Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Blaming others

The Amnesty International report on human rights for the year 2007 is out. The Muslim world constitutes, as usual, bleakest chapter. Every single country across the Muslim world has been pointed out by the Amnesty International either for executions and torture or discrimination against women and ethnic and religious minorities. Punishments never handed down even during the Stone Age, have been awarded in 21st century Muslim world. In one case, two Saudi nationals were awarded 7,000 lashes. Yes, 7,000. And executions? Well, 335 in Iran, 158 in Saudi Arabia and 135 in Pakistan. Violation of human rights, it seems, is the only thing that unites the otherwise divided Muslim world.

The report is no exception. The Muslim world cuts a sorry figure every time a global watchdog releases its findings. Freedom of expression here remains curtailed, Reporters Sans Frontieres annually reports. Regarding freedom of expression, there is a joke often told in Arab world. At a meeting, a US journalist says: "We have complete freedom of expression in the US. We can criticise the US president as much as we like." The Arab journalist replies. "We also have complete freedom of expression in Arab world. We can also criticise the US president as much as we like."

Similarly, it is either Bangladesh or Pakistan or Nigeria which is on top of Transparency International's corruption indexes. However, when Nobel laureates gather in Stockholm every December, Muslim scientists and writers are conspicuous by their absence. In case, as Naguib Mahfouz is crowned, he is stabbed and rendered paralysed. The irony, or tragedy, is that his attacker had not even read his excellent books. Or we disown Dr Abdul Salam just because he belonged to the Ahmadiya community. Salam's case deserves special mention since it underlines the absurdity that characterises this part of the world.

When all else fails, "Jews" and "Christian" West are there to lay the blame for all our ills. Conspiracy theories instead of scientific, rational thought holds sway across much of the Muslim world. And every time a rights abuse is highlighted in Iran, Saudi Arabia or Pakistan, a typical Muslim answer is: Look at Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and Chechnya. True, imperialism and Zionism have a hand in our predicament. However, there are many wounds one can only describe as self-inflicted.

Take, for instance, the Iran-Iraq war, one of the last century's bloodiest conflicts. There is no denying the fact that the United States backed the Saddam regime. But it was the Arab sheikhdoms, panicked at the Iranian revolution, that stoked the flames of war. And, ironically, now in the post-Saddam era when the "Christian" West has written off Iraq's Saddam-era debt worth $66 billion, Iraq's Arab brothers refuse to write off that country's $67 billion loans.

Similarly, last century's bloodiest Muslim genocide was not carried out by Serbs, Israelis, Americans, Europeans or Hindus. It was Pakistan's military that refused to respect a democratic verdict and plunged East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, into an ocean of blood. Millions were killed, maimed, raped and rendered homeless. Luckily, Pakistan has a "Hindu" neighbour. "Hindus are born enemies of Islam'. Hence, Pakistani children are now taught that a Bengali traitor (revered by Bengalis as founder of Bangladesh), in connivance with our "Hindu" neighbour, dismembered Pakistan. Ironically, of all her South Asian neighbours, Pakistan enjoys most cordial relations with the world's only Hindu state, Nepal. The other big genocide was perpetrated by Indonesia. The target was: its own citizens who were members of the Communist Party.

Figures are not available but Israel perhaps cannot match Iran in executing Arabs. Iran's confessional regime is a champion of the Arab cause in Occupied Territories but Arabs of its Khuzestan province are regularly sent to the gallows. Seizing the opportunity, one may also point out how only recently Afghan refugees were driven out of Iran as if Afghan refugees were not as Muslim as Palestinians. And, by the way in the fallen "Emirate of Afghanistan" itself, Hazaras were slaughtered by the Taliban in their thousands almost a decade ago – mainly because Hazaras are Shia. In Iraq, more people have been killed in Shia-Sunni clashes than in resisting the US occupation. Shia-Sunni clashes in Pakistan have claimed more lives than those lost in its wars against India. Ironically, this only "nuclear power" of the Muslim world is not being occupied on its eastern front by its "Hindu" neighbour but is losing territory on its western front to its own citizens.

