28 May 2008

Can al-Qaeda be destroyed if we kill Usama?

It is a tragic mistake to believe that al-Qaeda refers to a solid and uniform group whose very existence can be undone by the death of one man. As the execution of the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein proved, the demise of a criminal does not necessarily remove the crime. In fact, Iraqis believe that their lot is worse now than when Saddam's Baath party had been in power.

The mistaken belief about al-Qaeda is simple as it is attractive, but stems from a very real misunderstanding of what the term al-Qaeda had meant to Muslim militants in the past and what it means in the present. The word itself is constituted by three Arabic characters: Qaf, which is pronounced with a guttural emphasis on the K; Ayn, which is pronounced with a heavy dip in the AY; and Dal, which is pronounced with a thickening of the DA, usually achieved by filling up a cheek with air and releasing it when DAL is uttered. Al-Qaeda literally means 'the base', and may refer to three things:

  • Base, as in an outpost
  • Foundation, as in what supports a home
  • Principle, as in a formula, maxim or template
Abdullah Azzam, the chief ideologue of the non-Afghans (for a discussion on this predominantly Arab contingent, see Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil, & the Fundamentalism in Central Asia) who took part in the 'holy war' against Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, wrote:
Every principle needs a vanguard to carry it forward and, while focusing its way into society, puts up with heavy tasks and enormous sacrifices. There is no ideology, neither earthly nor heavenly, that does not require such a vanguard that gives everything it possesses in order to achieve victory for this ideology. It carries the flag all along the sheer, endless and difficult path until it reaches its destination in the reality of life, since Allah has destined that it should make it and manifests itself. This vanguard constitutes the strong foundation (Al-Qaeda al-Sulbah) for the expected society.
Azzam's use of the phrase al-Qaeda al-Sulbah led many commentators to believe that the group, al-Qaeda, had already existed during the early days of the Afghan jihad, but this is untrue. In writings and speeches, Azzam resorted to a very romanticized image of a small 'vanguard' fighting against the forces of evil. The vanguard was a term popularized by Syed Qutb, a leading intellectual of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood who was later executed by his own government. Thus, by Al-Qaeda al-Sulbah, Azzam was really referring to a didactic mode of activism, based on clear and very specific principles. He was, in short, discussing a tactic.

Al-Qaeda continues to be an elusive entity whose cohesive structure and tentacle reach is highly exaggerated. In the wake of 9-11, regimes like Russia, China, Uzbekistan and to a limited extent, Israel, have benefited from reconciling their various border wars with the US' war on terrorism. Often, the rebels would even be characterized as al-Qaeda operatives. This ensured that international criticism over war tactics and social policy is as limited as it is selective. Thus, civilian casualties imposed by state actors are called "collateral damage", and those imposed by non-state actors are called "terrorism".

Besides the eclectic value judgments that come to play when the word 'terrorism' is thrown about, there is a clear and present danger in overemphasizing the threat of al-Qaeda. Killing Usama bin Laden will not destroy al-Qaeda, per se, because the plethora of extremist movements that currently riddle the global arena are linked not by a physical network, but by a common maxim and world-view. A useful glimpse into this world-view can be derived from an article written by Ayman al-Zawahiri, entitled "Knights Under the Banner of the Prophet". In it, al-Zawahiri mentions the tools through which so-called Western imperialism is deployed [1]; they include:
  • The United Nations
  • The friendly rulers of the Muslim
  • The multinational corporations
  • The international communications and data exchange systems
  • The international news agencies and satellite media channels
  • The international relief agencies
It is interesting that all of al-Zawahiri's points take political and economic dimensions as their reference points.

On past occasions, US President George Bush had been fond of characterizing Muslim extremists as people "who hate our freedoms". This is a mistake, because the rhetoric of extremist leaders like the Saudi-born Usama bin Laden and the Egyptian-born Ayman al-Zawahiri are inherently rooted in the notion of liberating Muslim countries from very real, very unforgiving dictatorships. The US President panders to a self-assured Western audience without calculating how condescending, foolish and downright hypocritical his speeches sound in the Orient.

