

The lessons of the Arab revolt, which Lawrence helped start in 1916, continue to reverberate today.įor Lawrence, who died 75 years ago last month, the Turks "were like plants, immobile, firm-rooted, nourished through long-stems to the head," and his own band of Arab irregulars were "an influence, an idea … drifting about like a gas … a vapour blowing where we listed."


As he lay in his tent, "suffering a bodily weakness which made my animal self crawl away and hide till the shame was passed," the man known later as "Lawrence of Arabia" began to appraise the dynamics of the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Turks – breaking down his ideas of guerrilla warfare into a concept that pitted two opposing forces head-on. Lawrence recounts days spent struggling against illness in the unforgiving deserts of Arabia. In a passage from his "Seven Pillars of Wisdom," T.E.
