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Britain
New TE Lawrence exhibit in London
2005-10-13
Lawrence of Arabia told the cabinet at the end of the first world war that there was no case "for separating Sunni and Shia Arabs", an extraordinary foreshadowing of the issues at stake in this weekend's Iraqi constitutional vote, overseen by US and British occupying forces.
TE Lawrence's ideas are shown in a recently unearthed map that is one of many uncanny links between past and present in an new Imperial War Museum exhibition marking the 70th anniversary of his death in 1935. Winston Churchill led mourners at the funeral of the national hero and writer of genius mythologised for his role in the desert war against Ottoman Turkey. "From the sands of Arabia to the mother earth of England," intoned the Pathe newsreel as "the soldier-philosopher who rallied the Arabs to our cause" was buried.

Paintings, sculptures and memorabilia trace the life of the enigmatic man whose archaeological work in the Levant led him to military intelligence in Cairo. He spent two years with Sharif Hussein of Mecca delivering gold, blowing up trains and capturing the Red Sea port of Aqaba in a desert raid before entering Jerusalem and later Damascus.
The artefacts, photographs and documents catalogue the deepening involvement of Britain in the postwar Middle East and the fateful changes that shaped today's still turbulent region. Lawrence felt Arab hopes had been betrayed by the secret wartime carve-up that gave France control of Syria and Lebanon and Britain of Palestine - where the Jews had been promised a "national home" - and Transjordan. Prince Faisal, Hussein's son, became king of Iraq and his dynasty ruled until it was overthrown by the precursors of the Ba'ath party.

Tales of derring-do go alongside the geo-politics. Exhibits include Lawrence's silk robes, Arab headdress and Lee Enfield rifle (notched to mark the killing of a Turkish officer). There is the white flag raised at the surrender of Jerusalem and rusting bits of the Hejaz railway where he honed his guerrilla techniques. The IWM has even tracked down the Brough Superior SS100 motorcycle he was riding when he was killed.

Lawrence's stylish wit is much in evidence. So, too, is the depressive side that led him to despair and anonymity. Controversy about his sexuality - he was raped by a Turkish official and paid to be flogged while serving incognito in the postwar RAF - is not settled. And there is still mystery about the identity of the "SA" to whom he dedicated his master-work, Seven Pillars of Wisdom. A colleague called him: "An odd gnome, half cad, with a touch of genius."

Lawrence's circle included artists such as Eric Kennington and Augustus John whose works enrich this remarkable show. So do posters of promotional tours by US publicist Lowell Thomas, who quipped that Lawrence had "a genius for backing into the limelight".

And so it remains: the 1962 David Lean film starring Omar Sharif and Peter O'Toole guaranteed him fame for generations. "I loathe the notion of being celluloided," Lawrence said, but he was. Such is his place in the pantheon of British heroes that his Madame Tussaud's dummy appears on the Beatles' Sergeant Pepper album cover.

Lawrence's ideas on unconventional warfare, and Arabs, have enjoyed a revival since the current western entanglement in his old stamping ground. Pentagon planners are mining Seven Pillars for tips about strategy. "Do not try to do too much," he advised. "Better the Arabs do it tolerably than you do it perfectly. It is their war and you are their to help them, not win it for them."

The exhibition runs at the Imperial War Museum, south London from October 14 to April 17 2006
Posted by:Steve White

#6  Wheeeeeeee!
Posted by: Shipman   2005-10-13 19:37  

#5  about his homo cluster fucks with his arabo-male companions behind the dunes--he had sex with more arab men than cleopatra

There is a problem: his tendencies were of a "female" homosexual and I doubt Arabs would have repected, obeyed or even paid attention to one. As I said, there are serious doubts about his assertion that he was raped by a Turkish officer.

I think that he discovered his real tendencies: homosexuality+masochism after the war and that in his book he lied when situating it during the war. Until he disovered his tendencies Lawrence seems to have believed his lack of desires for women was due to him being an iron man able to placate his impulsions and too strong for falling in women's nets.
Posted by: JFM   2005-10-13 17:31  

#4  Weren't contemporary men of Cleopatria non-arabs, since the islamic conquest of North Africa had not yet occurred? I'm not sure, but ancient egyptians had to be some kind of berbers, amazighs, possibly greek or even celtic offshoots,... IE meditteranean, but not arab?
I'm nitpicking, I know, you're probably right in your assessment of Lawrence ass-banditry.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2005-10-13 16:25  

#3  the notorious foward authored by lawrence in his book reminesces about his homo cluster fucks with his arabo-male companions behind the dunes--he had sex with more arab men than cleopatra
Posted by: SON OF TOLUI   2005-10-13 13:07  

#2  It is weoirfder than that: Lawrence claimed urbi et orbe to have been captured by the Turks (who didn't identify him) and raped by their commander but his companions adamantly denied the whole thing: he didn't fall into Turkish hands and wasn't raped.

Could have been a kind of masochistic streak who caused Lawrence to assert something who would shock his audience.
Posted by: JFM   2005-10-13 07:20  

#1  Oh! These robes are so silk!
Let's run over the dune in these fetching duds.
Posted by: Tool O Toole   2005-10-13 07:09  

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