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vrijdag 5 juni 2009

AYAAN HIRSI ALI: OBAMA LET DOWN MODERATE MUSLIMS

Newmajority.com    

In an exclusive interview with NM's Jeb Golinkin, Ayaan Hirsi Ali -- the bestselling author of Infidel and Islamic reformer -- gives us her quick take of the President's address to the Muslim world.  Here are excerpts:

ON WOMEN'S RIGHTS:

President Obama's speech didn’t do much for Muslim women.  He defended their rights in Western countries to wear the hijab. He didn’t touch on Muslim women being confined, being forced into marriages or being victims of honor killings:  These traditions and principles in the Koran and in Islam are being practiced in the West.  He didn’t address that.

I think he was just appeasing the Muslim world because they perceive--they have these notions that Muslim women in Western countries--are not allowed to wear the headscarf or cover themselves. I mean you can wear whatever you want in the United States.

In Egypt where he spoke, women who do not wear their veil in public are subjected to very obscene remarks on the street and even sexual assault. Nowadays, even if they are covered they become victims of the same things: That is, in public, in Egypt, as a woman, you run 80% of the time the risk of being assaulted simply because you are a woman walking down the street. They are forced into marriages; their testimony in countries where Sharia is law is just half of that of a man.  They can be divorced with no rights.  They need guardians, a married guardian or they cannot sign any legal papers. The President simply did not address Sharia or Islamic law in relation to women.

ON ISLAMIC EXTREMISM:

Who is a real reformer?  Obama’s message is that all of this [violence] has nothing to do with Islam. He says that progress and human rights are perfectly reconcilable with Islam.  "Islam is peace."  He sticks to the line that there is nothing to reform in there. According to the President, we are only fighting a very small number of extremists, but it's not Islam, so if that’s the case then there really isn’t much to reform.  The true reformers -- the moderate Muslims -- take away from the speech that they can’t depend on the Obama administration to criticize Islam. Between the lines it's as if he is saying that he will prevent Islam from negative stereotyping or something like that, which is ridiculous because he can’t do that. But most Muslims as we know, believe that negative stereotyping is equal to criticizing Islam.

Obama said “let’s speak plainly to one another”;  I would have liked him to have added, “and that means let us face some of your religious principles and how they are radically different from American principles.”  That’s what we need to talk about. His plain speaking went as far as saying we have a right to be in Afghanistan because Al-Qaeda attacked and keeps trying to attack us… but what inspires Al-Qaeda? Why are people we call moderates not facing up to Al-Qaeda? What is it about Islamic values that causes this?  His plain speaking ended exactly where George Bush’s and all the Presidents that came before him… and Tony Blair… ended: with the selective quoting from the Koran.  It's like Hillary Clinton putting on the headscarf as a “sign of respect."

That said, some of the speech's passages were tough. I liked it the way he told them that “we are in Afghanistan and we are not leaving,” and I liked what he said about Holocaust denial. But overall, the speech just didn't go far enough.

ON OBAMA'S "NEW ERA":

Obama has now clearly defined that he is different from the previous administration.  So far, that clearly has been his goal: To show the Muslim world that they are different, and that this is the beginning of a new era, etc. I think once he has succeeded in creating the image that he is different, then I hope he will say look, I am different but -- and this was a statement I really liked -- I will always protect the security of Americans.

American security is going to repeatedly be attacked in the name of Islam.  When that happens, he can always point back to this speech and to negotiations with Iran and say “I came with outstretched arms, I tried to include you… I told you some things about how fabulous you are.”  And when all of that is rejected, then that’s when he can say “Now lets really discuss what is wrong with your religion, and where do our [American] values clash with Islamic values?  Will he do that? That's That’s the real question. But I don’t know if he will do it.  George Bush never did it.  He used the term "Islamofascism"; once but quickly took it back.  So I don’t know.  We will see.

geplaatst door Joop

dinsdag 17 februari 2009

Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West

Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West

Obsession is a film about the threat of Radical Islam to Western civilization. Using unique footage from Arab television, it reveals an 'insiders view' of the hatred the Radicals are teaching, their incitement of global jihad, and their goal of world domination.

Playlist, click on pic below

Obsession


vrijdag 13 februari 2009

Freedom go to hell

Pat Condell speaks out

Britain's spineless government

Dutch MP banned from Britain
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newst...

Labour minister praises Muslims because "secular commentators are afraid to criticise them."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newst...

"Freedom go to hell" and other choice slogans.
http://www.snopes.com/photos/politics...

When the original screening was cancelled Lord Ahmed told the Pakistani press it was "a victory for the Muslim community".
http://www.app.com.pk/en_/index.php?o...

Fitna the movie
http://www.themoviefitna.com/fitna-th...

PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION IN SUPPORT OF GEERT WILDERS
http://www.petitiononline.com/wilders...

PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION AND SUPPORT THE GLOBAL CAMPAIGN AGAINST SHARIA LAW
http://www.onelawforall.org/
http://www.shariapetition.com/

You can download an audio version of this video at http://patcondell.libsyn.com/

Ayaan Hirsi Ali - Islam needs reform

source: PiroNiro

Ayaan Hirsi Ali talks about Islam and why modern day technology and medieval philosophies shouldn't mix. She also talks about the historical divergence between Islam and the west and the state of the Islamic world today.

Credit:
http://www.bigthink.com/
http://www.youtube.com/user/bigthink


woensdag 11 februari 2009

Hardtalk with Geert Wilders (BBC)

BBC interview August 2008 source

A Dutch court has ordered prosecutors to put a right-wing politician on trial for making anti-Islamic statements.

Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders made a controversial film last year equating Islam with violence and has likened the Koran to Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf.

The BBC's Stephen Sackur spoke to Mr Wilders in an edition of Hardtalk in August 2008.


The Spectator quite an other approach then this 'hard talking'  BBC interviewer:

Britain capitulates to terror

But now the government has announced that it is banning Wilders from the country. A letter from the Home Secretary’s office to Wilders, delivered via the British embassy in the Hague, said:

...the Secretary of State is of the view that your presence in the UK would pose a genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat to one of the fundamental interests of society. The Secretary of State is satisfied that your statements about Muslims and their beliefs, as expressed in your film Fitna and elsewhere would threaten community harmony and therefore public security in the UK.

So let’s get this straight. The British government allows people to march through British streets screaming support for Hamas, it allows Hizb ut Tahrir to recruit on campus for the jihad against Britain and the west, it takes no action against a Muslim peer who threatens mass intimidation of Parliament, but it bans from the country a member of parliament of a European democracy who wishes to address the British Parliament on the threat to life and liberty in the west from religious fascism.

It is he, not them, who is considered a ‘serious threat to one of the fundamental interests of society’. Why? Because the result of this stand for life and liberty against those who would destroy them might be an attack by violent thugs. The response is not to face down such a threat of violence but to capitulate to it instead.

It was the same reasoning that led the police on those pro-Hamas marches to confiscate the Israeli flag, on the grounds that it would provoke violence, while those screaming support for genocide and incitement against the Jews were allowed to do so. The reasoning was that the Israeli flag might provoke thuggery while the genocidal incitement would not. So those actually promoting aggression were allowed to do so while those who threatened no-one at all were repressed. And now a Dutch politician who doesn’t threaten anyone is banned for telling unpalatable truths about those who do; while those who threaten life and liberty find that the more they do so, the more the British government will do exactly what they want, in the interests of ‘community harmony’.

Wilders is a controversial politician, to be sure. But this is another fateful and defining issue for Britain’s governing class as it continues to sleepwalk into cultural suicide.  If British MPs do not raise hell about this banning order, if they go along with this spinelessness, if they fail to stand up for the principle that the British Parliament of all places must be free to hear what a fellow democratically elected politician has to say about one of the most difficult and urgent issues of our time, if they fail to hold the line against the threat of violence but capitulate to it instead, they will be signalling that Britain is no longer the cradle of freedom and democracy but its graveyard.

Source: The Spectator, Melanie Philips
--------------------------------------------------------------
Update: Mail On Line

"UK Independence Party peer Lord Pearson, who invited Mr Wilders to Britain, said the screening of the film would go ahead today 'with or without Mr Wilders'.

In a joint statement he and cross-bench peer Baroness Cox said they were 'promoting freedom of speech' and accused the Government of 'appeasing' militant Islam.

They added: 'Geert Wilder's Fitna film, available on the web, is not a threat to anyone.
'It merely suggests how the Koran has been used by militant Islamists to promote and justify their violence.

'They react in fury and menace to our intention to show the film and have boasted that their threats of aggressive demonstrations prevented its previous showing in the Mother of Parliaments.

'This was not the case - the event was postponed to clarify issues of freedom of speech.

'The threat of intimidation in fact increases the justification for the film to be shown and discussed in Parliament and by the British and international press.'"


 
 

dinsdag 10 februari 2009

Islamophonic: Converting to Islam

Riazat Butt visits Muslims in Wales, and talks about the process of converting to Islam

Welcome to a long-overdue edition of Islamophonic. We've been tucked away for a while but we're back – bigger and juicier than your average pod.

In this programme we talk to people who have converted to Islam. I am told that people don't actually convert - that's what happens with lofts, see – they embrace Islam, which makes it sound like a cuddly and warming experience.

But is it? I find out why people chose the faith and what effect its had on their lives. I also discover what challenges they face once they've said the shahada.

There's also a random quiz for which you receive no rewards whatsoever. It's all in the taking part.


Bron: The Guardian               <p><p><p> Islamophonic podcast: Converting to Islam | World news | guardian.co.uk </p></p></p>              

               

vrijdag 6 februari 2009

A response to Geert Wilder's Fitna (From the Council of Ex-Muslims)

source : PiroNiro

Titel1 The Council of Ex-Muslims respond to the movie Fitna, a short film made by controversial Dutch politician Geert Wilders.

maandag 29 december 2008

From the left, a call to end the current Dutch notion of tolerance

International Herald Tribune

Images1 By John Vinocur,

Monday, December 29, 2008

AMSTERDAM: Two years ago, the Dutch could quietly congratulate themselves on having brought what seemed to be a fair measure of consensus and reason to the meanest intersection in their national political life: the one where integration of Muslim immigrants crossed Dutch identity.

In the run-up to choosing a new government in 2006, just 24 percent of the voters considered the issue important, and only 4 percent regarded it as the election's central theme.

What a turnabout, it seemed - and whatever the reason (spent passions, optimism, resignation?), it was a soothing respite for a country whose history of tolerance was the first in 21st-century Europe to clash with the on-street realities of its growing Muslim population.

Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States, the Netherlands had lived through something akin to a populist revolt against accommodating Islamic immigrants led by Pim Fortuyn, who was later murdered; the assassination of the filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, accused of blasphemy by a homegrown Muslim killer; and the bitter departure from the Netherlands of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali woman who became a member of Parliament before being marked for death for her criticism of radical Islam.
Now something fairly remarkable is happening again.

Two weeks ago, the country's biggest left-wing political grouping, the Labor Party, which has responsibility for integration as a member of the coalition government led by the Christian Democrats, issued a position paper calling for the end of the failed model of Dutch "tolerance."
It came at the same time Nicolas Sarkozy was making a case in France for greater opportunities for minorities that also contained an admission that the French notion of equality "doesn't work anymore."

But there was a difference. If judged on the standard scale of caution in dealing with cultural clashes and Muslims' obligations to their new homes in Europe, the language of the Dutch position paper and Lilianne Ploumen, Labor's chairperson, was exceptional.
The paper said: "The mistake we can never repeat is stifling criticism of cultures and religions for reasons of tolerance."

Government and politicians had too long failed to acknowledge the feelings of "loss and estrangement" felt by Dutch society facing parallel communities that disregard its language, laws and customs.

Newcomers, according to Ploumen, must avoid "self-designated victimization."
She asserted, "the grip of the homeland has to disappear" for these immigrants who, news reports indicate, also retain their original nationality at a rate of about 80 percent once becoming Dutch citizens.

Instead of reflexively offering tolerance with the expectation that things would work out in the long run, she said, the government strategy should be "bringing our values into confrontation with people who think otherwise."

There was more: punishment for trouble-making young people has to become so effective such that when they emerge from jail they are not automatically big shots, Ploumen said.
For Ploumen, talking to the local media, "The street is mine, too. I don't want to walk away if they're standing in my path.

"Without a strategy to deal with these issues, all discussion about creating opportunities and acceptance of diversity will be blocked by suspicion and negative experience."
And that comes from the heart of the traditional, democratic European left, where placing the onus of compatibility on immigrants never found such comfort before.
It's a point of view that makes reference to work and education as essential, but without the emphasis that they are the single path to integration.

Rather, Labor's line seems to stand on its head the old equation of jobs-plus-education equals integration. Conforming to Dutch society's social standards now comes first. Strikingly, it turns its back on cultural relativism and uses the word emancipation in discussing the process of outsiders' becoming Dutch.
For the Netherlands' Arab and Turkish population (about 6 percent of a total of 16 million) it refers to jobs and educational opportunities as "machines of emancipation." Yet it also suggests that employment and advancement will not come in full measure until there is a consciousness engagement in Dutch life by immigrants that goes far beyond the present level.

Indeed, Ploumen says, "Integration calls on the greatest effort from the new Dutch. Let go of where you come from; choose the Netherlands unconditionally." Immigrants must "take responsibility for this country" and cherish and protect its Dutch essence.
Not clear enough? Ploumen insists, "The success of the integration process is hindered by the disproportionate number of non-natives involved in criminality and trouble-making, by men who refuse to shake hands with women, by burqas and separate courses for women on citizenship.

"We have to stop the existence of parallel societies within our society."
And the obligations of the native Dutch? Ploumen's answer is, "People who have their roots here have to offer space to traditions, religions and cultures which are new to Dutch society" - but without fear of expressing criticism. "Hurting feelings is allowed, and criticism of religion, too."

The why of this happening now when a recession could accelerate new social tensions, particularly among nonskilled workers, has a couple of explanations.
A petty, political one: It involves a Labor Party on an uptick, with its the party chief, Wouter Bos, who serves as finance minister, showing optimism that the Dutch can avoid a deep recession. The cynical take has him casting the party's new integration policy as a fresh bid to consolidate momentum ahead of elections for the European Parliament in June.
A kinder, gentler explanation (that comes, remarkably, from Frits Bolkestein, the former Liberal Party leader, European commissioner, and no friend of the socialists, who began writing in 1991 about the enormous challenge posed to Europe by Muslim immigration):
"The multi-cultis just aren't making the running anymore. It's a brave step towards a new normalcy in this country. "

Geplaatst door Joop

maandag 8 december 2008

Muslims in India Put Aside Grievances to Repudiate Terrorism

Indian Muslims, including seminary students, above, marched Sunday through the heart of Mumbai to condemn a terrorist siege on the city that ended on Nov. 29.

MUMBAI, India — Throngs of Indian Muslims, ranging from Bollywood actors to skullcap-wearing seminary students, marched through the heart of Mumbai and several other cities on Sunday, holding up banners proclaiming their condemnation of terrorism and loyalty to the Indian state.

The protests, though relatively small, were the latest in a series of striking public gestures by Muslims — who have often come under suspicion after past attacks — to defensively dissociate their own grievances as a minority here from any sort of sympathy for terrorism or radical politics in the wake of the deadly assault here that ended Nov. 29.

Muslim leaders have refused to allow the bodies of the nine militants killed in the attacks to be buried in Islamic cemeteries, saying the men were not true Muslims. They also suspended the annual Dec. 6 commemoration of a 1992 riot in which Hindus destroyed a mosque, in an effort to avert communal tension. Muslim religious scholars and public figures have issued strongly worded condemnations of the attacks.

Read more in Source: New York Times

Posted by Joop

woensdag 26 november 2008

PAD says it will allow Iran Airlines to fly Hajj pilgrims to Teheran

Source: The Nation

An airport official said the Flight IR809 of the Iran Airlines will leave the Suvarnabhumi International Airport at 11:10 am Wednesday to fly 416 Thai Muslims to Teheran. Earlier the day, a PAD leader announced at the rally site at the airport that the flight would take off at 9:20 am to fly the pilgrims to Teheran before flying to Saudi Arabia.

Zie ook: en hier de Volkskrant



Geplaatst door Joop

vrijdag 14 november 2008

Praise the Lord, or else...

Source: Appeasing islam

Watch Pat Condell also in: Stop Sharia law in Brittain 

and

many others...

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 3 november 2008

Hirsi Ali, critic of Islam, honored for courage

Source: Jewish Journal

Ayaan

A tall African-born woman, raised a devout Muslim but now one of Islam's sharpest critics, last week calmly dismantled some of the favorite shibboleths of American liberalism.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali was in town to accept an inaugural award for her remarkable personal and civic courage from Community Advocates, Inc., in front of some 600 Angelenos of various political stripes.

In an interview, and in parts of her remarks at the downtown Japan America Theatre, she questioned the virtues of multiculturalism, the West's understanding of Islam and its comprehension of the roots of terrorism.

Hirsi Ali, 38, was born in Somalia, was an ultra-devout Muslim during adolescence, but changed gradually, and then radically, when she found asylum in Holland in 1992.

She was elected to the lower house of the Dutch parliament in 2003 and became an international figure in 2004, after she wrote the screenplay for the short film "Submission," a barbed indictment of Islam's treatment of women.

That same year, the movie's director, Theo van Gogh, was assassinated on an Amsterdam street by a young Muslim, who pinned a death threat against Hirsi Ali to Van Gogh's chest.

She now lives under constant police protection in America and continues to write and speak out as a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank.

In 2005, she made TIME's list of "100 of the World's Most Influential People."

Her categorical denunciations of Islam have been questioned, but never her personal mettle. It was for the latter characteristic that she was honored with the inaugural Ziegler Prize For Courage of Conviction by Community Advocates, Inc. (CAI) chairman and former Los Angeles mayor Richard Riordan, together with CAI President David Lehrer and Vice President Joe Hicks.

The accompanying citation reads: "In recognition of your indomitable courage and spirit, which teaches, offers hope and provides inspiration to humanity."

In her acceptance response and during her interview with The Journal, Hirsi Ali also faulted the West for its choice of weapons in fighting threats from Iran and Islamic militants.

"The United States has the option of using military force against Iran, which it may still have to do, or diplomacy, which has not worked so far," she said.

But the West has failed by not promoting its ideology in the "clash of ideas and values," Hirsi Ali declared.

"When Saudi Arabia spends $2 billion abroad for hospitals, mosques and schools, it conditions the aid on the recipient's acceptance of Saudi Arabia's fundamentalist form of Islam," she said. "But Western private and public philanthropy comes with no message, it's value free."

What the West must do, she urged, is to attach a clear message to its aid inculcating the values of individual responsibility, the equality of men and women and a scientific approach to counter tribal superstitions.

The West also fails to understand that there's little basic difference between Islamic "moderates" and "extremists," Hirsi Ali argued.

"When Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad denies the Holocaust, we may consider him crazy, but the concept that Jews are vermin is accepted throughout the Islamic world," she said. "In none of the 57 nations that make up the Organization of Islamic Countries is the Holocaust taught."

Hirsi Ali recalled, "I was raised in an educated family, and my father led the opposition to the Somali dictatorship, but I heard nothing about the Holocaust until I came to The Netherlands."

Another Western mistake lies in its admiration of multiculturalism and its exclusive focus on white racism, Hirsi Ali maintained.

"It is a fallacy that all cultures are equally valuable and must be preserved," she said. "Some cultures are superior to others. Some value human rights, while others justify the subjugation of women."

Along the same line, "While white racism is properly denounced, we're too shy to address black racism or Islamic racism."

CAI, headed by the white liberal Lerner and the black conservative Hicks, has made a name for itself by frequently challenging the accepted wisdom and strategies of mainstream civil rights and human relations groups.

In its writings and actions, CAI states, it seeks "to promote critical discourse about issues that transcend race, ethnicity, gender and religion."

Posted by Lucida

donderdag 23 oktober 2008

International Freedom Fighter Advocate for the Rights of Muslim Women In Rare Public Appearance in Los Angeles Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Source

Ayaan1

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who was born in Somalia and who TIME magazine included in its list of 100 of the World'ss Most Influential People will make a rare public appearance in Los Angeles. Ms. Hirsi Ali will speak before several hundred members of the community at the Japan America Theatre at 244 South San Pedro Street in Little Tokyo where she will receive the inaugural Ziegler Prize for Courage of Conviction, conferred by vanguard civil rights and social criticism organization Community Advocates, Inc. (CAI). www.cai-la.org. Ms. Hirsi Ali will receive the Ziegler Prize for acting in a principled manner, in spite of great personal and professional risk.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who was born in Somalia and who TIME magazine included in its list of 100 of the World'ss Most Influential People will make a rare public appearance in Los Angeles. Ms. Hirsi Ali will speak before several hundred members of the community at the Japan America Theatre at 244 South San Pedro Street in Little Tokyo where she will receive the inaugural Ziegler Prize for Courage of Conviction, conferred by vanguard civil rights organization Community Advocates, Inc. (CAI).

Ayaan is an award-winning humanitarian and freedom fighter, and one of the most outspoken political figures in the world today. Ayaan first gained international attention following the murder in the Netherlands of Theo van Gogh, who had directed her short film, Submission, about the oppression of women under Islam. The assassin, a radical Muslim, left a death threat for her attached to a knife in van Gogh'ss chest. Determined not to be silenced and to voice the truth, Ayaan has committed her life to advocating for freedom of speech, the defense of the principles of the Enlightenment, the need to reform Islam, and the rights of Muslim women. Ayaan lives with round-the-clock protection. Her willingness to speak out and her abandonment of the Muslim faith have made her a target for violence by Islamic extremists. Disowned by her father, she has few ties left with her family. Threatened time and again with death, this courageous woman refuses to be silenced.

Ayaan will be in Los Angeles to accept the Ziegler Prize for Courage of Conviction to be conferred by former Los Angeles mayor, Richard J. Riordan, chairman of Community Advocates, Inc. The prestigious Ziegler Prize honors an individual--locally, nationally, or internationally-- who has demonstrated the qualities described so eloquently by President Kennedy--acting in a principled manner in spite of personal consequences, in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures. The award recognizes the work of those who go against the grain of conventional wisdom, often at great personal or professional risk--attributes that Community Advocates deeply admires, and according to which the organization has tried to model itself.

Community Advocates, Inc. (CAI) is a vanguard civil rights and social criticism organization based in Los Angeles, CA. The President of CAI, David Lehrer, and the Vice President, Joe Hicks, are well-known and outspoken civil rights leaders and social critics, one a black conservative Republican, and the other a white, Jewish Democrat, who joined forces six years ago to form CAI. CAI is striving to re-frame discussions about controversial and provocative issues, particularly race, ethnic tensions, education, multi-culturalism, inner city violence amongst others, through new and updated lenses.

Chaired by former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan. CAI has been at the forefront of a fresh approach to race, ethnic and cultural issues in Los Angeles and throughout the country, attempting to challenge the dominant strategies of civil rights and human relations groups promoting instead critical discourse about common ground issues that transcend race, ethnicity, gender and religion. www.cai-la.org.

Posted by Joop

maandag 29 september 2008

Obsession Islam

Source - 39 minutes - Part 1


Part 2

Gehele serie als playlist op Youtube (not embeddable)

 


Jihad

 


Geplaatst door Joop

Speech Geert Wilders in Hudson Instute

Source: Jihadwatch

America as the last man standing

Geertwilders "In a generation or two, the US will ask itself: who lost Europe?"

Here is the speech of Geert Wilders, chairman Party for Freedom, the Netherlands, at the Four Seasons, New York, introducing an Alliance of Patriots and announcing the Facing Jihad Conference in Jerusalem (which I hope to be attending).

The speech was sponsored by the Hudson Institute on September 25.


Dear friends,

Thank you very much for inviting me. Great to be at the Four Seasons. I come from a country that has one season only: a rainy season that starts January 1st and ends December 31st. When we have three sunny days in a row, the government declares a national emergency. So Four Seasons, that’s new to me.

It’s great to be in New York. When I see the skyscrapers and office buildings, I think of what Ayn Rand said: “The sky over New York and the will of man made visible.” Of course. Without the Dutch you would have been nowhere, still figuring out how to buy this island from the Indians. But we are glad we did it for you. And, frankly, you did a far better job than we possibly could have done.

I come to America with a mission. All is not well in the old world. There is a tremendous danger looming, and it is very difficult to be optimistic. We might be in the final stages of the Islamization of Europe. This not only is a clear and present danger to the future of Europe itself, it is a threat to America and the sheer survival of the West. The danger I see looming is the scenario of America as the last man standing. The United States as the last bastion of Western civilization, facing an Islamic Europe. In a generation or two, the US will ask itself: who lost Europe? Patriots from around Europe risk their lives every day to prevent precisely this scenario form becoming a reality.

My short lecture consists of 4 parts.

First I will describe the situation on the ground in Europe. Then, I will say a few things about Islam. Thirdly, if you are still here, I will talk a little bit about the movie you just saw. To close I will tell you about a meeting in Jerusalem.

The Europe you know is changing. You have probably seen the landmarks. The Eiffel Tower and Trafalgar Square and Rome’s ancient buildings and maybe the canals of Amsterdam. They are still there. And they still look very much the same as they did a hundred years ago.

But in all of these cities, sometimes a few blocks away from your tourist destination, there is another world, a world very few visitors see – and one that does not appear in your tourist guidebook. It is the world of the parallel society created by Muslim mass-migration. All throughout Europe a new reality is rising: entire Muslim neighbourhoods where very few indigenous people reside or are even seen. And if they are, they might regret it. This goes for the police as well. It’s the world of head scarves, where women walk around in figureless tents, with baby strollers and a group of children. Their husbands, or slaveholders if you prefer, walk three steps ahead. With mosques on many street corner. The shops have signs you and I cannot read. You will be hard-pressed to find any economic activity. These are Muslim ghettos controlled by religious fanatics. These are Muslim neighbourhoods, and they are mushrooming in every city across Europe. These are the building-blocks for territorial control of increasingly larger portions of Europe, street by street, neighbourhood by neighbourhood, city by city.

There are now thousands of mosques throughout Europe. With larger congregations than there are in churches. And in every European city there are plans to build super-mosques that will dwarf every church in the region. Clearly, the signal is: we rule.

Many European cities are already one-quarter Muslim: just take Amsterdam, Marseille and Malmo in Sweden. In many cities the majority of the under-18 population is Muslim. Paris is now surrounded by a ring of Muslim neighbourhoods. Mohammed is the most popular name among boys in many cities. In some elementary schools in Amsterdam the farm can no longer be mentioned, because that would also mean mentioning the pig, and that would be an insult to Muslims. Many state schools in Belgium and Denmark only serve halal food to all pupils. In once-tolerant Amsterdam gays are beaten up almost exclusively by Muslims. Non-Muslim women routinely hear “whore, whore”. Satellite dishes are not pointed to local TV stations, but to stations in the country of origin. In France school teachers are advised to avoid authors deemed offensive to Muslims, including Voltaire and Diderot; the same is increasingly true of Darwin. The history of the Holocaust can in many cases no longer be taught because of Muslim sensitivity. In England sharia courts are now officially part of the British legal system. Many neighbourhoods in France are no-go areas for women without head scarves. Last week a man almost died after being beaten up by Muslims in Brussels, because he was drinking during the Ramadan. Jews are fleeing France in record numbers, on the run for the worst wave of anti-Semitism since World War II. French is now commonly spoken on the streets of Tel Aviv and Netanya, Israel. I could go on forever with stories like this. Stories about Islamization.

A total of fifty-four million Muslims now live in Europe. San Diego University recently calculated that a staggering 25 percent of the population in Europe will be Muslim just 12 years from now. Bernhard Lewis has predicted a Muslim majority by the end of this century.

Now these are just numbers. And the numbers would not be threatening if the Muslim-immigrants had a strong desire to assimilate. But there are few signs of that. The Pew Research Center reported that half of French Muslims see their loyalty to Islam as greater than their loyalty to France. One-third of French Muslims do not object to suicide attacks. The British Centre for Social Cohesion reported that one-third of British Muslim students are in favour of a worldwide caliphate. A Dutch study reported that half of Dutch Muslims admit they “understand” the 9/11 attacks.

Muslims demand what they call ‘respect’. And this is how we give them respect. Our elites are willing to give in. To give up. In my own country we have gone from calls by one cabinet member to turn Muslim holidays into official state holidays, to statements by another cabinet member, that Islam is part of Dutch culture, to an affirmation by the Christian-Democratic attorney general that he is willing to accept sharia in the Netherlands if there is a Muslim majority. We have cabinet members with passports from Morocco and Turkey.

Muslim demands are supported by unlawful behaviour, ranging from petty crimes and random violence, for example against ambulance workers and bus drivers, to small-scale riots. Paris has seen its uprising in the low-income suburbs, the banlieus. Some prefer to see these as isolated incidents, but I call it a Muslim intifada. I call the perpetrators “settlers”. Because that is what they are. They do not come to integrate into our societies, they come to integrate our society into their Dar-al-Islam. Therefore, they are settlers.

Much of this street violence I mentioned is directed exclusively against non-Muslims, forcing many native people to leave their neighbourhoods, their cities, their countries.

Politicians shy away from taking a stand against this creeping sharia. They believe in the equality of all cultures. Moreover, on a mundane level, Muslims are now a swing vote not to be ignored.

Our many problems with Islam cannot be explained by poverty, repression or the European colonial past, as the Left claims. Nor does it have anything to do with Palestinians or American troops in Iraq. The problem is Islam itself.

Allow me to give you a brief Islam 101. The first thing you need to know about Islam is the importance of the book of the Quran. The Quran is Allah’s personal word, revealed by an angel to Mohammed, the prophet. This is where the trouble starts. Every word in the Quran is Allah’s word and therefore not open to discussion or interpretation. It is valid for every Muslim and for all times. Therefore, there is no such a thing as moderate Islam. Sure, there are a lot of moderate Muslims. But a moderate Islam is non-existent.

The Quran calls for hatred, violence, submission, murder, and terrorism. The Quran calls for Muslims to kill non-Muslims, to terrorize non-Muslims and to fulfil their duty to wage war: violent jihad. Jihad is a duty for every Muslim, Islam is to rule the world – by the sword. The Quran is clearly anti-Semitic, describing Jews as monkeys and pigs.

The second thing you need to know is the importance of Mohammed the prophet. His behaviour is an example to all Muslims and cannot be criticized. Now, if Mohammed had been a man of peace, let us say like Ghandi and Mother Theresa wrapped in one, there would be no problem. But Mohammed was a warlord, a mass murderer, a pedophile, and had several marriages – at the same time. Islamic tradition tells us how he fought in battles, how he had his enemies murdered and even had prisoners of war executed. Mohammed himself slaughtered the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza. He advised on matters of slavery, but never advised to liberate slaves. Islam has no other morality than the advancement of Islam. If it is good for Islam, it is good. If it is bad for Islam, it is bad. There is no gray area or other side.

Quran as Allah’s own word and Mohammed as the perfect man are the two most important facets of Islam. Let no one fool you about Islam being a religion. Sure, it has a god, and a here-after, and 72 virgins. But in its essence Islam is a political ideology. It is a system that lays down detailed rules for society and the life of every person. Islam wants to dictate every aspect of life. Islam means ‘submission’. Islam is not compatible with freedom and democracy, because what it strives for is sharia. If you want to compare Islam to anything, compare it to communism or national-socialism, these are all totalitarian ideologies.

This is what you need to know about Islam, in order to understand what is going on in Europe. For millions of Muslims the Quran and the live of Mohammed are not 14 centuries old, but are an everyday reality, an ideal, that guide every aspect of their lives. Now you know why Winston Churchill called Islam “the most retrograde force in the world”, and why he compared Mein Kampf to the Quran.

Which brings me to my movie, Fitna.

I am a lawmaker, and not a movie maker. But I felt I had the moral duty to educate about Islam. The duty to make clear that the Quran stands at the heart of what some people call terrorism but is in reality jihad. I wanted to show that the problems of Islam are at the core of Islam, and do not belong to its fringes.

Now, from the day the plan for my movie was made public, it caused quite a stir, in the Netherlands and throughout Europe. First, there was a political storm, with government leaders, across the continent in sheer panic. The Netherlands was put under a heightened terror alert, because of possible attacks or a revolt by our Muslim population. The Dutch branch of the Islamic organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir declared that the Netherlands was due for an attack. Internationally, there was a series of incidents. The Taliban threatened to organize additional attacks against Dutch troops in Afghanistan, and a website linked to Al Qaeda published the message that I ought to be killed, while various muftis in the Middle East stated that I would be responsible for all the bloodshed after the screening of the movie. In Afghanistan and Pakistan the Dutch flag was burned on several occasions. Dolls representing me were also burned. The Indonesian President announced that I will never be admitted into Indonesia again, while the UN Secretary General and the European Union issued cowardly statements in the same vein as those made by the Dutch Government. I could go on and on. It was an absolute disgrace, a sell-out.

A plethora of legal troubles also followed, and have not ended yet. Currently the state of Jordan is litigating against me. Only last week there were renewed security agency reports about a heightened terror alert for the Netherlands because of Fitna.

Now, I would like to say a few things about Israel. Because, very soon, we will get together in its capitol. The best way for a politician in Europe to loose votes is to say something positive about Israel. The public has wholeheartedly accepted the Palestinian narrative, and sees Israel as the aggressor. I, however, will continue to speak up for Israel. I see defending Israel as a matter of principle. I have lived in this country and visited it dozens of times. I support Israel. First, because it is the Jewish homeland after two thousand years of exile up to and including Auschwitz, second because it is a democracy, and third because Israel is our first line of defense.

Samuel Huntington writes it so aptly: “Islam has bloody borders”. Israel is located precisely on that border. This tiny country is situated on the fault line of jihad, frustrating Islam’s territorial advance. Israel is facing the front lines of jihad, like Kashmir, Kosovo, the Philippines, Southern Thailand, Darfur in Sudan, Lebanon, and Aceh in Indonesia. Israel is simply in the way. The same way West-Berlin was during the Cold War.

The war against Israel is not a war against Israel. It is a war against the West. It is jihad. Israel is simply receiving the blows that are meant for all of us. If there would have been no Israel, Islamic imperialism would have found other venues to release its energy and its desire for conquest. Thanks to Israeli parents who send their children to the army and lay awake at night, parents in Europe and America can sleep well and dream, unaware of the dangers looming.

Many in Europe argue in favor of abandoning Israel in order to address the grievances of our Muslim minorities. But if Israel were, God forbid, to go down, it would not bring any solace to the West. It would not mean our Muslim minorities would all of a sudden change their behavior, and accept our values. On the contrary, the end of Israel would give enormous encouragement to the forces of Islam. They would, and rightly so, see the demise of Israel as proof that the West is weak, and doomed. The end of Israel would not mean the end of our problems with Islam, but only the beginning. It would mean the start of the final battle for world domination. If they can get Israel, they can get everything. Therefore, it is not that the West has a stake in Israel. It is Israel.

It is very difficult to be an optimist in the face of the growing Islamization of Europe. All the tides are against us. On all fronts we are losing. Demographically the momentum is with Islam. Muslim immigration is even a source of pride within ruling liberal parties. Academia, the arts, the media, trade unions, the churches, the business world, the entire political establishment have all converted to the suicidal theory of multiculturalism. So-called journalists volunteer to label any and all critics of Islamization as a ‘right-wing extremists’ or ‘racists’. The entire establishment has sided with our enemy. Leftists, liberals and Christian-Democrats are now all in bed with Islam.