Some western commentators also make an unforgivable lapse when they call al-Qaeda "a gang of evildoers" because the phrase sets up a false goal. Destroy gang, destroy problem. The war on terrorism is a ridiculous anachronism because terrorism is not an object, it is a tactic. Success in overcoming terrorism through policies that pursue individuals, contain money and human trafficking, widen police arrest powers and conduct pre-emptive action has been significant, but only in the short-term. It does nothing, for example, to deter new recruits from adopting the extremist ideology. To take a leaf from history, where was Zionism before European anti-Semitism eventually convinced almost all Jews that Israel was a reality that had to be forced with one's hands instead of simply waiting for the anticipated Messiah to lead them there? If anything, Zionism's evolution should serve as a warning to all myopic governments. Social and political pressure coming from the outside can and do contribute to increasing the relevance and currency of ideological movements, no matter how extremist they are.

So, al-Qaeda is but a tiny player in a market where the real commodity is that of ideas, not personalities or groups. Hunting down and eventually killing one man, Usama bin Laden, will not purge the world of extremism. People who continue to believe that are on their way to bitter disappointment. Worse, once these same optimists realize that the hopes they have been entertaining are false, they will then turn on the Muslim community at large. After all, if Usama's death does not remove terrorism, then surely Islam's death will. Signs of this trend are already abundant in parts of Europe, where radical political groups like the Danish People's Party openly declare that, "To a great extent, we are anti-Muslim."

The way forward is to visibly engage the extremists at a social, political and theological level. Yes, the tangible manifestations of extremism need to be curtailed. Men and women clearly out to do harm must be pursued to the fullest extent of the law. Here, both Muslim and non-Muslim nations have sometimes made blunt decisions on stemming the movement of people and money to stop extremism in its tracks. But initiatives are getting better-informed. Governments, for the most part, know enough not to turn the state's full attention on the entire Muslim community, but to a small section of it who subscribe to clear and well-defined trends (see my previous article, The Great Commission of Mussulman).

More than this, however, has to be done, and I suggest some signposts that ought to be followed, not least because they make common sense. Stop business interests from influencing international relations. Engage dictatorships, even if they govern strategically-sensitive and oil-rich countries, and persuade them to reform. Adopt a wide-ranging and human-centered approach to stopping disease. Adopt policies that orientate toward real global threats, like environmental catastrophes triggered by pollution and deforestation.

And most important of all, stop the hypocrisy! The so-called tactic and logic of terrorism is deployed by both Muslims and non-Muslims, and should be condemned for what it is, not who commits it.


[1] Jason Burke, Al-Qaeda- The True Story of Radical Islam, pg 23-24

26 May 2008

Japan sorry for offending Muslims

Japan says Muslim offense at cartoon "regrettable"

The government said in a statement Friday that it is "regrettable" that a section of a Japanese cartoon has sparked an outcry in the Muslim world and stressed the need to foster understanding to prevent similar incidents in the future. "While it resulted from carelessness, the Japanese government considers it regrettable that Muslims' feelings were hurt by the content of some of the cartoon..."

24 May 2008

The Catastrophe- sixty years and counting

Daoud Kuttab: Sixty Years of the Palestinian "Catastrophe"

As the state of Israel celebrates its 60th birthday, Palestinians remember the Nakbeh, or "catastrophe"- their story of dispossession, occupation, and statelessness. But, for both sides, as well as external powers, the events of 1948 and what has followed- the occupation since 1967 of the remaining lands of historic Palestine- represents a tragic failure.

22 May 2008

Theodor Herzl and the Israel of today

Benny Morris: A prophet perplexed

Beholding Israel today, Theodor Herzl - Zionism's fin-de-siecle prophet and founding organiser - would have alternatively beamed and frowned.
...
Perhaps the deeply secular, anti-theocratic Herzl would have been most flummoxed and incensed by the (burgeoning) numbers, and correlated political power of the orthodox and ultra-orthodox (some 20-25% of the country's Jews). He believed that God was dead, and religious Jews a dying breed.

