Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Robert Fisk's World: The German Lawrence Of Arabia Had Much To Live

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Robert Fisk's World: The German Lawrence Of Arabia Had Much To Live

    ROBERT FISK'S WORLD: THE GERMAN LAWRENCE OF ARABIA HAD MUCH TO LIVE UP TO - AND FAILED

    Independent
    Saturday, 7 November 2009
    UK

    The victors write the history, so Frobenius's adventures are today
    virtually unknown

    His name was Captain Leo Frobenius and he was the German Lawrence
    of Arabia, tasked to start an Arab Muslim insurgency against British
    rule in Sudan and Egypt. Colonel Lawrence's mission, of course, was
    to persuade the Arabs of the Gulf to rebel against the German-allied
    Turkish army of the Ottoman empire. There were a few differences. A
    colonel Lawrence may have been; a captain Frobenius was not. His
    military rank was a fraud. And unlike Lawrence, the secret Frobenius
    mission in 1915 was a hopeless failure.

    So come with me this Saturday morning - with the help of a brilliant
    Catalan scholar called Rocío Da Riva - with the German Lawrence,
    an archaeologist (like Lawrence), cultural historian, traveller and
    adventurer (again like Lawrence) regarded by some as a genius and a
    leading expert on Africa, by others as a charlatan guilty of abject
    behaviour (yet again, like Lawrence). But he ended up back in Germany,
    denounced to Chancellor Bethman-Hollweg as a "tactless" political
    agent and a liar, stirring up trouble among Germans, Arabs and Turks
    in equal measure because he did "not understand the Oriental way of
    thinking". Unlike Lawrence.

    The victors write the history, of course, so Frobenius's adventures
    are today virtually unknown. Already an explorer in pre-1914 Congo,
    Mali, Burkino Faso, Togo, Morocco, Algeria (twice), Tunis, northern
    Cameroon and Sudan, Frobenius of Arabia's mission in 1915 was to make
    his way across Ottoman Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Arabia
    via still neutral Italian Eritrea to Ethiopia where the marooned
    German legation in Addis Ababa had no radio or even postal contact
    with the Reich. Frobenius was to take "mail" (the official version)
    to the legation while in fact encouraging the Ethiopians to invade
    Sudan, organise uprisings by the Mahdiya partisans against Britain
    and challenge the British position in Suez.

    He and his expedition - Germans, Turks, an interpreter and eventually
    11 Palestinian Arabs, most of whom would be mysteriously put on rations
    as "gardeners" from Jaffa - travelled across Turkey on those bits of
    the Berlin-Baghdad railway already completed, the rest of the way by
    camel through the great passes of the Taurus and Cilician mountains,
    the road then being "improved by thousands of Armenians, who had been
    drafted into the Ottoman army for this purpose...".

    These, of course, were the remnants of the Ottoman army's Armenian
    soldiers, already disarmed in preparation for their slaughter by
    Turkish forces in the 1915 genocide. Through Aleppo, Hama and Homs,
    our heroic spies chuffed through Lebanon's Bekaa valley by narrow-gauge
    railway.

    >From Damascus, Frobenius adopted the name of Abdul Karim Pasha, now
    dressed like the rest of his amateur agents in Arab costume. They
    took the Hejaz railway - soon to be destroyed by Lawrence - to al-Ula
    where they travelled by camel to al-Wajh on the Red Sea. Then came
    the tricky bit: they had to cross the Red Sea for Massawa and dodge
    the British and French naval patrols all the way.

    Spies had already tipped off the Brits that the Germans were coming;
    first to stop their boat was the English Empress of Russia, followed
    by the French cruiser Desaix whose captain failed to spot Frobenius
    and his men because the crew was selling them picture postcards.

    According to a later despatch from the British ambassador to Rome,
    Frobenius and company "concealed themselves in a corner of the hold,
    used, apparently, for the same purpose as the 'Sanitary Tank' in a
    more civilised vessel, having reached this unromantic hiding place
    through a hole, the uses of which it is difficult to describe in
    polite language...". Through a crack in their shithole, the Germans
    even took a photo of the Desaix which remains to this day in the
    archives of the Frobenius Institute in Frankfurt.

    It took Frobenius of Arabia 42 days to reach Eritrea, where the
    Italians - alerted by the Brits - refused to let him move on to
    Ethiopia. The Germans then ensconced themselves on the luxury German
    liner Christian X, a new vessel whose silver cutlery and grand piano
    must have pleased the pseudo-aristocratic Frobenius. But while he was
    optimistically trying to arrange a radio cipher to take to the German
    legation in Addis whence they could communicate with Berlin via the
    captain of the Christian X, Sir Edward Grey - he of "lights going
    out all over Europe" fame - was giving permission for the Italians
    to take the Germans under safe conduct to Rome via Suez.

    Frobenius ended up in the Holy City, claiming in the Italian press
    that he was a plenipotentiary of the Ottoman emperor before admitting
    he was a secret agent, hoping he would receive an Italian decoration
    and then entraining for Germany one day before Italy declared war
    on the side of the Allies. Later German spy missions proved equally
    dismal. One left for Arabia dressed as an Arab dance troupe; another
    was betrayed as a German dressed as an Arab; the lack of corns on
    his feet proved to Eritrean policemen that he had been wearing shoes.

    When Frobenius tried to return to Africa after the war, he was
    stopped in Cairo where the British colonial office, regarding him as
    a "thieving scoundrel", memorably noted that he was "one of those
    scientific Germans to whom the word 'Hun' can be applied without
    raising any controversy". He ended up president of the Institute of
    Cultural Morphology in Frankfurt, reportedly selling artefacts from
    his expeditions, his scientific reputation (according to the Foreign
    Office) "as second rate as his reputation for decent behaviour".

    Frobenius of Arabia outlived Lawrence of Arabia by three years. But
    then again, Frobenius never rode a motorbike.
Working...
X