One can mention from the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait to the recent Hamas-Fatah infighting (a shameful tribute to Israel on its 60th anniversary). The list is long. Indeed, unending. However, the solution to all our problems is always simple: return to an imagined past which, mercifully for the people of the seventh century, never existed. Every time, a scientist in the West is ready with an invention, our readymade answer is: we knew about it 1,400 years ago what the West has found only now. We kill Theo van Gogh when confronted with a film. We burn down our own cities in response to a blasphemous and racist caricature. Still, we refuse to understand that our answer to every "provocation" is either a fatwa or mindless violence – perhaps because creativity is anathema to us. Not because we lack fertile minds, but because we lack liberation and freedom -- liberation from self-imposed mental, moral, and cultural censors. And freedom to think and express. Time to heed the great Syrian poet Nizar Qabbani, who said:



Five thousand years

Growing beards

In our caves.

Our currency is unknown,

Our eyes are a haven for flies.

Friends,

Smash the doors,

Wash your brains,

Wash your clothes.

Friends,

Read a book,

Write a book,

Grow words, pomegranates and grapes,

Sail to the country of fog and snow.

Nobody knows you exist in caves.

People take you for a breed of mongrels.



The writer is a freelance contributor. Email: mfsulehria@hotmail.com To go to source click here

5 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:42 PM

    I have sex with my younger brother for 1 year. Husband knew about and take me to police and court. Thank you Maumoon forgived me because my brother is grow up 15 year old. If here it is bloody wahhabi government me and my brother going to be killed with throwing stones. Not freedom. I love my husband very very much still.

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  2. 1)You might have overlooked the American statistic - 1106 executions. The electric chair isn't particularly humane..

    2) Lack of freedom of expression in the middle east has little to do with Islam.. so cut the 'Muslim world' crap. You mean the Arab world.

    3) Corruption is anti-Islamic.. just shows the lack of true Islam in the daily lives of citizens of those countries you named.

    4) Muslim writers are not 'conspicuous by their absence' at the Nobel prize, which isn't a religious prize anyway. Literary heavyweights like Orhan Pamuk and Khaled Hosseini do come from that part of the world.

    5) Don't generalize the 'typical response' as 'look at Palestine, Chechnya, Iraq'

    Human rights violations should be taken with the same seriousness everywhere..
    If 10,000 peoples rights are horrifically violated, it might deserve 10,000 times the condemnation of 1 persons violation.

    7) In the post-Saddam era, Iraq lies bereft of all its infrastructure, on the verge of a civil war, with ethnic tensions higher than at any point in history. All thanks to the ill conceived American war. After hundreds of thousands killed, and a country left to be built from scratch.. $66billion seems a very small compensation.

    8) Nepal is no longer a Hindu state.. it's a secular republic.

    9) You're giving religious hues to a political decision. '.. as if Afghan refugees were not as Muslim as Palestinians...'

    As much as you'd like to wish otherwise, the Iranian government reserves the right to restrict foreign nationals entry into its territory, for whatever reason. What does Islam have to do with that?

    10) Correction. "WE" did not kill Theo Van Gogh, some fanatic did.
    "OUR" response was not a fatwa or mindless violence. It was inaction against those who did.

    The time is not to blame the entire 'Muslim world' for the action of these fanatics. It's to mobilize the general public and the so called silent majority into a response against such characters.

    Use 'Islam' in every other sentence in unrelated subjects ranging from corruption to refugees to political trouble.. and you confirm yourself to be an Islamophobe.

    Take the Islam out of it, and you'll see a clearer, normal picture.

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  3. Anonymous1:38 PM

    Nass goes away, another one is born. This is messed up.

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  4. Anonymous2:28 PM

    rofl

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  5. Anonymous4:46 PM

    "You might have overlooked the American statistic - 1106 executions" Do you think you can throw around a figure and the world will believe it without question? The figures given in the post by Dhivehi Resistance were for the year 2007 alone. How did you invent 1106 for the US? Was it since the creation of the Union or what? As far as I know 121 people were judicially executed in the US (none extra-judicially) in the 21st century. A quick search of public databases will soon tell you the names of these people. It took me 30 seconds to find; it may take you slightly longer.

    Yes Islam killed van Gogh. The murderer was simply following the Sunnah of Mohamed established first by the murder of Asmaa bint Marwan. Mohamed accused Asmaa of ridiculing Islam (same allegation against van Gogh) and she was murdered as she laid breast feeding her baby. When the murderer showed remorse Mohamed comforted him saying "two goats would not butt their heads for her".

    Iran continues to occupy Arab lands in Khozestan, much bigger than the disputed territories of Gaza or the West Bank.

    True, Nepal is now a secular republic. At least they had the good sense to join the 21st century. The last Islamic country that became secular was Bangladesh in 1971. It has since reverted to 7th century barbarism.

    And so no, I will not take Islam out of it.

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