Herzl's liberal sensibilities would have been shocked by the Israeli occupation of much of the West Bank and the displays of insensitivity and occasional brutality that are the common fare of most military occupations. More generally, he would certainly have been taken aback by the spectacle of Arab-Israeli conflict, of which the occupation is one of the byproducts.

21 May 2008

Neo-Salafists win Kuwaiti poll

Sunni Islamists gain in Kuwait poll

Sunni Islamists have made a strong showing in Kuwait's legislative election, while minority Shia gained one more seat, according to results released on Sunday. Official results from four districts and unofficial returns from the fifth showed that the Islamic Salafi Alliance and its allies won at least 10 seats in Saturday's poll.
A dangerous precedent in a country whose neighbor, Iraq, has Sunni Muslims currently engaged in a life-or-death struggle against neo-Salafist elements. Those well-organized and well-funded elements had been warmly welcomed into the Sunni insurgency against the US-backed government in the beginning, but eventually outlived their welcome through their overt extremism and careless targeting of fellow Muslims in attacks. The Sunni Awakening Council was thus formed with the singular purpose of ridding Iraq of its neo-Salafist cohort, though Nuri al-Maliki, the Prime Minister of Iraq, reportedly dislikes these tribal formations because of their refusal to co-operate more fully with the Shia regime.

Kuwait's Islamic Salafi Alliance is closely affiliated with the Society of the Revival of Islamic Heritage (RIH), or Jamiat Ihya at-Turaz al-Islami, that has been implicated in numerous terrorist attacks in countries ranging from Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Afghanistan to Azerbaijan, Albania, and Bosnia. More ominously, the RIH promotes what Christopher Deliso identifies as a pro-Wahhabist, pro-Saudi agenda that is inimically hostile to the traditionalist, moderate and far larger constituency of Muslims.

In Kuwait's election, the Islamic Salafi Alliance won seats at the expense of a marginally more tolerant form of neo-Salafism, represented by the Islamic Constitutional Movement. The latter is affiliated with the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood (for more on the different strands of neo-Salafism, see Three flavors of Salafism), a movement that its founder, Hassan al-Banna at the very least tried to portray in a more inclusive light:
[The Brotherhood is] a Salafiya message, a Sunni way, a Sufi truth, a political organization, an athletic group, a scientific and cultural union, an economic enterprise and a social idea.
There is little doubt that pan-Arabism has been replaced by a stateless, pan-ideological movement toward puritanism which would not necessarily be a bad thing if not for the political violence it anticipates for its enemies (Muslim and non-Muslim). Worse, these enemies are often painted as 'enemies of Islam'.

Political ascendancy figures largely in the overall strategy of such ideological groups, as I discussed in an earlier article, Plotting Islamism's success.

Empowering radicals is never a good idea. All in all, bad news for Kuwaiti women, the Shia minority and most importantly, the entire region.

19 May 2008

Animated film on Sabra and Shatila massacre- Waltz With Bashir

Israeli film at Cannes explores 1982 Sabra and Shatila massacre

A daring new animated documentary follows Israeli director Ari Folman as he tries to piece together memories of the 1982 massacre of Palestinians in Beirut's Sabra and Shatila camps.

One of the most surprising aspects of the film was the parallel a psychiatrist drew between the Sabra and Shatila massacre and the Holocaust, in which millions of Jews perished.

"The response [to the massacre] in Israel was so huge, in my point of view, because immediately after we had the press release of the first photos of the massacre," he said, when asked about the parallels. "For us Israelis, it was a direct connection to our Jewish history."

18 May 2008

Academic flogged for sipping coffee with woman

Saudi prof faces flogging for having coffee with woman

Muhammad Ali Abu Raziza, a psychology lecturer at the university of Mecca, has been sentenced to 150 lashes and eight months in jail after the religious police caught him with a woman in a coffee shop...

17 May 2008

Enchanting music from Nass Marrakech

I really, really like the music that the Morroccon group Nass Marrakech dishes out. This is a song from their excellent album "Bouderbala", entitled L_Ham. You need an updated version of Flash to view the widget below.