This is the most painful thing to see: the betrayal by our elites. At this moment in Europe’s history, our elites are supposed to lead us. To stand up for centuries of civilization. To defend our heritage. To honour our eternal Judeo-Christian values that made Europe what it is today. But there are very few signs of hope to be seen at the governmental level. Sarkozy, Merkel, Brown, Berlusconi; in private, they probably know how grave the situation is. But when the little red light goes on, they stare into the camera and tell us that Islam is a religion of peace, and we should all try to get along nicely and sing Kumbaya. They willingly participate in, what President Reagan so aptly called: “the betrayal of our past, the squandering of our freedom.”

If there is hope in Europe, it comes from the people, not from the elites. Change can only come from a grass-roots level. It has to come from the citizens themselves. Yet these patriots will have to take on the entire political, legal and media establishment.

Over the past years there have been some small, but encouraging, signs of a rebirth of the original European spirit. Maybe the elites turn their backs on freedom, the public does not. In my country, the Netherlands, 60 percent of the population now sees the mass immigration of Muslims as the number one policy mistake since World War II. And another 60 percent sees Islam as the biggest threat to our national identity. I don’t think the public opinion in Holland is very different from other European countries.

Patriotic parties that oppose jihad are growing, against all odds. My own party debuted two years ago, with five percent of the vote. Now it stands at ten percent in the polls. The same is true of all smililary-minded parties in Europe. They are fighting the liberal establishment, and are gaining footholds on the political arena, one voter at the time.

Now, for the first time, these patriotic parties will come together and exchange experiences. It may be the start of something big. Something that might change the map of Europe for decades to come. It might also be Europe’s last chance.

This December a conference will take place in Jerusalem. Thanks to Professor Aryeh Eldad, a member of Knesset, we will be able to watch Fitna in the Knesset building and discuss the jihad. We are organizing this event in Israel to emphasize the fact that we are all in the same boat together, and that Israel is part of our common heritage. Those attending will be a select audience. No racist organizations will be allowed. And we will only admit parties that are solidly democratic.

This conference will be the start of an Alliance of European patriots. This Alliance will serve as the backbone for all organizations and political parties that oppose jihad and Islamization. For this Alliance I seek your support.

This endeavor may be crucial to America and to the West. America may hold fast to the dream that, thanks tot its location, it is safe from jihad and shaira. But seven years ago to the day, there was still smoke rising from ground zero, following the attacks that forever shattered that dream. Yet there is a danger even greater danger than terrorist attacks, the scenario of America as the last man standing. The lights may go out in Europe faster than you can imagine. An Islamic Europe means a Europe without freedom and democracy, an economic wasteland, an intellectual nightmare, and a loss of military might for America - as its allies will turn into enemies, enemies with atomic bombs. With an Islamic Europe, it would be up to America alone to preserve the heritage of Rome, Athens and Jerusalem.

Dear friends, liberty is the most precious of gifts. My generation never had to fight for this freedom, it was offered to us on a silver platter, by people who fought for it with their lives. All throughout Europe American cemeteries remind us of the young boys who never made it home, and whose memory we cherish. My generation does not own this freedom; we are merely its custodians. We can only hand over this hard won liberty to Europe’s children in the same state in which it was offered to us. We cannot strike a deal with mullahs and imams. Future generations would never forgive us. We cannot squander our liberties. We simply do not have the right to do so.

This is not the first time our civilization is under threat. We have seen dangers before. We have been betrayed by our elites before. They have sided with our enemies before. And yet, then, freedom prevailed.

These are not times in which to take lessons from appeasement, capitulation, giving away, giving up or giving in. These are not times in which to draw lessons from Mr. Chamberlain. These are times calling us to draw lessons from Mr. Churchill and the words he spoke in 1942:

“Never give in, never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy”.

Posted by Joop

donderdag 11 september 2008

Ayaan Hirsi Ali advocates social reform in Muslim countries

Charlie Owen, Vail CO, Colorado

bron :VailDaily

Bilde1_3 BEAVER CREEK, Colorado — Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s entire life has been a battle of opposing beliefs. She was raised in a strict Islamic household where at a young age she was tormented by the religion’s abusive teachings towards women and violence towards non-believers.

As she grew up, she was tempted by the allure of Western cultures, but had been taught to hate Americans and their alliances with the Jews. When her father told her she had to marry a Muslim man whom she didn’t even know, she was forced to make a choice between submitting to her father and husband — which she’d been taught her whole life — or leaving behind all she held dear for her personal freedom.

Finally, on this day, seven years ago, Ali began to steel her will for “the final showdown” in her own head, one more decision she knew she had to make: To denounce her faith in Islam; a religion she now viewed as completely cruel and intolerant, or side with the same religion the hijackers of 9/11 claimed gave them the right to take the lives of American infidels.

“I asked the question that none of us (Muslims) are supposed to ask: Is there a God, is there a hell?” Ali said during her speech at the Vilar Performing Arts Center Monday night.
On this, the seventh anniversary of 9/11, perhaps nothing could be more fitting than Ali’s speech in Beaver Creek. For Ali, turning her back on her religion was no small thing.

She was born in Somalia and spent her childhood living in poverty in third world countries — Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya. She knew letting go of her religion could mean losing her family, spending eternity in hell and possibly even her death. In the end, after all the “mind gymnastics,” she became an atheist.

“There are circumstances that you cannot control in life, but you can learn and figure out what you can control,” Ali said.

Down her own path

After listing the many obstacles in her life that could have prevented her from taking control of her future — premature birth, an unhappy family life, forced genital mutilation and her rigid Islamic upbringing — Ali said she promised herself as a teenager she would never end up like her mother.

“By learning to read and write, I did what my mother feared most,” Ali said. “I would go down my own path and do my own thing.”

According to Ali, women are to bow to the wishes of the men in their lives and to Allah and never follow the path to their own fulfillment. Denying herself was what she had always been taught, but would no longer do.

Instead, Ali devoted herself to learning as much as she could about other cultures and studied several different languages. Eventually, she sought political asylum in the Netherlands while trying to escape an arranged marriage. In Holland, Ali earned a degree in political science and became a member of Parliament where she sought to bring attention to the treatment of women in Islamic societies. Now she is a women’s rights activist, best-selling author (“Infidel”) and currently works with the conservative think tank, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research.

No regrets
Though Ali escaped the third world countries she’d been raised in, she couldn’t escape Islam’s impact on her life. A few months after Ali and her friend Theo van Gogh filmed a movie about the mistreatment of women in Islamic cultures, van Gogh was brutally murdered by an Islamist extremist in the streets. The attacker shot van Gogh eight times and slit his throat before stabbing a letter threatening Ali’s life into his chest.

“I do not regret anything in my life except the death of Theo van Gogh,” Ali said. “Regret is a waste of energy.”

Now Ali lives in America with round-the-clock security and continues to fight for the causes she believes in.

As proof that she inspires people all over the world, even here in Eagle Valley, Ali was the first speaker to ever sell out the Vilar Center.

“We’re very excited and very excited for the Vail Symposium that this is such a successful event and we’re very glad to be able to be a part of making it happen,” said Kris Sabel, executive director of the Vilar Performing Arts Center. “The question is: What was the thing about her that made people jump on this bandwagon?”

Eagle resident Liz Spetnagel read Ali’s memoir, “Infidel,” and decided she had to see the author in person.

“I’m more of a fiction reader and I still managed to read it in a day and a half,” Spetnagel said. “I found it to be very compelling and very interesting and pretty inspiring. She’s a woman my own age and she’s certainly done a lot more than I have.”

Beaver Creek resident Anne Prinzhorn agreed.

“She’s a brilliant women and we often don’t recognize that brilliance in people from different cultures,” said Prinzhorn, who works in Uganda a few months out of each year helping educate the poor.

Other people admired Ali’s bravery.

“There’s been death threats on her life because of the fact that she’s so secular and so political in a way that annoys certain fundamental groups,” said Jay Wissot of Vail. “I think she’s an incredibly brave woman and the fact that she’s able to conduct a public life when her life is under threat engenders a great deal of admiration on my part.”

‘It was worth it’

Does Ali’s appearance mean we’ll see more well-known political and social figures speaking in our community? It’s a possibility, according to Fraidy Aber, executive director of the Vail Symposium, the non-profit that brought Ali to town.

“To me this is not only a success in terms of Ayaan speaking at the Vilar Center, but in terms of the community coming together to support learning opportunities,” Aber said.

Ali wrapped up the evening with a Q-and-A session during which she talked freely about her beliefs on America’s immigration issues (we’re not perfect, but we’re trying), racial profiling to stop terrorist attacks (it’s a way to narrow down information but should never be used to assume guilt) and what she’s currently reading (Les Miserables).

After all Ali’s been through, and the pain that her former religion caused her, she still had
one simple desire.

“I wish fellow Muslims would sit here and reason with me,” Ali said, pointing out that to her, the Islamic religion doesn’t hold the answers to all of life’s questions.

And for all she’s been through, she had this to say: “It was worth it, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

Geplaatst door Joop (met toestemming van de auteur}

zondag 7 september 2008

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, author of ‘Infidel,’ to speak at Vilar

bron: Vail Daily

Bilde1 BEAVER CREEK, Colorado — An international humanitarian, a best-selling author, a prominent champion of liberal democracy, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, raised a Muslim, has a remarkable story.

A target of violence because of her willingness to speak out against her abandonment of the Muslim faith, Ali refuses to be silenced.

On Monday evening at the Vilar Performing Arts Center, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, author of “Infidel” will take center stage and discuss her experiences with an intimate, sold-out crowd.


The talk

Ali will focus on the clash of civilizations: Islam and the West, as well as describe her experience of coming to America. More than simply re-stating her story from her book, Ali will go deeper into the complexities of the mind under stress. Specifically, Ali will be discussing the process of evolving mindsets, as well as the process of evolving the spirit.

“We are very interested in learning more from Ayaan about how she was able to evolve her mindset and her thought processes from her upbringing to taking on a degree of independent thinking that necessitates security,” said Fraidy Aber, executive director of the Vail Symposium, the group responsible for bringing Ali to town.

Ali’s book, “Infidel,” has been a bestseller at the Bookworm of Edwards since it was published in English in 2007.

“We are really excited — not only is this of interest to our local community — this will also give us a perspective on the world at large, said Nicole Magistro, owner of the Bookworm in Edwards. “This is a national bestselling author — the caliber of author that we are exposing our community to is a real reflection on our community, that we are interested and engaging in world affairs.

“It has been wildly popular with our 80 book clubs registered at the store,” Magistro said. “This is an accessible story, for woman and men and all ages ... and I think her message will be very strong.”

The story

Born in Mogadishu, Somalia in 1969, Ali had a traditional Muslim upbringing. She embraced Islam, regularly studied the Quran and admired the movement of the Muslim Brotherhood. Her father, a political opponent of the Somali dictatorship, raised the family in exile, bringing them from Somalia to Saudi Arabia, then to Ethiopia and Kenya.

In 1992, she was forced into an arranged marriage by her father in a ceremony that she refused to attend. To escape, she fled to the Netherlands.

It was there that she first realized the inconsistencies between the Western society that embraced her and the Muslim culture in which she was raised. Ali earned a degree in political science and served in the Dutch parliament for three years. She began focusing on the challenges of integration for Muslim immigrant groups in the West and advocating for women’s rights in a campaign to reform Islam.

Ask Ayaan a question
Due to the large volume of attendees and limited time frame, the Symposium is asking interested parties to submit questions beforehand. Selected questions will be submitted to Ayaan Hirsi Ali at the event.
If interested, please submit your question along with your name, place of residence, and the name of your book club, if applicable. Send questions to info@vailsymposium.org. The sooner the questions are received, the more likely the questions will be asked.

Now Ali lives with round-the-clock protection. She is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington D.C., researching the relationship between the West and Islam, women’s rights in Islam and violence against women propagated in the name of religious and cultural arguments.

If you go ...
What: AuthorAyaan Hirsi Ali
Where: Vilar Performing Arts Center, Beaver Creek
When: Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Cost: $40. This event is currently sold out. Call the Vail Symposium to be put on a waiting list.
More information: Call the Symposium at 970-476-0954


geplaatst door Joop

donderdag 14 augustus 2008

Defend the Individual and So the West

By Ayaan Hirsi Ali - Source: American Enterprise Institute 

Thinkers of the Enlightenment, a set of new intellectual attitudes that remade Western culture in the 17th and 18th centuries, set out to understand the world and themselves through reason rather than religion. Their ideas led to massive advances in science, economics and commerce, the arts and human liberty, which underpin our present prosperity and social freedoms. Since the September 11, 2001, attacks, Islam has often been seen as the chief threat to the Enlightenment's legacy. But is there also something internal to Western intellectual history that leaves us vulnerable to the enemies of reason?

The West has cultivated an ethos of individualism, reason and tolerance, and an elaborate system in which every actor, from the individual to the nation-state, seeks to resolve conflict through words. The entire system is built on the idea of self-interest. This ethos rejects fanaticism. The alpha male, in our societies, is pacified and groomed to study hard, find a good job, and plan prudently for retirement. "While we in America are drugging our alpha boys with Ritalin," writes Lee Harris, author of The Suicide Of Reason, "the Muslims are doing everything in their power to encourage their alpha boys to be tough, aggressive and ruthless."

By dulling its people's instincts to stand up in defence of their own society and its values, the West is committing itself to slow suicide. Sometimes the response to attacks on Western societies is one of rapprochement, of softening our insistence on respect for the individual and the primacy of reason in public life. At others it is the reverse--a suspension of the civil liberties and normal legal processes that exemplify Western cultural achievements. But the way to rescue Western civilisation from its present path of what looks like decline can never be to challenge its tradition of reason and individualism.

Muslims have been migrating to the West in droves for decades now. They are in search of a better life.

I was not born in the West. I was raised with the code of Islam, and from birth I was indoctrinated into a tribal mind-set. Yet I have changed: I have adopted the values of the Enlightenment, and as a result I have to live with the rejection of my native clan as well as the Islamic tribe. Why have I done so? Because in a tribal society, life is cruel and terrible. And I am not alone. Muslims have been migrating to the West in droves for decades now. They are in search of a better life. Yet their tribal and cultural constraints have travelled with them. The multiculturalism and moral relativism that reign in the West have accommodated this.

Many Western leaders are terribly confused about the Islamic world. They are woefully uninformed and often unwilling to confront the tribal nature of Islam. The problem, however, is not too much reason, but too little. The enemies of reason within the West are religion and the Romantic movement. Both the Romantic movement and organised religion have contributed a great deal to the arts and to the spirituality of the Western mind, but they share a hostility to modernity.

It is not reason that accommodates and encourages the persistent segregation and tribalism of immigrant Muslim populations in the West. It is Romanticism and its descendants. Multiculturalism and moral relativism promote an idealisation of tribal life, and have shown themselves to be impervious to empirical criticism. I see today's Western leaders squandering a great and vital opportunity to compete with the agents of radical Islam for the minds of Muslims, especially those within their borders. But to do so, they must allow reason to prevail over sentiment.

To argue that children born and bred in superstitious cultures that value fanaticism are doomed to be governed by the law of the jungle is to ignore the lessons of the West's own past. There have been periods when the West was less than noble, when it engaged in crusades, inquisitions, witch-burnings, and genocides. Many of those now-Westerners who were born abroad into the law of the jungle, with its alpha males and submissive females, have since become acquainted with the culture of reason and have adopted it. They are even willing to die for it, perhaps with the same fanaticism as the jihadists willing to die for their tribe. While this conflict between Islam and the West is undeniably a deadly struggle between cultures, it is individuals who will determine the outcome.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI. She is the author of Infidel.

Related Links:

Related book review of The Suicide of Reason by Hirsi Ali

Related article on Islamic moderates by Hirsi Ali

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 6 augustus 2008

Fareed Zakaria interviews Ayaan Hirsi Ali on CNN

part 1 of Fareed Zakaria CNN: Ayaan Hirsi Ali Interview

part 2 of Fareed Zakaria CNN: Ayaan Hirsi Ali Interview

Posted by Joop

zaterdag 26 juli 2008

Humanitarian Ayaan Hirsi Ali added to Vail Symposium

Author best-selling book, ‘Infidel’ visits Beaver Creek on Sept. 8
BildeAyaan Hirsi Ali embodies the notion that freedom of discourse and expression is vital to the survival and vitality of liberal democracy. Ali’s 2007 internationally-bestselling memoir, “Infidel,” emerged as one of the most electrifying texts of the decade, detailing the violence and oppression she experienced as women growing up in a devout Muslim culture.

“Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s story is compelling and eye-opening. We are thrilled to be bringing her to this community,” said Fraidy Aber, executive director of the Vail Symposium. Ali was named one of Time Magazine’s “100 Most Influential People” of 2005, one of the Glamour Heroes of 2005 and the Prix Simone de Beauvoir in 2008.
Born in Mogadishu, Somalia in 1969, Ali had a traditional Muslim upbringing. She embraced Islam, regularly studied the Quran and admired the movement of the Muslim Brotherhood. Her father, a political opponent of the Somali dictatorship, raised the family in exile, bringing them from Somalia to Saudi Arabia, then to Ethiopia and Kenya.
In 1992, she was forced into an arranged marriage by her father in a ceremony that she refused to attend. To escape, she fled to the Netherlands. There, she first realized the inconsistencies between the Western society that embraced her and the Muslim culture in which she was raised. Ali earned a degree in political science and served in the Dutch parliament for three years. She began focusing on the challenges of integration for Muslim immigrant groups in the West and advocating for women’s rights in a campaign to reform Islam.
In 2004, Ali acquired an international spotlight following the murder of Theo Van Gogh, the director of “Submission,” a short film about the oppression of women under Islam. Van Gogh was assassinated by a radical Muslim, who left a death threat for Ali pinned to Van Gogh’s chest.
A target of violence because of her willingness to speak out against her abandonment of the Muslim faith, Ali refuses to be silenced. Now, Ali lives with round-the-clock protection. She is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington D.C., researching the relationship between the West and Islam, women’s rights in Islam and violence against women propagated in the name of religious and cultural arguments.

“One of the recent goals of the Vail Symposium is to bring one high-profile speaker to our deserving community each season,” Aber said. “We expect a great response from the community and are seeking supporters for this effort.”

The Vail Symposium is a non-profit organization dedicated to year-round lifelong learning, through diverse cultural and educational programs that are thought provoking, diverse and affordable. For more information, visit www.vilarcenter.org
If you go:
Who: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
When: Monday, Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m.
Where: Vilar Performing Arts Center, Beaver Creek
Cost: $40.
More information. Tickets go on sale Thursday at 11 a.m.
Tickets are available at www.vilarpac.org, by calling 970-845-TIXS (8497), or at the Vilar Center box office.
Posted by Sylvia

donderdag 12 juni 2008

Muslims, show some more respect !

bron : Volkskrant 10-6-08

Translation: Annabeth

"Why do we behave without respect in the Netherlands while we expect others to take account of us?"

Samira al-Onal is the pseudonym name of a highly-educated Dutch Muslim woman.
As exceptions to normal policy our editorial staff sometimes decides to publish pseudonym articles e.g. when the author is afraid for repercussions.

OPINION:

"It is time that we Muslims let go of our feeling of superiority, hypocrisy and ignorance" says Samira al-Onal.

I urge the Volkskrant to publish this article with which I pursue two goals: the first is to expose the centuries-old egoism of Muslims concerning non-Muslims. The second to show that not non-Muslims but Muslims themselves are to blame that they stand in bad light."

We demand from non-Muslims that they respect our religion, that they accept our cultural demands and that they support us financially. But what do we give in return which they demand from us? The following:

Before Islam the Middle East was inhabited by people who adhered to an in origin Indian ideology wherein statues were venerated. Islam then proclaimed that no images of God are allowed. What happened next? Wherever statues were found these were destroyed by Muslims who then converted these people to Islam, if needed using violence and murder.

Muslim history writers wrote with pride about what they saw as successful heroic deeds. And we still live under the delusion that the quality of the lives of indigenous people is improved by replacing their temples and churches by mosques, and that we conquer their hearts by doing so. But nothing is further from the truth and why the Dutch say 'our culture is disappearing as we do see mosques everywhere' when yet another church is transformed into a mosque.

Holy names

We call our sons Muhammad, Hassan and Ali, but allow these names to be used for murders, for hitting women, for theft, and for showing no respect for other cultures. If we believe that Islam stands for peace -our excuse is that these Muslims give us a bad name. But are these names indeed holy?

The prophet and his followers waged wars and Mohammed murdered people himself. Are mosques indeed superior to the temples and churches upon which they were built? We are in fact saying that Islam is inferior to already existing religions or else our ancestors would have had no use for their 'stupid', non-holy materials.

We consider it marvellous that Islam is growing but which can only be considered the growth of blind faith. You can believe whatever you want, but believing without any proof is witnes to stupidity.
With the support of my parents I plucked-up the courage to examine Islam in the past and present, and found much that makes me sad.

Decapitations

The present time: consider the decapitation of non-Muslims in Iraq and Pakistan. Those so-called heroic deeds are perpetrated in name of Allah. What is our response to this? Do we condemn this? No, we look on silently, but do demonstrate on streets when an insulting cartoon is published in a newspaper and we threaten politicians with their murder. Embassies of non-Muslim countries are attacked, and numbers of murders are committed out of our passion for heroic martyrdom.

Simultaneously, and already for centuries on end, we find it normal to ridicule holy elements in non-Islamic cultures. Why do we behave disrespectfully of Dutch culture and that while we consider that everyone must show respect for us? That people in other cultures do not protest against us shows that they are wiser then we are.

We find existing politics guilty or the media, but Geert Wilders didn't just fall out of the blue sky and if we had shown more respect, Wilders' political platform wouldn't exist. Do we ever ask ourselves why there isn't an anti-Chinese political party?

Back to violence: When people are decapitated or shot in name of Allah that doesn't mean that He condones this. And where is written that suicide-bombers will arrive by Allah as martyrs? Also non-Muslims are Allah's children. Why therefore does Allah allow that one group of 'children' humiliates, persecutes and murders the other group?

In India, and each year, and much more than in the West, trains, busses, temples and other buildings are blown-up by Muslims in name of Allah. We don't even respect Hindu religious celebrations because our ancestors did not in previous centuries. Islam attacked India around AD 700 and occupied India well into the 18th century. In those centuries Muslims occupied India using much violence and plunder. Religious men and scientists were murdered; others converted or made into second-class citizens. Christians, Jews and Hindus were not allowed to hold good jobs, had to pay religious taxes and tax and put on food-rations. This while we, and European culture, owe much to the old India, especially concerning science.

Head-scarves

Last year Salman Rushdie was given a knighthood. What was our response? Our Muslim brothers and sisters demonstrated worldwide in streets of capitals, especially in London, Pakistan and India. A few years before the same thing happened in France as caused by the prohibition of headscarves in schools. But when non-Muslims are humiliated or murdered by Muslims we remain quiet. And what is our response to Malaysia where Hindu-temples are still destroyed by Muslims? What in respect to Kazakhstan where a group of non-Muslims were thrown out of their houses in freezing-cold weather? What about Bangladesh where land of non-Muslims is confiscated by Muslims with politicians looking-on in silence? What our response to Kashmir where the same things happen? As in Iran where non-Muslims are not allowed to study in universities? And Afghanistan where non-Muslims are spat and jeered at, and driven away by Taliban-Muslims? What is our response to the Netherlands where non-Muslims are treated with comparable bullying tactics and non-Muslims preferably driving out of their suburbs?

Nothing

Why don't we demonstrate against these and other actions of our fellow-believers? Why don't we show respect in the Netherlands where we adhere to few rules and civic norms, and where we perpetrate senseless violence - while we make use of their medical facilities, ask for special attention of teachers and community-workers, complain a lot while expecting non-Muslims to take account of us?

We should get rid of our egoism, our short-sightedness and sense of superiority, and stop feigning holiness, or else it is better for us to return to our Muslim lands so that non-Muslims can live in peace and we get rid of the hatred for Muslims but which we generate ourselves.

Geplaatst door Joop

dinsdag 10 juni 2008

Moslims, toon eens wat meer respect

Samira al-Onal

bron : Volkskrant 10-6-08

Waarom gedragen wij ons in Nederland respectloos, terwijl wij vinden dat anderen rekening moeten houden met ons?

Samira al-Onal is een gefingeerde naam voor een Nederlandse, hoogopgeleide moslima. Bij uitzondering stemt de redactie soms in met plaatsing van een artikel onder pseudoniem, vanwege de angst van de auteur voor represailles.
Woensdag 11 juni zal hier naar een uitgebreider artikel van haar worden verwezen.

OPINIE -
Wij moslims moeten ons egoïsme en onze superioriteit, schijnheiligheid en onwetendheid eindelijk eens loslaten, betoogt moslima Samira al-Onal.

Met klem verzoek ik de redactie van de Volkskrant dit artikel op te nemen. Hiermee streef ik twee doelen na. Het ene is het eeuwenoude egoïsme van moslims ten opzichte van niet-moslims aan de kaak te stellen. Het andere is bewijzen dat het niet aan de niet-moslims ligt dat wij moslims in een kwaad daglicht worden gesteld.

Wij eisen van niet-moslims dat zij ons geloof respecteren, dat zij onze culturele wensen inwilligen en dat zij ons financieel steunen. Maar wat geven wij aan hen, zonder dat zij daarom gevraagd hebben? Dat volgt hieronder.

Voordat de islam bestond, werd het Midden-Oosten bewoond door mensen die een ideologie praktiseerden waarin beelden voorkwamen, afkomstig uit India.

Met de stelling dat je van God geen beeld moest maken, begon vervolgens de leer van de islam. Wat gebeurde er? Overal waar beelden waren te vinden, sloegen gelovigen de boel kort en klein om daarna ongelovigen te bekeren, desnoods met geweld, moord en doodslag.

Onze geschiedschrijvers van toen schrijven hier met trots over, want zij zagen het als een geslaagde heldendaad. En wij verkeren nog steeds in de waan dat de kwaliteit van leven van de oorspronkelijke bewoners wordt verbeterd door tempels en kerken te vervangen door moskeeën, en dat daarmee hun harten worden veroverd.

Heilige namen

Niets is minder waar. Zo zeggen autochtonen, als er weer een kerk wordt veranderd in een moskee: ‘Onze cultuur verdwijnt, maar je ziet wel overal moskeeën.’

Wij noemen onze zonen Mohammed, Hassan en Ali, maar laten toe dat zij deze heilige namen misbruiken door te moorden, vrouwen te slaan, te stelen en geen respect te hebben voor andere culturen. Als wij vinden dat islam staat voor vrede, dan geven zij ons een slechte naam.

Aan de andere kant, zijn deze namen wel heilig? De profeet heeft met zijn aanhang oorlogen gevoerd en eigenhandig gemoord. En zijn de moskeeën wel bovengeschikt aan de godshuizen waarvan en waarop ze gebouwd zijn? In feite zeggen wij dat de islam ondergeschikt is aan de godsdienst die eerst op die plekken werd beleden – anders hadden onze voorouders die ‘domme’, niet-heilige, materialen niet gebruikt.

Wij vinden het geweldig dat de  islam groeit. Maar er is sprake van een groei van blind geloof. Je kunt van alles geloven, maar geloven zonder enige aanwijzing van bewijs getuigt van grote onwetendheid. Zelf heb ik met steun van mijn ouders de moed opgebracht een diepe kijk te nemen in het islamitische heden en verleden. En dan is er veel dat me treurig stemt.

Onthoofdingen

Om in het heden te blijven: neem de onthoofdingen van niet-moslims in Irak en Pakistan. Die zogenaamde heldendaden worden in naam van Allah uitgevoerd. Wat doen wij? Veroordelen wij die? Nee, wij kijken stilzwijgend toe. Wel gaan wij de straat op als er een beledigend prentje in een krant staat en bedreigen wij  politici met de dood. Ambassades van niet-islamitische landen worden neergehaald, er vallen doden door onze passie voor heldendom. Tegelijk is het in de islamitische cultuur al eeuwen heel normaal om heilige elementen uit niet-islamitische culturen belachelijk te maken.
Waarom gedragen wij ons in Nederland respectloos, terwijl wij vinden dat anderen rekening moeten houden met ons?

Dat mensen uit deze culturen hiertegen niet protesteren, toont aan dat zij wijzer zijn dan wij. Wij geven de schuld aan de politiek of de media. Maar Geert Wilders, die is toch niet met de ooievaar gebracht? Als wij wat meer respect zouden geven aan anderen, was hij nooit opgestaan. Vragen wij ons wel eens af waarom er geen anti-Chinese partij bestaat?

Terug naar het geweld. Als in de naam van Allah mensen worden onthoofd of de kogeldood sterven, zegt dat toch niet dat Hij dit goed vindt? En waar staat dat zelfmoordcommando’s als martelaren bij Allah komen? Ook niet-moslims zijn immers Allah’s kinderen. Hoe kan Allah toestaan dat de ene groep ‘kinderen’ de andere groep vernedert, pest of vermoordt?

In India worden vele malen per jaar, veel meer dan in het Westen, treinen, bussen, tempels en andere gebouwen door moslims opgeblazen, in naam van Allah. Zelfs de hindoeïstische feestdagen respecteren wij niet, omdat onze voorouders dat in eerdere eeuwen evenmin hebben gedaan. In India begon de islamitische inval rond het jaar 700. Islamieten hielden India bezet tot ergens in de 18de eeuw. In die eeuwen hebben moslims India met veel geweld geplunderd en bezet. Geestelijken en geleerden werden vermoord, anderen bekeerd of tot tweederangs burgers gemaakt. Christenen, joden en hindoes mochten geen goede banen hebben, moesten godsdienstbelasting betalen en moesten op rantsoen. Dat terwijl wij, maar ook de Europese cultuur, veel te danken hebben aan het oude India, vooral op  wetenschappelijk gebied.

Hoofddoekjes

Vorig jaar werd Salman Rushdie in Engeland geridderd. Wat deden wij? Onze islamitische broeders en zusters gingen overal ter wereld de straat op, vooral in Londen, Pakistan en India. Een paar jaar gebeurde hetzelfde in Frankrijk, toen daar hoofddoekjes op scholen werden verboden. Maar als niet-moslims door moslims worden vernederd of vermoord, blijft het stil.

Wat zeggen wij over Maleisië, waar nog steeds beelden in hindoetempels door moslims worden kapotgemaakt? Over Kazachstan, waar een groep niet-moslims door moslims uit hun huizen is verjaagd, de vrieskou in? Over Bangladesh, waar land van niet-moslims wordt ingepikt terwijl de politiek stilzwijgend toekijkt? Over Kashmir, waar hetzelfde gebeurt? Over Iran, waar  niet-moslims geen universitaire studie mogen volgen? Over Afghanistan, waar niet-moslims worden bespuugd, uitgescholden en verjaagd door Taliban-achtige moslims? Of over Nederland, waar niet-moslims met soortgelijke tactieken door moslims worden gepest en het liefst uit de wijk verjaagd?

Niets.


Waarom gaan wij tegen deze en andere acties van onze medegelovigen niet de straat op? Waarom gedragen wij ons in Nederland respectloos, nemen wij weinig sociale regels of fatsoensnormen in acht en plegen wij zinloos geweld, terwijl wij hier veel gebruik maken van medische voorzieningen, veel aandacht vragen van leraren en buurtwerkers, veel klagen en vinden dat anderen rekening moeten houden met ons?

Wij zouden ons egoïsme en onze kortzichtigheid, superioriteit, schijnheiligheid en onwetendheid moeten loslaten. Anders kunnen wij beter terug naar onze moslimlanden, opdat niet-moslims rust krijgen en wij verlost worden van de moslimhaat die wij zelf in stand houden.

Reageer verder op vk.nl./opinie


read here the english translation of this column

Geplaatst door Joop

vrijdag 28 maart 2008

Dutch anti-koran video released

Source: Spiegelonline

Wilders Sparks Political Protest

It is little more than a makeshift collage, but it contains a horror show of images meant to distort Islam. Dutch right-wing politician Geert Wilders has launched his long-awaited video screed criticizing the Koran. Criticism is mounting.

A scene from "Fitna:" Scenes of murder, terrorism and hate preachers
AFP

A scene from "Fitna:" Scenes of murder, terrorism and hate preachers

View Fitna the movie here

Geert Wilders chose the time to publish his anti-Koran film carefully. He picked a Thursday evening, shortly before the Dutch evening news and before Muslims in East Asian countries like Indonesia visit their mosques for Friday prayers.

Until the very last minute, there was fierce speculation over whether and when the cinematic pamphlet would be broadcast. And until very recently, Wilders was offering only vague responses to these questions, especially after no television broadcaster was willing to show the film. Even a US Internet provider decided to take the Dutch right-wing populist's Web site offline.

"Fitna," Arabic for "strife," is now available online at Liveleak, a video platform similar to YouTube. It was viewed well over a million times within just one hour.

The film begins with an image that every Muslim in the world and many others are likely to recognize immediately: the controversial caricature of Mohammed wearing a bomb as a turban. The publication of this and similar drawings in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in September 2005 triggered unrest in the Arab world.

The cartoonist who drew the caricature, Kurt Westergaard, himself the target of planned attacks recently, promptly protested against its use in the Wilders video. "The drawing was created in a certain context," Westergaard said, adding that Wilders could "simply not use it. This is not a question of free speech, but of copyrights." Westergaard told the paper that he wants the Danish association of journalists to take action against the copyright violation.

Wilders has animated the bomb fuse on Mohammad's head, allowing it to burn up. Then the image is faded out and followed by a sura from the Koran calling Muslims to fight the infidels. The airplanes that crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001 appear through the lettering, followed by images of people jumping from the burning towers, screaming desperately.

The film continues in this suggestive mode: with images of the Madrid train bombings, of imams calling for global dominance, with a video showing the beheading of a Western hostage and with statistics on the rapidly growing number of Muslims living in the Netherlands.

Wilders shows a postcard with the words "Greetings from the Netherlands" on it, but instead of pictures of windmills, we see mosques. "Is this the Netherlands of the future?" the film asks, as it shows an image of a girl being subjected to female circumcision. "I had to warn people," Wilders said. "This isn't a provocation, it's the 11th hour."

Women being stoned, beheadings -- the makeshift collage of images of horror from Arab countries is meant to generate a sense of alarm among Wilders' fellow Dutchmen. He calls upon Muslims to tear what he considers to be hate-filled pages from the Koran, accompanied by a soundtrack of pages being torn from a book.

Does the film live up to all the excitement that dominated the Netherlands and the rest of Europe in the months preceding its airing? Dutch intelligence in The Hague raised the terror alert level weeks ago. Embassies in the Arab world have had evacuation plans in place, and Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende had already asked his counterparts within the European Union to support him if his country became the target of protests and boycotts.

Balkenende's cabinet convened on Thursday evening to watch the film, which is now available around the world in Dutch and English. Then, only three hours after "Fitna" went online, Balkenende, looking serious, went before the press and gave an address in Dutch and, for foreign viewers, again in English. In his speech, Balkenende castigated the film for equating the Koran with terrorist attacks, and he announced that the Dutch Justice Ministry is looking into legal issues related to the film. He also pointed out that suicide bombings have also claimed the lives of Muslims.

Balkenende criticized Wilders for seeking to invoke nothing but base emotions against Muslims. In replying to Wilders and his film, he said: "Let us build bridges and overcome prejudices."

The film's final sequence is likely to give the government the greatest cause for concern. The Muhammad cartoon reappears, but now the fuse on his turban bomb is lit. Then there is the sound of an explosion. Is the Prophet exploding, like a suicide bomber? According to Wilders, the noise is the "roar of thunder and lightning."

