CAIRO — Two months ago, five young activists at a Cairo coffee shop
hatched a simple plot to capture the growing public frustration with the
direction of their country: collect signatures calling for the ouster
of President Mohamed Morsi and organize a protest at the presidential
palace on June 30, the anniversary of his inauguration.
As happened once before, with the demonstrations that toppled the former
president, Hosni Mubarak, the results ran far beyond the organizers’
expectations.
The campaign, called “tamarrod,” Arabic for “rebellion,” spawned
branches across the country and rallied millions of Egyptians to join
the protests this weekend that have infuriated the country’s Islamists,
shaken Mr. Morsi’s grip on power and pushed the Egyptian military to
threaten to once again take over the country.
The campaign’s success has made its originators — Mahmoud Badr, Mohammed
Abdel-Aziz, Hassan Shahin, Mai Wahba and Mohammed Heikal, all 22 to 30
years old — heroes to those who oppose the Muslim Brotherhood. They are cheered at protests, hounded by journalists and sought after as guests on evening talk shows.
Their movement, however, underlines both the greatest strengths and the
most glaring weaknesses of the youth groups that have driven many of Egypt’s
most fundamental political transformations since the revolution,
channeling public sentiment to political change but failing to transform
it into sustainable organizations.
“While they are communicating for the people, they are not figuring out
how to organize people within the political process itself other than
calling on them to protest,” said Rabab el-Mahdi, a professor of
political science at the American University in Cairo.
Dr. Mahdi said that the group’s lack of a well-articulated political
project likely means it will “vanish just like other youth coalitions
because they are about what they don’t want, not about what they want.”
The tamarrod campaign was born in late April among five friends who had
gotten to know each other through another political movement that
eventually helped bring down Mr. Mubarak in February 2011. They all
worked in opposition news media, but have distanced themselves from
political parties. They were all Muslims and personally devout, but
deeply distrustful of the political Islamism of the Muslim Brotherhood.
After the uprising that pushed Mr. Mubarak from power, they came to
believe the revolution had gone off track and, especially, that Mr.
Morsi, the country’s first freely elected president, had failed to
transcend his roots in the Muslim Brotherhood, which had dominated
post-revolutionary elections.
“The idea at the start was that there was lots of anger in the street
against the Brotherhood and Morsi, and that one part of society had
taken over the government and not carried out any reforms that have
benefited people,” said Mr. Shahin, 22, who is credited with suggesting
the campaign to his friends.
The group created a simple petition to withdraw confidence from Mr.
Morsi and call for early presidential elections. They spread the idea on
Facebook and Twitter and started collecting signatures in Tahrir Square
during Labor Day protests on May 1.Mr. Badr, one of the organizers, said the group was amazed at the
response and collected thousands of signatures that day, so many that
they ran out of petitions and had to make more copies.
They later had friends outside Cairo help collect signatures around the
country. Soon, groups they had never heard of had joined the campaign
and were gathering signatures on their own and delivering stacks of
signed petitions to the group’s downtown Cairo headquarters.
Since its start, the campaign has remained ideologically neutral, saying
only that it supports a democracy that all Egyptians can participate
in. It was only after word of it spread that prominent opposition
figures like Mohamed ElBaradei and a former presidential candidate,
Hamdeen Sabahi, established ties.
“This is the voice of the Egyptian people, and we would commit a
historical error if we turned it into a political party,” said Ms.
Wahba, the founding group’s only woman. “This is the completion of the
revolution.”
The campaign’s popularity spread by tapping into widening discontent
over the state of the country. As the economy continued to sink at the
start of the summer and power outages and gas shortages became more
common, many Egyptians blamed Mr. Morsi.
Others accused him of trying to “Brotherhoodize” the state by appointing
Brotherhood members and other Islamists to key government positions.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: July 2, 2013
An
earlier version of this article misspelled the given name a former
presidential candidate in Egypt. He is Hamdeen Sabahi, not Hamden.
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