Nass Marrakech represents a new generation of musicians dedicated to keeping the Gnawa tradition alive and true to its roots. The Gnawa are Sufis descended from black Africans enslaved by Arabs centuries ago, which lends their music a very heartfelt and endearing strain.

16 May 2008

A human rights crime in Gaza

Jimmy Carter: A Human Rights Crime In Gaza

The world is witnessing a terrible human rights crime in Gaza, where a million and a half human beings are being imprisoned with almost no access to the outside world by sea, air, or land. An entire population is being brutally punished.

This gross mistreatment of the Palestinians in Gaza was escalated dramatically by Israel, with United States backing, after political candidates representing Hamas won a majority of seats in the Palestinian Authority parliament in 2006.
Former US President Jimmy Carter joins an ever-growing list of academics and influential people who know that the Israeli Defense Forces' (IDF) abuses in the Occupied Territories must be called out.

15 May 2008

Podcast: Imam Zaid Shakir

Question Time! Part I | With Imam Zaid Shakir

Anthropologist suggests removing sword from Saudi flag

Saudi Anthropologist Sa'd Al-Sowayan Advocates Modern Interpretation of Religious Texts, Suggests Swords Be Removed from Saudi Flag

My problem is that the sword is combined with the phrase 'There is no god but Allah. When I wrote this, there were certain circumstances - it was when Al-Zarqawi and his people were decapitating hostages with a sword. It was as if the sword had become one of the symbols of Islam. When you combine the sword with the phrase 'There is no god but Allah,' some people might get confused, and think that you want to spread 'there is no god but Allah' by means of the sword.

14 May 2008

Asharis contradict themselves

Wahhabi Contention: Asharis contradict themselves by affirming some attributes and not affirming other attributes

Wahhabi Contention: The Asharis and Maturidis contradict themselves. They affirm for Allah Life, Power, Will, Knowledge, Speech, Hearing and Sight, while making Ta'wil of Istiwa', Nuzul, Maji', Ityan, Wajh, Yad, Saq, Qadam, Janb, 'Ain, and relocation in (various) levels. The basic rule with regards to the attributes is one, so if you affirm the seven attributes, what prevents you from affirming the rest? What is the difference? This is nothing less than a contradiction.
The response to this and more at a new blog, Sunni Answers- Challenging Heresy Head On!

13 May 2008

Courage of the mad

For Palestinians to forgive Israel would be risky, irrational even, but it could be the only hope

In the first chapter of Amos Oz's novel My Michael, the protagonist Hannah recalls her childhood friends, Khalil and Aziz, two Palestinians who in 1948 disappeared along with 800,000 of their people. In the last chapter she imagines her two friends coming back to blow everything up. By then Hannah has descended into madness.

Hannah, like Oz and his generation of Israelis, knows that before the war of 1948 there was another, older and larger society than her own, and that that society was destroyed and its traces erased; the population was forced to leave, villages were razed to the ground and cities, neighbourhoods and streets were renamed. She must also know that the destruction of the Palestinian society was necessary for the creation of Israel. Unlike her generation, however, Hannah is willing to admit what she knows; but that's only because she is mad.
A thoughtful article on the way Israeli society puts a mental block on its past atrocities.

Taleban back to attacking girls' schools

Taleban return to attacking girls' schools in Afghanistan

Since the beginning of the new school year on March 23 there have been 36 attacks. Empty buildings have been set on fire or had grenades thrown into them. Teachers have been kidnapped, and later released. In one grisly case a caretaker was mutilated by having his ears and nose cut off, a common punishment for those accused of collaborating with the Afghan Government.
The Taliban's treatment of women stems more from a cultural peculiarity than from Islamic teachings. Most of the Taliban are ethnic Pashtuns, and their Pashtunwali- or customary law- differs in large respects from Islamic legal rulings that are practiced elsewhere in the Islamic world.

Divorce, which is a right granted to women by Islam, is forbidden, and women are prevented from owning either land or estate. According to a popular Pashtun proverb: a woman is best either in the household or the grave.