Wilders has apparently tried to avoid any legal repercussions by replacing the explosion with the sound of thunder. He also sought to downplay the sound of pages being torn out of a book by adding that the pages are from a telephone book.

"He apparently looks for boundaries, but he avoids crossing them," Yusuf Altuntas, the spokesman for a Muslim organization, said on Dutch television. "I find that many of the images are not really original. They're simply clicked together from the Internet."

Dutch Muslims, Altuntas added, are thick-skinned, and he said that he doesn't believe that the film would provoke them. "I can't say the same for other countries," he added.

A similar reaction came from the spokesman of an organization of Moroccans in the Netherlands known as "Landelijk Beraad Marokkanen." He said that he was relieved that the film has finally been released. "The concerns I had about unrest and the like have now been reduced considerably."

But Leo Kwarten, an Arabist, believes the film's low-impact nuances will be lost on the Arab World.

Kwarten is critical of the film for several reasons. For one, Wilders shows the circumcision of young girls, even though the Koran contains nothing about female circumcision. "He throws Sunnis and Shiites into one pot and unabashedly creates a link between images of terror from around the world and Muslims in the Netherlands."

Gijs van de Westelaken, producer of the film "Submission" by Theo van Gogh, was disappointed: "I don't see how any of it was a political attack -- quite unlike 'Submission.' Now that was a real statement."

The government has not commented on the film yet. Clerics and Muslim officials are meeting in the mosques in Amsterdam's suburbs to discuss how they should respond to the Wilders film. They plan to issue a statement at a press conference on Friday.

It's likely that Wilders will face a legal challenge over his film. A photo in the video meant to be of van Gogh's radical Islamist murderer Mohammed Bouyeri actually shows Dutch-Moroccan rapper Salah Edin.

He now wants to sue Wilders.

donderdag 27 maart 2008

Fitna, the movie

View the movie Fitna here...

dinsdag 11 maart 2008

Danish cartoonist: Dutch politician should air his anti-Quran film

Source: de Volkskrant - by Nanda Troost

ÅRHUS - Dutch politician Geert Wilders should definitely air his anti-Quranfilm, Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard says Monday in an exclusive interview in the Dutch newspaper ‘de Volkskrant’.

VergrotingKurt Westergaard

Westergaard says he does not understand Dutch politicians who say that Wilders should not air his film. ‘There is not a single politician in Denmark that would state a similar thing. That would mean political suicide for him. Every Danish politician knows you should never limit the freedom of speech.’

Westergaard does not regret his caricatures of the prophet Muhammad ‘at all’. ‘It started out as and still is a matter of freedom of speech.’ Westergaard considers starting this debate as a ‘duty’ of newspapers and cartoonists. ‘Muslims are to accept that.’

Extremist
The Danish cartoonist loathes the role of members of the Muslim elite, because they compare him to ‘an extremist like Osama bin Laden’. Westergaard: ‘After the nazis, fascists and communists there is a new totalitarian force threathening Europe, of course not Muslims as a group, but a number of extremists’.

Westergaard considers his cartoons perfectly acceptable and thinks ‘everything’ should be able to be said in democracies as Denmark and the Netherlands. If Muslims feel offended by that, they should ‘learn’ to cope with that. ‘We live in a tolerant society. This is the way we do this here.’

Shelter
Death threats have forced Westergaard to live in safe houses. He will soon be moving to a new shelter for the sixth time. He was first criticized after he had drawn a picture of the prophet Muhammed wearing a bomb-shaped turban for the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. His caricatures were recently republished by several newspapers in Denmark. Three men plotting an attack on his life were arrested mid February.

Dutch politician Geert Wilders also receives death threats from radical Muslims because of his extreme criticism on islam. The Dutch Prime minister as well as politicians from outside the Netherlands, have put pressure on Wilders in the past weeks to reconsider his plan to air his anti-Quran film in late March. Wilders has refused all requests.

More than 200 thousand people demonstrated against the Danish cartoons and the Dutch film of Wilders in the Afghan city of Jalalabad on Sunday. ‘Death to Denmark, death to the Nederlands’, the crowd shouted. In the past few weeks there have been many demonstrations against the cartoons and the film in other cities of Afghanistan and other Muslim countries.

Read interview: 'A totalitarian power threatens us in Europe'

Posted by Sylvia

zaterdag 1 maart 2008

Berlin gallery shuts after Muslim threats

Source: Reuters Africa

BERLIN, Feb 28 (Reuters Life!) - A Berlin gallery has temporarily closed an exhibition of satirical works by a group of Danish artists after six Muslim youths threatened violence unless one of the posters depicting the Kaaba shrine in Mecca was removed, it said on Thursday. The Galerie Nord in central Berlin said it had closed its "Zionist Occupied Government" show of works by Surrend, a group of artists who say they poke fun at powerful people and ideological conflicts.

On Tuesday, four days after the exhibition opened, a group of angry Muslims stormed into the gallery, shouting demands that one of the 21 posters should be removed, said the gallery."They were very agrressive and shouted at an employee that the poster should be taken down otherwise they would throw stones and use violence," the gallery's artistic director Ralf Hartmann told Reuters.The Muslims objected to a depiction of the Kaaba -- the ancient shrine in Mecca's Grand Mosque which Muslims face to say their prayers -- which gave a "bitingly satirical commentary against radicalism," said the gallery in a statement.

SECURITY REVIEW

Hartmann said the gallery was working with German authorities to improve security and he hoped to re-open the show as soon as possible."It would be unacceptable if individual social groups were in a position to exercise censorship over art and the freedom of expression," said the gallery in a statement.The show also contained pictures which ridiculed neo-Nazis who believe Jews dominate global politics and industry as well as the state of Israel and radical Jews.Surrend members are mainly street artists and use stickers, advertisements, posters and Web sites to express irony.In 2006, a Berlin opera house caused a storm in Germany when it cancelled a production of Mozart's "Idomeneo" which showed the Prophet Mohammad's severed head, citing security fears.And this month, Danish newspapers reprinted cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad which caused outrage in Islamic countries and sparked violent protests across the globe two years ago.They republished the drawings after police arrested three men on suspicion of plotting to kill a cartoonist who drew one of the images.

Read also in Der Spiegel:
Berlin Exhibition Closes after Muslim Threats

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us 

Posted by Joop

vrijdag 29 februari 2008

'I don't hate Muslims. I hate Islam,' says Holland's rising political star

The Guardian

Geert Wilders, the popular MP whose film on Islam has fuelled the debate on race in Holland, wants an end to mosque building and Muslim immigration. Ian Traynor met him in The Hague

Geert Wilders, the right-wing Dutch politician.
Photograph: Jerry Lampen/Reuters

A TV addict with bleached hair who adores Maggie Thatcher and prefers kebabs to hamburgers, Geert Wilders has got nothing against Muslims. He just hates Islam. Or so he says. 'Islam is not a religion, it's an ideology,' says Wilders, a lanky Roman Catholic right-winger, 'the ideology of a retarded culture.'

The Dutch politician, who sees himself as heir to a recent string of assassinated or hounded mavericks who have turned Holland upside down, has been doing a crash course in Koranic study. Likening the Islamic sacred text to Hitler's Mein Kampf, he wants the 'fascist Koran' outlawed in Holland, the constitution rewritten to make that possible, all immigration from Muslim countries halted, Muslim immigrants paid to leave and all Muslim 'criminals' stripped of Dutch citizenship and deported 'back where they came from'. But he has nothing against Muslims. 'I have a problem with Islamic tradition, culture, ideology. Not with Muslim people.'

Wilders has been immersing himself in the suras and verse of seventh-century Arabia. The outcome of his scholarship, a short film, has Holland in a panic. He is just putting the finishing touches to the 10-minute film, he says, and talking to four TV channels about screening it.

'It's like a walk through the Koran,' he explains in a sterile conference room in the Dutch parliament in The Hague, security chaps hovering outside. 'My intention is to show the real face of Islam. I see it as a threat. I'm trying to use images to show that what's written in the Koran is giving incentives to people all over the world. On a daily basis Moroccan youths are beating up homosexuals on the streets of Amsterdam.'

Wilders is lucid and shrewd and the provactive soundbites trip easily off his tongue. He was recently voted Holland's most effective politician. If 18 months ago he sat alone in the second chamber or lower house in The Hague, his People's Party now has nine of 150 seats and is running at about 15 per cent in the polls. His Islam-bashing seems to be paying off. And not only in Holland. All across Europe, the new breed of right-wing populists are trying to revive their political fortunes by appealing to anti-Muslim prejudice.

A few months ago the Swiss People's Party of the pugnacious billionaire Christoph Blocher won a general election while simultaneously running a campaign to change the Swiss constitution to ban the building of minarets on mosques. Last month in Antwerp, far-right leaders from 15 European cities and from political parties in Belgium, Germany and Austria got together to launch a charter 'against the Islamisation of western European cities', reiterating the call for a mosque-building moratorium.

'We already have more than 6,000 mosques in Europe, which are not only a place to worship but also a symbol of radicalisation, some financed by extreme groups in Saudi Arabia or Iran,' argued Filip Dewinter, leader of Belgium's Flemish separatist party, the Vlaams Belang, who organised the Antwerp get-together. 'Its minarets are six floors high, higher than the floodlights of the Feyenoord soccer stadium,' he said of a new mosque being built in Rotterdam. 'These kinds of symbols have to stop.'

Where a few years ago the far right in Europe concentrated its fire on immigration, these days Islam is fast becoming the most popular target. It is a campaign that is having mixed results. In Switzerland, the Blocher party has been highly successful. In Holland, Wilders is thriving by constantly poking sticks in the eyes of the politically correct Dutch establishment. But when Susanne Winter ran for a seat on the local council in the Austrian city of Graz last month by branding the Prophet Muhammad a child molester, she lost her far-right Freedom Party votes.

For the mainstream centre-right in Europe, foreigner-bashing is also backfiring. Roland Koch, the German Christian Democrat once tipped as a future Chancellor, wrecked his chances a fortnight ago by forfeiting a 12-point lead in a state election after a campaign that denounced Muslim ritual slaughter practices and called for the deportation of young immigrant criminals.

Wilders echoes some of the arguments against multiculturalism that have convulsed Germany in recent years. Like many on the traditional German right, he wants the European Judaeo-Christian tradition to be formally recognised as the dominating culture, or Leitkultur. 'There is no equality between our culture and the retarded Islamic culture. Look at their views on homosexuality or women,' he says.

But if Wilders shares positions and aims with others on the far right in Europe, he is also a very specific Dutch phenomenon, viewing himself as a libertarian provocateur like the late Pim Fortuyn or Theo van Gogh, railing against 'Islamisation' as a threat to what used to be the easy-going Dutch model of tolerance.

'My allies are not Le Pen or Haider,' he emphasises. 'We'll never join up with the fascists and Mussolinis of Italy. I'm very afraid of being linked with the wrong rightist fascist groups.' Dutch iconoclasm, Scandinavian insistence on free expression, the right to provoke are what drive him, he says.

He shrugs off anxieties that his film will trigger a fresh bout of violence of the kind that left Van Gogh stabbed to death on an Amsterdam street and his estranged colleague Ayaan Hirsi Ali in hiding, or the murderous furore over the Danish cartoons in 2005.

The Dutch government is planning emergency evacuation of its nationals and diplomats from the Middle East should the Wilders film be shown. It is alarmed about the impact on Dutch business. 'Our Prime Minister is a big coward. The government is weak,' says Wilders. 'They hate my guts and I don't like them either.'

And if people are murdered as a result of his film? 'They say that if there's bloodshed it would be the responsibility of this strange politician. It's almost a self-fulfilling prophecy. They're creating an atmosphere. I'm not responsible for using democratic means and acting within the law. I don't want Dutch people or Dutch interests to be hurt.'

But he does want to create a stir. 'Islam is something we can't afford any more in the Netherlands. I want the fascist Koran banned. We need to stop the Islamisation of the Netherlands. That means no more mosques, no more Islamic schools, no more imams... Not all Muslims are terrorists, but almost all terrorists are Muslims.'

Free speech or hate speech? 'I don't create hate. I want to be honest. I don't hate people. I don't hate Muslims. I hate their book and their ideology.'

For more than three years, Wilders has been paying for his 'honesty' by living under permanent police guard as the internet bristles with threats on his life. He has lived in army barracks, in prisons, under guard at home. 'There's no freedom, no privacy. If I said I was not afraid, I would be lying.'

There is little doubt that if Wilders's film exists - and it's shrouded in secrecy - and is broadcast, it will be construed as blasphemy in large parts of the world and may spark a new bloody crisis in relations between the West and the Muslim world.

He does not seem to care. 'People ask why don't you moderate your voice and not make this movie. If I do that and not say what I think, then the extremists who threaten me would win.'

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 27 februari 2008

Muslims want unis to fit prayer time

Bron: The Australian

MUSLIM university students want lectures to be rescheduled to fit in with prayer timetables and separate male and female eating and recreational areas established on Australian campuses.

International Muslim students, predominantly from Saudi Arabia, have asked universities in Melbourne to change class times so they can attend congregational prayers. They also want a female-only area for Muslim students to eat and relax.

But at least one institution has rejected their demands, arguing that the university is secular and it does not want to set a precedent for requests granted in the name of religious beliefs.

La Trobe University International chief officer John Molony said several students had approached the Bundoora institution about rearranging class times to fit in with daily prayers.

Mr Molony said the university was attempting to "meet the needs" of an increasing number of Muslim international students, including doubling the size of the prayer room on campus.

La Trobe University International College director Martin Van Run said that although it was involved in discussions with the Muslim students who had made the requests, the university was not planning to change any timetables.

"That would seriously inconvenience other people at the college and it is not institutionally viable," he told The Australian. "We are a secular institution ... and we need to have a structured timetable."

Mr Van Run said that Saudi students were fully aware that the university was secular before coming to study there. "They know well in advance the class times," he said.

A spokesman for RMIT University would neither confirm nor deny reports that Muslim students had requested timetable changes.

One university source told The Australian that the requests by Muslim international students for timetable changes included a petition.

"Some of the students would prefer that lecture times were organised so it would be easy for them to attend prayers," he said. "But it wouldn't be a good precedent to set."

Islamic leaders yesterday backed the push by Muslim students to have their lectures arranged to accommodate prayer sessions, but said such a move would be essential only for congregational Friday prayers.

Female Muslim leader Aziza Abdel-Halim said yesterday it was a religious duty for those who followed Islam to preach with their fellow believers on Fridays.

But the former senior member of John Howard's Muslim reference board said there was nothing in Islam that indicated men and women be segregated when it came to educational activities.

"There's nothing in Islam that says there should be complete segregation, especially in educational institutions," said Sister Abdel-Halim.

She said afternoon prayers for Muslims - Zhohor, at 1.10pm, and Asr, at 4.50pm - could be performed until 10 minutes before the following daily prayer, so it was more appropriate to alter prayer times than lecture schedules.

"It's reasonable to ask for the lectures to be shifted around on Friday," Sister Abdel-Halim said. "But if it's going to cause havoc with the timetable, I don't think it's really feasible to ask forevery single prayer to be catered for."

Geplaatst door lucida

zaterdag 16 februari 2008

Islam critic asks for protection

Source: BBC News    - Support Ayaan!

AhaAyaan Hirsi Ali, the former Dutch MP and outspoken critic of Islam, has appealed to the EU to create a fund to help protect people in her position.

She told the European Parliament in Brussels her life was in greater danger because the Dutch government had stopped paying for her security.

"I don't want to die, I want to live and I love life," she said.

Ms Ali added that the cost of her bodyguards was beyond anything a private person could raise.

The Somali-born former MP has been living under police protection since the murder of Dutch film-maker Theo Van Gogh by an Islamic extremist in 2004.

Europe needs to defend her because she has defended Europe
French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy

She was threatened in a note left on his body for writing the script for Van Gogh's Submission - a highly controversial film alleging that women were being abused under Islam.

But she left the Netherlands for the United States in 2006 after a political row in which she admitted lying in her Dutch asylum request.

She now works for a conservative think-tank in the US and the Dutch government has said it can no longer justify paying for her security.

Full-time job

Ms Ali said she had been working full-time on raising funds.

Dozens of MEPs have signed a declaration backing the creation of a fund.

But for the initiative to become official, half of the parliament's 785 will have to back the petition.

Earlier this week she announced she was seeking French citizenship.

She said the campaign for her to receive honorary French citizenship was being spearheaded by a group of French intellectuals and was supported by the country's political leaders.

"Europe needs to defend her because she has defended Europe," French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy told MEPs.

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 13 februari 2008

Newspapers Republish Muhammad Cartoons

It was hard to read a newspaper in Denmark on Wednesday without seeing the cartoons.

FRESH CONTROVERSY IN DENMARK - Source: Spiegel on line

After the arrest this week of three men who wanted to kill a Danish cartoonist, about a dozen papers in Denmark have republished the infamous Muhammad cartoons. Some observers notice a sea-change in Denmark's integration debate since the 2006 riots in the Muslim world.

Danish newspapers closed ranks on Wednesday to defend a cartoonist's right to free speech by reprinting 12 caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that sparked deadly riots in Muslim countries in early 2006. The papers were responding to the arrest in Denmark on Tuesday (more...) of three Muslim men who allegedly wanted to kill Kurt Westergaard, the cartoonist who drew the most inflammatory image, showing Muhammed with a bomb-shaped turban.

"We are doing this to document what is at stake in this case," the  Copenhagen paper Berlingske Tidende wrote on Wednesday morning, "and to unambiguously back and support the freedom of speech that we as a newspaper will always defend."

Reaction from Muslim leaders was mixed. "There could have been other ways to do it without the drawing, which I personally do not like," said Abdul Wahid Petersen, a moderate imam, according to the Associated Press.

RELATED SPIEGEL ONLINE LINKS

"We are so unhappy about the cartoon being reprinted," said Imam Mostafa Chendid, head of the Islamic Faith Community, which led Danish protests against the cartoons in 2006. "No blood was ever shed in Denmark because of this, and no blood will be shed. We are trying to calm down people, but let's see what happens. Let's open a dialogue."

But a Muslim politician in Denmark, 44-year-old Naser Khader (more...), told SPIEGEL ONLINE that something palpable had changed in the Danish political climate over the past two years. "Of course there's a fear of a new crisis; Islamists are unpredictable," he said. "And in some Muslim countries the people have not forgotten the Muhammad cartoons."

Khader is the head of a new centrist party called "Ny Alliance." His background is Syrian. He said Muslim leaders as well as Danish society overall seemed more cohesive in their response to the threat of violence: "The Muslims who have made statements since the arrests yesterday have spoken very moderately." In fact, he said, "The great majority of Danish Muslims have shown that they reject violence and live in harmony with Danish law." And the results have been good, judging from a recent poll that shows overall public opinion of Muslims in Denmark has changed for the better in the last two years.

"The crisis didn't hurt integration," said Khader, "it opened doors for us -- and in Denmark things have improved quite a bit in the meantime."

This position chimes with a SPIEGEL ONLINE interview published Tuesday with the editor of Jyllands-Posten, the paper that first published the Muhammad cartoons in late 2005. Flemming Rose, (more...) who commissioned the cartoons, said the debate over integration in Denmark is "far more fact-based than it used to be."

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 23 januari 2008

Glenn Beck: Islam exposed

60 minutes on 'Peace', Islamic way - Glenn Beck

Geplaatst door Joop

vrijdag 18 januari 2008

'The Trouble Is the West'

Source: Reason on line

Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Islam, immigration, civil liberties, and the fate of the West.

Rogier van Bakel | November 2007

It was a heinous murder that made the best-selling memoirist Ayaan Hirsi Ali internationally famous, but she was neither the victim nor the perpetrator. The corpse was that of Theo van Gogh, a writer and filmmaker who in November 2004 was stabbed, slashed, and shot on an Amsterdam street by a Dutch-born Muslim extremist of Moroccan descent.

The assassin, driven to rage by Submission, a short film Van Gogh had made about the poor treatment of women under Islam, left no doubt about his motives. A letter he pinned to his victim’s chest with a knife was a call to jihad. It was also a death threat against Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a member of the Dutch parliament. She had persuaded Van Gogh to make Submission and had written the movie’s script.

Then 35, Hirsi Ali had already seen plenty of turmoil. She had endured a heavily religious upbringing in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, and Kenya, including a brutal circumcision to keep her “pure.” She chafed under the yoke of an embittered and sometimes violent mother and longed for a father who was perennially absent—often imprisoned or in hiding, due to his opposition to the Somali dictator Siad Barré.

In July 1992, Hirsi Ali defied her family’s wishes, refusing to marry the man to whom her father had betrothed her. She fled Kenya for the Netherlands, gaining refugee status and finding employment as a cleaning woman and a factory worker. She assimilated quickly, learning perfect Dutch and studying political science, a choice that led to a job as an analyst at the Labor Party’s think tank. There, to the consternation of her bosses, who had been courting the Muslim vote, Hirsi Ali worried out loud about Holland’s ever-burgeoning immigrant community and the rising tensions between Muslims and the native Dutch.

In Rotterdam, the Netherlands’ second-largest city, immigrants—mostly Muslims from Morocco and Turkey—had become a majority, with Amsterdam well on its way to a similar demographic sea change. That might not have been a problem, Hirsi Ali argued publicly, if the Dutch had only encouraged the newcomers to embrace the country’s culture the way she had. But the country’s multiculturalist mind-set, paired with the national inclination to tolerate almost any form of behavior, had led to minorities’ ghettoization and to a certain lawlessness. Dutch Muslims were largely content to stay in the neighborhoods they formed together, Hirsi Ali observed. Raised on a steady diet of Islamic preaching and Middle Eastern and North African satellite TV channels, many of them rejected the Dutch way of life as hedonistic, even sinful.

Hirsi Ali wasn’t shy about mentioning the Muslim community’s self-imposed insularity, or the crime wave involving disproportionate numbers of second- and third-generation Dutch Moroccans. But mostly she agitated against the oppression of local Muslim women by male family members: forced marriages, denial of education opportunities, domestic slave labor, and, in some horrific cases, honor killings. By extension, she criticized the native Dutch for turning a blind eye to the injustices in their midst, and for tolerating those who themselves refused to tolerate alternative lifestyles.

It was a shock and a revelation to see a young, black, Muslim woman championing causes previously associated with middle-aged white male pundits who had often been dismissed as racists or Islamophobes. Hirsi Ali’s star rose quickly, especially after she accepted an offer from the VVD, Holland’s pro-market party, to run for parliament. By then, she was receiving a stream of death threats from radical Dutch Muslims and their sympathizers. Once she won her parliamentary seat, the hate mail intensified. A security detail shadowed her everywhere. Van Gogh’s murder proved the threat was all too real.

Throughout her parliamentary career, which lasted from 2003 to 2006, Hirsi Ali reaped both praise and controversy. She continued writing and speaking out in favor of free speech and the right to offend. 2004 was an especially turbulent year both privately and publicly. In May she swore off Islam and all religion. Van Gogh’s assassination made her internationally famous, and she garnered a spot on Time’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world and a European of the Year Award from the European editors of Reader’s Digest. Even the readers of De Volkskrant, a newspaper that had long embraced unfettered multiculturalism, were enthralled: They chose Hirsi Ali as their Dutch Person of the Year at the end of 2004.

In May and June of last year, a tempest in a teacup erupted over her alleged truth-twisting at the time of her Dutch asylum application. (She allegedly used false biographical data.) Hirsi Ali had already decided to move on. The publication of her autobiography, Infidel, was imminent. Early whispers about a resident fellow position with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C., turned out to be correct. Hirsi Ali moved to America, and she joined the institute in the fall of last year.

In June, Hirsi Ali talked with the Dutch-born journalist Rogier van Bakel in Washington, D.C. Comments can be sent to letters@reason.com.

Reason: Tell me how you came to the United States and the American Enterprise Institute.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I was a member of parliament back in the Netherlands, and my party asked if I wanted to run for the next elections, in 2007. I declined. Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende’s cabinet was very precarious anyway; every two or three weeks we thought the government would fall, which would mean elections, which would force all of us members of parliament to think about what we were going to do next. So I had already decided I didn’t want to run for elections, and wanted instead to go back to being a scholar. Cynthia Schneider, who was then the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, said she’d be delighted to take me around in the United States and introduce me—to the Brookings Institution, the Johns Hopkins Institute, Georgetown University, the RAND Corporation. I balked at paying a visit to the American Enterprise Institute, though.

Reason: Why the initial aversion?

Hirsi Ali: Because I thought they would be religious, and I had become an atheist. And I don’t consider myself a conservative. I consider myself a classical liberal.

Anyway, the Brookings Institution did not react. Johns Hopkins said they didn’t have enough money. The RAND Corporation wants its people to spend their days and nights in libraries figuring out statistics, and I’m very bad at statistics. But at AEI they were enthusiastic. It turns out that I have complete freedom of thought, freedom of expression. No one here imposed their religion on me, and I don’t impose my atheism on them.

Reason: Do you see eye to eye with high-profile AEI hawks such as former Bush speechwriter David Frum and former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton?

Hirsi Ali: Most of the time I do. For instance, I completely and utterly agree with John Bolton that talking to Iran is a sheer waste of time.

When I was with the Labor Party, I’d get into trouble because the party bosses determined that some of what I wrote, or proposed to write about, wasn’t conducive to their policies or to electoral success. But at AEI there are no such restraints. As long you can argue it with some intelligence, no one interferes.

Reason: Religion is hardly inconsequential in European politics, but it’s virtually a prerequisite for electability here: If you’re not devout, forget about it; you won’t be elected to public office.

Hirsi Ali: I’m not going to become president, and I’m not going to run for Congress. Your Constitution doesn’t allow it. [Laughs.]

Reason: But do you feel at all uncomfortable with that heavy emphasis on religion in American public life?

Hirsi Ali: Yes. And the good thing is—and that’s what I’ve tried to tell all my European friends—I’m allowed to say so.

I think that it’s a great mistake for this country to reject a very good atheist. I mean, when you have two candidates, and one is an atheist and the other is a religious person and the atheist would make the better public official, it’s a great loss not to elect him. Anyway, atheists here can forward their agenda and fight back safely without risking violence.

I accept that there are multitudes seeking God, seeking meaning, and so on, but if they reject atheism, I would rather they became modern-day Catholics or Jews than that they became Muslims. Because my Catholic and Jewish colleagues are fine. The concept of God in Jewish orthodoxy is one where you’re having constant quarrels with God. Where I come from, in Islam, the only concept of God is you submit to Him and you obey His commands, no quarreling allowed. Quarreling or even asking questions means you raise yourself to the same level as Him, and in Islam that’s the worst sin you can commit. Jews should be proselytizing about a God that you can quarrel with. Catholics should be proselytizing about a God who is love, who represents a hereafter where there’s no hell, who wants you to lead a life where you can confess your sins and feel much better afterwards. Those are lovely concepts of God. They can’t compare to the fire-breathing Allah who inspires jihadism and totalitarianism.

Reason: In Infidel, you point out many positive religious experiences you had as a Muslim. For instance, you describe Mecca’s Grand Mosque as a place of vastness and beauty. You praise the kindness that you experienced there, a sense of community, a lack of prejudice. Are there times when you miss that aspect of being a practicing believer?

Hirsi Ali: I’d love to go and visit the Mosque in Mecca again, just for the sheer beauty of it, not for God—much the way a non-Catholic might go to Vatican City because of the beauty of the buildings and the artifacts. There’s a sense of calm in such places that’s wonderful, and there’s the awe you feel because of what humanity can accomplish.

But do I miss the religious experience? The feelings of belonging and family and community were powerful, but the price in terms of freedom was too high. In order to be able to live free, I’ve accepted living with the pain of missing my family. As for community, I experienced a very deep sense of community with my friends in Holland.

Reason: Should we acknowledge that organized religion has sometimes sparked precisely the kinds of emancipation movements that could lift Islam into modern times? Slavery in the United States ended in part because of opposition by prominent church members and the communities they galvanized. The Polish Catholic Church helped defeat the Jaruzelski puppet regime. Do you think Islam could bring about similar social and political changes?

Hirsi Ali: Only if Islam is defeated. Because right now, the political side of Islam, the power-hungry expansionist side of Islam, has become superior to the Sufis and the Ismailis and the peace-seeking Muslims.

Reason: Don’t you mean defeating radical Islam?

Hirsi Ali: No. Islam, period. Once it’s defeated, it can mutate into something peaceful. It’s very difficult to even talk about peace now. They’re not interested in peace.

Reason: We have to crush the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims under our boot? In concrete terms, what does that mean, “defeat Islam”?

Hirsi Ali: I think that we are at war with Islam. And there’s no middle ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For starters, you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present, there are native Westerners converting to Islam, and they’re the most fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the schools and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the symbol burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye and flex your muscles and you say, “This is a warning. We won’t accept this anymore.” There comes a moment when you crush your enemy.

Reason: Militarily?

Hirsi Ali: In all forms, and if you don’t do that, then you have to live with the consequence of being crushed.

Reason: Are we really heading toward anything so ominous?

Hirsi Ali: I think that’s where we’re heading. We’re heading there because the West has been in denial for a long time. It did not respond to the signals that were smaller and easier to take care of. Now we have some choices to make. This is a dilemma: Western civilization is a celebration of life—everybody’s life, even your enemy’s life. So how can you be true to that morality and at the same time defend yourself against a very powerful enemy that seeks to destroy you?

Reason: George Bush, not the most conciliatory person in the world, has said on plenty of occasions that we are not at war with Islam.

Hirsi Ali: If the most powerful man in the West talks like that, then, without intending to, he’s making radical Muslims think they’ve already won. There is no moderate Islam. There are Muslims who are passive, who don’t all follow the rules of Islam, but there’s really only one Islam, defined as submission to the will of God. There’s nothing moderate about it.

Reason: So when even a hard-line critic of Islam such as Daniel Pipes says, “Radical Islam is the problem, but moderate Islam is the solution,” he’s wrong?

Hirsi Ali: He’s wrong. Sorry about that.

Reason: Explain to me what you mean when you say we have to stop the burning of our flags and effigies in Muslim countries. Why should we care?

Hirsi Ali: We can make fun of George Bush. He’s our president. We elected him. And the queen of England, they can make fun of her within Britain and so on. But on an international level, this has gone too far. You know, the Russians, they don’t burn American flags. The Chinese don’t burn American flags. Have you noticed that? They don’t defile the symbols of other civilizations. The Japanese don’t do it. That never happens.

Reason: Isn’t that a double standard? You want us to be able to say about Islam whatever we want—and I certainly agree with that. But then you add that people in Muslim countries should under all circumstances respect our symbols, or else.

Hirsi Ali: No, no, no.

Reason: We should be able to piss on a copy of the Koran or lampoon Muhammad, but they shouldn’t be able to burn the queen in effigy. That’s not a double standard?

Hirsi Ali: No, that’s not what I’m saying. In Iran a nongovernmental organization has collected money, up to 150,000 British pounds, to kill Salman Rushdie. That’s a criminal act, but we are silent about that.

Reason: We are?

Hirsi Ali: Yes. What happened? Have you seen any political response to it?

Reason: The fatwa against Rushdie has been the subject of repeated official anger and protests since 1989.

Hirsi Ali: I don’t know. The British sailors who were kidnapped this year—what happened? Nothing happened. The West keeps giving the impression that it’s OK, so the extremists will get away with it. Saudi Arabia is an economic partner, a partner in defense. On the other hand, they—Saudi Arabia, wealthy Saudi people—spread Islam. They have a sword on their flag. That’s the double standard.

Reason: I want my government to protest the Rushdie fatwa. I’m not so sure they ought to diplomatically engage some idiots burning a piece of cloth or a straw figure in the streets of Islamabad. Isn’t there a huge difference between the two?

Hirsi Ali: It’s not just a piece of cloth. It’s a symbol. In a tribal mind-set, if I’m allowed to take something and get away with it, I’ll come back and take some more. In fact, I’ll come and take the whole place, especially since it’s my holy obligation to spread Islam to the outskirts of the earth and I know I’ll be rewarded in heaven. At that point, I’ve only done my religious obligation while you’re still sitting there rationalizing that your own flag is a piece of cloth.

We have to get serious about this. The Egyptian dictatorship would not allow many radical imams to preach in Cairo, but they’re free to preach in giant mosques in London. Why do we allow it?

Reason: You’re in favor of civil liberties, but applied selectively?

Hirsi Ali: No. Asking whether radical preachers ought to be allowed to operate is not hostile to the idea of civil liberties; it’s an attempt to save civil liberties. A nation like this one is based on civil liberties, and we shouldn’t allow any serious threat to them. So Muslim schools in the West, some of which are institutions of fascism that teach innocent kids that Jews are pigs and monkeys—I would say in order to preserve civil liberties, don’t allow such schools.

Reason: In Holland, you wanted to introduce a special permit system for Islamic schools, correct?

Hirsi Ali: I wanted to get rid of them. I wanted to have them all closed, but my party said it wouldn’t fly. Top people in the party privately expressed that they agreed with me, but said, “We won’t get a majority to do that,” so it never went anywhere.

Reason: Well, your proposal went against Article 23 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees that religious movements may teach children in religious schools and says the government must pay for this if minimum standards are met. So it couldn’t be done. Would you in fact advocate that again?

Hirsi Ali: Oh, yeah.

Reason: Here in the United States, you’d advocate the abolition of—

Hirsi Ali: All Muslim schools. Close them down. Yeah, that sounds absolutist. I think 10 years ago things were different, but now the jihadi genie is out of the bottle. I’ve been saying this in Australia and in the U.K. and so on, and I get exactly the same arguments: The Constitution doesn’t allow it. But we need to ask where these constitutions came from to start with—what’s the history of Article 23 in the Netherlands, for instance? There were no Muslim schools when the constitution was written. There were no jihadists. They had no idea.

Reason: Do you believe that the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights—documents from more than 200 ago—ought to change?

Hirsi Ali: They’re not infallible. These Western constitutions are products of the Enlightenment. They’re products of reason, and reason dictates that you can only progress when you can analyze the circumstances and act accordingly. So now that we live under different conditions, the threat is different. Constitutions can be adapted, and they are, sometimes. The American Constitution has been amended a number of times. With the Dutch Constitution, I think the latest adaptation was in 1989. Constitutions are not like the Koran—nonnegotiable, never-changing.

Look, in a democracy, it’s like this: I suggest, “Let’s close Muslim schools.” You say, “No, we can’t do it.” The problem that I’m pointing out to you gets bigger and bigger. Then you say, “OK, let’s somehow discourage them,” and still the problem keeps on growing, and in another few years it gets so bad that I belatedly get what I wanted in the first place.

I respect that it needs to happen this way, but there’s a price for the fact that you and I didn’t share these insights earlier, and the longer we wait, the higher the price. In itself the whole process is not a bad thing. People and communities and societies learn through experience. The drawback is, in this case, that “let’s learn from experience” means other people’s lives will be taken.

Reason: When I read Ian Buruma’s review of your book in The New York Times, I felt he wasn’t being fair to you when he wrote that you “espouse an absolutist way of a perfectly enlightened west at war with the demonic world of Islam.” But maybe that’s a pretty apt description of what you believe.
Hirsi Ali: No, that’s not fair. I don’t think that the West is perfect, and I think that standing up and defending modern society from going back to the law of the jungle is not being absolutist.

