The Real Mohamed Bouazizi

One year on, a team of researchers uncovers the man behind the martyr and the economic roots of the Arab Spring.

BY HERNANDO DE SOTO | DECEMBER 16, 2011

One year ago, on Dec. 17, a humble, cowed fruit-seller in a small, provincial city in Tunisia doused himself in paint thinner and set himself alight. The flames that eventually took his life had an effect he could not have foreseen, even in his wildest dreams: Less than a month later, his country's long-ruling tyrant had fled for his life and a democratic revolution would soon sweep across the Middle East. His death made him famous, an icon whose face adorns postage stamps and whose name -- Mohamed Bouazizi -- now stands for the hopes of a generation.

As is so often the case with political martyrs, Bouazizi means strikingly different things to different people. To some he's a generic symbol of the resistance to injustice; to others an archetype of the fight against autocracy. Occupy Wall Street activists have even enlisted him as a spiritual ally of their struggle against the unholy alliance between Washington and corporate America.

It is hard to imagine that the real Mohamed Bouazizi would have recognized himself in any of these incarnations.

My colleagues at the Institute for Liberty and Democracy (ILD) and I recently spent some three months painstakingly reconstructing Bouazizi's life and world, conducting interviews with his family members and friends as well as exploring his hometown of Sidi Bouzid (population 38,000). The Bouazizi we uncovered is a far more modest and straightforward figure than many of his admirers would presume. He was an apolitical family man, respected by his peers.

Bouazizi wanted two things: to earn a living for his family and to accumulate capital (ras el mel). He was a young man, only 26, of no other discernible interests. His life was consumed by his role as the primary breadwinner for his family of seven -- a role he had played, according to his mother, ever since he started working in the market at age 12. His father died when Bouazizi was 3. He had five siblings. His mother later remarried, but his stepfather, also his uncle, plagued by health problems, was unable to support the family.

As those who knew Bouazizi tell it, he was the very opposite of an activist. "He never even watched the news," his mother told us. "People like Mohamed are concerned with doing business. They don't understand anything about politics." The $73 he earned each week was the family's main source of income.

Above all, he was a repressed entrepreneur -- which is why Bouazizi's death resonated so strongly and became a unifying force across the culturally, politically, and religiously diverse Arab world, from Morocco to Syria. For decades, market economies have been growing in the Middle East and North Africa, albeit in the shadows of the law. The ILD has estimated that 50 percent of the region's entrepreneurs operate outside the law. They share Bouazizi's desire to prosper -- and his despair in the face of the insurmountable obstacles in their way.

FETHI BELAID/AFP/Getty Images

 

Hernando de Soto is president of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy and the author of The Mystery of Capital and The Other Path. This article was produced under the auspices of the Democracy Lab project, a forthcoming joint venture between Foreign Policy and the Legatum Institute.

RES PUBLIC

8:08 PM ET

December 16, 2011

Slap in the face? I don't think so

The article claims that Bouazizi got slapped in the face and it attracted a crowd, this scene is often claimed to be what pushed the vendor over the edge. But the truth is, only one person actually saw the scene and he bore a grudge against the policewoman who slapped the vendor.

Why are esteemed researches perpetuating a myth? Shouldn't it be their job to do actual research and investigation, instead of just chewing over whatever the family told them?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/23/fedia-hamdi-slap-revolution-tunisia

 

RES PUBLIC

9:30 AM ET

December 17, 2011

*Researchers.

*Researchers.

 

BUTTERCUP15

10:25 AM ET

January 11, 2012

slap in face

im sorry but who slaped mohamed bouazizi in the face?? i dont recall reading this!!!!
???????????????????????????????????????????????????

 

JJTHETRAVELER

4:35 AM ET

December 20, 2011

Arab spring

Ya hows that arab spring working out? Egypt? Syria? Libya? Iran? Gota love the libs they bite on anything. All that will come out of this is more repression and more death. The arab simply can't face the fact that their culture is what holds them back. I know you think I'm a racist but I'm a realist.

 

YARINSIZ

12:36 PM ET

January 10, 2012

The article claims that

The article claims that Bouazizi got slapped in the face and it attracted a crowd, this scene is often claimed to be what pushed the vendor over the edge. But the truth is, only one seslichat person actually saw the scene and he bore a grudge against the policewoman who slapped the vendor.