In all fairness, Pashtunwali evolved to counter a violent and often fickle environment. Women are thus signal representations of the honor of an individual male, family and clan; to be defended at all costs. Because of this, Pashtun women are expected to conform to a strict set of behavioral norms. If the norm is broken, using force to reinforce a woman's place in society is not considered an aberrant action.

US offers to help Lebanese army

Bush offers help for Lebanon army

The US is prepared to help strengthen Lebanon's army so it can disarm Hezbollah, US President George W Bush said in an interview with the BBC.

He said the Shia Muslim Hezbollah movement had acted against its own people and was destabilising Lebanon.
Where was US aid, or even diplomatic arm-twisting, when Israeli bombs were landing on Lebanese cities and civilian structures?

Salafi Mosque refuses to bury cop-killer

Mosque's burial refusal stirs global controversy

Turning down a request last week to bury alleged cop-killer Howard Cain at the Germantown Masjid has sparked an international controversy about the burial of Muslims.
...
These events represent a major turning point in the once-insular Muslim community here where leaders want it to be known that their Allah-fearing believers do not condone such violence.

"This was a wake-up call, not just for us to say Islam calls people to good behavior, but when we see [criminal behavior] in the mosque, we have to speak about that," said Amin Nathari, a visiting imam who preached last Friday at Masjidullah in West Oak Lane.
More information about the mosque can be found here. An interesting development, this is.

12 May 2008

Fight terror, invent electric cars

Peres: Fight terror - reduce global dependence on oil

President Shimon Peres on Monday hailed Israel's new weapon against the threat of "terrorism" from its Middle East neighbors - the electric car.

Outlining Israel's development priorities in an address to foreign journalists to mark this week's 60th anniversary of statehood, Peres said reducing global dependence on oil would curb oil-producing states' ability to fund Israel's enemies.

"Oil ... is not only polluting the air, it is also promoting terror," said the 84-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner, who has long promoted Israel's now powerful high-tech industries.

Peres argued that manifold increases in oil prices in recent years had contributed to a rise in financing for terrorism in the Middle East
Okay, I confess, I kind of understand where Mr Shimon Peres is coming from, but if I extend his logic, then the Bush Administration itself would be a direct sponsor of terrorism by continuing to buy oil from the Middle East and refusing to cut down or ratify any treaty that threatens its use of oil.

Update your bookmark

Dear readers,

http://higher-criticism.blogspot.com is now http://higher-criticism.com

Although it is a hassle, I'd like to humbly request that you update your links and bookmarks.

Thank you.

11 May 2008

The passing of knowledge

There is a famous Hadith that warns of a latter time, when knowledge will begin its exodus from the world. In that time, God:

...does not withdraw knowledge by extracting it from the hearts of men, rather He takes away the religious scholars. When no religious scholar remains, people take the ignorant as their leaders; these ignorant ones are questioned and give religious verdicts without knowledge. They are astray and lead others astray. [1]
It is instructive that the departure of knowledge is not the result of a literal taking away of knowledge from the hearts of ordinary men and women, for there is little knowledge there to begin with. What thirst-quenching sustenance is there in empty water-skins?

Knowledge is a combination of data and understanding. Data is abundant, understanding is not. Data grows exponentially, understanding retreats. Data is revered, methodology is scorned. With the departure of religious scholars, goes the distillation of data. Nobody to qualify and quantify data. All that remains is data, and the only methodology that laymen and laywomen can resort to in interpreting the data is a kind of half-hearted literalism and confused absolutism.

There is no more mortal blow than this.
Notes:
1. Bukhari, Hadith number 100, 7307

10 May 2008

Catholics win right to use the word Allah

Catholic newspaper in Malaysia wins first round of legal battle against 'Allah' ban order

A Roman Catholic newspaper cleared its first legal hurdle Monday in its fight against a Malaysian government ban on Christians using the word "Allah" as a synonym for "God." High Court Judge Lau Bee Lan ruled that prosecutors' objection to a lawsuit by The Herald weekly was "without merit."