I don’t know what Buruma saw when he went to Holland [to research Theo van Gogh’s assassination for his book Murder in Amsterdam], but Theo rode to work on his bicycle one morning, and a man armed with knives and guns took Theo’s life in the name of his God—and that same man, Mohammed Bouyeri, wasn’t born believing that. The people who introduced this mind-set to Bouyeri took advantage of the notion of freedom of religion and other civil liberties.

Samir Azouz, another young man in Holland convicted of terrorist plotting, attended a fundamentalist Muslim school in Amsterdam which is still open. He had maps of the Dutch parliament. He wanted to kill me and other politicians. He wanted to cause murder and mayhem congruent with the set of beliefs that he was taught in school using Dutch taxpayers’ money. Now go back in time a little. Isn’t it extremely cruel when you put yourself in the shoes of that little boy? He was just going to an officially recognized school in a multicultural society. Everyone approved—and now he’s being punished for it. He’s in jail.

Reason: One of the things in your book that struck me was that many of the women in the book made religious choices that seemed entirely free. Your childhood teacher, Sister Aziza, chose to cover herself “to seek a deeper satisfaction of pleasing God.” You described dressing in an ankle-length black cloak yourself, and how it made you feel sensuous and feminine and desirable and like an individual. There’s also the scene where many women in your own Somali neighborhood, including your mother, began dressing in burkas and jilbabs after encountering a preacher named Boqol Sawm. You and they apparently did so of their free will, without any obvious coercion. So what’s the problem with that?

Hirsi Ali: I really thought Sister Aziza was convincing, and I wanted to be like her. And she talked about God and hell and heaven in a way I hadn’t heard before. My mother would only scream, “Pray, it’s time to pray!” without ever explaining why. Sister Aziza wasn’t doing that.

But she did teach us to hate Jews. I must confess to a deep emotional hatred I felt for Jews as a 15-, 16-, 17-year-old living in Kenya. You almost can’t help it; you become part of something bigger. I think that’s how totalitarian movements function and that’s what’s wrong with them. You lose your faculty of reason. You’re told, “Don’t think for yourself. Just follow the leader.”

“Hate people.” OK. “Kill people.” OK, fine.

Reason: But I don’t think that you, at the time, would have said that you had lost your faculty of reason. Nor would your mother have copped to that. You and the other women believed you were all making a perfectly free, rational choice to dress religiously. And why not?

Hirsi Ali: Boqol Sawm is a Somali man who was offered a scholarship to go to Medina to learn true Islam. He was indoctrinated in Medina, and then he was sent with a message to go out and be a missionary, and that’s what he was doing and he did it voluntarily. No one kidnapped him. And he convinced a lot of people.

Reason: Isn’t it all in the eye of the beholder? When you say he was indoctrinated, he would say, “I was enlightened. I was gaining knowledge of my one true faith.”

Hirsi Ali: I agree with you. When I was with Sister Aziza I thought I was being enlightened. I wasn’t aware of all the terms that we are using now: fundamentalism, radical Islam, jihadism, and so on. We were simply true and pure Muslims. We were seeking to live as true Muslims, practicing true Islam, which you find in the Koran. But it’s a problematic ideology because it demands subservience to Allah, not just from believers but from everyone.

Reason: Having lived in the United States for about a year now, do you find that Muslims in the United States have by and large integrated better here than they have in Europe?

Hirsi Ali: Since I moved here, I’ve spent most of my time in airports, in airplanes, in waiting rooms, in hotels, doing promotion for Infidel all over the world, so the amount of time I’ve actually lived in the U.S. is very small. But yes, I have the impression that Muslims in the United States are far more integrated than Muslims in Europe. Of course, being assimilated doesn’t necessarily mean that you won’t be a jihadist, but the likelihood of Muslims turning radical here seems lower than in Europe.

For one thing, America doesn’t really have a welfare system. Mohammed Bouyeri had all day long to plot the murder of Theo van Gogh. American Muslims have to get a job. What pushes people who come to America to assimilate is that it’s expected of them. And people are not mollycoddled by the government.

There’s a lot of white guilt in America, but it’s directed toward black Americans and native Indians, not toward Muslims and other immigrants. People come from China, Vietnam, and all kinds of Muslim countries. To the average American, they’re all fellow immigrants.

The white guilt in Germany and Holland and the U.K. is very different. It has to do with colonialism. It has to do with Dutch emigrants having spread apartheid in South Africa. It has to do with the Holocaust. So the mind-set toward immigrants in Europe is far more complex than here. Europeans are more reticent about saying no to immigrants.

And by and large, Muslim immigrants in Europe do not come with the intention to assimilate. They come with the intention to work, earn some money, and go back. That’s how the first wave of immigrants in the Netherlands was perceived: They would just come to work and then they’d go away. The newer generations that have followed are coming not so much to work and more to reap the benefits of the welfare state. Again, assimilation is not really on their minds.

Also, in order to get official status here in the U.S., you have to have an employer, so it’s the employable who are coming. The Arabs who live here came as businessmen, and a lot of them come from wealthy backgrounds. There are also large communities of Indian and Pakistani Muslims, who tend to be very liberal. Compare that to the Turks in Germany, who mostly come from the poor villages of Anatolia. Or compare it to the Moroccans in the Netherlands, who are for the most part Berbers with a similar socio-economic background. It’s a completely different set of people.

And finally, there’s the matter of borders. In America, Muslim immigrants typically pass through an airport, which means the Americans have a better way of controlling who comes in—a far cry from Europe’s open borders. Forty years ago, when Europe began talking about lifting borders between countries to facilitate the free traffic of goods and labor, they weren’t thinking about waves of immigrants. They thought of Europe as a place people left. America, on the other hand, has always been an immigration nation, with border controls that have been in place for a long time. I know the southern border is difficult to monitor, but for Arab Muslims and Pakistanis coming to America, it’s very hard to enter illegally.

Without passing any moral judgment, those are the differences between the two places.

Reason: Are you concerned about the efficacy of your message? Do you worry that, at least in the short term, you have exacerbated the miserable treatment of women under much of mainstream Islam by prompting moderate Muslims to turn inward to their religion because they really don’t want to follow the path of the apostate Hirsi Ali?

Hirsi Ali: Young men now want to become terrorists in response to something I’ve written, that sort of thing? I don’t think that is the case. If we continue that reasoning, we’ll never scrutinize anything. Can we ever write? Can we ever criticize anything?

Reason: You write in your book that you would never have voted for Pim Fortuyn, the murdered leader of an anti-immigration party who had been considered a candidate for the Dutch prime ministership. I wonder what ideological differences you had with him.

Hirsi Ali: It wasn’t an ideological difference I had with Pim Fortuyn. In the Netherlands, new parties provoke change; they’re shock parties. They don’t carry out policies. Also, Fortuyn had no experience and had an explosive temper. Don’t get me wrong; he would have been a wonderful addition to the Dutch parliament, because rhetorically he was far stronger than all the other candidates. But I don’t think he really wanted to become prime minister. He was only joking.

Reason: He was?

Hirsi Ali: I think he was. He was a flamboyant hedonist. To be a prime minister, you sleep about four hours a night. So anyway, I wouldn’t have voted for him. I’ve always voted for the establishment.

Reason: You don’t sound like an establishment-supporting kind of person. You’re supposed to be a big rebel.

Hirsi Ali: Yeah, but there are rebels and rebels. There are rebels who are always against something, like the Socialist Party in the Netherlands. To them, rebelling itself is the aim. That’s where they get their thrill from. But I’m rebelling for something. I want something to be established.

Reason: Tolerance is probably the most powerful word there is in the Netherlands. No other word encapsulates better what the Dutch believe really defines them. That makes it very easy for people to say that when they’re being criticized, they’re not being tolerated—and from there it’s only a small step to saying they’re being discriminated against or they’re the victims of Islamophobia or racism or what have you.

Hirsi Ali: We have to revert to the original meaning of the term tolerance. It meant you agreed to disagree without violence. It meant critical self-reflection. It meant not tolerating the intolerant. It also came to mean a very high level of personal freedom.

Then the Muslims arrived, and they hadn’t grown up with that understanding of tolerance. In short order, tolerance was now defined by multiculturalism, the idea that all cultures and religions are equal. Expectations were created among the Muslim population. They were told they could preserve their own culture, their own religion. The vocabulary was quickly established that if you criticize someone of color, you’re a racist, and if you criticize Islam, you’re an Islamophobe.

Reason: The international corollary to the word tolerance is probably respect. The alleged lack of respect has become a perennial sore spot in relations between the West and Islam. Salman Rushdie receiving a British knighthood supposedly signified such a lack of respect, as did the Danish cartoons last year, and many other things. Do you believe this is what Muslims genuinely crave—respect?

Hirsi Ali: It’s not about respect. It’s about power, and Islam is a political movement.

Reason: Uniquely so?

Hirsi Ali: Well, it hasn’t been tamed like Christianity. See, the Christian powers have accepted the separation of the worldly and the divine. We don’t interfere with their religion, and they don’t interfere with the state. That hasn’t happened in Islam.

But I don’t even think that the trouble is Islam. The trouble is the West, because in the West there’s this notion that we are invincible and that everyone will modernize anyway, and that what we are seeing now in Muslim countries is a craving for respect. Or it’s poverty, or it’s caused by colonization.

The Western mind-set—that if we respect them, they’re going to respect us, that if we indulge and appease and condone and so on, the problem will go away—is delusional. The problem is not going to go away. Confront it, or it’s only going to get bigger.

Rogier van Bakel is a freelance journalist and runs the blog Nobody's Business.

Discuss this article online.

Geplaatst/gelinkt door Joop

   

zaterdag 12 januari 2008

Blind Faiths

Source: NY Times - By AYAAN HIRSI ALI

Radical Islam’s Threat to the Enlightenment

Ali1450_1

Several authors have published books on radical Islam’s threat to the West since that shocking morning in September six years ago. With “The Suicide of Reason,” Lee Harris joins their ranks. But he distinguishes himself by going further than most of his counterparts: he considers the very worst possibility — the destruction of the West by radical Islam. There is a sense of urgency in his writing, a desire to shake awake the leaders of the West, to confront them with their failure to understand that they are engaged in a war with an adversary who fights by the law of the jungle.

Foto: Ahead of the United States’ invasion of Iraq in 2003, Saddam Hussein’s policemen dressed as suicide bombers for a parade in Baghdad.

Harris, the author of “Civilization and Its Enemies: The Next Stage of History,” devotes most of his book to identifying and distinguishing between two kinds of fanaticism. The first is Islamic fanaticism, a formidable enemy in the struggle for cultural survival. In Harris’s view, this fanaticism has acted as a “defense mechanism,” shielding Islam from the pressures of the changing world around it and allowing it to expand into territories and cultures where it had previously been unknown.

With few exceptions, Harris sees Islamic expansion as permanent. Although this point is arguable, he bravely attempts to make the case that the entry of Islam into another culture produces changes on every level, from political to personal: “Wherever Islam has spread, there has occurred a total and revolutionary transformation in the culture of those conquered or converted.”

In describing the imperialist nature of Islam, Harris suggests that it is distinct from the Roman, British and French empires. He views Islamic imperialism as a single-minded expansion of the religion itself; the empire that it envisions is governed by Allah. In this sense, the idea of jihad is less about the inner struggle for peace and justice and more about a grand mission of conversion. It should be said, however, that Harris’s argument is incomplete, since he does not address the spread of Christianity in the Roman, British and French empires.

The expansion of Islam is perhaps more potent than the expansion of the Christian empires (including Rome after Constantine) because the concept of separating the sacred from the profane has never been acceptable in Islam the way it has been in Christianity. The Romans, the British and the French went about annexing large parts of the world more for earthly or material gain than for spiritual dominance. Under these empires, the clergy was allowed to propagate its faith as long as it did not jeopardize imperial interests.

Harris goes on to argue that the Muslim world, since it is governed by the law of the jungle, makes group survival paramount. This explains in part the willingness of Muslims to become martyrs for the larger community, the umma — uniting peoples separated by geographical boundaries, with different cultures, heritages and languages. According to Harris, this sense of solidarity is sustainable only with the weapon of fanaticism, which obligates each member of the umma to convert infidels and to threaten those who attempt to leave with death. That is, the aim of Muslim culture, so different from that of the West, is both to preserve and to convert, and this is what enables it to spread across the globe.

The second fanaticism that Harris identifies is one he views as infecting Western societies; he calls it a “fanaticism of reason.” Reason, he says, contains within itself a potential fatality because it blinds Western leaders to the true nature of Islamic-influenced cultures. Westerners see these cultures merely as different versions of the world they know, with dominant values similar to those espoused in their own culture. But this, Harris argues, is a fatal mistake. It implies that the West fails to appreciate both its history and the true nature of its opposition.

Nor, he points out, is the failure linked to a particular political outlook. Liberals and conservatives alike share this misperception. Noam Chomsky and Paul Wolfowitz agreed, Harris writes, “that you couldn’t really blame the terrorists, since they were merely the victims of an evil system — for Chomsky, American imperialism, for Wolfowitz, the corrupt and despotic regimes of the Middle East.” That is to say, while left and right may disagree on the causes and the remedies, they both overlook the fanaticism inherent in Islam itself. Driven by their blind faith in reason, they interpret the problem in a way that is familiar to them, in order to find a solution that fits within their doctrine of reason. The same is true for such prominent intellectuals as Samuel Huntington and Francis Fukuyama.

Harris does not regard Islamic fanaticism as a deviancy or a madness that affects a few Muslims and terrifies many. Instead he argues that fanaticism is the basic principle in Islam. “The Muslims are, from an early age, indoctrinated into a shaming code that demands a fanatical rejection of anything that threatens to subvert the supremacy of Islam,” he writes. During the years that this shaming code is instilled into children, the collective is emphasized above the individual and his freedoms. A good Muslim must forsake all: his property, family, children, even life for the sake of Islam. Boys in particular are taught to be dominating and merciless, which has the effect of creating a society of holy warriors.

By contrast, the West has cultivated an ethos of individualism, reason and tolerance, and an elaborate system in which every actor, from the individual to the nation-state, seeks to resolve conflict through words. The entire system is built on the idea of self-interest. This ethos rejects fanaticism. The alpha male is pacified and groomed to study hard, find a good job and plan prudently for retirement: “While we in America are drugging our alpha boys with Ritalin,” Harris writes, “the Muslims are doing everything in their power to encourage their alpha boys to be tough, aggressive and ruthless.”

The West has variously tried to convert, to assimilate and to seduce Muslims into modernity, but, Harris says, none of these approaches have succeeded. Meanwhile, our worship of reason is making us easy prey for a ruthless, unscrupulous and extremely aggressive predator and may be contributing to a slow cultural “suicide.”

Harris’s book is so engaging that it is difficult to put down, and its haunting assessments make it difficult for a reader to sleep at night. He deserves praise for raising serious questions. But his arguments are not entirely sound.

I disagree, for instance, that the way to rescue Western civilization from a path of suicide is to challenge its tradition of reason. Indeed, for all his understanding of the rise of fanaticism in general and its Islamic manifestation in particular, Harris’s use of the term “reason” is faulty.

Enlightenment thinkers, preoccupied with both individual freedom and secular and limited government, argued that human reason is fallible. They understood that reason is more than just rational thought; it is also a process of trial and error, the ability to learn from past mistakes. The Enlightenment cannot be fully appreciated without a strong awareness of just how frail human reason is. That is why concepts like doubt and reflection are central to any form of decision-making based on reason.

Harris is pessimistic in a way that the Enlightenment thinkers were not. He takes a Darwinian view of the struggle between clashing cultures, criticizing the West for an ethos of selfishness, and he follows Hegel in asserting that where the interest of the individual collides with that of the state, it is the state that should prevail. This is why he attributes such strength to Islamic fanaticism. The collectivity of the umma elevates the communal interest above that of the individual believer. Each Muslim is a slave, first of God, then of the caliphate. Although Harris does not condone this extreme subversion of the self, still a note of admiration seems to creep into his descriptions of Islam’s fierce solidarity, its adherence to tradition and the willingness of individual Muslims to sacrifice themselves for the sake of the greater good.

In addition, Harris extols American exceptionalism together with Hegel as if there were no contradiction between the two. But what makes America unique, especially in contrast to Europe, is its resistance to the philosophy of Hegel with its concept of a unifying world spirit. It is the individual that matters most in the United States. And more generally, it is individuals who make cultures and who break them. Social and cultural evolution has always relied on individuals — to reform, persuade, cajole or force. Culture is formed by the collective agreement of individuals. At the same time, it is crucial that we not fall into the trap of assuming that the survival tactics of individuals living in tribal societies — like lying, hypocrisy, secrecy, violence, intimidation, and so forth — are in the interest of the modern individual or his culture.

I was not born in the West. I was raised with the code of Islam, and from birth I was indoctrinated into a tribal mind-set. Yet I have changed, I have adopted the values of the Enlightenment, and as a result I have to live with the rejection of my native clan as well as the Islamic tribe. Why have I done so? Because in a tribal society, life is cruel and terrible. And I am not alone. Muslims have been migrating to the West in droves for decades now. They are in search of a better life. Yet their tribal and cultural constraints have traveled with them. And the multiculturalism and moral relativism that reign in the West have accommodated this.

Harris is correct, I believe, that many Western leaders are terribly confused about the Islamic world. They are woefully uninformed and often unwilling to confront the tribal nature of Islam. The problem, however, is not too much reason but too little. Harris also fails to address the enemies of reason within the West: religion and the Romantic movement. It is out of rejection of religion that the Enlightenment emerged; Romanticism was a revolt against reason.

Both the Romantic movement and organized religion have contributed a great deal to the arts and to the spirituality of the Western mind, but they share a hostility to modernity. Moral and cultural relativism (and their popular manifestation, multiculturalism) are the hallmarks of the Romantics. To argue that reason is the mother of the current mess the West is in is to miss the major impact this movement has had, first in the West and perhaps even more profoundly outside the West, particularly in Muslim lands.

Thus, it is not reason that accommodates and encourages the persistent segregation and tribalism of immigrant Muslim populations in the West. It is Romanticism. Multiculturalism and moral relativism promote an idealization of tribal life and have shown themselves to be impervious to empirical criticism. My reasons for reproaching today’s Western leaders are different from Harris’s. I see them squandering a great and vital opportunity to compete with the agents of radical Islam for the minds of Muslims, especially those within their borders. But to do so, they must allow reason to prevail over sentiment.

To argue, as Harris seems to do, that children born and bred in superstitious cultures that value fanaticism and create phalanxes of alpha males are doomed — and will doom others — to an existence governed by the law of the jungle is to ignore the lessons of the West’s own past. There have been periods when the West was less than noble, when it engaged in crusades, inquisitions, witch-burnings and genocides. Many of the Westerners who were born into the law of the jungle, with its alpha males and submissive females, have since become acquainted with the culture of reason and have adopted it. They are even — and this should surely relieve Harris of some of his pessimism — willing to die for it, perhaps with the same fanaticism as the jihadists willing to die for their tribe. In short, while this conflict is undeniably a deadly struggle between cultures, it is individuals who will determine the outcome.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, is the author of “Infidel.”

Posted by Sylvia

vrijdag 4 januari 2008

Dad charged in daughter's death


Aqsa Parvez.
CREDIT: Ebonie Mitchell
Aqsa Parvez.

TORONTO - A Mississauga, Ont. cab driver has been charged with the murder of his 16-year-old daughter, who was attacked in the family home after clashing with her strict Muslim family over whether or not to wear the hijab, the traditional Islamic head scarf for women.

Muhammad Parvez, 57, was charged after his daughter Aqsa Parvez died in hospital late Monday.

The victim's older brother Waqas Parvez, was charged with obstructing police in connection with the girl's death.

Police were called to a home in Mississauga early Monday morning by a man who told 911 operators that he had killed his daughter.

They found Aqsa Parvez lying motionless on the floor of her bedroom, to all appearances dead, but paramedics found a faint pulse and rushed her to hospital. The teenager succumbed to her injuries several hours later, police said Tuesday.

Const. J.P. Valade would not give any details about the teenager's killing, but police sources said she was strangled.

Friends of the girl said she had left the family home, where her brothers also lived with their families, about a week before the attack because of arguments with her father and brothers over her refusal to wear traditional Muslim garb, including the hijab.

"She was scared of her father: He was always controlling her," said Dominiquia Holmes-Thompson, a friend and classmate at Applewood Heights Secondary School, where both were Grade 11 students. "She wasn't allowed to go out or do anything: That's why she left."

Valade would not comment on the possible motive for the killing, but said detectives are continuing to interview neighbours and friends of the girl as well as members of her extended family.

Canadian Muslim groups on Tuesday condemned the attack.

"There should be zero tolerance for violence of any kind against women or girls," said Shahina Siddiqui, the president of the Islamic Social Services Association.

Faisal Kutty, the legal counsel for the Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations, said: We call for the strongest possible prosecution of Ms. Parvez's alleged attacker."

Sylvia Link, a spokeswoman for the Peel District School Board, said grief counsellors have been sent to the school to help Aqsa's classmates deal with the incident.

The flag outside the school was flown at half-mast and a memorial table was set up at the school where friends of the slain teen could write their memories, display pictures, leave flowers and mementos.

Link said school officials are also looking into the case to see if there was anything they could have done to help Aqsa or students in similar situations.

"We want to see what we can learn from this tragedy," she said.

Valade said police and prosecutors have not yet decided whether to charge the dead girl's father with first- or second-degree murder, but they have until the beginning of his preliminary hearing to make that decision.

Parvez is scheduled to appear in a Brampton court today on a bail hearing.

More: Teen died of strangulation

Muslim teen was abused, friends say

--------------------------------------------

Ook in Nederland gebeurt dit :

Arme Doekle

De 26-jarige Naima el Gourari, haar 2-jarige zoontje Moktar en haar zussen Laila (28) en Fatima (19) zijn dakloos nadat er op oudejaarsavond brand is gesticht in hun flat aan de Eendrachtweg in Gouda. Naima is ervan overtuigd dat de brandstichting tevens een aanslag op hun leven was. “Gelukkig dat we maandagavond in Arnhem waren, anders waren we er niet meer geweest”, zegt ze tegen een verslaggeefster van AD Groene Hart.

“De drie zussen zijn ervan overtuigd dat er sprake is van brandstichting”, vervolgt het AD. “Naima: Ik ben Marokkaanse, maar zie er niet uit als de standaard moslima. Mijn haren zijn geverfd, ik heb een tatoeage. Ik bewoon het huis sinds 2005 en heb sindsdien problemen met Marokkanen in de wijk. Als ik op straat loop, noemen ze me ‘slet’ of ‘hoer’. Er is bier over mijn hoofd gegooid en mijn ruiten zijn ingegooid.’

Lees verder op Hoeiboei in een column van Carel Brendel

Posted by Joop

zaterdag 22 december 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali versus Timothy Garton Ash

Source: Axess tv

Islam's compatibility with democracy, the rule of law and freedom of speech is a subject of immense salience and importance in the early 21st century. In the Royal Society of Arts in London, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who lives under a death threat imposed by Muslim fundamentalists, debates this problem with Timothy Garton Ash, who has in the past criticised her for being an 'enlightenment fundamentalist'.

To watch the debate, click the blue film link below. Read more here.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali möter Timothy Garton Ash - Axess TV 2007 - v06 

Ayaan Hirsi Ali versus Timothy Garton Ash

 Ayaan211207
Click link above (or right) to watch the debate

A fiery debate on the compatibility of Enlightenment principles and Islamic fundamentalism is currently taking place in the USA, continental Europe and in the Swedish newspaper Expressen.
On the one side stand Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Paul Berman, and on the other Ian Buruma and Timothy Garton Ash. Timothy Garton Ash is one of Britain's most prominent public intellectuals, famous not least for his critical analysis of communism in former Eastern Europe.

Timothy Garton Ash has controversially compared Ayaan Hirsi Ali's defense of Enlightenment values to a kind of Islamic fundamentalism. He has described her views as representing "Enlightenment fundamentalism".  Also, he has stated that if Ayaan Hirsi Ali would have been an unattractive woman, she would never have gained such a large public acclaim.

Will Timothy Garton Ash stick to his guns and maintain that Ayaan Hirsi Ali's beauty is pivotal for her public interest and keep referring to her views as "Enlightenment fundamentalism"?


Will Ayaan Hirsi Ali attack Timothy Garton Ash at his soft spot – his being an intellectual, white, middle aged, middle class man? Taking turns, Timothy Garton Ash starts the debate.

John Lloyd, director of journalism at the Reuters Institute, chairs the discussion, recorded at the Royal Society of Arts, London.

Here is a transcript of the debate

From that transcript :

As some of you will know from the debates and the public prints I am a book reviewer in the New York Review of Books described Ayaan as an enlightenment fundamentalism. Some wise friends told me, warned me at the time that this was bound to be misunderstood. This was they said a great mistake. How right they were, because as some of you will know a great discussion has unfolded, particularly in Germany, from which one might have gathered that I had authored a three volume tome called something like the “Ausklerungs fundementalismus…” and I want to say here quite clearly that it did not occur to me that anyone would be so idiotic as to imagine that one was construing any symmetry between Islamic fundamentalists and enlightenment fundamentalists

and (Timothy Garton Ash):

We don’t have time to go into Tarek Ramadan. He’s a highly problematic figure, but I have certainly never pushed Tarek Ramadan on young Muslims......

At the end of the discussion, somewhere around the 55th minute some 'blasfemous' words are 'eradicated'

Here's the 'proof' :

Censuur












Posted by Joop mda Wilhelm
 

zondag 9 december 2007

Channel 4 cleared of fakery

Source: The Independent - By Jonathan Brown, Nov. 20, 2007

Channel 4 was yesterday cleared of faking the views of Muslim preachers in an undercover documentary examining alleged Islamic extremism in Britain.

The broadcaster accused West Midlands Police, which had reported it to Ofcom after its criminal investigation into the Dispatches programme collapsed earlier this year, of giving "legitimacy" to those preaching a message of hate.

In its findings, the media regulator said there was no evidence that Channel 4 or the documentary makers Hardcash Productions had misled the audience with the documentary broadcast in January. It said: "'Undercover Mosque' was a legitimate investigation, uncovering matters of important public interest."

Excerpts from preachers and teachers included such comments as: "Allah created the woman deficient", and "by the age of 10, it becomes an obligation on us to force her (young girls) to wear hijab and if she doesn't ... we hit her".

Ofcom also rejected the 364 viewers' complaints, which it said appeared to be part of a campaign.

The shadow Home Secretary, David Davis, said it was inappropriate for the police to scrutinise editorial decisions and risked deterring investigative journalism. West Midlands Police said it feared the documentary could undermine community cohesion.


Added: Januari 2007 UK Channel 4, aired 15th January 2007
Radicalisation of UK mosques by Saudi Wahabbism:

Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (1 of 6)


Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (2 of 6)


Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (3 of 6)


Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (4 of 6)


Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (5 of 6)


Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (6 of 6)


Read more: Volkskrantblog

Posted by Joop

Islam's Silent Moderates

Source: New York Times - By Ayaan Hirsi Ali

The woman and the man guilty of adultery or fornication, flog each of them with 100 stripes: Let no compassion move you in their case, in a matter prescribed by Allah, if you believe in Allah and the Last Day. (Koran 24:2)

In the last few weeks, in three widely publicized episodes, we have seen Islamic justice enacted in ways that should make Muslim moderates rise up in horror.
A 20-year-old woman from Qatif, Saudi Arabia, reported that she had been abducted by several men and repeatedly raped. But judges found the victim herself to be guilty. Her crime is called 'mingling': when she was abducted, she was in a car with a man not related to her by blood or marriage, and in Saudi Arabia, that is illegal. Last month, she was sentenced to six months in prison and 200 lashes with a bamboo cane.

Two hundred lashes are enough to kill a strong man. Women usually receive no more than 30 lashes at a time, which means that for seven weeks the 'girl from Qatif,' as she's usually described in news articles, will dread her next session with Islamic justice. When she is released, her life will certainly never return to normal: already there have been reports that her brother has tried to kill her because her 'crime' has tarnished her family's honor.

We also saw Islamic justice in action in Sudan, when a 54-year-old British teacher named Gillian Gibbons was sentenced to 15 days in jail before the government pardoned her this week; she could have faced 40 lashes. When she began a reading project with her class involving a teddy bear, Ms. Gibbons suggested the children choose a name for it. They chose Muhammad; she let them do it. This was deemed to be blasphemy.

Then there's Taslima Nasreen, the 45-year-old Bangladeshi writer who bravely defends women's rights in the Muslim world. Forced to flee Bangladesh, she has been living in India. But Muslim groups there want her expelled, and one has offered 500,000 rupees for her head. In August she was assaulted by Muslim militants in Hyderabad, and in recent weeks she has had to leave Calcutta and then Rajasthan. Taslima Nasreen's visa expires next year, and she fears she will not be allowed to live in India again.

It is often said that Islam has been 'hijacked' by a small extremist group of radical fundamentalists. The vast majority of Muslims are said to be moderates.
But where are the moderates? Where are the Muslim voices raised over the terrible injustice of incidents like these? How many Muslims are willing to stand up and say, in the case of the girl from Qatif, that this manner of justice is appalling, brutal and bigoted--and that no matter who said it was the right thing to do, and how long ago it was said, this should no longer be done?

Usually, Muslim groups like the Organization of the Islamic Conference are quick to defend any affront to the image of Islam. The organization, which represents 57 Muslim states, sent four ambassadors to the leader of my political party in the Netherlands asking him to expel me from Parliament after I gave a newspaper interview in 2003 noting that by Western standards some of the Prophet Muhammad's behavior would be unconscionable. A few years later, Muslim ambassadors to Denmark protested the cartoons of Muhammad and demanded that their perpetrators be prosecuted.

But while the incidents in Saudi Arabia, Sudan and India have done more to damage the image of Islamic justice than a dozen cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad, the organizations that lined up to protest the hideous Danish offense to Islam are quiet now.
I wish there were more Islamic moderates. For example, I would welcome some guidance from that famous Muslim theologian of moderation, Tariq Ramadan. But when there is true suffering, real cruelty in the name of Islam, we hear, first, denial from all these organizations that are so concerned about Islam's image. We hear that violence is not in the Koran, that Islam means peace, that this is a hijacking by extremists and a smear campaign and so on. But the evidence mounts up.

Islamic justice is a proud institution, one to which more than a billion people subscribe, at least in theory, and in the heart of the Islamic world it is the law of the land. But take a look at the verse above: more compelling even than the order to flog adulterers is the command that the believer show no compassion. It is this order to choose Allah above his sense of conscience and compassion that imprisons the Muslim in a mindset that is archaic and extreme.

If moderate Muslims believe there should be no compassion shown to the girl from Qatif, then what exactly makes them so moderate?
When a 'moderate' Muslim's sense of compassion and conscience collides with matters prescribed by Allah, he should choose compassion. Unless that happens much more widely, a moderate Islam will remain wishful thinking.

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 28 november 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: My life under a fatwa

Born and raised by fundamentalist Muslims, Ayaan Hirsi Ali fled her native Somalia for a new life in the Netherlands. Her talents bought fame as a feminist, writer and MP; her criticisms of Islam made her a target for violent extremists. Johann Hari meets a woman who dared to stand up for her beliefs – and paid the price Published: 27 November 2007

bron : The Independent

Ayaanindependent_1 Ayaan Hirsi Ali was stabbed into the world's consciousness three years ago. One wet afternoon in November 2004, her friend Theo van Gogh – a film-maker, and descendant of Vincent – left his house and was about to cycle off through Amsterdam.

But a young Dutch-born Muslim called Mohammed Bouyeri was waiting for him – with a handgun and two sharpened butcher's knives. Wordlessly, he shot Van Gogh twice in the chest. Van Gogh howled: "Can't we talk about this?" Bouyeri ignored his pleas and fired four more times. Then he pulled out a knife and slit Van Gogh's throat with such strength that his head was almost severed from his body. He used the other knife to stab a five-page letter on to Van Gogh's haemorrhaging corpse. Ayaan explains: "The letter was addressed to me." It said that Van Gogh had been "executed" for making a film with her that exposed the widespread abuse of Muslim women. Now, she would be "executed" too – for being an apostate.

She says that, even now, "every time I close my eyes, I see the murder, and I hear Theo pleading for his life. 'Can't we talk about this?' he asked his killer. It was so Dutch, so sweet and innocent." At the trial, Bouyeri spat at Van Gogh's mother: "I don't feel your pain. I don't have any sympathy for you. I can't feel for you because I think you're a non-believer." This is the story of how a 25-year-old bogus asylum-seeker from Africa came to Europe in search of freedom – only to be nearly murdered here by a Dutchman, on the streets of Amsterdam, for speaking out against religion.

The story opens in the blood-strewn streets of Somalia, and it closes amid the shiny white marble of Washington, DC – yet it also ends where it began: with Ayaan's life in danger. This is the story of the refugee who rocked Islam.

**** Her light, slight figure walks into the room so quietly that I would not have noticed her. But then the bodyguards follow: big, with their eyes darting into every corner in search of the long-awaited assassin, and you realise – yes, she is here. The internet is littered with pledges to torture and slay Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Yet, just a few weeks before we meet in London, the Dutch government has stripped away her security detail. She is paying for her own bodyguards now – and she could soon run out of cash. So how did this soft-voiced woman come to be so hated – and to be abandoned by the country that gave her sanctuary? The life of her mother hangs over Ayaan as a morality tale, a warning of what she might have been. "I was determined to never let what happened to my mother happen to me," she says, looking away. "I think that has made me the way I am." By the time her mother gave birth to Ayaan in a hospital on the outskirts of Mogadishu in 1967, she was a broken woman.

Like all Somalian women, she had been pressured all her life to suppress her personality, to sublimate everything to men and to God – to become what Ayaan calls "a devoted, well-trained work-animal". In her youth, her mother had moments when she fought back, briefly and bravely. She insisted on leaving her family. They were desert nomads, in effect living in the Iron Age, with no writing, few metal objects, and a belief that Allah's angels and demons were constantly tinkering with reality. At 15, she walked out of their desert to the city of Aden. But when her father called her back to be married to a man she had never met, she submitted.

There was another flickering moment of freedom: exceptionally for that time and place, she later insisted on a divorce, and got one. But this was all gone when Ayaan was born. The woman striving for independence had soon remarried, and crashed into the sheer weight of cultural expectation. She had been persuaded that "God is just and all-knowing and will reward you in the hereafter for being subservient". Her personality became deformed by it. "She remained completely dependent," Ayaan says. "She nursed grievances; she was resentful; she was often violent, and she was always depressed." She would take it out on Ayaan, tying her arms behind her back and lashing her with wire for the slightest misdemeanour.

When Ayaan first menstruated, her mother screamed at her: "Filthy prostitute! May you be barren! May you get cancer!" Ayaan tried to commit suicide not long after. But now she says she knows that "all the abuse wasn't really directed at me, but at the world, which had taken her rightful life away." When her second husband left her, Ayaan's mother was too infantilised to react. "It never occurred to her to go out and create a new life for herself, even though she can't have been older than 35 or 40 when my father left," Ayaan has written. She remembers waking up every night as a small girl to hear her mother wailing.

Once, she went into her mother's bedroom and placed a hand on her cheek; her mother screamed and beat her. After that, Ayaan would simply crouch at the door, listening to the wails, wishing she knew what to do. Somali culture began to demand that Ayaan too become a submissive woman who scrubbed away her own personality and sexuality. When she was five years old, she was made "pure" by having her genitals hacked out with a knife. It was a simple process; her grandmother and two of her friends pinned her down, pulled her legs apart, and knifed away her clitoris and labia. She remembers the sound even now – "like a butcher, snipping the fat off a piece of meat".

