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This
principle unequivocally defines the Syrian cause and
emphasizes the indissoluble bond between the nation and its
territory.
Nations arise in distinct territories that sustain their
lives and national character. The concept of the unity of
the nation and its homeland embodied in this principle
enables us to understand the nation as a social reality and
frees the concept of nationhood from such historical, racial
or religious misconceptions as are contrary to the nature of
the nation and its vital interest.
The
organic correlation between the nation and its homeland is
the only principle whereby the unity of life can be
achieved. It is within a national territory that the unity
of national life and participation in its activities,
interests and aims are attained. The national territory is
vital for the development of the social character of the
nation and forms the basis of its life.
A dominant characteristic of
the basic principles is Saadeh's insistence on clarity in
defining the issues of Syrian nationalism. This is
exemplified by the sequential order of development of the
basic principles. They evolve one from the other in a
complementary fashion amplifying the breadth of the national
cause while detailing its elements. The third principle
carries the issue of the national cause into its elements:
it is the cause of the Syrian nation and the Syrian
homeland. This amplification is important for two main
reasons: first, it emphasizes a major precept of Social
Nationalism mentioned earlier about the indissoluble link of
the nation and its homeland. Second, this principle defines
the framework of national struggle. The emphasis is on
concrete causes directly related to primordial issues. The
SSNP does not struggle for independence in an undefined
sense, but for the independence of the Syrian nation in its
homeland, i.e. its political, economic, cultural, military
and strategic independence in its completely liberated
homeland (16). This divergence from the stream of
generalities that imbues Near Eastern political movements is
a conscious choice inculcated by Saadeh to all his
disciples. This principle also widens the envergure of
national struggle. Since the cause is that of the nation,
its life and destiny, then all the elements of its life need
to be addressed.
The doctrine of Social
Nationalism is the first in the Near East to base the
concept of nation on the realities of human societal
development. The details particular to the Syrian nation
will be illustrated in subsequent principles. In general,
the doctrine states that nations formed because the
geographical environment coupled with historical-economic
and sociological events led to the formations of distinct
human societies with distinct life cycles, character and
history. This view contrasts with other concepts of
nationhood prevalent in the Near East that relate the
existence of nations to religious bonds, race purity, or
secondary aspects of human society such as language and
common historical periods.
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