Jewish influence in the Grand Old Party

Jewish Republicans are jockeying to win McCain's favor

As the Republican Party coalesces behind presidential contender John McCain, Jewish bigwigs in the party are vying for influence in the campaign.
..
In the view of some observers, the drive to become part of McCain's inner sanctum may have been a factor underlying a recent kerfuffle involving a recent breakfast for McCain fundraisers that was originally scheduled to be held at Manhattan's Harmonie Club, a largely Jewish locale that has been criticized for lacking minority members. In 2001 the venue drew negative publicity when New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg resigned his membership over a lack of black and Hispanic members, and in the years since, a number of politicians, including Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, have avoided appearing at the club.

09 May 2008

Abandoning weak hadiths

Over the last week or so, I had the occasion to re-read Prof Hashim Kamali's "Hadith Methodology", and was struck by statement he made about Da'if, or weak, Hadiths:

Many prominent contemporary ulama including Ahmad Muhammad Shakir, Nasir al-Din al-Albani, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Ajaj al-Khatib and Manna al-Qattan have advocated the view that the Da'if should be abandoned. I too believe that a restrictive approach to the admissibility of weak hadith is safer and in greater harmony with the objective of preserving the purity of hadith. To mix the weak in the general corpus of valid hadith is likely to undermine the credibility of the latter and it should be avoided. [1]
I feel that expunging weak Hadiths from the Hadith literature is as drastic as it is self-defeating. Although most Hadiths that are classified as being Da'if have obvious defects, there are some that require a scholar to make a value judgment.

I would also argue that the continual existence of weak Hadiths within the Hadith literature is of immense benefit to scholars, who will have a more immediate experience of the methodology used to evaluate Hadiths. Without weak Hadiths, a large part of the methodology will atrophy and eventually vanish.

Notes:
[1] Hashim Kamali, Hadith Methodology, pg 218-219.

08 May 2008

Beard warning

Taliban leader gives beard warning

Taliban leader has warned local tribesmen to grow beards within the next two months in accordance with Islamic teachings or face harsh punishment, residents said on Monday.

The threat came amid an apparent increase in incidents of militants trying to enforce Islamic Sharia law in Pakistans tribal belt bordering Afghanistan, where the new government is trying to make peace with militants.
Once in a while, the article speaks for itself and no comment from me is needed.

07 May 2008

The price of peace in Israeli cities

Israeli tactics collide with peace process

Suicide bombings in Israel have dropped off so significantly that the nation's security officials now dare to speak openly of success. But the very steps they are taking to thwart bombers appear to collide head on with the government's agenda of achieving peace with the Palestinians.

It is a classic military-political dilemma. The progress in stopping suicide bombers, the vast majority of whom cross into Israel from the West Bank, has brought enough quiet for Israel to resume peace talks with the Palestinian leadership there.

But the current calm is fragile, and to maintain it Israeli security officials say they must continue their nightly arrests and sometimes deadly raids in the heart of the West Bank - tactics at odds with a peace process that envisions a separate Palestinian state, an eventual Israeli withdrawal from much of the West Bank and, in the meantime, a gradual handover of authority to the Palestinian police.
Peace reigns in the cities of Israel, where suicide bombings have dropped off dramatically. Whatever the criticism, Israeli tactics of collective punishment, including the withholding of tax revenues, cutting off diesel supply for power stations and obstructing medical aid to sick Palestinians have worked.

06 May 2008

The demise of Israeli Arabs

For Israel's Arabs, 60 years of regret

As Israel toasts its 60th anniversary in the coming weeks, rejoicing in Jewish national rebirth and democratic values, the Arabs who make up 20 percent of its citizens will not be celebrating. Better off and better integrated than ever in their history, freer than the vast majority of other Arabs, Israel's 1.3 million Arab citizens are still far less well off than Israeli Jews and feel increasingly unwanted.
...
Across Israel, especially in the north, the remains of dozens of Palestinian villages sit partly unused, scars on the landscape from the conflict that gave birth to the state in 1948.