The bleeding wound was sewn up, leaving a thick tissue of scars to form as her fleshy chastity belt. She could not walk for two weeks. Ayaan soon realised that, in a culture so patriarchal that it could not tolerate the existence of an unmaimed vagina, "I could never become an adult. I would always be a minor, my decisions made for me. But I wanted to become an individual, with a life of my own." By reading novels, she heard whispers of a world where this was possible.

For her, even poring over Enid Blyton and Barbara Cartland seemed transgressive, because they depicted a world where boys and girls played together on the basis of equality, and where women chose their husbands rather than having them forced on them by their fathers. Imagine a world so patriarchal that Barbara Cartland seems like a gender revolutionary. Yet, on the road to this self-determining life, Ayaan turned first to its polar opposite: the very Islamic fundamentalism that now wants to kill her.

Ayaan was taught from infancy to revere the Prophet Mohamed and the Koran, and she believed it all. She desperately wanted to please Mohamed, and his path seemed to her the only one. So, once her family had moved to Kenya, a country where few people wore the headscarf, she chose to don one. She has written: "It had a thrill to it, a sensuous feeling. It made me feel powerful: underneath this screen lay a previously unsuspected, but potentially lethal, femininity. It sent out a message of superiority: I was the one true Muslim."

She began to go to a prayer group where the texts of Sayyid Qutb and Hassan al-Banna – the intellectual inspirations for al-Qa'ida – were pored over. When the Ayatollah Khomeini declared that Salman Rushdie should be murdered for what a maniac says in one of his novels, Ayaan wanted him dead. "I supported it," she says now, "and the logic of my position is that I would have become a martyr myself, or supported the people [who did become martyrs]." What would that girl, who took to the streets to call for Rushdie's death, say if she could see you now? Would she think you should be killed too?

For the first time in our interview, Ayaan pauses. A long pause. "What would that girl of 1989 think of this girl?" she repeats. "I think... well... people change." Another pause. "She would at least approve of it. That's why I try to explain – there is a reason why so many Muslims are silent when, in the name of Islam, violence is committed. It's because we believe that jihad is the sixth obligation. Those, then, who are brave enough to commit acts of jihad must deserve our commendation."

Then, one day, as she slid into jihadism, her absent father reappeared and announced that he had found her a good husband. Ayaan thought the potential life-partner stupid and ugly – but she had no choice. He was from the right clan, he had the right fundamentalist beliefs, and he wanted her. She knew what was expected: "A Muslim girl does not make her own decisions or seek control."

**** But she could not – would not – do it. She ran. She ran all the way to the Netherlands, on a plane, to claim asylum. She was terrified when she landed in the heartland of The Infidel. She expected to find depravity on every corner. But she was amazed. Here was a peaceful land that seemed like Paradise. "In the Netherlands, I saw people we called infidels living an amazing life – men and women mixing, gay people being free, you could say whatever you wanted," she says.

"Then I went back to the asylum-seekers' centre and almost everyone was from a Muslim country begging for the charity of these infidels. And I thought, 'If we're so superior, why are we begging from them?'" She experimented in stepping out on to the streets without her hijab, expecting she would be harassed and raped by the sex-crazed infidel. Nobody looked twice.

She began to test other democratic freedoms. She drank alcohol, she found a boyfriend – and she headed for the library to discover the principles that had created this place. She began to pore over the works of Enlightenment philosophy. "Sometimes, it seemed as if every page I read challenged me as a Muslim. Drinking wine and wearing trousers was nothing compared to reading the history of ideas," she says. "The Enlightenment cut European culture from its roots in old fixed ideas of magic, kingship, social hierarchy and the domination of priests, and regrafted it on to a great strong trunk that supported the equality of each individual and his right to free opinions and self-rule."

She found that all this was a profound challenge to the severe Islam she had been pickled in since childhood. She began to study for a political science degree and was slowly rethinking her faith when, one bright morning in September 2001, the island of Manhattan became swathed in smoke. The chief hijacker, Mohammed Atta, was exactly the same age as Ayaan. She feels like she knows him, and that if her life had taken a different turn – if she had stayed in Kenya, with the jihadis – "perhaps I could have done it."

And she says something very revealing: "I realised I could either go mad, join the Bin Ladenists, or step out of the religion." This fanatical form of Islam was, she realised, around her in the Netherlands. On the night of September 11, a small group of Muslim men took to the streets to celebrate the massacre. The country's domestic violence shelters were disproportionately crammed with Muslim women fleeing male terror. Forced marriages and "honour killings" continued at a startling rate in Dutch cities.

But she found that many otherwise good people were reluctant to speak out against this abuse of women and gay people within immigrant communities. The Netherlands had a policy called "emancipation within your own circle", and Ayaan saw this as a betrayal. Multiculturalism, she believed, was "elevating cultures full of bigotry and hatred towards women to the stature of respectable alternative ways of life. I wanted Muslim women to be aware of just how bad, and unacceptable, their suffering was. I wanted to help them develop the vocabulary of resistance."

She took the great English feminist Mary Wollstonecraft as her lodestar, and began to campaign for the state to log the rate of "honour" killings, because nobody was even bothering to count. This led to the centre-right Liberal Party asking her to run to be a member of parliament. She accepted, and got one of the highest personal votes in the country. This in turn led her into the path of Theo van Gogh – and to his slaughter. After that, Ayaan was placed under full-time surveillance by security guards and was barely permitted to leave her house.

**** At this point, two Ayaans were born, with clashing and contradictory views on Islam. Sitting here now, I can feel their presence; I can hear them alternate in her mind. I call the first "revolutionary Ayaan", and this Ayaan says about September 11: "This was not just Islam, this was the core of Islam. Mohammed Atta believed he was giving his life for Allah. This is beyond Osama bin Laden, it is based in the basic roots of Islam." Without pausing, she continues: "You have to ask – is it a fact that the Prophet Mohamed conquered lands using the sword? Is it a fact that Muslims are commanded to commit jihad? Yes it is." She has no time for what she sees as the ignorant, woolly Islam-is-peace message of Western liberals, insisting: "I see no difference between Islam and Islamism. Islam is defined as submission to the will of Allah, as it is described in the Koran. Islamism is just Islam in its most pure form. Sayyid Qutb didn't invent anything, he just quoted the sayings of Mohamed." Revolutionary Ayaan believes that the religion cannot be reformed or changed, only defeated. The millions upon millions of Muslims who are not violent – "the wonderful, decent, law-abiding people" – simply do not really follow Islam. They ignore it, or they live uncomfortably with the explosive "cognitive dissonance" of simultaneously supporting human decency and the demands of Islam.

She lists the awkward truths about the Prophet Mohamed. "All Muslims believe in following his example, but many of the things he did are crimes. When he was in his fifties, he had sex with a nine-year-old girl. By our standards, he was a pervert. He ordered the killing of Jews and homosexuals and apostates, and the beating of women." That is why she concludes that "the war on terror is a war on Islam", and "Islam is the new fascism". But then there is "reformist Ayaan". This Ayaan says the opposite: that internal reform within Islam is both possible and necessary. She insists: "It's wrong to treat Muslims as if they will never find their John Stuart Mill. Christianity and Judaism show that people can be very dogmatic and then open up. There is a minority [within Islam] like [the reformists] Irshad Manji and Tawfiq Hamid who want to remain in the faith and reform it. "Can you be a Muslim and respect the separation of church and state? I hope a large enough number of Muslims will agree you can, and they will find a way to keep the spiritual elements that comfort them and live in a secular society." Ayaan's life story is strewn with Muslims who rejected Bin Ladenist fanaticism. Her father, for example, was revolted by the Wahabbism he witnessed in Saudi Arabia, and told her: "This is not Islam – this is Saudis perverting Islam."

She hesitates when I ask her about this fracture line in her thinking; I can almost touch the cognitive dissonance. Then "reformist Ayaan" says: "Well, my father was trying to combine the commandments in the Koran with his conscience. He has reached a level of civilisation because he's living in the 21st century, but he was also trying to follow a religion founded in the seventh century. So on the one hand he thinks you should accept that the content of the Koran is the true word of God, and on the other hand he is a decent person. He tried to move on by saying that we should only convert non-Muslims by example, not by violence, and [by saying] that only the Prophet Mohamed can call for a jihad." But then "revolutionary Ayaan" adds: "That's not what the Koran says. It says you can never change the faith." Is there is a danger that the language of "revolutionary Ayaan" is undercutting the very people "reformist Ayaan" wants to encourage? Does she worry that by calling all Islam "fascism" she might encourage the hard right, who want to deny women like her the chance even to come to Europe as refugees? "I do," she says. "But the group of Europeans, white Europeans, who want to stop immigration altogether, and who reject Muslims, today in 2007, is not that large. But they could become larger if European governments continue the policy of accommodating and appeasing fascist demands made by radical Muslims. They need to oppose fascist demands by Muslims, and the fascist demands by far-right white groups. I think that if there is equal treatment on both sides, the traditional populations of Europe will say that it's fair play."

As we discuss this, I realise there is something odd about this conversation. It is all so disconcertingly normal. Ayaan is speaking in a level voice, at a level volume. If you didn't speak English and you saw us talking, you could assume that we were discussing bus timetables, or the weather. It's not that she seems passionless – not at all – but that her personality seems to be coiled up within her, and I am only seeing the carefully considered tip of it. When she describes the people who want to hack her body to pieces, it is in paragraphs that feel prepacked. Perhaps it is all she can bear to show. And so we continue. She looks at me politely and says that Europe needs to be more confident about standing up to Islamic fundamentalism. "When we come here as immigrants, we know it will be different to where we come from. It's a choice to come, and we can always choose to leave. If we do not want to adopt European values, we should expect to be criticised."

For example, she says, the veil she used to wear is "a political statement, it's not just a religious statement. It says: I'm different from you and I reject what you stand for." She stresses that she doesn't want to ban it, just to see it challenged. "I'm opposed to banning of political expression, but I'm very much a proponent of competing political expression. "The message of liberals is so much better, so much stronger, that you don't have to resort to banning. You can wear whatever it is that you want, you can give out whatever message that you want to give out – but you have to understand that if that message is rejected, then you can't call people Islamophobic and expect to be taken seriously. If you choose to wear a veil, people might ridicule and oppose you. That's their right, too."

**** She speaks with such eloquent intensity because she is arguing against another, younger version of herself. The Ayaan of 2007 is attacking the Ayaan of 1987 – who is damning her right back. If there is a clash of civilisations, it is happening within her. It's hard to remember, as we sit here, that there are tens of thousands of people who want to prematurely bring this fizzing debate inside Ayaan's head to an end – with a bullet.

She fell in love with Holland because of its tradition of unabashed free speech, but it seems the country's politicians have judged that she took free speech too far for them. Last year, the Dutch government began to reinvestigate the lies in her original asylum claim. Ever since she entered public life she had been totally candid about this: she exaggerated the degree of state persecution she faced because being abused by your family isn't enough to be granted refugee status.

Now the government was twitchy about the rows she was stirring up – so they suddenly decided to strip her of her seat in parliament. Amid efforts to revoke her Dutch citizenship as well, she fled to Washington and a job with a conservative think-tank. Her alignment with the American right doesn't seem like an easy fit. She is a militant defender of atheism, feminism and gay rights – all forces they have demonised for decades. She is an illegal immigrant, their ultimate hate figure.

But, as our interview goes on, I realise she has depressingly begun to adopt some of their ideas. She wants to abolish the minimum wage. She no longer calls for the closing of all faith schools, but simply Muslim ones, because "they are the only ones that do not respect the division between secular and divine law". She has even begun to touch on the American hard right's preposterous predictions that Muslims are "outbreeding" the continent's traditional populations and will impose sharia law "within decades".

When I challenge her on this, she says that "experts" say it is true. Then, this month, the Dutch government went further and stripped away her security protection, saying she should pay for it herself. The US government will not pick up the tab – the only mechanism they have for protecting private citizens full-time is the Witness Protection Program, which isn't appropriate. "Only 11 members out of the 150 MPs voted to keep my security detail," she says. "So it's an overwhelming decision, and when I saw that I did feel betrayed. It's not only a betrayal of me, it's a betrayal of the idea of free expression. "I think they believe that supposedly provoking Muslims will only make them more angry and hostile. The four large cities in Holland have now got very large Muslim populations, and that number is increasing – the estimate is that they're about 40 per cent. With that kind of electoral power [they think] it's best not to provoke them." Even if that means sacrificing basic Dutch values? "Yes." She is revolted by the people who claim that it is she, Ayaan, who has "sold out" Muslims. "Tell me, is freedom only for white people?" she has written. "Is it self-love to adhere to my ancestors' traditions and mutilate my daughters? To agree to be humiliated and powerless?

When I came to a new culture, where I saw for the first time that human relations could be different, would it have been self-love to see that as a foreign cult, which Muslims are forbidden to practise?" So here she is, with the last sliver of protection she can afford standing between her and the people determined to murder her, still speaking, still fighting. Her family have said that they will never speak to her again. She knows she can never return to the country where she was born. Is she frightened? She answers quickly, as if reciting a reassuring script. "I know that is what these terrorists want me to be," she says. "So I try not to be scared." Then she pauses, and looks down. "But sometimes. Yes." She looks up again. "But I am lucky. There are so many crossroads where my life could have become so much worse. If I had stayed in Kenya with the [jihadist] prayer group, if I had entered into the marriage my father wanted... I could have lived like my mother." She nods with confidence. "How many girls born in Digfeer Hospital in Mogadishu in November 1969 are even alive today? And how many have a real voice?"

Ayaan Hirsi Ali was in London to address the Centre for Social Cohesion

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Geplaatst/gelinkt door Joop, m.d.a. Margaretha

woensdag 21 november 2007

Dutch author Hirsi Ali says Muslims should protest terrorism

Source  :  Herald Tribune  Dutch author Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the target of death threats for her criticism of radical Islam, says Muslims must demonstrate their anger when terrorism is committed in the name of religion, just as they did last year when newspapers published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.

Muslims must make a moral choice to defy extremists who use their religion to justify terrorism, the Somali-born former Dutch lawmaker said during a debate late Tuesday in London organized by a think tank, the Center for Social Cohesion.

"Muslims, I believe, should take to the streets when, in the name of their prophet, people are beheaded and passengers are blown up — not only when drawings of Prophet Muhammad are made," she said, referring to last year's mass protests in Muslim countries over Danish newspaper cartoons.

Sitting a few meters (yards) behind her on the stage was a bodyguard, a reminder that she lives under round-the-clock protection since the 2004 murder of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam.

Van Gogh was shot and stabbed by a Muslim radical offended by the film "Submission" about oppressed Muslim women, for which Hirsi Ali wrote the script. The killer, now serving a life sentence, pinned a letter threatening Hirsi Ali on Van Gogh's chest with a knife.

The location of the debate was kept secret until the last minute, and the audience of policy makers, academics and journalists was carefully selected.

Hirsi Ali and former Islamic extremist Ed Husain, an author, debated the West and the future of Islam, disagreeing mainly over whether Islam was a set of exact, restrictive laws or whether it had many interpretations.

Hirsi Ali, who in her book "Infidel: My Life" wrote of how she was subjected to genital mutilation and later forced into an unwanted marriage that led her to flee to the Netherlands, argued some tenets of Islam are inherently violent and must be rejected. After growing up as a devout Muslim, she now identifies herself as an atheist.

"The people who we've come to call 'moderates' are those Muslims who are not willing to follow every commandment that's in the Koran and take it literally ... but principally condone it," she said.

Husain argued that he escaped the hold militants had on him as a young man by exploring his Muslim faith more deeply and finding different interpretations. He argued the key to de-radicalizing people lay in the religion itself.

"There's no better way into the mind of an extremist than to say, 'Well actually you've got it wrong. Here are other scriptural proofs to illustrate that your point of view is scripturally unfounded,'" he said. "As a minimum you insert doubt, as a maximum you take them out of that mindset."

Husain blamed the rise of extremism in Britain on the government for allowing radical clerics a platform during the 1980s and 1990s. He said Western Islam is in its formative stages, and the kind of Islam fostered in the West today will shape the religion for decades to come.

"Young Muslims in Damascus, Jeddah, Cairo and Rabat look to us to see how it is we young Muslims come to terms with being Muslim in the heart of the west," he said. "If we fix it here for this generation we have every chance of sending a beacon of hope back into the Muslim East."

Posted by Lucida

woensdag 14 november 2007

Westerners 'should stop making films about Islam'

Source : The Independent Western documentary makers should think twice about making films about Islam because they do not understand the issues as well as their Muslim counterparts, a leading Muslim film-maker has said.

Parvez Sharma, whose documentary about what it means to be gay and Muslim had its European premiere at the Sheffield International Documentary Festival last night, said Western non-Muslim film makers were jumping on the "Islamic bandwagon".

Sharma added: "Post 11 September, [Islam] is suddenly very hot", and he cited the "plane-loads" of documentary makers who flew from New York to Afghanistan after the terrorist attacks of 9/11.

"For many documentary film-makers there's very little understanding of the complexities. Everyone has been jumping on the Islamic bandwagon. Very few of those films do justice [to Islam]. They suffer from a lack of comprehension. There's this need to cash in on the Islamic theme."

Sharma, whose documentary, A Jihad For Love includes emotional interviews with gay Muslims from around the world, torn between their homosexuality and their faith, said there was a "paucity" of Muslim film-makers and called on Islamic documentary producers to make their own voices heard to combat Islamaphobia. His Jihad, filmed over six years, reveals the often shocking treatment meted out to homosexuals in Islamic states such as Iran, where one of the men featured was flogged for attending a gay party, and in Egypt, where another interviewee was thrown into prison, where he was raped, then fled to France.

For Sharma, a gay Muslim from the north of India who now lives in the US, making the film was an intensely personal experience. "It was very important for me as a Muslim film-maker not to deal with Islam as a problematic monolith, which is how many people in the west see Islam," he said.

"I always knew Islam was diverse. It was important for me to present the diversity of the religion. I'm gay and Muslim, so it was an intensely personal film. So many films about Islam are mediated through Western eyes. It's really important for me as a Muslim to take up a Muslim camera. So few of us have taken responsibility to change the discussions about our own religion.

"It's critical to have Muslim voices in the arts, in documentary film-making, to tell the stories of Muslims as they see it. This climate requires Muslim film- makers to step up and tell stories."

The British film-maker Ruhi Hamid, who has been making documentaries for 12 years, identified herself as a Muslim on screen for the first time in her latest documentary, Inside A Sharia Court, set in Nigeria. She said: "There's been a kneejerk reaction over Islam. Western film-makers go for the obvious things: there's an obsession with women in the veil and with angry young jihadi men. The lives are much more complex than that."

The British film-maker, Ivan O'Mahoney, who made Baghdad High, a documentary also showing at Sheffield, in which four young students from an Iraqi boys' school film their own lives amid sectarian violence, said: "I thought of Iraq as a country where everybody to a certain degree had been radicalised. But with these kids we see almost the opposite. The more violence around, the more they tried to be normal teenagers. That filled me with hope."

Geplaatst door lucida m.d.a. NRP

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vrijdag 9 november 2007

Citizenship and Identity: Old Concepts and New Challenges

Bron : NRC   Dit is de Engelse samenvatting van de inaugurale rede die Tariq Ramadan vrijdag aan de Erasmusuniversiteit hield.

For more than two centuries the Western societies have been dealing with the ongoing process through which they were securing the rights of the individuals while setting clearly their duties towards the structured community they were belonging to. It is through that historical development that our societies have become more and more democratic by clarifying the common legal framework and setting the central principle of “rule of law”. It has been then possible to speak about freedom, equality, and citizenship and to deal with ideologies and political views embodied in social organisations or political parties. This was the natural way to deal with social and political pluralism. After the World War II, the arrival of new immigrants – sometimes coming from the previous colonised countries – added a new dimension to the old concept of pluralism : we had thus to deal with “other” cultures and religions, and mainly with “Muslims”. For the last forty years, the Western societies have been dealing with a new complex challenge in the form of a new kind of cultural and religious diversity. Not only the situation is new and difficult but all the figures and the economic prospects are informing us that immigration is not going to stop: whatever strong might be our cultural resistance (and sometimes our rejection of the “foreigners”), our economic needs will be stronger as our societies and enterprises need more and more workers and our “indigenous populations” become more and more older. This conflicting picture creates tension, doubts and fears.

Even with a positive take on the facts, one shall ask: how can we deal with this new historical situation? In other words, how to adapt an old effective framework regulating political pluralism to a society facing cultural and religious diversity and cultural heterogeneity? Are the old references and concepts (such as secularism, rule of law, citizenship, etc.) still meaningful or efficient? Do we have to change our vision and propose to take into account the rights of the new comers, as individuals or as communities. It is clearly not enough to state bluntly “the new comers must simply adapt” as we hear in some political discourses and among the majority of the French sociologists (Kepel, Tribala, Taguieff, etc.). We can’t accept a pure culturalist positioning saying that we must be ready to change the laws to accommodate the immigrants for democracy is about freedom and respecting cultural and religious minorities. We also need to go further than to assert, with no clear vision, that we need “to compromise on both sides”. Our responsibility in such a debate is to clarify the terms of the debate, to know from where we start and to circumscribe the different challenges and fields at stake.

We must begin by stating that the Western democratic societies are based on a common legal framework (sometimes constitutions) that must be accepted and respected by their members (as long as they are not imposing an unjust behaviour like the apartheid legalisation in the old South African regime for instance : here consciousness objection should be understood as “lawful”). Thus citizens must be law abiding and get equal rights and equal duties before the law. We must add here a third dimension related to the principles of secularism: the State should be neutral as to the religious affairs and does not intervene in theological matters. In our view, a clear debate must start with a clear picture based on these three principles: rule of law, citizenship and secularism. These are the starting points of reference but the passionate debates over the last decade have shown that they would not be sufficient to solve the new challenges we mentioned earlier. People are driven by negative perceptions, mistrust and fears “on both sides” so to say: on the one hand we hear “they will never be integrated” (which is not a new statement when it comes to immigrants); on the other “we will never be accepted”. All are experiencing a kind of “identity crisis”: the question “What is Dutchness, Britishness or Frenchness?” echoes the interrogative doubt: “Would it be possible for us to remain Muslims in the West?” In such a climate it would be wrong, and even dangerous, to reduce the debate to a “pure legal problem” for its scope is clearly wider. Nevertheless, it would be as dangerous to accept, voluntarily or not, to read the texts of the law through the distorting prism of the common (negative) perception: the same text could be read in an inclusive way when we trust our fellow citizens or, on the contrary, in a very exclusive way in times of mistrust: during the latter, to ask the same rights might be wrongly perceived as claims to get specific treatments. Another mistake would be to “culturalise” “religionise” or “islamise” all the social or socio-economic problems we are facing: lacking good and effective social politicies, politicians end up instrumentalising cultures and religions for the sake of bad politics. Laws are essential, as we have mentioned, but the challenges are more complex and require taking into account other dimensions.

As we referred to perceptions constantly interfering into the current debate, we must add a central and essential psychological factor. Whatever is our take on the common law and equal citizenship, we will not succeed if we are unable to shape and feed a strong and shared “sense of belonging” among the citizens. We are witnessing the creation of closed areas and social ghettos where people (rich or poor, coming from the same cultural background and/or economic status) are isolating themselves. Some white indigenous French, British or Dutch citizens are migrating from within the cities to the outskirts because they no longer feel at home in some areas. On the other hand, the new European citizens, asked to “integrate” on almost a daily basis, feel that they still have a long way to go before being accepted and thus feeling at home. Negative perceptions, fears, mistrust are undermining the common sense of belonging and create virtual or real walls between people. It is urgent to rebuild bridges and to promote mutual knowledge and a common awareness as to the immigrants’ contribution to the Western societies not only through material and economic inputs but also by assessing the cultural and religious richness they add to the societies. It is important to push citizens from different background to get out of their respective ghettos and to become more proactive. Mutual knowledge, general awareness of respective contributions and proactivity are the prerequisites to reach mutual trust and to feed a sincere feeling of loyalty towards the country: all these dimensions, in turn, nurture the sense of belonging our societies need.

Hence, it will not be enough to repeat obsessively that we want to promote common citizenship and that we respect people’s identities. These theoretical discourses, full of good and humanist intentions, will be neither heard nor trusted by the citizens if they are not part of a prospective vision and concretely translated into effective multidimensional policies. We need a holistic approach based on a vision, overall objectives and practical steps to follow. It is crucial to understand, upstream from the problems we are facing on the ground, that solutions will be reached though a two way process. Our democratic societies, without changing their laws, must reconsider their traditional and inherited narrative to make it more inclusive. Inclusiveness is the key when it comes to teach the official History of a country. The western populations have changed tremendously and it becomes important to think about, and shape, a more comprehensive and consistent common History of memories. We must be willing and able to integrate in our official curricula a self critical discourse as to what have been done to previous colonised people who now have become our fellow citizens : to speak about the two sides of our past, the light one as well as the dark one. A positive discourse on the immigrants’ contributions to our societies and a better knowledge of the cultural and religious diversity should go along all the social policies promoting civil engagement and social cohesion.

Our requirements towards the new citizens or the residents with diverse cultural backgrounds must be clear with no compromise. They have to know, and abide by, the laws, respect the institutions and accept the cultural Western environment (they may be selective for their own sake and behaviour but they have to be inclusive as well and make the national culture theirs). It is important that they refuse to feed a kind of “victim mentality” and start addressing, not as potential-suspect-on-the-defensive, but as fellow proactive citizens some of the legitimate concerns and fears people might have around them : on violence, women, cultural heritage, etc. This should be the intellectual and social attitudes the new citizens have to promote by being in the mainstream debates regarding common values, national identity and domestic issues: they must refuse to create a new kind of citizenship which is a psychological alienated “minority citizenship”. It does not exist in our legislations but it may be created in some minds (this is one of the reasons why the legal approach is necessary without being sufficient and exclusive).

This overall vision of an constant two way process within our societies should rely on effective concrete policies. We need courageous politicians (refusing to instrumentalise people’s fears and play the easy game of polarisation) and committed citizens engaged within the civil society: it means exploiting the potential richness and contribution of each individual or cultural and religious community through new and creative social projects. Dialogue is not enough; people need to do things together. This is why the local level, and the local political authorities and institutions are so instrumental and important for now and for the future : this is where the people can know each other, reach mutual trust, be proactive and get a strong sense of belonging. Local initiatives, far from the political national rhetoric, are essential to change the climate and mentalities: a national movement of local initiatives is of course necessary and it must be accompanied by the government which should listen more to the positive messages coming from the people building at the grassroots than to the distorting images and (naturally bad) news carried by the media. By saying that one should realise that the key of success in that field is also to think of a “media strategy” : to get journalists involved with a better understanding, an more accurate knowledge of the stakes and a civic willingness to speak and write more about “what’s work”.

Every institution has a role to play and among them our universities. Professors, lecturers and students cannot think far from the society and think for it and even judge its failures. The role of the professors and the teachers is to clarify the terms of the debates, to refuse to be driven by passions and fears and thus to come with a critical and positive contributions within the civil society. When dealing with concepts such as “citizenship” or “identity” we witness on a daily basis the degree of confusion and tension and our universities should be the space where deep, free and critical debates are still possible. The unique condition would be not to think on behalf of the people or by proxy but with our fellow citizens, within the civil arena, and to be proactive. It means to be able to listen, to learn from practical experiences and to talk with the average citizens and not only to them. This is why I think that this Chair at Erasmus University connected with the local involvement of the municipality is a pilot project: it means respecting the competences of each other while working together for a better future.

Geplaatst door Lucida

donderdag 8 november 2007

Danish political party threatened

Bron : Aftenposten  The decision by the Danish Folkeparti (People's Party) to use the highly controversial caricatures of the prophet Mohammed in their election campaign has resulted in terrorist threats.
The Islamist terrorist organization the al-Aqsa Brigade threatened the DF in an interview with Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten.

"This party is dealing in the blood of the Danish population. It is dangerous," said al-Aqsa Brigade spokesman Khaled al-Jabbari. "We do not wish to see the Danish people as an enemy, but this could lead to actions."

DF Party leader Pia Kjærsgaard told Jylland-Posten that they would not give way to terrorists under any circumstances, and had the support of Denmark's Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

"It is of course completely unacceptable that a terrorist organization like the al-Aqsa Brigade tried to frighten a free democracy," Fogh Rasmussen said.

Geplaatst door Lucida

vrijdag 2 november 2007

President Bush's Remarks on the Global War on Terror

Bron : The Heritage foudation 

PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH:

I appreciate all you've done and I really want to thank Heritage.

One of the interesting things about the Heritage legacy is that the folks here have been tireless advocates, tireless champions of liberty and free enterprise and democracy and religious freedom.

These are values that came under attack on September the 11th, 2001.

Our nation was attacked by a brutal enemy that despises freedom, that rejects tolerance, that kills the innocent in the pursuit of a dark vision. These folks believe that it's OK to subjugate women and indoctrinate children and murder those who oppose their harsh rule.

They have stated clearly they want to impose this ideology on millions. They are at war with America because they hate what they stand for and they understand that we stand in their way.

And so, today I've come to talk to you about the war on terror, my firm commitment that we'll do everything in our power to protect the American people, and my call on the United States Congress to give us the tools necessary so we can do the job the American people expect.

I, too, want to thank the members of the Heritage Foundation board of trustees who've joined us. Thank you for supporting this important organization.

I can't tell you how important it is to have good centers of thought in Washington, D.C., people who are willing to look at today's problems and come up with innovative solution based upon sound principle to solve those problems. And that's how I view Heritage.

I thank all the members and guests who've joined us today as well. It's a pleasure to be with you.

It's been now more than six years since the enemy attacked us on September the 11th, and we are blessed that there has not been another attack on our soil.

With the passage of time, the memories of the 9/11 attacks have grown more distant. And for some, there is the temptation to think that the threats to our country have grown distant as well. They have not.

The terrorists who struck America that September morning intend to strike us again. We know this because the enemy has told us so. Just last year, Osama bin Laden warned the American people, quote, Operations are under preparation and you will see them on your own ground once they are finished.

Seven months later, British authorities broke up the most ambitious known Al Qaida plot since the 9/11 attacks, a plot to blow up passenger airplanes flying over the Atlantic toward the United States.

Our intelligence community believes that this plot was just two or three weeks away from execution. If it had been carried out, it could have rivaled 9/11 in death and destruction.

The lesson of this experience is clear: We must take the words of the enemy seriously.

The terrorists have stated their objectives. They intend to build a totalitarian Islamic empire encompassing all current and former Muslim lands stretching from Europe to North Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia.

In pursuit of their imperial aims, these extremists say there can be no compromise or dialogue with those they call infidels, a category that includes America, the world's free nation, Jews, and all Muslims who reject their extreme vision of Islam.

They reject the possibility of peaceful coexistence with the free world.

Again, hear the words of Osama bin Laden last year: Death is better than living on this Earth with the unbelievers among us.

History teaches us that underestimating the words of evil, ambitious men is a terrible mistake.

In the early 1900s, the world ignored the words of Lenin as he laid out his plans to launch a communist revolution in Russia, and the world paid a terrible price. The Soviet empire he established killed tens of millions and brought the world to the brink of thermonuclear war.

In the 1920s, the world ignored the words of Hitler as he explained his intention to build an Aryan superstate in Germany, take revenge on Europe and eradicate the Jews. And the world paid a terrible price. His Nazi regime killed millions in the gas chambers and set the world aflame in war before it was finally defeated at a terrible cost in lives and treasure.

Bin Laden and his terrorist allies have made their intentions as clear as Lenin and Hitler before them. And the question is, will we listen?

America and our coalition partners are listening. We have made our choice. We take the words of the enemy seriously.

Over the past six years, we have captured or killed hundreds of terrorists. We have disrupted their finances. We have prevented new attacks before they could be carried out. We've removed regimes in Afghanistan and Iraq that had supported terrorists and threatened our citizens and, in so doing, liberated 50 million people from the clutches of tyranny.

With our allies, we're keeping the pressure on the enemy. We're keeping them on the move. We're fighting them everywhere they make their stand, from the mountains of Afghanistan to the deserts of Iraq to the islands of Southeast Asia and the Horn of Africa.

On every battlefront we're on the offense, keeping constant pressure. And in this war on terror, we will not rest or retreat or withdraw from the fight until this threat to civilization has been removed.

I fully understand that, after six years, the sense of imminent danger has passed for some. And it can be natural for people to forget the lessons of 9/11 as they go about their daily lives.

I just want to assure you that I'll never forget the lessons of September the 11th, and nor will the people with whom I work.

I know that when I discuss the war on terror, some here in Washington, D.C., dismiss it as political rhetoric; an attempt to scare people into votes.

Given the nature of the enemy and the words of its leaders, politicians who deny that we are at war are either being disingenuous or naive. Either way, it is dangerous for our country.

We are at war. And we cannot win this war by wishing it away or pretending it does not exist.

Unfortunately, on too many issues, some in Congress are behaving as if America is not at war.

For example, in a time of war, it is vital for the president to have a full national security team in place. And a key member of that team is the attorney general.

The job of the attorney general is essential to the security of America. The attorney general is the highest ranking official responsible for our law enforcement community's efforts to detect and prevent terrorist attacks here at home.

I've selected an outstanding nominee to fill this vital role: Judge Michael Mukasey.

Judge Mukasey has a long record of accomplishments in matter of law and national security. He has been praised by Republicans and Democrats alike as a man of honesty, intellect, fairness and independence.

Judge Mukasey provided nearly six hours of testimony. He patiently answer more than 200 questions at the hearing. He's responded to nearly 500 written questions less than a week after his hearing.

Yet the Senate Judiciary Committee has been holding up his nomination.

As a price for his confirmation, some on that committee want Judge Mukasey to take a legal position on specific techniques allegedly used to interrogate captured terrorists.

As Judge Mukasey explained in a letter to committee members, he cannot do so for several reasons.

First, he does not know whether certain methods of questioning are, in fact, used, because the program is classified. And therefore, he is in no position to provide an informed opinion. He has not been read into the program and won't until he is confirmed and sworn in -- won't be until he's confirmed and sworn in as the attorney general.

Second, he does not want an uninformed opinion to be taken by our professional interrogators in the field as placing them in legal jeopardy.

Finally, he does not want any statement of his to give the terrorists a window into which techniques we may use and which ones we may not use. That could help them train their operatives to resist questioning and withhold vital information we need to stop attacks and save lives.

In the war on terror, intelligence is one of the most crucial tools for our defense. If a captured terrorist has information about a plot against our homeland, we need to know what he knows.

And so, that's why I put in place, under the CIA, a program to question key terrorist operatives and its leaders. Last year, Congress passed a law that allows the CIA to continue this vital program.

The procedures used in this program are safe, they are lawful and they are necessary.

Senior leaders in the House and the Senate from both political parties have been briefed on the details of this program. It's wrong for congressional leaders to make Judge Mukasey's confirmation dependent on his willingness to go on the record about the details of a classified program he has not been briefed on.

If the Senate Judiciary Committee were to block Judge Mukasey on these grounds, they would send a new standard for confirmation that could not be met by any responsible nominee for attorney general. And that would guarantee that America would have no attorney general during this time of war.

By any measure, Judge Mukasey is eminently qualified to be the next attorney general.

And now, after allowing his nomination to languish for 41 days, the Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled a vote for next Tuesday.

Senate leaders must move this nomination out of committee, bring it to the Senate floor and confirm this good man.

Congress has also failed to act on intelligence legislation that is vital to protect the American people in this war on terror. Stopping new attacks on our country requires us to make sure we understand the intentions of the enemy. We've got to know what they're thinking and what they're planning. And that means we got to have effective measures to monitor their communications.

