Are you law-abiding if you do so and your life doesn't depend on it?
Are you principled if your principles have not been tested?Basboosa was born in 1984. His father, a construction worker died when he was 3 years old, and his mother then married his father's brother. He went to school in a one-room village school, and never finished high school. He had a total of six siblings.
So what were the options?
Basboosa's application to the army was refused, all his various job applications rejected, and their family had no breadwinner.
By the age of 26,
Basboosa had been a street vendor for 7 years, selling fruits and vegetables from his push-cart. He earned about Kes 11,200 per month and used the money to take care of his mother, her husband, and younger siblings. His dream in life was to
buy a working van to sell his waresOne morning this past December,
Basboosa took a debt of Kes 16,000 to buy his wares. But a policewoman confiscated his unlicensed cart and its goods.
Basboosa desparately tried to pay the fine of Kes 800 but the policewoman slapped the scrawny young man, spat in his face and insuted his dead father.
Humiliated and dejected,
Basboosa went to the administrative headquarters to complain to local municipality officals, but they refused to see him.
At 11.30am on Dec 17 2010,
less than an hour after the confrontation with the policewoman and without telling his family,
Basboosa returned to the double storey white building that served as the administrative headquarters, poured fuel over himself and
set himself on fire.The young man, known to his friends as
Basboosa died 10 days later - his official name
Mohammed Bouaziz.
And with his action, this legend of a man, from the dusty streets of the impoverished town of Sidi Bouzid, Tunisia, set into motion events that within one month would topple the presidents of two countries, and cause revolutions in another 4 countries in one of the most conservative regions of the world.
http://www.time.com/time/world/...e/0,8599,2043557,00.html