the author could have been
primarily motivated to uncover the physical remains of processes
of cultural diffusion, in keeping with his implicit theoretical
framework (i.e., ethnos theory), and not necessarily to elucidate
Socotra's mode and scale of production during its early days as an
evolving social formation.
-
- Concerning the material culture of the
Socotrans, the author goes through a systematic description of
craft production, food processing, clothing style, settlement and
housing patterns etc, with photographs or drawings as
illustration. What is striking about these descriptions is that
they are merely an elaboration upon what Wellsted summarized about
the material aspects of the everyday life of the Socotrans over
150 years ago! Perhaps this fact alone justifies the focus on
ethnos given the absence of assimilationist pressure from an
outside culture that would induce change, and given the
environmental constraints and the inertia of established customs
in the midst of a relatively generalized isolation over a long
period. Finally, in terms of the general cultural characteristics
of Socotrans, Naumkin identifies two dominant economic-cultural
types: Inland pastoralists and the coastal fishing communities.
Pastoralism, however, is the essence of Socotran culture and the
foundational pillar of its traditional economy. As he explains,
"Pastoralism symbolizes a Socotran's protection of his hearth,
parental home, land pasture etc, and indeed it furthers the
conservation of the entire way of life" (1993:308).
-
- In concluding this section, reference to
the author's discussion of anthropogenic changes as part of the
process of contact with the outside world provides a warning of
the potential threats to Socotran culture. Naumkin explains these
threats as follows: "The new and constantly changing general
conditions of life on the island are having a major impact on the
lives of the herders. Their partial entry into the orbit of
money-commodity relations, the slow but nonetheless ongoing
process of class differentiation, the increasing pressure of
population growth on the natural environment, the emergence of
modern means of production, and a rise in the cultural level of
the herders, all combine to undermine and destroy the existing
system of relations" (1993:364). The critical issue this raises is
the sustainability of the Socotrans' commitment to a pastoral mode
of production in the face of inducements to alternative means of
livelihood that development inevitably brings in its wake. Naumkin
suggested that this commitment was becoming more tenuous as the
gradual incorporation of Socotra into networks of commodity
relations and generalized monetization of the economy may
undermine the prevailing norms of cultural reproduction and
generate a movement toward deterritorialization of pastoralists
through induced migration, sedentarization and other adverse
cultural and ecological outcomes.
-
- However, counsel of despair may be
premature. For the case of Socotra presents a perplexing issue:
namely, the relative absence, subsequent to a lengthy history of
heterogeneous cultural and economic contacts with the rest of the
world, of the evidence of such contacts given the relatively low
level of cultural and economic attainment of the population. This
situation would suggest a case of severe isolation from external
contact, which is contrary to the historical record. Indeed, if
the historical accounts discussed in this paper are to be
believed, then Socotra can only be described as a society that has
experienced a kind of evolutionary reversal. A kind of
"civilizational" collapse, hence a relapse into a more elementary
state of development. Alternatively, it could be argued that these
contacts were superficial at best, in that they did not permeate
into the society, thus no institutions were built to sustain any
kind of internal development. Socotra's encounter with an
intrusive modernity in the guise of development in the 21st
century will help lift the veil on this puzzle. Also, it will
either confirm or disconfirm the legend concerning Socotrans'
indomitable spirit, and thus of the island as a graveyard for
those who sought to rule it (or develop it?).
-
- Socotra & the New
Conjuncture:
- Biodiversity Conservation,
Ecotourism & the Global Regime of Environmental
Management
-
- Biodiversity
the variability
among living organisms and among the ecological complexes of
which they are part not only forms the basis of many commercial
products, but also underpins our very existence (Tate &
Laird 1999:1).
-
- The globalization of the concern over
biodiversity, which makes it a 21st century commodity cum global
commons par excellence, is its simultaneous embodiment of the two
types of values captured in the above quote, namely "forms the
basis of many commercial products" (i.e., its consumptive and
productive values), and "underpins our very existence" (i.e., its
non-consumptive values or existence values). The sense of urgency
that has accompanied discussions of biodiversity is precisely due
to the perceived threat to both of those values and the associated
potential economic losses. As professors Wilson and Ehrlich, two
of the world's renowned protagonists in species extinction
research, put it, "just as the importance of all life forms for
human welfare becomes most clear, the extinction of wild species
and ecosystems is seen to be accelerating through human action"
(1991:758). Coincidentally, this statement was made only a year
prior to the 1992 Rio Conference on Environment and Development,
during which the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was
submitted for the signature of governments around the world.
-
- The CBD entered into force in 1993 and
brought with it the political and economic regimentation of
biodiversity as part of the global commons. It also seems to have
prioritized the consumptive/productive use values associated with
biodiversity. This is evident in its language as conveyed in
Article 1, where the Convention's objectives are stipulated: "the
conservation of biological diversity, the sustainable use of its
components and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits
arising out of the utilization of genetic resources including by
appropriate access to genetic resources and by appropriate
transfer of relevant technologies, taking into account all rights
over those resources and to technologies, and by appropriate
funding" (CBD 1992:2). Indeed, the expansive web that the CBD has
spun around biodiversity and all that it entails is captured in
Tate & Laird's description of its implications: It is
comprehensive in its approach, global in its scope. It covers all
components of biological diversity, from ecosystems and habitats,
species and communities to genomes and genes, and it deals not
only with the conservation of biological diversity in situ and ex
situ, but also with its sustainable use and benefit sharing.
Moreover, it marks a watershed in the regulation of access to
genetic resources and benefit sharing. It sets the substantive and
procedural requirements for any person, organization or company
wishing to obtain genetic and biological resources, their
derivatives and the traditional knowledge concerning them for
research and commercial development (1999:13).
-
- It is a stake in this environmental
"Grand Bargain" that Yemen sought to claim when in 1996 it
ratified the CBD and later that year declared the Socotra
Archipelago a special, natural area in urgent need of protection.
Thus Socotra, as in previous centuries, made its entry unto the
world' stage in keeping with the current emphasis of the global
economy. In the current conjuncture it is being presented as a
potential biodiversity preserve, a unique research station for
biodiversity studies as well as an international destination for
ecotourism. Indeed, ecotourism is seen as the locomotive or the
catalyst of an ecodevelopment process, which aims at establishing
natural biotic areas or anthropological reserves that will enable
the challenging task of conserving the archipelago's biodiversity
in a manner that enhances the livelihoods of its inhabitants,
while maintaining their traditional lifestyle. In this context,
ecotourism is designed as a means of valorizing these
anthropological reserves through the generation of employment
opportunities as well as to contribute to the financial
sustainability of the conservation strategy. Furthermore,
ecotourism constitutes an integral part of the major initiatives,
namely the Biodiversity Zoning Plan and the Master Plan for the
Development of Socotra, that were formulated subsequent to Yemen's
ratification of the Biodiversity Convention. The implementation of
these two plans will determine the fate of the archipelago during
the current millennium.
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