This summer Congress passed the Protect America Act, which strengthened our ability to collect foreign intelligence on terrorists overseas. And this good law closed the dangerous gap in our intelligence.

Unfortunately, they made this law effective for only six months. The problem is that Al Qaida doesn't operate on a six-month timetable.

And if Congress doesn't act soon, the law will expire, and the gap in our intelligence will reopen, and the United States of America will be at risk.

We must keep the intelligence gap firmly closed.

The terrorists are communicating with each other and are plotting new attacks. We need to know what they're planning.

We must ensure that the protections intended for the American people are not extended to terrorists overseas who are plotting to harm us. And we must grant liability protection to companies who are facing multi-billion-dollar lawsuits only because they are believed to have assisted in the efforts to defend our nation following the 9/11 attacks.

The Senate Intel Committee has approved a bipartisan bill that contains provisions to preserve our ability to collect intelligence on terrorists overseas, while protecting the civil liberties of Americans here at home.

This bill still needs some improving. But it's an important step in the right direction.

Time is of the essence. And the full Senate and the House of Representatives need to get -- pass a good bill and get it to my desk promptly so our intelligence professionals can continue to use the vital tools of the Protect America Act to keep us safe.

Congress is also stalling on the emergency war supplemental to fund our troops on the front lines in Afghanistan and Iraq. This crucial bill includes funds for bullets and body armor, protection against IEDs and mine-resistant ambush-protective vehicles.

Congress should be able to move the supplemental quickly. There's no reason why they're not moving the supplemental. After all, it had more than eight months to study most of its provisions.

In fact, nearly 75 percent of the funding requests in the supplemental were submitted along with my annual budget in February of this year.

The supplemental is critical for our troops. And Congress should not go home for the holidays while our men and women in uniform are waiting for the funds they need.

Congress also needs to pass the Department of Defense spending bill, as well as a funding bill for our nation's veterans.

There are reports that congressional leaders may be considering combining the funding bills for our military and our veterans together with a bloated labor, health and education spending bill.

It's hard to imagine a more cynical ploy than holding funding for our troops and our wounded warriors hostage in order to extract $11 billion in wasteful Washington spending.

If reports of this strategy are true, I will veto such a three- bill pileup.

I ask Congress to send me a clean veterans funded bill by Veterans Day and to pass a clean defense spending bill. Congress needs to put the needs of those who put on the uniform ahead of their desire to spend more money.

When it comes to funding our troops, some in Washington should spend more time responding to the warnings of terrorists like Osama bin Laden and the requests of our commanders on the ground and less time responding to the demands of MoveOn.org bloggers and Code Pink protesters.

Here's the bottom line: This is no time for Congress to weaken the Department of Justice by denying it a strong and effective leader. It's no time for Congress to weaken our ability to gather vital intelligence from captured terrorists. It's no time for Congress to weaken our ability to intercept information from terrorists about potential attacks on the United States of America.

And this is no time for Congress to hold back vital funding for our troops as they fight Al Qaida terrorists and radicals in Afghanistan and Iraq.

In the struggle against the terrorists and extremists, I hope I made my strategy clear today, that we will keep constant pressure on the enemy in order to defend the American people. We will fight them overseas so we do not have to fight them here at home.

At the same time, we'll use every available tool of law and intelligence to protect the people here. That's our most solemn duty. It's a duty I think about every day.

In the long run, the only way to defeat the terrorists is to advance freedom as the great alternative to radicalism and repression. We can have confidence in this cause because we have seen the power of liberty to transform nations and secure peace before.

Here at The Heritage Foundation, you understand this better than most. During the Cold War, there were loud voices in Washington who argued for accommodation for the Soviet Union, because they believed the watchword of our policy should be stability.

At Heritage, you knew that when it came to the Soviet Union, the watchword of our policy should be freedom. Together with a great president named Ronald Reagan you championed a policy of rolling back communism repression, and bringing freedom to nations enslaved by communist tyranny.

And by taking the side of the dissidents who helped millions across the world throw off the shackles of communism, you helped build the free and peaceful societies that are the true sources of stability and peace in the world. And now we're at the start of a new century, and the same debate is once again unfolding, this time regarding my policy in the Middle East. Once again, voices in Washington are arguing that the watchword of the policy should be stability.

And once again they're wrong.

In Kabul and Baghdad and Beirut and other cities across the broader Middle East, brave men and women are risking their lives every day for the same freedoms we enjoy. And like the citizens of Prague and Warsaw and Budapest in the century gone by, they are looking to the United States to stand up for them, speak out for them and champion their cause, and we are doing just that.

We are standing with those who yearn for the liberty -- who yearn for liberty in the Middle East, because we understand that the desire for freedom is universal, written by the almighty into the hearts of every man, woman and child on this Earth.

We are standing with those who yearn for liberty in the Middle East because we know that the terrorists fear freedom even more than they fear our firepower. They know that, given a choice, no one will choose to live under their dark ideology of violence and death.

We're standing with those who yearn for liberty in the Middle East because we know that when free societies take root in that part of the world they will yield the peace we all desire.

The only way the terrorists can recruit operatives and suicide bombers is by feeding on the hopelessness of societies mired in despair, and by bringing freedom to these societies, we replace hatred with hope.

And this will help us to marginalize the extremists and eliminate the conditions that feed radicalism, and make the American people more secure.

The lessons of the past have taught us that liberty is transformative. And I believe 50 years from now an American president will be speaking to Heritage and say, Thank God that generation that wrote the first chapter in the 21st century understood the power of freedom to bring the peace we want.

Geplaatst door Lucida

zaterdag 27 oktober 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali Security Trust

AYAAN HIRSI ALI SECURITY TRUST
C/O JACKSON & CAMPBELL,
P.C. 1120 20TH STREET, N.W.,
SUITE 300S WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036

Website Jackson & Campbell

PROVIDING FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE  FOR AYAAN HIRSI ALI’S SECURITY DETAIL

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, former Dutch parliamentarian and an outspoken defender of women’s rights in Islamic societies, is at risk from a variety of extremist threats in both Europe and the United States. She has needed constant security protection since her life was originally threatened in 2002. Up until October 1, 2007, this protection was provided by the Dutch government.*)

Now a permanent resident of the United States and a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Ms. Hirsi Ali must raise her own funds to finance her costly but necessary protection. In response to the numerous private citizens who have expressed interest in helping Ms. Hirsi Ali fund her security detail, the Ayaan Hirsi Ali Security Trust has been established.

The preferred and most immediate way to assist Ms. Hirsi Ali in the financing of her private security protection is through the Ayaan Hirsi Ali Security Trust. This private trust fund can accept non-tax deductible donations from within the United States and internationally, and is entirely dedicated to financing Ms. Hirsi Ali’s security.

*) The Dutch government is still responsible for Ms. Hirsi Ali’s security when she is on Dutch soil.

Checks should be made payable to the Ayaan Hirsi Ali Security Trust and sent to:

Ayaan Hirsi Ali Security Trust
Bank of Georgetown
1054 31st Street, N.W.
Suite 18
Washington, DC 20007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali Trust Tax Identification Number: 75-6826872

Thank you for your interest in assisting Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

For more information please contact: John Matteo (jmatteo@jackscamp.com) or Mackenzie McNaughton (mmcnaughton@jackscamp.com), representatives for Ms. Hirsi Ali. Telephone: 202.457.1600

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 15 oktober 2007

Danish invitation to Hirsi Ali

Source: Jyllands Posten

Brian Mikkelsen, Danish Culture Minister offers to pay for the protection of Hirsi Ali who lives under constant threat from Islamic fundamentalists.

Culture Minister Brian Mikkelsen (conservatives) sends a direct request to Danish municipalities in which he urges them to invite the Somali born writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali to live in Denmark.

It would be logical to invite her in the context of the new free city arrangement for persecuted writers for which the Danish government is preparing a draft for a new law.

‘Ayaan Hirsi Ali will be the first on the top of a list of writers that in my opinion ought to be invited to Denmark. She has been a prime fighter for freedom of expression, and she has also been exposed to direct personal threats against her own life’, the Danish culture minister was quoted for saying.

Under protection since 2004

Hirsi Ali has lived under police protection since 2004, when she was the author of a manuscript for the controversial film "Submission", the film for which the instructor Theo van Gogh was murdered by an Islamic fanatic. Last week the Dutch parliament decided that the Dutch government no longer wants to pay for her protection when she takes residence in the US.

According to Brian Mikkelsen the government will be prepared to pay for the expenses for her security that will be needed in connection with housing the author in a Danish free city.

"It is clear that Hirsi Ali will crave an extraordinary expense. We will look at that positively", said Brian Mikkelsen.

His invitation was met with broad support from the Danish Parliament at Christiansborg. The former Mayor of Odense, now counselor for cultural affairs the Social Democrat Anker Boye, is ready to discuss the matter with the government.

Posted by Lucida

zondag 14 oktober 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali at the Atheist Alliance International conference

This is the speech given by Ayaan Hirsi Ali at the Atheist Alliance International conference in Sept 2007. She is the author of the bestselling book "Infidel", and helped create the film "Submission" with Theo Van Gogh.


This is the Q&A session with Ayaan Hirsi Ali after her speech (see part 1) at the Atheist Alliance International conference in Sept 2007. She is the author of the bestselling book "Infidel", and helped create the film "Submission" with Theo Van Gogh



Click here to view 138 other movies with Ayaan Hirsi Ali at Youtube

Posted by Joop

vrijdag 12 oktober 2007

The Trouble Is the West

Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Islam, immigration, civil liberties, and the fate of the West

In June, Hirsi Ali talked with the Dutch-born journalist Rogier van Bakel in Washington, D.C.

It was a heinous murder that made the best-selling memoirist Ayaan Hirsi Ali internationally famous, but she was neither the victim nor the perpetrator. The corpse was that of Theo van Gogh, a writer and filmmaker who in November 2004 was stabbed, slashed, and shot on an Amsterdam street by a Dutch-born Muslim extremist of Moroccan descent.

The assassin, driven to rage by Submission, a short film Van Gogh had made about the poor treatment of women under Islam, left no doubt about his motives. A letter he pinned to his victim’s chest with a knife was a call to jihad. It was also a death threat against Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a member of the Dutch parliament. She had persuaded Van Gogh to make Submission and had written the movie’s script.

Then 35, Hirsi Ali had already seen plenty of turmoil. She had endured a heavily religious upbringing in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, and Kenya, including a brutal circumcision to keep her “pure.” She chafed under the yoke of an embittered and sometimes violent mother and longed for a father who was perennially absent—often imprisoned or in hiding, due to his opposition to the Somali dictator Siad Barré.

In July 1992, Hirsi Ali defied her family’s wishes, refusing to marry the man to whom her father had betrothed her. She fled Kenya for the Netherlands, gaining refugee status and finding employment as a cleaning woman and a factory worker. She assimilated quickly, learning perfect Dutch and studying political science, a choice that led to a job as an analyst at the Labor Party’s think tank. There, to the consternation of her bosses, who had been courting the Muslim vote, Hirsi Ali worried out loud about Holland’s ever-burgeoning immigrant community and the rising tensions between Muslims and the native Dutch.

In Rotterdam, the Netherlands’ second-largest city, immigrants—mostly Muslims from Morocco and Turkey—had become a majority, with Amsterdam well on its way to a similar demographic sea change. That might not have been a problem, Hirsi Ali argued publicly, if the Dutch had only encouraged the newcomers to embrace the country’s culture the way she had. But the country’s multiculturalist mind-set, paired with the national inclination to tolerate almost any form of behavior, had led to minorities’ ghettoization and to a certain lawlessness. Dutch Muslims were largely content to stay in the neighborhoods they formed together, Hirsi Ali observed. Raised on a steady diet of Islamic preaching and Middle Eastern and North African satellite TV channels, many of them rejected the Dutch way of life as hedonistic, even sinful.

Hirsi Ali wasn’t shy about mentioning the Muslim community’s self-imposed insularity, or the crime wave involving disproportionate numbers of second- and third-generation Dutch Moroccans. But mostly she agitated against the oppression of local Muslim women by male family members: forced marriages, denial of education opportunities, domestic slave labor, and, in some horrific cases, honor killings. By extension, she criticized the native Dutch for turning a blind eye to the injustices in their midst, and for tolerating those who themselves refused to tolerate alternative lifestyles.

It was a shock and a revelation to see a young, black, Muslim woman championing causes previously associated with middle-aged white male pundits who had often been dismissed as racists or Islamophobes. Hirsi Ali’s star rose quickly, especially after she accepted an offer from the VVD, Holland’s pro-market party, to run for parliament. By then, she was receiving a stream of death threats from radical Dutch Muslims and their sympathizers. Once she won her parliamentary seat, the hate mail intensified. A security detail shadowed her everywhere. Van Gogh’s murder proved the threat was all too real.

Throughout her parliamentary career, which lasted from 2003 to 2006, Hirsi Ali reaped both praise and controversy. She continued writing and speaking out in favor of free speech and the right to offend. 2004 was an especially turbulent year both privately and publicly. In May she swore off Islam and all religion. Van Gogh’s assassination made her internationally famous, and she garnered a spot on Time’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world and a European of the Year Award from the European editors of Reader’s Digest. Even the readers of De Volkskrant, a newspaper that had long embraced unfettered multiculturalism, were enthralled: They chose Hirsi Ali as their Dutch Person of the Year at the end of 2004.

In May and June of last year, a tempest in a teacup erupted over her alleged truth-twisting at the time of her Dutch asylum application. (She allegedly used false biographical data.) Hirsi Ali had already decided to move on. The publication of her autobiography, Infidel, was imminent. Early whispers about a resident fellow position with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C., turned out to be correct. Hirsi Ali moved to America, and she joined the institute in the fall of last year.

In June, Hirsi Ali talked with the Dutch-born journalist Rogier van Bakel in Washington, D.C. Comments can be sent to letters@reason.com.

Reason: Tell me how you came to the United States and the American Enterprise Institute.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I was a member of parliament back in the Netherlands, and my party asked if I wanted to run for the next elections, in 2007. I declined. Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende’s cabinet was very precarious anyway; every two or three weeks we thought the government would fall, which would mean elections, which would force all of us members of parliament to think about what we were going to do next. So I had already decided I didn’t want to run for elections, and wanted instead to go back to being a scholar. Cynthia Schneider, who was then the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, said she’d be delighted to take me around in the United States and introduce me—to the Brookings Institution, the Johns Hopkins Institute, Georgetown University, the RAND Corporation. I balked at paying a visit to the American Enterprise Institute, though.

Reason: Why the initial aversion?

Hirsi Ali: Because I thought they would be religious, and I had become an atheist. And I don’t consider myself a conservative. I consider myself a classical liberal.

Anyway, the Brookings Institution did not react. Johns Hopkins said they didn’t have enough money. The RAND Corporation wants its people to spend their days and nights in libraries figuring out statistics, and I’m very bad at statistics. But at AEI they were enthusiastic. It turns out that I have complete freedom of thought, freedom of expression. No one here imposed their religion on me, and I don’t impose my atheism on them.

Reason: Do you see eye to eye with high-profile AEI hawks such as former Bush speechwriter David Frum and former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton?

Hirsi Ali: Most of the time I do. For instance, I completely and utterly agree with John Bolton that talking to Iran is a sheer waste of time.

When I was with the Labor Party, I’d get into trouble because the party bosses determined that some of what I wrote, or proposed to write about, wasn’t conducive to their policies or to electoral success. But at AEI there are no such restraints. As long you can argue it with some intelligence, no one interferes.

Reason: Religion is hardly inconsequential in European politics, but it’s virtually a prerequisite for electability here: If you’re not devout, forget about it; you won’t be elected to public office.

Hirsi Ali: I’m not going to become president, and I’m not going to run for Congress. Your Constitution doesn’t allow it. [Laughs.]

Reason: But do you feel at all uncomfortable with that heavy emphasis on religion in American public life?

Hirsi Ali: Yes. And the good thing is—and that’s what I’ve tried to tell all my European friends—I’m allowed to say so.

I think that it’s a great mistake for this country to reject a very good atheist. I mean, when you have two candidates, and one is an atheist and the other is a religious person and the atheist would make the better public official, it’s a great loss not to elect him. Anyway, atheists here can forward their agenda and fight back safely without risking violence.

I accept that there are multitudes seeking God, seeking meaning, and so on, but if they reject atheism, I would rather they became modern-day Catholics or Jews than that they became Muslims. Because my Catholic and Jewish colleagues are fine. The concept of God in Jewish orthodoxy is one where you’re having constant quarrels with God. Where I come from, in Islam, the only concept of God is you submit to Him and you obey His commands, no quarreling allowed. Quarreling or even asking questions means you raise yourself to the same level as Him, and in Islam that’s the worst sin you can commit. Jews should be proselytizing about a God that you can quarrel with. Catholics should be proselytizing about a God who is love, who represents a hereafter where there’s no hell, who wants you to lead a life where you can confess your sins and feel much better afterwards. Those are lovely concepts of God. They can’t compare to the fire-breathing Allah who inspires jihadism and totalitarianism.

Reason: In Infidel, you point out many positive religious experiences you had as a Muslim. For instance, you describe Mecca’s Grand Mosque as a place of vastness and beauty. You praise the kindness that you experienced there, a sense of community, a lack of prejudice. Are there times when you miss that aspect of being a practicing believer?

Hirsi Ali: I’d love to go and visit the Mosque in Mecca again, just for the sheer beauty of it, not for God—much the way a non-Catholic might go to Vatican City because of the beauty of the buildings and the artifacts. There’s a sense of calm in such places that’s wonderful, and there’s the awe you feel because of what humanity can accomplish.

But do I miss the religious experience? The feelings of belonging and family and community were powerful, but the price in terms of freedom was too high. In order to be able to live free, I’ve accepted living with the pain of missing my family. As for community, I experienced a very deep sense of community with my friends in Holland.

Reason: Should we acknowledge that organized religion has sometimes sparked precisely the kinds of emancipation movements that could lift Islam into modern times? Slavery in the United States ended in part because of opposition by prominent church members and the communities they galvanized. The Polish Catholic Church helped defeat the Jaruzelski puppet regime. Do you think Islam could bring about similar social and political changes?

Hirsi Ali: Only if Islam is defeated. Because right now, the political side of Islam, the power-hungry expansionist side of Islam, has become superior to the Sufis and the Ismailis and the peace-seeking Muslims.

Reason: Don’t you mean defeating radical Islam?

Hirsi Ali: No. Islam, period. Once it’s defeated, it can mutate into something peaceful. It’s very difficult to even talk about peace now. They’re not interested in peace.

Reason: We have to crush the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims under our boot? In concrete terms, what does that mean, “defeat Islam”?

Hirsi Ali: I think that we are at war with Islam. And there’s no middle ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For starters, you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present, there are native Westerners converting to Islam, and they’re the most fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the schools and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the symbol burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye and flex your muscles and you say, “This is a warning. We won’t accept this anymore.” There comes a moment when you crush your enemy.

Reason: Militarily?

Hirsi Ali: In all forms, and if you don’t do that, then you have to live with the consequence of being crushed.

Reason: Are we really heading toward anything so ominous?

Hirsi Ali: I think that’s where we’re heading. We’re heading there because the West has been in denial for a long time. It did not respond to the signals that were smaller and easier to take care of. Now we have some choices to make. This is a dilemma: Western civilization is a celebration of life—everybody’s life, even your enemy’s life. So how can you be true to that morality and at the same time defend yourself against a very powerful enemy that seeks to destroy you?

Reason: George Bush, not the most conciliatory person in the world, has said on plenty of occasions that we are not at war with Islam.

Hirsi Ali: If the most powerful man in the West talks like that, then, without intending to, he’s making radical Muslims think they’ve already won. There is no moderate Islam. There are Muslims who are passive, who don’t all follow the rules of Islam, but there’s really only one Islam, defined as submission to the will of God. There’s nothing moderate about it.

Reason: So when even a hard-line critic of Islam such as Daniel Pipes says, “Radical Islam is the problem, but moderate Islam is the solution,” he’s wrong?

Hirsi Ali: He’s wrong. Sorry about that.

Reason: Explain to me what you mean when you say we have to stop the burning of our flags and effigies in Muslim countries. Why should we care?

Hirsi Ali: We can make fun of George Bush. He’s our president. We elected him. And the queen of England, they can make fun of her within Britain and so on. But on an international level, this has gone too far. You know, the Russians, they don’t burn American flags. The Chinese don’t burn American flags. Have you noticed that? They don’t defile the symbols of other civilizations. The Japanese don’t do it. That never happens.

Reason: Isn’t that a double standard? You want us to be able to say about Islam whatever we want—and I certainly agree with that. But then you add that people in Muslim countries should under all circumstances respect our symbols, or else.

Hirsi Ali: No, no, no.

Reason: We should be able to piss on a copy of the Koran or lampoon Muhammad, but they shouldn’t be able to burn the queen in effigy. That’s not a double standard?

Hirsi Ali: No, that’s not what I’m saying. In Iran a nongovernmental organization has collected money, up to 150,000 British pounds, to kill Salman Rushdie. That’s a criminal act, but we are silent about that.

Reason: We are?

Hirsi Ali: Yes. What happened? Have you seen any political response to it?

Reason: The fatwa against Rushdie has been the subject of repeated official anger and protests since 1989.

Hirsi Ali: I don’t know. The British sailors who were kidnapped this year—what happened? Nothing happened. The West keeps giving the impression that it’s OK, so the extremists will get away with it. Saudi Arabia is an economic partner, a partner in defense. On the other hand, they—Saudi Arabia, wealthy Saudi people—spread Islam. They have a sword on their flag. That’s the double standard.

Reason: I want my government to protest the Rushdie fatwa. I’m not so sure they ought to diplomatically engage some idiots burning a piece of cloth or a straw figure in the streets of Islamabad. Isn’t there a huge difference between the two?

Hirsi Ali: It’s not just a piece of cloth. It’s a symbol. In a tribal mind-set, if I’m allowed to take something and get away with it, I’ll come back and take some more. In fact, I’ll come and take the whole place, especially since it’s my holy obligation to spread Islam to the outskirts of the earth and I know I’ll be rewarded in heaven. At that point, I’ve only done my religious obligation while you’re still sitting there rationalizing that your own flag is a piece of cloth.

We have to get serious about this. The Egyptian dictatorship would not allow many radical imams to preach in Cairo, but they’re free to preach in giant mosques in London. Why do we allow it?

Reason: You’re in favor of civil liberties, but applied selectively?

Hirsi Ali: No. Asking whether radical preachers ought to be allowed to operate is not hostile to the idea of civil liberties; it’s an attempt to save civil liberties. A nation like this one is based on civil liberties, and we shouldn’t allow any serious threat to them. So Muslim schools in the West, some of which are institutions of fascism that teach innocent kids that Jews are pigs and monkeys—I would say in order to preserve civil liberties, don’t allow such schools.

Reason: In Holland, you wanted to introduce a special permit system for Islamic schools, correct?

Hirsi Ali: I wanted to get rid of them. I wanted to have them all closed, but my party said it wouldn’t fly. Top people in the party privately expressed that they agreed with me, but said, “We won’t get a majority to do that,” so it never went anywhere.

Reason: Well, your proposal went against Article 23 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees that religious movements may teach children in religious schools and says the government must pay for this if minimum standards are met. So it couldn’t be done. Would you in fact advocate that again?

Hirsi Ali: Oh, yeah.

Reason: Here in the United States, you’d advocate the abolition of—

Hirsi Ali: All Muslim schools. Close them down. Yeah, that sounds absolutist. I think 10 years ago things were different, but now the jihadi genie is out of the bottle. I’ve been saying this in Australia and in the U.K. and so on, and I get exactly the same arguments: The Constitution doesn’t allow it. But we need to ask where these constitutions came from to start with—what’s the history of Article 23 in the Netherlands, for instance? There were no Muslim schools when the constitution was written. There were no jihadists. They had no idea.

Reason: Do you believe that the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights—documents from more than 200 ago—ought to change?

Hirsi Ali: They’re not infallible. These Western constitutions are products of the Enlightenment. They’re products of reason, and reason dictates that you can only progress when you can analyze the circumstances and act accordingly. So now that we live under different conditions, the threat is different. Constitutions can be adapted, and they are, sometimes. The American Constitution has been amended a number of times. With the Dutch Constitution, I think the latest adaptation was in 1989. Constitutions are not like the Koran—nonnegotiable, never-changing.

Look, in a democracy, it’s like this: I suggest, “Let’s close Muslim schools.” You say, “No, we can’t do it.” The problem that I’m pointing out to you gets bigger and bigger. Then you say, “OK, let’s somehow discourage them,” and still the problem keeps on growing, and in another few years it gets so bad that I belatedly get what I wanted in the first place.

I respect that it needs to happen this way, but there’s a price for the fact that you and I didn’t share these insights earlier, and the longer we wait, the higher the price. In itself the whole process is not a bad thing. People and communities and societies learn through experience. The drawback is, in this case, that “let’s learn from experience” means other people’s lives will be taken.

Reason: When I read Ian Buruma’s review of your book in The New York Times, I felt he wasn’t being fair to you when he wrote that you “espouse an absolutist way of a perfectly enlightened west at war with the demonic world of Islam.” But maybe that’s a pretty apt description of what you believe.
Hirsi Ali: No, that’s not fair. I don’t think that the West is perfect, and I think that standing up and defending modern society from going back to the law of the jungle is not being absolutist.

I don’t know what Buruma saw when he went to Holland [to research Theo van Gogh’s assassination for his book Murder in Amsterdam], but Theo rode to work on his bicycle one morning, and a man armed with knives and guns took Theo’s life in the name of his God—and that same man, Mohammed Bouyeri, wasn’t born believing that. The people who introduced this mind-set to Bouyeri took advantage of the notion of freedom of religion and other civil liberties.

Samir Azouz, another young man in Holland convicted of terrorist plotting, attended a fundamentalist Muslim school in Amsterdam which is still open. He had maps of the Dutch parliament. He wanted to kill me and other politicians. He wanted to cause murder and mayhem congruent with the set of beliefs that he was taught in school using Dutch taxpayers’ money. Now go back in time a little. Isn’t it extremely cruel when you put yourself in the shoes of that little boy? He was just going to an officially recognized school in a multicultural society. Everyone approved—and now he’s being punished for it. He’s in jail.

Reason: One of the things in your book that struck me was that many of the women in the book made religious choices that seemed entirely free. Your childhood teacher, Sister Aziza, chose to cover herself “to seek a deeper satisfaction of pleasing God.” You described dressing in an ankle-length black cloak yourself, and how it made you feel sensuous and feminine and desirable and like an individual. There’s also the scene where many women in your own Somali neighborhood, including your mother, began dressing in burkas and jilbabs after encountering a preacher named Boqol Sawm. You and they apparently did so of their free will, without any obvious coercion. So what’s the problem with that?

Hirsi Ali: I really thought Sister Aziza was convincing, and I wanted to be like her. And she talked about God and hell and heaven in a way I hadn’t heard before. My mother would only scream, “Pray, it’s time to pray!” without ever explaining why. Sister Aziza wasn’t doing that.

But she did teach us to hate Jews. I must confess to a deep emotional hatred I felt for Jews as a 15-, 16-, 17-year-old living in Kenya. You almost can’t help it; you become part of something bigger. I think that’s how totalitarian movements function and that’s what’s wrong with them. You lose your faculty of reason. You’re told, “Don’t think for yourself. Just follow the leader.”

“Hate people.” OK. “Kill people.” OK, fine.

Reason: But I don’t think that you, at the time, would have said that you had lost your faculty of reason. Nor would your mother have copped to that. You and the other women believed you were all making a perfectly free, rational choice to dress religiously. And why not?

Hirsi Ali: Boqol Sawm is a Somali man who was offered a scholarship to go to Medina to learn true Islam. He was indoctrinated in Medina, and then he was sent with a message to go out and be a missionary, and that’s what he was doing and he did it voluntarily. No one kidnapped him. And he convinced a lot of people.

Reason: Isn’t it all in the eye of the beholder? When you say he was indoctrinated, he would say, “I was enlightened. I was gaining knowledge of my one true faith.”

Hirsi Ali: I agree with you. When I was with Sister Aziza I thought I was being enlightened. I wasn’t aware of all the terms that we are using now: fundamentalism, radical Islam, jihadism, and so on. We were simply true and pure Muslims. We were seeking to live as true Muslims, practicing true Islam, which you find in the Koran. But it’s a problematic ideology because it demands subservience to Allah, not just from believers but from everyone.

Reason: Having lived in the United States for about a year now, do you find that Muslims in the United States have by and large integrated better here than they have in Europe?

Hirsi Ali: Since I moved here, I’ve spent most of my time in airports, in airplanes, in waiting rooms, in hotels, doing promotion for Infidel all over the world, so the amount of time I’ve actually lived in the U.S. is very small. But yes, I have the impression that Muslims in the United States are far more integrated than Muslims in Europe. Of course, being assimilated doesn’t necessarily mean that you won’t be a jihadist, but the likelihood of Muslims turning radical here seems lower than in Europe.

For one thing, America doesn’t really have a welfare system. Mohammed Bouyeri had all day long to plot the murder of Theo van Gogh. American Muslims have to get a job. What pushes people who come to America to assimilate is that it’s expected of them. And people are not mollycoddled by the government.

There’s a lot of white guilt in America, but it’s directed toward black Americans and native Indians, not toward Muslims and other immigrants. People come from China, Vietnam, and all kinds of Muslim countries. To the average American, they’re all fellow immigrants.

The white guilt in Germany and Holland and the U.K. is very different. It has to do with colonialism. It has to do with Dutch emigrants having spread apartheid in South Africa. It has to do with the Holocaust. So the mind-set toward immigrants in Europe is far more complex than here. Europeans are more reticent about saying no to immigrants.

And by and large, Muslim immigrants in Europe do not come with the intention to assimilate. They come with the intention to work, earn some money, and go back. That’s how the first wave of immigrants in the Netherlands was perceived: They would just come to work and then they’d go away. The newer generations that have followed are coming not so much to work and more to reap the benefits of the welfare state. Again, assimilation is not really on their minds.

Also, in order to get official status here in the U.S., you have to have an employer, so it’s the employable who are coming. The Arabs who live here came as businessmen, and a lot of them come from wealthy backgrounds. There are also large communities of Indian and Pakistani Muslims, who tend to be very liberal. Compare that to the Turks in Germany, who mostly come from the poor villages of Anatolia. Or compare it to the Moroccans in the Netherlands, who are for the most part Berbers with a similar socio-economic background. It’s a completely different set of people.

And finally, there’s the matter of borders. In America, Muslim immigrants typically pass through an airport, which means the Americans have a better way of controlling who comes in—a far cry from Europe’s open borders. Forty years ago, when Europe began talking about lifting borders between countries to facilitate the free traffic of goods and labor, they weren’t thinking about waves of immigrants. They thought of Europe as a place people left. America, on the other hand, has always been an immigration nation, with border controls that have been in place for a long time. I know the southern border is difficult to monitor, but for Arab Muslims and Pakistanis coming to America, it’s very hard to enter illegally.

Without passing any moral judgment, those are the differences between the two places.

Reason: Are you concerned about the efficacy of your message? Do you worry that, at least in the short term, you have exacerbated the miserable treatment of women under much of mainstream Islam by prompting moderate Muslims to turn inward to their religion because they really don’t want to follow the path of the apostate Hirsi Ali?

Hirsi Ali: Young men now want to become terrorists in response to something I’ve written, that sort of thing? I don’t think that is the case. If we continue that reasoning, we’ll never scrutinize anything. Can we ever write? Can we ever criticize anything?

Reason: You write in your book that you would never have voted for Pim Fortuyn, the murdered leader of an anti-immigration party who had been considered a candidate for the Dutch prime ministership. I wonder what ideological differences you had with him.

Hirsi Ali: It wasn’t an ideological difference I had with Pim Fortuyn. In the Netherlands, new parties provoke change; they’re shock parties. They don’t carry out policies. Also, Fortuyn had no experience and had an explosive temper. Don’t get me wrong; he would have been a wonderful addition to the Dutch parliament, because rhetorically he was far stronger than all the other candidates. But I don’t think he really wanted to become prime minister. He was only joking.

Reason: He was?

Hirsi Ali: I think he was. He was a flamboyant hedonist. To be a prime minister, you sleep about four hours a night. So anyway, I wouldn’t have voted for him. I’ve always voted for the establishment.

Reason: You don’t sound like an establishment-supporting kind of person. You’re supposed to be a big rebel.

Hirsi Ali: Yeah, but there are rebels and rebels. There are rebels who are always against something, like the Socialist Party in the Netherlands. To them, rebelling itself is the aim. That’s where they get their thrill from. But I’m rebelling for something. I want something to be established.

Reason: Tolerance is probably the most powerful word there is in the Netherlands. No other word encapsulates better what the Dutch believe really defines them. That makes it very easy for people to say that when they’re being criticized, they’re not being tolerated—and from there it’s only a small step to saying they’re being discriminated against or they’re the victims of Islamophobia or racism or what have you.

Hirsi Ali: We have to revert to the original meaning of the term tolerance. It meant you agreed to disagree without violence. It meant critical self-reflection. It meant not tolerating the intolerant. It also came to mean a very high level of personal freedom.

Then the Muslims arrived, and they hadn’t grown up with that understanding of tolerance. In short order, tolerance was now defined by multiculturalism, the idea that all cultures and religions are equal. Expectations were created among the Muslim population. They were told they could preserve their own culture, their own religion. The vocabulary was quickly established that if you criticize someone of color, you’re a racist, and if you criticize Islam, you’re an Islamophobe.

Reason: The international corollary to the word tolerance is probably respect. The alleged lack of respect has become a perennial sore spot in relations between the West and Islam. Salman Rushdie receiving a British knighthood supposedly signified such a lack of respect, as did the Danish cartoons last year, and many other things. Do you believe this is what Muslims genuinely crave—respect?

Hirsi Ali: It’s not about respect. It’s about power, and Islam is a political movement.

Reason: Uniquely so?

Hirsi Ali: Well, it hasn’t been tamed like Christianity. See, the Christian powers have accepted the separation of the worldly and the divine. We don’t interfere with their religion, and they don’t interfere with the state. That hasn’t happened in Islam.

But I don’t even think that the trouble is Islam. The trouble is the West, because in the West there’s this notion that we are invincible and that everyone will modernize anyway, and that what we are seeing now in Muslim countries is a craving for respect. Or it’s poverty, or it’s caused by colonization.

The Western mind-set—that if we respect them, they’re going to respect us, that if we indulge and appease and condone and so on, the problem will go away—is delusional. The problem is not going to go away. Confront it, or it’s only going to get bigger.

Rogier van Bakel is a freelance journalist and runs the blog Nobody's Business.

Comments can be sent to letters@reason.com

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 9 oktober 2007

The Price of FreedomIf the Dutch government abandons Ayaan Hirsi Ali, America should welcome her

Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Click image to expand.

If any country has enjoyed a long reputation for peaceful and democratic consensus combined with civic fortitude, that country is the Netherlands. It was one of the special countries of the Enlightenment, providing refuge for the family of Baruch Spinoza and for the heterodox Pierre Bayle and René Descartes. It overcame Catholic-Protestant fratricide with a unique form of coexistence, put up a spirited resistance to Nazi occupation, evolved a constitutional form of monarchy, and managed to make a fairly generous settlement with its former colonies and their inhabitants.

