Wael Ghonim (BacktoBlack Festival), was one of the main leaders of the protests that toppled the dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt. Ghonim graduated in Computer Engineering from Cairo University and then graduated with an MBA in Marketing and Finance from the American University in the Egyptian capital. In 2008, he was hired by Google and soon received a promotion to Marketing Executive for the Middle East and North Africa.
To take the position, Ghonim moved with his family to Dubai. After the police killed young Khaled Said in Alexandria in 2010, Ghonim created the page “We Are All Khaled Said” on Facebook, which garnered thousands of followers. In January of that year, inspired by the revolution in Tunisia, the Google executive, under the pseudonym of El Shaheed (“The Martyr”), created an event in which he invited the page’s 350,000 fans to protest in Tahrir Square. Within days, there were more than the 50,000 confirmations of attendance. Ghonim then headed to Egypt to participate in the January 25 protests. Some days later, the young man was arrested and spent 12 days missing. Upon leaving prison, he gave an emotional testimony on Egyptian television and was received by the public as a hero of the revolution that had gripped the country.
In the end, more than 12 million people took to the streets and removed Dictator Mubarak from power. Due to his cyberactivism espousing nonviolence and civil disobedience, Ghonim was elected one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people on the planet.
AND, from How to undermine dictators and thugs
"Dictators always want their opponents to be seen as extremists," he said. Ghonim likened convincing people of the rightness of a cause to the marketing of a product. "Civilized and non-violent protest" was what brought increasing numbers of Egyptians into their streets and squares.
Being careful to note that it is easier for him to analyze his actions in hindsight—and insisting that there was no "master-plan"—Wael Ghonim provided some lessons on strategies of non-violent activism. He opted, he tells us, for non-confrontational actions—having people gather for "silence stands" in front of government buildings for example—to defeat the regime’s attempts at picturing its opponents like extremists. "We’re going to get all of our rights by being non-violent," he continues, "by showing them that they are ugly (…) and we are civilized." For him, these Ghandi-inspired tactics allowed the number of protesters to swell. It brought more people into the mainstream: "You should not try to avoid the mainstream, you should try to get the mainstream to adopt your ideas."
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Mca (Wednesday, 04 April 2012 21:45)
good post