Yet some of the original Arab inhabitants and their descendants, all Israeli citizens, live in packed towns and villages often next door and remain barred from resettling the vacant areas, while Jewish communities around them are urged to expand.
What Israel's leaders are quietly doing is creating an apartheid regime...and it always begins with, of all things, roads.

Condoleezza Rice and the road to nowhere...aka Jerusalam

Rice seeks Mid-East breakthrough

It is crunch time for the Bush administration as it continues to hold out hope for a peace agreement between the Palestinians and the Israelis.

But even US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice let out a sign of her frustration at the lack of progress on the ground, particularly on the part of the Israelis.
Once again, the indomitable US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visits the world's most intractable conflict. Once again, nothing is going to come out of it. Rice's optimism that a solution could be found by year's end is another promise that belongs to the trash bin of history. More than anything else, it is a signal of tired retreat. US President George Bush's time in the Oval Office is fast coming to an end, and this is undoubtedly his Administration's farewell to the Promised Land- kind of like a "no-hard-feelings" handshake that has been two presidential terms in the making.

Christian Zionists, that powerful lobby that 'protects' Israel for its own rather sinister reasons, have won another year of reprieve for the Jews they "know" will one day repent of their rejection of Jesus, convert to Christianity and ultimately help fight the dark minions of the anti-Christ.

If any lesson is to be had, it is this: Maintain bull-headedness in any phrase or statement, and you'll get away with the most outrageous things. Take for example, our Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni's reply to Rice's concern over the growth of settlements in the Occupied Territories. "No growth," Ms Livni says, even when everybody knows Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had earlier agreed to build 750 new homes in the West Bank.

I think the incongruence did not go unnoticed, and as a backdoor, Ms Livni assures us that in any case, Israel's 2005 withdrawal from Gaza Strip was proof that Jewish settlements were "not obstacles" to peace.

Perhaps, and I am guessing here, Ms Livni is promising the same kind of dismantling that took place in Gaza when the time is ripe. Ominous news for the settlers, of course. I have my doubts, though I think that Ms Livni's ambiguity is understandable. The pro-settlement lobby in Israel is a small but very vocal and influential group.

05 May 2008

Critic of Muslim 'villiany' caught red-handed

Islam critic and evangelist author charged with arson

DAPHNE Anis Shorrosh, a Palestinian Arab and author of Christian evangelist books critical of Islam, was arrested early Wednesday morning and accused of attempting to set fire to a plastic recycling bin at the Loma Alta Towers where he lives.
No comment.

04 May 2008

Muslim-filled jails

In France, Prisons Filled With Muslims

About 60 to 70 percent of all inmates in the country's prison system are Muslim, according to Muslim leaders, sociologists and researchers, though Muslims make up only about 12 percent of the country's population...
The shocking number of Muslims in French jails are only meaningful if we also measure the illiteracy and unemployment rate amongst them.

Some blame should rightly be laid on the Muslim community's doorstep for not organizing effective support structures, and this includes playing a more vigorous role in the political process and even something as innocuous as cross-cultural outreach. But mostly, the lack of emancipation of certain minorities can be attributed to sustained neglect from French society at large; a fact that French President Nicolas Sarkozy himself acknowledged and pledged to correct.

The appalling numbers therefore are more a reflection of French society's bigoted habits than anything else, and this has become worse all over Europe since the campaign of demonization of the Muslim community after the terrorist attacks of 9-11. Immigration, especially from Muslim countries, have become political batons for right-wing conservatives; and all over Europe, the donning of the hijab has been crafted to mean sure radicalism amongst the general Muslim community.

Be warned. The high number of Muslim incarcerated also means that the statistic of disenfranchisement feeds itself. A Muslim seeking employment already faces discrimination; a Muslim ex-convict would face an even more hostile job market.

But there is a greater danger lurking just around the corner. Prison gives resentment an outlet to grow. Muslims especially would be enticed by what I would call the Qutb-ian perception of a society that is sick in so many ways. The "revolutionary" mantle is an all-too-easy cloak to don when one is convinced by his own victim-hood.