In the last few years, two episodes have hideously sullied this image. The first smirching was the conduct of the Dutch contingent in Bosnia, who in July 1995 abandoned the population of the U.N.-protected "safe haven" at Srebrenica and enabled the worst massacre of civilians on European soil since World War II. Dutch officers were photographed hoisting champagne glasses with the sadistic goons of Ratko Mladic's militia before leaving the helpless Muslim population to a fate that anyone could have predicted.

Those of us who protested at this slaughter of Europe's Muslims are also obliged to register outrage, I think, at the Dutch state's latest betrayal. On Oct. 1, having leaked its intention in advance to the press, the Christian-Democrat administration of Jan Peter Balkenende announced that it would no longer guarantee the protection of Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

To give a brief back story, it will be remembered that Hirsi Ali, a refugee from genital mutilation, forced marriage, and civil war in her native Somalia, was a member of the Dutch parliament. She collaborated with Theo van Gogh on a film—Submission—that highlighted the maltreatment of Muslim immigrant women living in Holland. Van Gogh was murdered on an Amsterdam street in November 2004; a note pinned to his body with a knife proved to be a threat to make Hirsi Ali the next victim. Placed inside a protective bubble by the authorities, she was later evicted from her home after neighbors complained that she was endangering their safety and then subjected to a crude attempt to deprive her of her citizenship. Resolving not to stay where she was not wanted, Hirsi Ali moved to the United States, where she was offered a place by the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., and where the Dutch government undertook to continue to provide her with security. This promise it no longer finds it convenient to keep. The ostensible reason for the climb-down is the cost, which involves a basic 2 million euros (not very much for a state), which can admittedly sometimes be higher if Hirsi Ali has to travel.

The Dutch parliament debates this question later this week, and I hope that its embassies hear from people who don't regard this as an "internal affair" of the Netherlands. If a prominent elected politician of a Western country can be left undefended against highly credible threats from Islamist death squads, what price all of our easy babble about not "appeasing terrorists"? Especially disgraceful is the Dutch government's irresponsible decision to announce to these death squads, without even notifying Hirsi Ali, that after a given date she would be unprotected and easy game. (Lest I inadvertently strengthen this deplorable impression, let me swiftly add that at present she is under close guard in the United States.)

Suppose the narrow and parochial view prevails in Holland, then I think that we in America should welcome the chance to accept the responsibility ourselves. Ayaan Hirsi Ali has become a symbol of the resistance, by many women from the Muslim world, to gender apartheid, "honor" killing, genital mutilation, and other horrors of clerical repression. She has been a very clear and courageous voice against the ongoing attack on our civilization mounted by exactly the same forces. Her recent memoir, Infidel (which I recommend highly, and to which, I ought to say, I am contributing a preface in its paperback edition), is an account of an extremely arduous journey from something very like chattel slavery to a full mental and intellectual emancipation from theocracy. It is a road that we must, and for our own sake as well, be willing to help others to travel.

For a while, her security in America was provided by members of the elite Dutch squad that is responsible for the protection of the Dutch royal family and Dutch politicians. The U.S. government requested that this be discontinued, for the perfectly understandable reason that foreign policemen should not be operating on American soil. The job has now been subcontracted, and was until recently underwritten by The Hague. If The Hague defaults, then does the "war on terror" administration take no interest in protecting the life of one of the finest enemies, and one of the most prominent targets, of the terrorists? Hirsi Ali has been accepted for permanent residence in the United States, and would, I think, like to become a citizen. That's an honor. If she was the CEO of Heineken or the president of Royal Dutch Shell, and was subject to death threats while on U.S. soil, I have the distinct feeling that the forces of law and order would require no prompting to consider her safety a high priority.

A last resort would be to set up a trust or fund by voluntary subscription and continue to pay for her security that way. Perhaps some of the readers of this column would consider kicking in or know someone who was about to make an unwise campaign contribution that could be diverted to a better end? If so, do please watch this space and be prepared to write to your congressional representatives, or to the Dutch ambassador, in the meantime. We keep hearing that not enough sacrifices are demanded of us, and many people wonder what they can do to forward the struggle against barbarism and intimidation. So, now's your chance.

Posted by Sylvia

A Dutch Retreat on Speech?

Source: Washington Post - by Anne Applebaum 

And now we come to what may be a truly fundamental test, maybe even a turning point, for that part of the world generally known as the West.

The test is this: Are prominent, articulate critics of radical Islam, critics who happen to be citizens of European countries or the United States, entitled to the same free speech rights enjoyed by other citizens of European countries and the United States?

Legally, of course they are. In practice, they can say what they want -- and then they can be murdered for doing so. That means that Western governments have a special and unusual responsibility to them, as many have long acknowledged. It is no accident that the writer Salman Rushdie, upon whom the Ayatollah Khomeini declared a fatwa on Feb. 14, 1989, is still very much alive. Though the details have not been publicized, it is assumed that Rushdie remains, one way or another, under the protection of the British police and secret services, both in Britain and abroad. This protection is completely uncontroversial -- in June, the queen even gave Rushdie a knighthood-- and as a result the fatwa has not prevented him from speaking, writing, publishing, even divorcing and remarrying several times over the past 18 years.

The case of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Dutch-Somali politician and writer, is different. Hirsi Ali has been under Dutch police protection since 2002, when her public comments about mistreatment of women in the Dutch Muslim community and references to herself as "secular" led to death threats in Holland.

Though encouraged to remain in the country -- and promised security protection -- by the government then in power, the mood in Holland changed in 2004. That year, a fanatic named Mohammed Bouyeri infamously murdered Theo Van Gogh, the director of a film about the oppression of Muslim women -- and then thrust a knife bearing a note threatening Hirsi Ali, who wrote the film's script, into the victim's chest.

Dutch society became, and remains, bitterly divided in the wake of the Van Gogh murder. Some of Hirsi Ali's compatriots decided it was time to address the issues of women, Islam and integration head on. The Dutch writer Leon de Winter, a defender of Hirsi Ali, talks openly about his country's failure to integrate Muslim immigrants, attributing the problem to the Dutch "guilt complex": "As soon as we let people from the Third World come here to work in our rich country, we . . . somehow saw them as sacred victims."

Others simply want Hirsi Ali and her ilk to go away forever, thereby keeping Holland out of the headlines and Amsterdam off terrorists' hit lists. Unlike the British, who have gotten used to the idea that faraway events can affect them, the Dutch, at least in this century, are more insular. That helps explain why, in 2006, the Dutch government tried to revoke Hirsi Ali's citizenship over an old immigration controversy, and why her neighbors went to court that year to have her evicted from her home (they claimed the security threat posed by her presence impinged upon their human rights). But although she did finally move to the United States, the argument continued in her absence. Last week, the Dutch government abruptly cut off her security funding, forcing her to return briefly to Holland.

The reasons given were financial, but there was clearly more to it. To put it bluntly, many in Holland find her too loud, too public in her condemnation of radical Islam. She doesn't sound conciliatory, in the modern continental fashion. Compare her description of Islam as "brutal, bigoted, fixated on controlling women" with the German judge who, citing the Koran, in January told a Muslim woman trying to obtain a divorce from her violent husband that she should have "expected" her husband to deploy the corporal punishment his religion approves. Hirsi Ali herself says she is often told, in so many words, that she's "brought her problems on herself." Now the Dutch prime minister openly says he wants her to deal with them alone.

Fortunately, Hirsi Ali is already back in the United States, under professional, full-time, well-resourced and for the moment privately organized protection. But this week, the Dutch parliament is due to debate her status once again. And once again, the Dutch will be confronted with the facts that Hirsi Ali remains a Dutch citizen; that the threat to her life comes at least in part from groups based in Holland; that she lives abroad because the Dutch political situation forced her to; and that when she speaks out, she does so in defense of what she believes to be Dutch values.

Whether or not the Dutch like it -- and I'm sure most of them don't -- revoking her police protection will send a clear message to the world: that the Dutch are no longer willing to protect their own traditions of free speech. Resources will be found, and she will recover. But will Holland?

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 2 oktober 2007

ABRUPT HOMECOMING

Hirsi Ali Returns to the Netherlands after Losing Body Guards

Source: Der Spiegel / Spiegel online

Former Dutch legislator and Islam critic Hirsi Ali has been under state-funded protection since extremists began threatening her life in 2004. Now the Dutch government has said it won't pay for her protection if she continues to live and work in the United States.

Somalia-born critic of Islam and former Dutch politician Ayaan Hirsi Ali has returned to the Netherlands to make security arrangements for herself after the Dutch government decided to no longer pay for her US security. Somalia-born critic of Islam and former Dutch politician Ayaan Hirsi Ali has returned to the Netherlands to make security arrangements for herself after the Dutch government decided to no longer pay for her US security.

Writer and former Dutch politician Ayaan Hirsi Ali returned to the Netherlands on Monday after living in the United States and working for a prominent conservative think tank. The move came after the Dutch government said it would no longer pay for her security needs in Washington.

The Dutch government has provided Hirsi Ali with police protection since the 2004 murder of filmmaker Theo van Gogh by a radical Islamist. Hirsi Ali became internationally prominent because of her uncompromising criticism of Islam in the wake of the slaying -- a position which has made her the subject of repeated death threats. In 2006, she left the Netherlands at the center of a scandal that would eventually cost the country's then-integration minister, Rita Verdonk, her job.

According to the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad, Hirsi Ali returned Monday to her adopted country, the Netherlands, where she is entitled to state-funded protection.

Sybrand van Haersmma Buma, the ruling Christian Democrat Party's security-issues spokesman, defended the government's decision, saying that the state-funded protection in the US was only meant to last through Hirsi Ali's first year abroad and that it had only been granted due to "extraordinary circumstances," the Associated Press reported him as saying.

It was a temporary measure," van Haersmma Buma told Dutch NOS television Monday. The responsibility for her security should be taken on by the US government, van Haersmma Buma added, arguing that handling Hirsi Ali's security arrangements in a foreign country was taxing.

Hirsi Ali first entered the international public spotlight in 2004 when she collaborated with Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh on Submission, a short film highly critical of Islam's treatment of women. The film led to van Gogh's murder by a radical Muslim angered by the film's depiction of Islam. A note the murderer, now serving a life sentence in prison, left attached to van Gogh's body with a knife threatened Hirsi Ali's life. She was forced to go into hiding temporarilyand only emerged later under police protection.

From 2003 to 2006, Hirsi Ali served in the lower house of the Dutch parliament. In 2006, she resigned from her position after hardline Dutch Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk tried to revoke her Dutch passport because Hirsi Ali had provided false information when she applied for asylum in 1992. The resulting controversy led to widespread public outcry in the Netherlands and abroad, and Verdonk was forced to back down.

Since then, Hirsi Ali has been a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think-tank based in Washington, DC. Her autobiography, entitled "Infidel," was released in the US earlier this year and became a best-seller. Her security in the US was increased in March after she received more death threats there.

RELATED SPIEGEL ONLINE LINKS

Dutch Political Crisis: Hirsi Ali Row Brings Down Government (06/30/2006)

Ayaan Hirsi Ali Heads for the States: Settling Scores with Old Europe (05/22/2006)

SPIEGEL Interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Everyone Is Afraid to Criticize Islam (02/06/2006)

SPIEGEL Interview with Hirsi Ali: We Must Declare War on Islamist Propaganda (05/14/2005)

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 1 oktober 2007

Hirsi Ali leaves US, returns to Holland

Source: Dutch News
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the controversial former MP and outspoken critic of Islam, returned to the Netherlands on Monday, according to media reports. The news comes just a week after Hirsi Ali was presented with her American green card in Washington.

According to the NRC, Hirsi Ali has been forced to leave her new home in the US because the Dutch state is no longer prepared to pay for her protection abroad.

The GroenLinks party has demanded an emergency debate into the problems around the Hirsi Ali's security.

Last year the justice ministry said that according to international practice, each country is responsible for the safety and protection of people on their territory. According to GroenLinks the question now is whether the Dutch government should make an exception to this rule similar to that made by the British government in the case of writer Salman Rushdie.

The ruling Christian Democrats feel it is ‘going somewhat far’ to expect the Dutch government to pay for long term protection of Dutch people abroad. They are supported by the opposition Liberal VVD part while the government coalition Labour Party sides with GroenLinks in calling for a parliamentary debate on the issue.

In a press release from the US immigration service on September 25, director Emilio Gonzalez welcomes Hirsi Ali to the US as a permanent resident. ‘We welcome her to the protection provided by the U.S Constitution and encourage her to continue speaking our regarding those issues she feels passionate about.’

He describes her as ‘a courageous woman who is exercising her right to free speech’.

Hirsi Ali herself responded by saying she was ‘overwhelmed with emotions and filled with great pride and gratitude to be counted as one of the many immigrants to the US… who came seeking freedom, refuge and the right to speak without fear of persecution.’

Hirsi Ali has been under heavy guard for several years because of the short film Submission which she made together with the film maker Theo van Gogh murdered by an Islamic extremist in November 2004. The Americans are unable to provide Hirsi Ali with protection for legal reasons, the NRC says.

Hirsi Ali is to continue her work for the right-wing think-tank American Enterprise Institute from a secret address in the Netherlands. She moved to the US last year.

dinsdag 25 september 2007

Bollenger's speech Columbia University

Source: Hotair.com

Video: Bollinger’s rebuke to a “petty and cruel dictator”
Update: Students cheer Ahmadinejad’s rebuke to Bollinger



Update: Here’s Ahmadinejad taking the mic after Bollinger and reminding the useful idiots assembled how superior non-western cultures treat their invited guests. Big cheers.
Click the image to watch.
Zie hier voor meer video's
Artikel in de VK over Amadinejad

Geplaatst/gelinkt/geknutseld door Joop, m.d.a. Ernst

woensdag 12 september 2007

The end of democracy in Belgium - Europe

Lees verder een uitgebreid verslag op Het Vrije Volk
geplaatst/gelinkt door Joop

maandag 27 augustus 2007

Erdogan: The Term “Moderate Islam” Is Ugly And Offensive

PM Erdogan: The Term “Moderate Islam” Is Ugly And Offensive
There Is No Moderate Islam;
Islam Is Islam
bron Memritv:

Erdogan_1 Speaking at Kanal D TV’s Arena program, PM Erdogan commented on the term “moderate Islam”, often used in the West to describe AKP and said, ‘These descriptions are very ugly, it is offensive and an insult to our religion. There is no moderate or immoderate Islam. Islam is Islam and that’s it.”

Source: Milliyet, Turkey, August 21, 2007

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drie jaar geleden verkondigde Erdogan al hetzelfde standpunt

bron: Dhimmywatch

Erdogan demands dhimmitude

The Turkish prime minister would find a soulmate in Nabil Bebawi. From TurkishPress.com,http://www.turkishpress.com/turkishpress/news.asp?ID=21036  with thanks to Nicolei:
Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan said that terrorism did not have any religion, language, race or country.

    The expression ''moderate Islam'' was also wrong, Erdogan stated.

    Erdogan said, ''Turkey is not a country where moderate Islam prevails.'' ...

    Reacting to the expression ''moderate Islam'' used by panelist Harmon, Erdogan said, ''Turkey is not a country where moderate Islam prevails. This expression is wrong. The word Islam is uninflected, it is only Islam. When you say moderate Islam, then there will be another alternative like nonmoderate Islam. As a Muslim, I can't accept such a concept. Islam rejects extreme concepts. I am not an extreme Muslim.''

Fair enough, Erdogan. I use "radical" and "moderate" to denote those who pursue violent jihad and those who do not, but I acknowledge that both groups read out of the same books. Yet I too have read those books, and I don't see how they teach peace and tolerance, even though you seem to be insisting that the rest of the world assume that they do.

    Reacting to panelist Bernard Lewis, who used the expression ''Islamic terrorism'', Erdogan said, ''this expression will sadden not only the Muslims but also those who believe in other religions. None of the religions allows terrorism. Therefore, it is very ugly to put the word Islam before terrorism. You may say religious terrorist but you can't say Islamic terrorist.''

I'd like to see how Erdogan would explain the copious references to the Qur'an and Sunnah in the writings of Osama and other radical Muslims. They themselves quite explicitly operate in the name of Islam. The PM seems to be zealous not to combat their version of Islam, but only to make sure that the rest of the world doesn't commit the faux pas of noticing their use of Islam to justify terrorism.

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Zie ook het hieraan gewijde Volkskrantblog  van Paul Broekman

Geplaatst/gelinkt door Joop

dinsdag 21 augustus 2007

Fitzgerald: Work to educate Infidels

Source: Jihad Watch 

"I believe the only way is to expose the Muslims to different cultures, different thoughts, different belief systems," said Dr Sultan, who is completing her first book, The Escaped Prisoner: When Allah is a Monster. -- From this article

Here is one of those details: those who are in a position to do so must work first to educate Infidels, so that a sufficient number of them in positions of power clearly understand the texts, tenets, attitudes, atmospherics of Islam. They must also be brought to understand why it is that efforts at appeasement and "integration" of Muslims into societies whose basic principles are flatly contradicted by Islam will fail.

And then, beyond the political and journalistic groups, and beyond those who are to protect and instruct us, there are ever-widening groups of citizens. These must make sure that in every encounter with Muslims, their new knowledge, and new implacable attitude, are not hidden from view, but self-confidently displayed.

What effect will this have on Muslims? It will madden many. So what? Many have already been taught to spread Islam, to subdue Infidels, to remove every obstacle to the imposition of rule by Muslims. And they are prepared to use what instruments at the time prove most effective. Furthermore, they have never been put in a position where they are forced to look at, or to confront, the history of Islamic Jihad conquest and the subjugation of non-Muslims. Make them do so. Force them to do so.

And make them look -- because increasing numbers of Infidels will not for one minute let them forget -- at the way in which the basic doctrines of Islam, and the figure of Muhammad, have worked themselves out in history. If there is despotism and corruption all over the Muslim lands, make sure they understand that it is Islam itself that locates political legitimacy in the will expressed by a whimsical Allah, as revealed in the Qur'an, and glossed -- for most Muslims -- by the Hadith and Sira. Make them look at the fact that there is economic paralysis in the Muslim lands, despite the ten trillion dollars received since 1973 alone by ten Muslim members of OPEC. The few Muslim states that have some economic development have it because, though Muslim, they have for a long time been living with the systematic constraining of Islam as a political and social force, as in Turkey. Or they might enjoy a relatively higher level of economic development because they have within their borders a sufficient number of non-Muslims who are able to provide the essential element for economic development, as in Malaysia, or to provide a kind of modernizing and civilizing effect on the local Muslims, or at least on some of them, as has happened because of the large Christian presence in Lebanon.

And do the same with social, moral, and intellectual development. Try to persuade Muslims to learn history, including the history of early Islam, and how it developed, and what was the real story of the Qur'an. In other words, subject Islam to the same treatment that Christianity and Judaism were subjected to by the practice of the Higher Criticism.

The most primitive people will not stand for it. But others will, and then they will begin to think. Some may have already begun to think, especially if they are non-Arab Muslims and can first have their minds opened a bit by appealing to their understanding of the role non-Arabs play within Islam. Some may already have begun to think if it has been pointed out to them how Islam is, and has always been, a vehicle for Arab linguistic, cultural, and other kinds of imperialism. Intelligent Persians, Indonesians, even some Pakistanis, will not be able to deny the truth of that assertion, and who knows? Some may, after examining all this evidence, find themselves in a mood to look back to their pre-Islamic pasts, national and personal.

But it starts with the Infidels, and what they know, or are capable of learning and understanding. The only way to expose the Muslims to different cultures, different thoughts, different belief systems, as Dr. Sultan recommends, is through the efforts of Infidels.

Posted by Lucida

maandag 20 augustus 2007

Ayaan Hirsia Ali versus Avi Lewis

Ayaan Hirsi Ali was interviewed by Avi Lewis on CBC. He tries to dismantle her arguments to no avail. Hmmm, maybe there is something worse than America you know.


Reactie op dit 'interview', waarin de vloer wordt aangeveegd met CBC.

Discussieleider is Michael Coren (dat soort lui missen we hier node).

Woman in red is Marily n Churley:

deel 2 (vuurwerk!!)


Nog een fraaie reactie op de leeghoofdigheid van de CBS interviewer

Het verdient aanbeveling te Googlen op Ayaan Hirsi Ali op Youtube

Deze is het aanzien ook meer dan waard.

Geplaatst door Joop

Self-made terrorists

Source: The Australian 

Jamal Zougam was a handsome and popular 30-year-old who frequented the discos in Madrid's Moroccan quarter and ran a mobile phone shop with his brother. Born in Tangier, Morocco, he had migrated to Spain with his family as a child and seemed perfectly integrated into Spanish society.

"He was good looking, he didn't have a beard, he joked around a lot," recalled one of his friends. "He's the kind of guy who would walk around in a Lacoste T-shirt in summer."

Zougam was also a terrorist, Spanish police say. It's alleged that on March 11, 2004, he helped plant 10 bombs that ripped through four packed commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people and injuring more than 1800. He and 27 others are awaiting verdicts from a Madrid court after a four-month trial.

Zougam may seem an unlikely candidate to join a terrorist cell. But he is the archetypal terrorist recruit, according to a landmark study by the intelligence division of the New York Police Department, which has traced the formation and development of Islamist terror cells in the US, Britain, Canada, Spain, The Netherlands and Australia.

Their report, Radicalisation in the West: The Homegrown Threat, is the most comprehensive cross-national study of how terror cells form, develop, plan and execute large-scale attacks. Its results are groundbreaking. It finds there is "a remarkable consistency in the behaviour and trajectory" of the terrorists studied and their plots. Crucially, it provides "a tool for predictability" to help identify emerging terror cells before they strike.

The report's authors, Mitchell Silber and Arvin Bhatt, are special assistants to the deputy commissioner of intelligence for the NYPD. Their brief was to identify terrorists in the making in order to pre-empt mass-casualty attacks rather than arrest the perpetrators after the event.

"Where once we would have defined the initial indicator of the threat at the point where a terrorist or group of terrorists would actually plan an attack, we have now shifted our focus to a much earlier point, a point where we believe the potential terrorist or group of terrorists begin and progress through a process of radicalisation," say the authors.

Their report comes at a critical time. Recent US intelligence estimates say "activists identifying themselves as jihadists are increasing in both number and geographic dispersion", and "the operational threat from self-radicalised cells will grow".

The NYPD's assessment is that while al-Qa'ida's central core of leaders, operatives and foot soldiers has shrunk since the September 11, 2001, attacks, "its philosophy of global jihad has spread worldwide at an exponential rate". This "wave of militant ideological influences" has underpinned a surge of radicalisation in the West that is known as the "home-grown" threat.

The NYPD analysts studied cells that carried out the March 2004 train attacks in Madrid, the July 2005 bombings in London, the Toronto 18 who plotted to bomb the Canadian parliament and behead Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the Hofstad group in Amsterdam which murdered filmmaker Theo van Gogh, and two groups of men arrested in Australia who are awaiting trial on terrorism charges. They also examined four groups in the US: the Lackawanna Six, the Portland Seven, the Northern Virginia Paintball group and the September 11 attackers.

They found that across the board cell members started out as "unremarkable" individuals, typically from second or third-generation middle-class immigrant families, often successful university students with little if any criminal history. Most "do not begin as radical or even devout Muslims".

In the Australian study, at least seven of the men charged with terrorism were the children of Lebanese immigrants who had grown up "somewhat secular" and had only begun practising Islam 18 months before their arrest. Likewise, some in the Toronto group had not practised Islam until they began to radicalise.

Men who become "home-grown" terrorists are not driven by religion, at least not at first, nor are they motivated by oppression, suffering, revenge or desperation. Rather, they are looking for an identity and a cause, which they find in radical Islam.

They are not recruited from above but usually begin the process of radicalisation alone, then gravitate towards like-minded individuals, form clusters and "self-designate themselves as holy warriors".

Silber and Bhatt identify four stages in the process of radicalisation. The first is the "pre-radicalisation" phase, where an individual is often frustrated with his life or the politics of his home government and is looking for meaning in life.

Middle-class families and students provide fertile ground. Young Muslim men living in diaspora communities are particularly vulnerable. These communities provide "ideological sanctuaries" for radical thought and tend to tolerate the existence of an "extremist sub-culture". The more "pure" and isolated they are from the rest of the community, the more vulnerable they are to extremism.

The second stage is "self-identification", where the individual discovers Salafi-jihadist ideology, a Sunni revivalist movement which aims to create a "pure" Islamic society based on a literal reading of the Koran. Under this interpretation, complex disputes such as the Arab-Israeli conflict and Kashmir are simplified into a single global war between "believers and non-believers".

"This powerful and simple 'one size fits all' philosophy resonates with the younger diaspora Muslim populations in the West who are often politically naive," Silber and Bhattwrite.

Many attracted to this ideology have suffered a personal crisis such as the death of a family member, loss of a job, personal discrimination or "moral shock" caused by political conflicts abroad, and turn to religion to deal with it.

They seek out others experiencing the same inner conflict, and clusters form. Recent converts tend to be the most zealous as they seek to prove their new-found religious conviction. At this stage the joiners become alienated from their former lives, often giving up cigarettes, drinking and gambling, while they begin to wear Islamic clothing, grow beards and become involved in social activism. At the same time they gravitate towards extremist incubators such as radical mosques, prayer rooms and book stores. The NYPD study identifies the Michael Street mosque in Brunswick, Melbourne, run by Ahlus Sunnah wal Jamaah leader Mohammed Omran as the "extremist incubator" for a number of Australians, a place where they "began to self-identify with the jihadi-Salafi ideology".

The third stage in the radicalisation process is indoctrination, when the individual's views intensify and become all-consuming.

"What was merely an ideology transforms into a personal cause" and the individual decides he must take action to further it. The group becomes his new world while unbelievers become the arch-enemy. His new beliefs become politicised: in the Australian case study, this was manifested in a desire to force the Australian Government to withdraw troops from Afghanistan and Iraq.

In this phase, all of the cells that were studied withdrew from their regular prayer room, which was no longer sufficiently radical. The Melbourne group shunned Sheik Omran's mosque and began meeting and worshipping in private homes.

In each case, as they became more isolated from the world around them, the internet played a crucial role, acting as a "virtual echo chamber" and "radicalisation accelerant", while also providing a tactical resource, the authors say.

The fourth and final stage of transformation is jihadisation, the point at which members of the group "self-designate themselves as holy warriors".

"Group-think" becomes a force multiplier for radicalisation and invariably paves the way for action. They engage in bonding activities such as camping, whitewater rafting, target shooting and paintball games. They spend hours on internet chatrooms and watching jihadist videos, which help to psych them up by glorifying death by jihad as a "true hero's inevitable fate".

The decision to attack is made as a group and driven by an operational leader, which the NYPD study found is a crucial element in the formation of a terrorist cell. The next step, target selection and operational planning, happens very quickly and with little warning, in as little as two weeks.

A critical focus of the NYPD study was to identify why some societies are more vulnerable than others to the emergence of home-grown terror cells. Britain and Europe have an arrest rate for terrorism offences five times higher than the US.

Silber and Bhatt conclude: "Europe's failure to integrate the second and third generation of its immigrants into society, both economically and socially, has left many young Muslims torn between the secular West and their religious heritage. This inner conflict makes them especially vulnerable to extremism: the radical views, philosophy and rhetoric that is highly advertised and becoming more and more fashionable among young Muslims in the West."

They believe the US has proven more resistant to extremism because of its greater economic opportunities, a stronger work ethic compared with Europe's welfare culture, and the "more assimilating nature of American society". US Muslims are more educated and earn more than the average American and are more integrated into society than their European counterparts, and hence have fewer grievances.

The crucial question for Australian policy-makers and counter-terrorism specialists is: where does Australia sit on this spectrum?

Former CIA officer and forensic psychologist Marc Sageman has profiled hundreds of terrorists for his books Understanding Terror Networks and the newly released Leaderless Jihad, and his work is cited in the NYPD report. Sageman believes Australia is less at risk than Europe but more so than the US. He cites the latest figures on terrorism-related arrests: Australia has had about 30 arrests out of a Muslim population of about 300,000, compared with about 60 arrests in the US from a Muslim population 10 times the size.

The NYPD analysts concur with Sageman's view. "Australia and Canada (are) more like the UK in terms of the more lenient asylum standards and more generous welfare benefits," says Silber.

"These enabled a less professional, lower economic strata of immigrants to enter the country. However, unlike the UK, both Australia and Canada are much closer to the US in terms of being societies that had histories, in fact histories integral to their national stories, that involved taking in new immigrants. This made it easier for the immigrants to integrate. So, in short, diaspora populations in Australia may not be as vulnerable to radicalisation as the UK, but not as resistant as the US."

The NSW Police assistant commissioner for counter-terrorism, Nick Kaldas, who was briefed last week in New York on the NYPD study, agrees Australia is less vulnerable than Europe but more so than the US. An Egyptian-born fluent Arabic speaker, Kaldas believes the key to preventing radicalisation is ensuring a constant flow of communication with Muslim communities, giving them a conduit to air grievances.

"Our efforts in community outreach are focused exactly on that: trying to minimise the pressures on those communities from minority extremist elements," says Kaldas.

"If they're talking to us and telling us what's on their minds, we figure they're less likely to feel aggrieved and to go down a different path."

Posted by Lucida

vrijdag 10 augustus 2007

Petitie tegen het verbod op demonstratie Brussel

To: Brussels Major

The Brussels mayor, the Socialist Freddy Thielemans, has, on 9th of August 2007 sent out a press release in which he has banned a demonstration with a minute of silence to commemorate the victims of 9/11 on the 11th sept in Brussels. The reason for the prohibition is that he says he cannot guarantee public safety and that he won’t disturb the Islamic section of the population in Brussels. By invoking the lack of public safety, he is precisely highlighting SIOE’s demonstration title:

Stop the Islamisation of Europe.

SIOE’s message through the 4 slogans is exactly to warn against conditions such as these, where people no longer can use their freedom of expression and feel secure, but the shocking facts are that these conditions already reign at the heart of the EU. SIOE’s demonstration will of course happen, as a peaceful utterance of opinion, an utterance of opinion for which Moslems have countless times received permission to demonstrate in Brussels.

Therefore it is, of course, completely absurd to ban a peaceful demonstration because they are afraid of violent muslim counter-demonstrators!

We kindly ask the major of Brussels to alter his decision and let the free people of Europe demonstrate for their civil rights. We want our right to have a minute of silence to commemorate the victims of 9/11 !

Sincerely,

The Undersigned

View Current Signatures


The Brussels demonstration Sept. 11 2007 Petition to Brussels Major was created by  and written by Dr. Udo Ulfkotte (udo@ulfkotte.de).   This petition is hosted here at www.PetitionOnline.com as a public service.  There is no endorsement of this petition, express or implied, by Artifice, Inc. or our sponsors.  For technical support please use our simple Petition Help form.

Posted by Lucida

donderdag 14 juni 2007

Islam & the West: Ayaan Hirsi Ali — Abandoned by the Left

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-born human rights campaigner who was the headline at the recent Sydney Writers’ Festival, has become a hero of the Right.

But only because the Left deserted her in her hour of need.

Hirsi Ali, 37, fled to the Netherlands in 1992. As a young girl in Somalia, she endured female genital mutilation at her grandmother’s hand. As a young woman in Kenya, her father promised her, in an arranged marriage, to a cousin she had never met. She is now the world’s most famous, and credible, critic of a fanatical and fascistic strand of Islam.

Until last year, Hirsi Ali was a member of the Dutch Parliament, representing the liberal People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy. (She was forced to quit Parliament after admitting to some minor fabrications in the story that helped her win political asylum in 1992. None of the fabrications, which concerned her birth date and original surname, undermined the core claims of the abuse she had suffered, and the Parliament reinstated the citizenship it had previously stripped from her.) But Hirsi Ali’s original home — indeed, I would argue, her natural home — was the Dutch Labour Party.

In the 1970s, the Party transformed itself from a doctrinaire Party focussed primarily on building the Welfare State to a New Left model that embraced environmentalism, feminism and human rights. Why wouldn’t it be the first port of call for a young, progressive woman — a refugee from an oppressive creed who had become a political scientist inspired by Enlightenment values? But, with bitter consequences, Labour fell out with Hirsi Ali.

In 2002, in the wake of the September 11 terror attacks, Hirsi Ali, having renounced Islam, was working on immigration issues for a Labour-aligned think tank. She had left a lucrative corporate job with the drug manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline, such was her commitment to progressive values.

In a policy paper, she urged the closure of The Netherlands’ 41 Islamic schools — many of which were indoctrinating young Muslims with hatred towards the society that had given them refuge — and the reform of Article 23 of the Dutch Constitution, which endorses the multicultural principle of ‘ integration with maintenance of one's own identity.’ As The Guardian reported, ‘Jaws hit the table. The reaction she got indicated how badly she had started trampling on taboos.’

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Labour and other Parties of the Left had competed for support among Muslim communities, including some of the most reactionary. A young Labour official, of Moroccan background, had even endorsed the banning of Aisha, a critical play about the nine-year-old wife of the Prophet Mohammed.

By contrast, Hirsi Ali, a young woman with impeccable life credentials — including working as a social worker among Muslim women who had been brutalised within their officially mandated ‘distinct communities’ — became too controversial and problematic for Labour. ‘I called it the paradox of the Left,’ she told The Guardian. ‘On the one hand they support ideals of equality and emancipation, but in this case they do nothing about it; they even facilitate the oppression.’

A ‘New Left’ icon, Timothy Garton Ash, even referred to her, condescendingly, as a ‘simplistic enlightenment fundamentalist.’

In one of the more disgraceful episodes in the recent history of the European Left, Dutch Labour chose the votes of primitive mullahs — and I make no apology for labelling them as such — and the communities over which they hold sway, instead of a passionate human rights campaigner. Hirsi Ali bolted first to a libertarian business Party and, following her resignation from Parliament, to a Right-wing think tank in the United States.

What a loss. She became a victim of the Left’s fatal embrace of cultural relativism over universal human rights.

Ten days ago, after making almost a dozen calls and calling in several favours, I snaffled a seat in the sold-out auditorium where Hirsi Ali delivered the closing address of the Sydney Writers’ Festival. Her 35-minute address was a largely personal story of how she came to break the chains of Islamic fundamentalism.

But it contained a powerful argument that Islam is a religion, not a race, and one should not resile from criticising its more extreme manifestations, such as Wahabbism and extreme Shi’ism, for fear of being labelled racist. Indeed, I would argue that we have a duty to criticise, confront, censure and even discriminate against any religious or cultural practice that violates those universal human rights that we should hold dear, such as gender and racial equality, and opposition to child and spousal abuse — including the ‘light beatings’ to which Islamic activist Keysar Trad refers — stonings, punitive amputations and decapitations.

Religion is, after all, a belief system and it is not racist to oppose a belief system, even if it is the dominant belief system of a particular race or ethnicity. For example, one can criticise, even disdain, the first five books of the Bible or the laws of the Talmud without being anti-Semitic, just as one can disdain the Gospels without being anti-European (or anti-African or anti-Asian or anti-Latin), the Bhagavad-Gita without being anti-Indian, and, yes, the Koran, without being anti-Arab or anti-Indonesian or anti-Afghan.

Such critiques may challenge our values, traduce our sensibilities, even insult our saviours, but a critique of the tenets of a religion is not necessarily a criticism of the bearers of a religion.

The Left is not being ‘culturally sensitive’ when it argues we need to accept or even ‘understand’ cultures, be they in Central Asia or Central Australia, that challenge liberal and social democratic norms or accommodate violence in the community or the home — it is being dangerously indulgent and its adherents need to rethink their position, with Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s words ringing in their ears.

