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#4
Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2001 23:39:15 -0400
From: Dmitri Gusev <dgusev@qwestinternet.net>
Subject: Article for the JRL: Author of bin Laden's "Mein Kampf"
Russian-born?
A couple of weeks ago I asked a friend of mine, Russian writer and Afghan war
veteran Vladimir Grigoriev to find out if "The Foundation", a 1951
sci-fi bestseller by Isaac Asimov, a well-known American author and scientist,
was translated and published in Arabic, and if so, under what title? Yesterday,
I learned that my friend contacted his former professor Olga Frolova, currently
the Chair of the Arab Philology Department, School of Oriental Languages, St.
Petersburg State University, and she confirmed that the book was published in
Arabic as "Al Qaeda", the title matching the name of the international
terrorist network founded and headed by Osama bin Laden. (The Western media
usually translates "Al Qaeda" back as "The Base", as if a
base of terrorists were been referred to.)
This peculiar coincidence would be of little interest if not for abundant
parallels between the plot of Asimov's book and the events unfolding now. The
central character of "The Foundation" named Seldon, the pioneer of a
new scientific discipline called "psychohistory", predicts that the
Galactic Empire is about to fall. While the process of disintegration cannot not
be stopped, Seldon decides to send an expedition to a remote place on the
outskirts of the Galaxy and establish The Foundation, which is to become the
nucleus of the next Empire. Even though the Old Empire tries to destroy The
Foundation with its superior military might, Seldon's plan eventually works
despite many predicted difficulties and occasional random hiccups. Seldon does
not live long enough to see the triumph of his cause, but he leaves videotaped
messages at a machine timed to broadcast them to his followers and instruct them
at the turning points of The Foundation's history, as his forecasts are coming
true.
I think the public would be relieved to realize that the internationally
feared Terrorist No. 1 is trying to mimic a scenario from his favorite science
fiction novel. I also believe that the study of "The Foundation"
(along with its sequels and prequels) can help the decision makers around the
globe to better understand what they're up against and what the ultimate
objectives of Osama bin Laden are, much in the same way a study of "Mein
Kampf" would have benefited Adolf Hitler's counterparts a great deal if
they bothered to read the book and paid attention to what it said.
Isaac Asimov, a famous Jewish-American author and researcher, was born
January 2, 1920, in Petrovichi, Russia, on the territory of the present day
Belarus. He died April 6, 1992, in New York, New York, several months before the
first attack struck the World Trade Center on February 26, 1993.
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