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HordeKing1
11-27-2002, 07:45 AM
No More Fanaticism as Usual

November 27, 2002
By SALMAN RUSHDIE

It's been quite a week in the wonderful world of Islam.

Nigerian Islam's encounter with that powerhouse of subversion, the Miss World contest, has been unedifying, to put it mildly. First some of the contestants had the nerve to object to a Shariah court's sentence that a Nigerian woman convicted of adultery be stoned to death and threatened to boycott the contest - which forced the Nigerian authorities to promise that the woman in question would not be subjected to the lethal hail of rocks. And then Isioma Daniel, a Christian Nigerian journalist, had the effrontery to suggest that if the prophet Muhammad were around today, he might have wanted to marry one of these swimsuit hussies himself.

Well, obviously, that was going too far. True-believing Nigerian Muslims then set about the holy task of killing, looting and burning while calling for Ms. Daniel to be beheaded, and who could blame them? Not the president of Nigeria, who put the blame squarely on the shoulders of the hapless journalist. (Germaine Greer and other British-based feminists, unhappy about Miss World's decision to move the event to London, preferred to grouse about the beauty contest. The notion that the killers, looters and burners should be held accountable seems to have escaped notice.)

Meanwhile, in the Islamic Republic of Iran, Hashem Aghajari, a person with impeccable Islamist credentials - a leg lost in battle and a r?sum? that includes being part of the occupying force that seized the Great Satan's Tehran embassy back in the revolution's salad days - languishes under a sentence of death imposed because he criticized the mullahs who run the country. In Iran, you don't even have to have cheeky thoughts about the prophet to be worthy of being killed. The hearts of true believers are maddened a
lot more easily than that. Thousands of young people across the country were immature enough to protest against Mr. Aghajari's sentence, for which the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, duly rebuked them. (More than 10,000 true believers marched through Tehran in support of hard-line Islam.)

Meanwhile, in Egypt, a hit television series, "Horseman Without a Horse," has been offering up anti-Semitic programming to a huge, eager audience. That old forgery, "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" - a document purporting to prove that there really is a secret Jewish plot to take over the world, and which was proved long ago to have been faked by Czar Nicholas II's secret police - is treated in this drama series as historical fact.

Yes, this is the same Egypt in which the media are rigorously censored to prevent anything that offends the authorities from seeing the light of day. But hold on just a moment. Here's the series' star and co-writer, Mohammed Sobhi, telling us that what is at stake is nothing less than free speech itself, and if his lying show "terrified Zionists," well, tough. He'll make more programs in the same vein. Now there's a gutsy guy.

Finally, let's not forget the horrifying story of the Dutch Muslim woman, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who has had to flee the Netherlands because she said that Muslim men oppressed Muslim women, a vile idea that so outraged Muslim men that they issued death threats against her.

Is it unfair to bunch all these different uglinesses together? Perhaps. But they do have something in common. Ayaan Hirsi Ali was accused of being "the Dutch Salman Rushdie," Mr. Aghajari of being the Iranian version, Isioma Daniel of being the Nigerian incarnation of the same demon. A couple of months ago I said that I detested the
sloganization of my name by Islamists around the world. I'm beginning to rethink that position. Maybe it's not so bad to be a Rushdie among other "Rushdies." For the most part I'm comfortable with, and often even proud of, the company I'm in.

Where, after all, is the Muslim outrage at these events? As their ancient, deeply civilized culture of love, art and philosophical reflection is hijacked by paranoiacs, racists, liars, mal

ADF
11-27-2002, 08:47 AM
That's interesting, but I'd think Salmon Rushdie would say something more like, "bloop bloop bloop."

<center><img src = http://octopus.gma.org/Tidings/salmon.gif></center>

<center><img src=http://thereisnogod.faithweb.com/images/shark.gif>
Ce sachet d'emballage n'est pas un jouet.</center>

billyio
11-27-2002, 01:15 PM
Hmm...that was interesting Horde King. Rushdie makes some interesting points, especially since he himself has lived a captive lifestyle considering the ban on him. I happen to opine that not only Islam,but every type of societal institution will keep some people "captive". Its just how ideology works. Look at fundamentalist Christianity and other brands of religious and political radicalisms. It just seems difficult to ever overturn the ideology of society when one considers the social strata within it.

Another good study of denial within Islam is Daryush Shayegan's Cultural Schizophrenia . It explains how ideas within Islam clash with modernity. A good read.

BTW, sorry to ramble without clarifying some points more...I'm in a hurry to school.

Thanks for the article.

See Ya!

TheMojoPin
11-27-2002, 01:34 PM
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VP #2 for the Coalition of Angry Micks, and Minister of Bloody Mayhem.
"You can tell some lies about the good times you've had/But I've kissed your mother twice and now I'm working on your dad..."

Johnny4
11-27-2002, 04:21 PM
Great article HordeKing. I was reading an article today where the Nigerians were comparing that poor woman to Rushdie and I wondered where he has been and how he felt about that. I agree with him that muslims have been too silent and need to oppose some of the recent developments. Then again, Arafat denounces suicide bombers all the time and then does something else behind closed doors. The closest thing to the silence of the Muslims here is the silence of Italians with the violence of the mafia. Is it possible that the muslims are quiet because of fear? Is it also possible that they are quiet because of the power it gives them? Maybe they actually want people to have some fear of them. That's why I always hated wannabe's, not enough respectable Italian-Americans call these hoods a bunch of uneducated assholes.

Rackin' up bad Karma since 1971!