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 4 juni 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali on video

Ayaan Hirsi Ali backs abolition of Australian Muslim schools

Source: Live Search

Abolish Muslim schools

Source: The Daily Telegraph 

MUSLIM schools in Australia should be abolished, a controversial Somali-born writer told the Sydney's Writers Festival last night.

Amid intense security and the police riot and public order squad, Ayaan Hirsi Ali received a standing ovation from a full house at the Sydney Recital Hall after speaking on the importance of Western values influencing Islamic thought.

Her calls for reforming Islam along with collaborations with assassinated Dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh has made her a leading voice in the debate on Islam.

It has also made her need 24-hour security.

"I don't hate Muslims but I detest the submission of the free will," she said last night.

Calling for Islam to accept and not be above criticism, she asked the audience to consider the need for separate Muslim schools in Australia.

"Australians' must ask why there is need for Saudi Arabian financed Muslim schools? Young people should be groomed to be Australians first, to see their nationality first not religion," she said.

The distinguished author who fled Somalia to The Netherlands, became a member of Parliament and now lives in the US.

Her speech outlined her evolution of thinking, from denouncing Salman Rushdie to reading forbidden texts.

Posted by Lucida

Bouncing between babies and books

Source: The Australian

THERE are some people - my editor, my chief of staff - who have been complaining that I have hardly done any work this week. By this, they mean very few words have appeared in this newspaper under my byline.

I say, work, schmerk.

Well, no, I would never dare say that. But I do say, hey, it depends on your definition of work. My mind has been active; my fingers, too. I've been with thousands of others at the Sydney Writers Festival, thumbing through books, flirting with authors (men, women, even poets), and speaking, from the stage, about books of my own.

Has it been thrilling?

Well, of course, it has. On Wednesday, for example, I was invited to meet Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somalian-born writer who was mutilated as a child, and who has since renounced Islam and now describes the prophet Mohammed as a pedophile.

The meeting took place on the top deck of the InterContinental Hotel, with postcard views of Sydney: the Harbour Bridge, the Opera House, the bobbing catamarans. We agreed it was the kind of view that would make you sick if you had to look at it every day, as the poor (read: very rich) people who lived in nearby apartments had to.

Much better to cruise through Sydney's streets and suddenly catch sight of the water or the curve of an Opera House sail and be reminded that you live in paradise.

Hirsi Ali has important things to say, but I also couldn't stop staring at her coffee-coloured skin, her sad eyes and her gentle smile. She was hoping somebody would take her to the Opera House to see a show. I offered to put an ad in The Australian - "Celebrated Writer with Full-Time Security Detail Seeks Partner for One Night of Song" - but something told me she was not short of offers.

Later, I travelled down to the hotel's salon, where a waiter in a starched white uniform served tea while I interviewed Australian-born ethicist Margaret Somerville. She is a bit worried about reproductive technology.

Shouldn't we be thinking more seriously about what it means to create "designer families", such as those with the number of boys and girls perfectly balanced? Doesn't it take the mystery, the uncertainty and therefore the glory out of life? What is it with the human need to control every little thing about the way we live and love? I don't know the answers, but while we were talking I heard a voice that seemed to be coming from a naked statue, nestled in a nearby palm. I've been feeling a bit mad lately, so at first I thought the statue was talking to me.

Actually, it was the man behind the statue, British writer and actor Richard E. Grant, also in town for the festival, who was having his photograph taken.

We spoke briefly about an amusing item in the newspaper concerning a leopard that jumped through a window, into the homeowner's bed. I'm pretty sure, in the course of my telling this story, Grant fell for me, but we'll see.

Later still, it was my turn to talk. I shared a stage with the ABC's national security correspondent Leigh Sales, who has written a superbly balanced book about that odious little traitor, David Hicks. Me, I talked about wheat, which may not sound quite so sexy but it's the subject of my book, Kickback, about the AWB scandal. Totally unbiased readers - my dear old Dad, for example - assure me it is a rollicking good read, full of

lawyers, guns and money, which is, I think, a plagiarism.

I should have known better than to share a stage with Sales, who is younger, taller and thinner than me, who glides in her heels and seems not to need ropes and pulleys to hold her figure together, the way this old mother of two has to do.

Sales told the audience that she strove in her book to create a flowing narrative, and that she was inspired by giants of literature such as Tom Wolfe. I was taken aback: the thing I'm reading right now is Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (or, if it's my daughter's turn to choose, then Ruby the Red Fairy.)

But off we went, Sales talking about human rights, me about bare-chested blokes pointing pistols at the camera, funnelling money to the regime of Saddam Hussein. The crowd laughed, and not only at us.

To my surprise and delight, some came up later and bought copies of our books, and asked us to sign them, which I assume means they won't be used simply as doorstops.

Later still, I went browsing in the book tent and was soon cross-legged on the floor, surrounded by books I absolutely had to buy. With all the writing and the raising of children I've been doing, I had quite forgotten that you can - and should - lose yourself in books. But when I turned on my phone, there was a message from my chief of staff saying: "Hey, you know this job that you're actually paid to do? Are you ever coming back to do it?"

Well, not immediately. I'm speaking at the writers festival again tomorrow. Afterwards, I intend to plunge happily back into the book tent, surrounded by others who just love words.

If the boss asks what I'm doing, I'll say, "Reading." There should be more of it.

Posted by Lucida

Times Writers Group: 'Infidel' gives controversial look at Islam

Source: Times/St. Cloud 

Islam needs to veer away from these radical fundamentalists using religion as their vehicle to control their millions of followers, according to controversial political figure Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

Ali, whose autobiography "Infidel," was published earlier this year, says today's fundamentalist Muslims preach hate and violence as a tenet of their religion and insist on total control of half of their own population — women.

While Ali acknowledges Islamic leaders did teach such positive lessons as being compassionate and showing charity to others, too often this approach was overshadowed by the vengeance, anger and control preached in the Islamic holy book, the Quran.

As Ali says of this document ... "the Quran is not a holy document. It is a historical record, written by humans. It is one version of events, as perceived by the men who wrote it 150 years after the Prophet Muhammad died. And it is a very tribal and Arab version of events. It spreads a culture that is brutal, fixated on controlling women, and harsh in war."

Questioning her faith

Born in Somalia in 1969, Ali and her family fled the country six years later as political refugees.

In the next 13 years, largely because her father opposed the corrupt Somali government, the family would live in Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya — all of them Islamic countries.

While Ali fervently embraced Islam, she was having difficulty reconciling the different messages preached by her religion.

If God was merciful, she asked, why did Muslims have to shun non-Muslims or even attack them to establish a state based on Allah's laws? If God loved men and women equally, why were women so downtrodden in Islamic society?

Whenever she brought up these conflicts, she was shouted down by her Quran teacher and hushed by other women who were frightened by her audacity.

A few years later, her father decided to marry her off to a cousin she had never met. Ali began the journey to meet him, but when she got to Germany, she decided she wanted the kind of life she saw in the West and sought asylum in Holland.

There she earned a master's degree in political science, became a researcher for a think tank linked to the left-wing Social Democratic party and eventually was elected to the Dutch parliament.

Mind-set change needed

While impressed with the progressive Western life she saw, she was equally appalled by the regressive behavior she witnessed as a Somali-Dutch interpreter and translator for Somali women in battered women's shelters, abortion clinics, police stations and unemployment offices.

She was depressed at the extent and persistence of wife abuse. She saw firsthand how certain practices such as wife beating, female genital mutilation and honor killings — practices she thought she had left behind in Africa — were continued by Muslims in the West.

As she says of the women's shelters, "There were hardly any white women, only women from Morocco, from Turkey, from Afghanistan — Muslim countries — alongside some Hindu women from Surinam.

The Somali cases ware almost always the same, again and again. The husband took all the welfare money, spent it on khat (a drug) and when the wife hid the money, he would beat her until the police finally intervened."

The women involved insisted they could not press charges or leave the situation.

Instead they told her "Allah gave me these circumstances, and if I am patient, Allah will remove this misery."

Ali says the West cannot continue to tolerate behavior among her people that it would not allow among fellow Westerners.

As she writes, "Many well-meaning Dutch people have told me in all earnestness that nothing in Islamic culture incites abuse of women, that this is just a terrible misunderstanding. Men all over the world beat their women, I am constantly informed.

"In reality, these Westerners misunderstand Islam. The Quran mandates these punishments. It gives legitimate basis for abuse so that perpetrators feel no shame and are not hounded by their conscience or their community. ..."

On a broader scale, she says the kind of thinking in today's Islamic countries "is incompatible with human rights and liberal values." It's as if the most radical Christian fundamentalists were running the Western world on the beliefs of the seventh century and insisting the rest of the world had to join them in this approach.

Posted by Lucida

zaterdag 2 juni 2007

Author calls on Muslims to reform

Ayaanhirsi_wideweb__470x3522_2Source: The Sydney Morning Herald

MUSLIMS must get their "act together" and reform Islam to avoid a bloody future, Somali author Ayaan Hirsi Ali says.

Ali, 37, who has renounced her Islamic faith and considers herself an atheist, was speaking in Sydney as part of the Writers Festival.

The author of Infidel survived a civil war, female circumcision and escaped an arranged marriage in her homeland before fleeing to the Netherlands.

She says Muslims must examine their religion and "review the example of the prophet Muhammad. Muslims are not used to criticising Islam, they are not used to criticising the prophet Muhammad", she told a sell-out audience at the Sydney Theatre.

"That's what this century has opened up with September 11 - it was an attack on the West but it was also an attack on Islam itself," she said.

"Because if we who were born into Islam do not get our act together and reform our faith, our future might be that we tend to clash even more. It will only get more bloody.

"If Islam is reformed I think the people who will gain the most are women.

"As a woman after I left the circumstances where the rule was Islam, I gained my personal freedom.

"Reforming Islam, changing it from what it is now, will benefit women and as women benefit from it they will become educated, become owners of their own bodies and their own destinies."

But, she said mothers must also take responsibility for the way they raise boys, to teach them to have respect for women.

"As woman we make men, we bear the boys. It's really important how you bring them up. If we encourage the mentality that they are wild dogs and that we are raw meat, that's how they will behave."

Ali has had an around-the-clock guard since 2004 when death threats were made against her because of her outspoken views on Islam.

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 30 mei 2007

Anti-Muslim author told to go

Aha_5Source: Daily Telegraph

MUSLIM community leaders yesterday denounced the arrival of a controversial Somali writer who has previously accused the prophet Mohammed of paedophilia.

Flanked by bodyguards, Ayaan Hirsi Ali arrived in Sydney yesterday to prepare for a talk she will give as part of the Sydney Writers Festival.

The author, who has renounced her Islamic faith, has claimed the culture is backward and promotes the persecution of women.

She has had an around-the-clock guard since 2004, when Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh was murdered by Islamic extremist Mohammed Bouyeri.

At the time of his death, van Gogh was producing a film called Sub- mission which was written by Hirsi Ali. In a five-page manifesto pinned to his victim's chest, Bouyeri also threatened Hirsi Ali's life.

Yesterday Islamic Friendship Association spokesman Keysar Trad questioned the Federal Government's decision to allow her to enter the country.

"It shows gross double standards. Recently there has been requests from Muslim groups to bring in moderate figures and they were not allowed under some pretext," he said.

Sydney-based Islamic education consultant Silma Ihram said the author's perception of the religion was wholly inaccurate.

"(She) has an axe to grind due to her background suffering from unfortunate Somali tribal practices," she said.

"Combine that with a desire for wealth as a Somali European migrant and it's natural for her to achieve both by publicly slandering Islam and obtaining immediate media attention.

"Australia is a free country and while I condemn her views . . . about Mohammed and Islam, I would not wish to add to her infamy by making a fuss."

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 29 mei 2007

The infidel

Bron : The Australian   door Geoff Elliott; The Australian's Washington correspondent.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali's one-woman assault on Islam is a slap in the face for multiculturalists, writes: "I HAVE a soft voice," says Ayaan Hirsi Ali, her face shining with a wide smile and flirting with apology. She is standing before a small group, mostly women, in a stunning apartment in inner-city Georgetown, Washington, DC, overlooking the Potomac River.

Hirsi Ali, who was born in Somalia, is struggling to be heard over the noise of passenger jets headed down the Potomac towards Reagan National airport.

The windows are duly shut on this late afternoon, an unseasonably warm day in spring.

It is not the only reason many of the 40 or so members of Washington's The Women's Foreign Policy Group present on this occasion start shifting uncomfortably in their seats. What Hirsi Ali will say is a slap in the face for many of the earnest women present, steeped in the kind of inclusiveness and thirst for understanding of other cultures that at first blush Hirsi Ali appears to represent.

But multiculturalists beware. For Hirsi Ali's mellifluous voice, rich with a continent's cycle of joy and despair, is mesmerising. Her elegance and poise are simply breathtaking. But her message is devastating.

"Western culture is superior to Islamic culture," Hirsi Ali tells the audience. "Islam as a body of ideas is not compatible with human rights, it is bad for women, it is bad for the human being, it is bad for the imagination, bad for science and therefore bad for progress."

For a while the jets are silent and you could hear a pin drop as she explains why she appears to stereotype Islam as an inferior culture and makes no allowances for individuals and the more moderate elements of Islam.

Although there are plenty of decent Muslims, Hirsi Ali adds, she is making no bones about it: Islam is incompatible with the idea of moderndemocracy.

A member of the audience asks why, then, Hirsi Ali still calls herself a Muslim.

"I'm not a Muslim!" Hirsi Ali responds. "I have become an infidel!"

Which is pretty obvious, really, given that Infidel is the title of Hirsi Ali's sensational book, the subject on which she is addressing the audience.

It charts Hirsi Ali's life from Mogadishu, Somalia, to The Netherlands, where she was elected to parliament, only to become embroiled in controversy last year after it emerged that she had lied to authorities when she sought asylum in 1992.

Hirsi Ali makes her first trip to Australia later this month as a guest of the Sydney Writers Festival to promote the book.

Hirsi Ali and Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh (a distant descendant of the painter) had collaborated on Submission, a film that explored the oppression of Muslim women.

His subsequent murder is one of the more infamous atrocities perpetrated in the name of Islamic fundamentalism.

Mohammed Bouyeri gunned down van Gogh while the filmmaker was bicycling to work in Amsterdam in November 2004 and left a five-page letter pinned to his chest with a knife. The note was a rambling death threat addressed to Hirsi Ali.

But it failed to silence her. At the age of 37, Hirsi Ali is regarded as one of the most influential voices in the world on Islam and the West. Time magazine named her among the 100 most influential people of 2005, while Glamour, one of the top selling women's magazines in the US, listed her as one of its heroes.

Her attacks on Islam include the contention that the prophet Mohammed was by Western standards a "perverse man and a tyrant" for marrying a six-year-old girl and consummating the marriage when she was nine. "If the prophet Mohammed went to be with a nine-year-old, then according to Dutch law he is a pedophile," she writes.

These incendiary, headline-grabbing comments underpin Hirsi Ali's broader thesis, which calls for an Islamic reformation similar to the one in which the West escaped medieval religious oppression.

This also explains why there are more and more Bouyeris who wish on Hirsi Ali the same grisly end as van Gogh. To some it proves the point she is trying to make: the West has developed an institutional framework underpinning human rights that is strong enough to ensure blasphemous expression against established religions does not seal a death warrant.

Of course, we've been here before with Islam. Hirsi Ali has been described as the new millennium's Salman Rushdie, the writer who, in 1989, had a fatwa declared against him for his novel The Satanic Verses.

This means any contact with Hirsi Ali involves dealing with the almost presidential security that surrounds her 24 hours a day. Heavy-set men with earpieces shadow her every move.

At her book function, guests were screened on arrival and a guard vetted everyone who approached her for an autograph. The signing was organised in a separate room where no liquids were allowed.

Hirsi Ali later tells Review she has grown accustomed to day-to-day security issues. She is obviously reluctant to reveal anything about her security arrangements but she does allow a glimpse of the life of a modern-day infidel.

"There are good days and bad days," Hirsi Ali says, "and the good days are becoming more and more. By good I mean that I do not feel that my privacy is invaded and I don't think my life is limited.

"But that could be because they (security guards) have been around me for five years," she adds. "At some point you learn not to see them any more. I have to ask myself every time I'm bothered by having security around me why I have them around me, and if I want to give up the battle.

"And I don't want to give it up. And then I tell myself I should not whine; live with it and put up with it."

The genesis of this battle is laid out clearly in Infidel. Hirsi Ali's life by most comparative measures for Westerners has been shocking. The book conveys a strong sense of betrayal by her family and her religion. A telling insight is offered early:

Sometimes in my grandmother's stories there were brave women -- mothers, like my mother -- who used their cunning and courage to save their children from danger.

This made us feel safe, in a way. My grandmother, and my mother, too, were brave and clever: they would surely be able to save us when our time came to face the monsters.

What's clear from the book is they didn't. In fact, while Hirsi Ali's book indicates forgiveness for her family -- devout Muslims still living in Somalia -- any objective reading of the actions of her grandmother and mother makes them monsters, albeit unwitting dispensers of the cruellest of punishments in the name of religion amid the utter despair of the family's circumstances.

Like any good autobiography in which the story needs no embellishing, the structure of Infidel is simple and the prose is spare. Hirsi Ali has no need for literary shenanigans when the narrative of her life story is so compelling.

Her shocking treatment at the hands of her grandmother drives the first part of the story. Mercifully, she spares the reader a detailed description of the crude circumcision that she and her brother and sister underwent (at the ages of five, six and four, respectively), a procedure organised by her grandmother while her parents were absent. But the two pages in her 350-page book that recount the event are nonetheless so harrowing one has to look away.

And it's just one of many injustices, culminating in the murder of her friend van Gogh. As a consequence, Hirsi Ali is hardly an objective voice in the debate on Islam and the West; however, given her life story, that does not detract from her credibility.

"I wouldn't say some of the things she says, but Ayaan has reacted against her own experiences in Islam," says Norm Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington-based conservative think tank.

He says she gives voice to difficult choices the West faces: from re-evaluating the super-tolerance of multiculturalism to the idea of a new framework in which immigrants have to adapt to the values and principles of their adopted country.

Ornstein was instrumental in landing Hirsi Ali a berth at AEI after a chance conversation about two years ago with his friend Cynthia Schneider, a former US ambassador to The Netherlands. At the time Hirsi Ali's career as a parliamentarian was about to end.

"She dazzled me as she dazzles just about everyone," Ornstein says.

Plans were sped up when Hirsi Ali faced possible deportation from The Netherlands.

To many on the Left, her decision to join a conservative think tank is just another area where she goes off-script.

But she believes she wouldn't be able to say the things she does about multiculturalism if she were at a more liberal institution.

"There are more and more Muslim women and Muslim men doing this," she says of her move to a think tank like the AEI. "We started out on the Left but we are moving to more conservative institutions because they listen, because they respond."

And the speech she delivered to the The Women's Foreign Policy Group is a case in point. It is just one of many stump speeches she is giving across the US, and soon in Australia, calling for an Islamic reformation and a reappraisal by the West of what she describes as failed multicultural policies.

She tells Review, for example, that the terrorist attacks on the London Underground in July 2005 did not surprise her. "It shocked me, but it did not surprise me. If one country has appeased and accommodated Islam and taken multiculturalism to its most absurd end, it is the UK."

And Hirsi Ali has followed the debate in Australia, too, noting the comments of Australia's most senior Muslim cleric, Taj Din al-Hilali, in which he likened scantily clad women to raw meat, suggesting that they invited rape.

Hirsi Ali continues to win friends and make enemies, perhaps in equal measure. Islamic leaders in the US have called for her speeches to be boycotted, saying her attacks on Islam are "poisonous and unjustified".

At a recent appearance at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown in Pennsylvania, she delivered her usual mantra, prompting local Islamic leaders to say she would be executed under sharia law.

Imam Fouad ElBayly, president of Johnstown Islamic Centre, said she has "defamed the faith".

"If you come into the faith, you must abide by the laws, and when you decide to defame it deliberately, the sentence is death," said ElBayly, who came to the US from Egypt in 1976.

He added that the US is not the jurisdiction where such a crime should be punished, which proves a point. Because he could have added that it wouldn't happen in Australia, either, or anywhere else in the West.

After all, that's where the freedom to engage in the battle of ideas is underpinned by an ability to tolerate dissent and new thought.

No matter what you make of her arguments, the West has found a brilliant new recruit in this extraordinary Somali refugee.

Geplaatst door Lucida

maandag 28 mei 2007

Anti-Islamic writer 'stirs hatred'

Ayaan_9Source: News.com.au

A VISIT to Sydney by a controversial Somali writer who calls the prophet Mohammed a pedophile and says Islam is inferior to Western culture has outraged Muslims, who accuse her of inciting hatred.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali will arrive in Sydney today amid tight security normally reserved for foreign dignitaries or royalty.

Her writings and talks focus on what she calls the backwardness of Islamic culture and the persecution of Muslim women.

The Somali-born Muslim - who fled to The Netherlands, became a Dutch citizen and renounced her religion - has been under 24-hour guard since the murder of film-maker Theo van Gogh in November 2004 by a Muslim extremist in Amsterdam.

Van Gogh's film Submission, which examined the oppression of Muslim women, was written by Hirsi Ali. His killer, Mohammed Bouyeri, left a five-page death threat addressed to her, pinned to the filmmaker's chest.

However, University of Technology Sydney Islamic law lecturer Jamila Hussain said Hirsi Ali's ideas were extreme and stigmatised Muslims.

"I think she'd be better staying where she came from," Ms Hussain said. "I've read enough of her thoughts. It's a narrow and radical opinion, and I don't agree with it. She's obviously had some dreadful experiences, but they're not typical."

In her writings, Hirsi Ali describes being circumcised as a young girl and how she escaped an arranged marriage.

Nada Roude, of the NSW Islamic Council, said Hirsi Ali's comments on the prophet Mohammed were a "no-go zone".

"They (prophets) are not just like you and me, they have special status - you're supposed to show respect," Ms Roude said.

"There have to be boundaries in how far you go in respecting other's beliefs. The reaction from the community is likely to be quite worrying."

Hirsi Ali has written that under Dutch law, Mohammed's marriage to six-year-old A'ishah (whose age is disputed by Muslim scholars) and his subsequent consummation of the marriage when she was nine would make him a pedophile.

Ms Roude said there seemed to be a double standard about who was allowed to visit Australia, particularly as Hirsi Ali's visit appeared to have the potential to incite hatred.

"Muslims are not treated the same," she said. "There are a set of rules for one community and another for the rest of the community. Anyone who causes harm to our society because they have the right to express their opinion is not welcome."

Hirsi Ali's latest book, her autobiography Infidel, has been a bestseller. She now lives in the US after losing a parliamentary seat in The Netherlands when it was discovered she had lied on her application for asylum.

She has two public functions at the Sydney Writers Festival: a discussion on Saturday and the festival's closing address on Sunday. Both are sell-outs.

Posted by Sylvia

woensdag 9 mei 2007

Hirsi Ali's Challange to humanity

Ayaan_7Ayaan Hirsi Ali is arguably the bravest and most remarkable woman of our times.

Source: Jerusalem Post - by Caroline Glick

To understand why this 37-year-old woman is extraordinary, she must be assessed in the context of the forces pitted against her in her twin struggles to force the Western world to take note of Islam's divinely ordained enslavement of women, and to force the Islamic world to account for it.

A series of incidents this week placed the forces she battles in stark relief. Sunday Muslims shot up the Omariyah elementary school in Gaza. One man was killed and six were wounded in the onslaught. The murderers attacked because the UN-run school in Rafah had organized a sports day for the children, in which little boys would be playing with little girls.
The idea that that boys and girls might play sports together was too much for the righteous believers. It was an insult to Islam, they said. And so they decided to kill the little boys and girls.

On May 3, in Gujrat, Pakistan, Muslims detonated a bomb at the gate of a girls' school. Their righteous wrath was raised by the notion that girls would learn to read and write. That too, they felt, is an insult to Islam.

On April 28, US soldiers in Iraq discovered detonation wires across the street from the newly built Huda Girls' school in Tarmiya, north of Baghdad. They followed the wire to its source and discovered the school had been built as a deathtrap. The pious Muslims who constructed the school had filled propane tanks with explosives and buried them beneath the floor. They built artillery shells into the ceiling and the floor. To save the world for Allah, they decided to butcher little girls.

And the brutality is not limited to the Middle East. Last month in Oslo, Norway, Norwegian-Somali women's rights activist Kadra was brutally beaten by a crowd of men piously calling out "Allah Akhbar." She was attacked for exposing the fact that inside their mosques in Norway, Norwegian imams praise female genital mutilation in the name of Allah.

LATE LAST year Hirsi Ali published her memoir, Infidel. In describing her own life, what she actually explains are the two competing human impulses - conformity and individualism. In her own life, the clash of the two has been played out on the stage of Islamic ascendance and Western cultural collapse.
Hirsi Ali was born in Somalia to a politically active father who sought to free his country from Said Barre's Marxist dictatorship. Forced to flee the country with her family, Hirsi Ali's childhood in Arabia and Africa revolved along the axis of Islamic ascendance at the hand of the Saudi-financed Muslim Brotherhood and Khomeini's Iran.

Hirsi Ali's rebellion against Islam was personal, not political. As a young girl and later as a young woman, she found herself abused and stifled by the dictates of Islam just as her youthful spirit wished most to take flight. As a five-year-old in Somalia, she screamed in pain and shock when her grandmother tied her down and had a man with a knife mutilate her genitals.

Living in Saudi Arabia she was struck by the oppressiveness of the "true Islam." Why, she wondered were she and her mother and sister prohibited from leaving their apartment without a male relative escorting them? As an adolescent in Nairobi she wondered why the enjoyment she felt in the company of boys was sinful.

Why did her mother need to suffer the humiliation of polygamy? Why could she not choose her own husband? Why was she told by one and all that her normal human impulses to seek love, respect and compassion and think for herself were sinful and evil?

AS SHE puts it, "I could never comprehend the downright unfairness of the rules, especially for women. How could a just God - a God so just that almost every page of the Koran praises his fairness - desire that women be treated so unfairly? When the [Islamic teachers] told us that a woman's testimony is worth half of a man's, I would think, Why? If God is merciful, why did He demand that His creatures be hanged in public? If He was compassionate, then why did unbelievers have to go to Hell?"

In her words, "The spark of will inside me grew even as I studied and practiced to submit." Ali credits Harlequin romance novels for her initial mental deliverance from submission. These books, with their passionate loves and steamy sex scenes were her first glimpse at the possibility of freedom. The novels showed her that the emotions and desires she was told to repress were natural and could even be beautiful and right.

Her impulse to rebel was matched by her impulse to conform. As a teenager, Hirsi Ali tried to be a faithful Muslim and even joined the Muslim Brotherhood. Embracing the notion of submission she began wearing a full-body burka.

But try as she might, she could not accept that her own will had no inherent value. She blamed the preachers for the terror she saw as a Muslim girl, believing they must be distorting the Koran. "Surely," she writes, "Allah could not have said that men should beat their wives when they were disobedient? Surely a woman's statement in court should be worth the same as a man's?"

Yet, when she sat down and read the Koran on her own, she found that everything the preachers had said was written in the book.

AT 21, HIRSI Ali emancipated herself. Fleeing from an arranged marriage to a Somali immigrant in Canada, she sought and received asylum in Holland. There, she embraced Dutch society and freedoms and quickly flourished in a true rag-to-riches immigrant tale. She learned Dutch fluently and began supporting herself as a translator. In just four years she had bridged the cultural divide between Africa and Europe and began studying political science with the creme de la creme of Dutch society at the University of Leiden.

A mere decade after her arrival, as a naturalized Dutch citizen, she was a pubic figure, an outspoken social critic of Islam in Europe. In January 2003, she was elected to Parliament as a member of the conservative Liberal Party.

IN HOLLAND, Hirsi Ali found herself confronted by a kinder, gentler type of cultural tyranny - the moral relativism of political correctness and multiculturalism dictated by the Left. Just as she rejected Islamic oppression in Africa, so in Holland she refused to submit to the will of the majority not to notice, judge or take action against the misogynist tyranny and anti-Western culture of the Muslim minority.

Hirsi Ali's labors brought her to Theo Van Gogh. In 2004 the two produced the film Submission, Part One. The short film shows a young Muslim woman wearing a see-through burka. Passages of the Koran permitting the abuse of women are written on her body. The woman prays in submission to Allah all the while noting her abject suffering in his name. At the end of the movie, the woman raises her head to Allah and calls into question the reasonableness of her submission.

The film's provocative message placed both Hirsi Ali and Van Gogh's lives in imminent danger. And on November 21, 2004 Van Gogh was butchered by a Dutch Muslim on the streets of Amsterdam. The murderer stabbed a letter into Van Gogh's chest in which he threatened to murder Hirsi Ali "in the name of Allah Most Gracious and Most Merciful."

While Hirsi Ali was forced to flee her home and live under armed guard in army installations, her message proved too much of a challenge for the Dutch establishment which vomited her out last year. Her own party found a formality on which to revoke her citizenship and throw her out of the country and the parliament. Although the public outcry that ensued forced the government to restore her citizenship, the message was clear.

HIRSI ALI moved to Washington, DC. As a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute she continues to warn the West of the dangers of Islam and of Western cultural disintegration under the tyranny of multiculturalism. Just last month, her work brought an imam from Pittsburgh to call for her murder for the crime of apostasy.

In her life and work, Hirsi Ali personifies the central challenges of our times. She holds a mirror up to the Islamic world and demands that it contend with the evil it propagates in the name of divinity.

She holds a mirror up to the Free World and demands that we defend our freedom against the onslaught of moral relativism and cultural decline.

So too, she demands our compassion for the women of Islam. She says we must see the suffering beneath the veil and work to alleviate it. Whether it means that we must mass produce and distribute Arabic and Urdu copies of Harlequin romance novels throughout the Islamic world; challenge veiled women to explain why they ascribe to a faith that gives men the divine right to beat and rape women; or simply hold Muslim communities in the West to the standards of freedom on which our civilization is based, the West must help these women free themselves from oppression.

Finally, in our own societies we must protect and uphold voices like Hirsi Ali's. For the past five years, Hirsi Ali has lived under threat of death for her views.

We must understand that only when she, and people like her can walk on the streets unafraid will we have properly defended our freedom.

Posted by Sylvia

Can secular Turkey survive democracy?

Source: L.A.Times - By Ayaan Hirsi Ali *) - May 9, 2007

How reformists can stop the Islamists who have chipped away at Turkey's secularism.

SECULAR AND LIBERAL Turks have had a rude awakening from years of deep slumber. Kemal Ataturk's heritage is about to be destroyed — not by an invading power but from within, by fellow Turks who yearn for an Islamic state.

Ever since Ataturk, Turkey has been divided into those who want to run state affairs on Islamic principles and those who want to keep Allah's will from the public space.

The proponents of Islam in government, such as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and their Justice and Development Party, have been remarkably successful. They have exploited the fact that you can use democratic means to erode democracy, employing a powerful strategy.

Three pillars of that strategy are worth discussion.

The first is Dawa, a tactic inspired by Islam's founder, Muhammad. Dawa means to preach Islam as a way of life, including a way of government, perpetually and with conviction. Every convert is obligated to preach Islam to others, creating a grass-roots movement.
The secularists in Turkey underestimated this pillar and thus neglected competing with the Islamists for the hearts and minds of the electorate. Polls suggest that 70% of voters might still elect Gul president if Erdogan succeeds in changing the constitution so that the president can be elected directly. Any protest from the secularists against this evident popular will sounds irrational and undemocratic.

The second pillar is the improvement of the economy. No one can deny that when the secular parties were in power, the Turkish economy was in tatters. Since Erdogan took office, growth has been strong, with inflation down and foreign investment high.

The third pillar is taking control of two types of institutions in a democracy: those designed to educate civilians (education and media) and those designed to keep law and order (police, justice and the secret service).

After an initial attempt at Islamic revolution failed in 1997, when the military engineered a "soft coup" against elected Islamists, Erdogan and his party understood that gradualism would yield more lasting power. They surely realize that Islamizing Turkey entirely is possible only if they gain control of the army and the Constitutional Court, the two institutions that have helped preserve Turkey's secular state.

The recent Constitutional Court ruling annulling the nomination of Gul for the presidency, after the military warned that it is the guardian of secularism, is only a temporary setback for the Islamists. Erdogan and Gul have another trick up their sleeves.

If they show the same restraint and patience that have brought them this far, they may achieve their aim by continuing to court membership in the European Union. Well-meaning but naive European leaders were manipulated by the ruling Islamists into saying that Turkey's army should be placed under civil control, like all armies in EU member states.

In hindsight, Turkey's secular liberals have only themselves to blame. They underestimated the power of Dawa, they failed at growing the economy and they have not realized that members of the EU have been manipulated.

An important trait of liberalism, however, is the opportunity to learn by trial and error. Turkish secular liberals must start their own grass-roots movement, one with the message of individual freedom. They must restore the confidence of the electorate in entrusting Turkey's economy to them, and they must reconquer the institutions of education, information, police and justice.

They must also make EU leaders understand and respect the fact that the army and the Constitutional Court — besides defending the country and the constitution — are also, and maybe even more important, designed to protect Turkish democracy from Islam.

Bringing back true secularism does not mean just any secularism. It means secularism that protects individual freedoms and rights, not the ultra-nationalist kind that breeds an environment in which Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" is a bestseller, the Armenian genocide is denied and minorities are persecuted. Hrant Dink, the Armenian editor, was murdered by such a nationalist.

It is this mix of virulent nationalism and predatory Islam in Turkey that makes the challenge for Turkish secular liberals greater than for any other liberal movement today.

*) AYAAN HIRSI ALI, a former Dutch legislator and women's activist who now lives in the U.S., recently published her memoir, "Infidel."

Posted by Sylvia

zaterdag 28 april 2007

Ayaan revisited

Source: Radio Netherlands - by Perro de Jong

Last week I mentioned the growing number of Dutch expats who come back because things don't work out. Someone I don't expect to join that list any time soon is Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

Last year, the Somali-born former refugee and campaigner against Islam abandoned her boring life as a Dutch MP - made slightly less boring by continuous death threats - to embark on an exciting career in the United States, as a member of a leading think-tank and a rising literary star.

At least, I don't recall any other book by a Dutch national - which she still is - receiving the kind of serious attention in the US media that Ayaan's autobiography, Infidel, has had. Not that you'd guess from the lukewarm reactions here in the Netherlands. Apparently we're still suffering from that old knee-jerk reflex to play down any success abroad as a fluke, something that shouldn't be taken too seriously.

No such reservations are holding back American Muslims; it became clear this week that they are taking Ms Hirsi Ali's success very seriously indeed. Take imam Fouad ElBayly, from the Johnstown Islamic Center in Pennsylvania. He's gone on record saying there is only one way to deal with her ongoing campaign against Islam, and that is to execute her.

Hot issue
Hang on, did I really hear that right? Wasn't Ms Hirsi Ali greeted in the US as a courageous voice from 'Eurabia', from a continent where radical Islam has been allowed to fester and run amuck while American Muslims are paragons of successful integration? In fact, there's even a prestigious Translantic Forum in Brussels this weekend, discussing 'why the integration of Muslim immigrants is a Hot Issue in Europe but not in the United States'.

Well excuse me, but it sounds like a Hot Issue if they're calling for people to be killed! But maybe I'm jumping to conclusions. Surely a country as big as the US is allowed one or two fundamentalist lunatics. God knows the Netherlands isn't in a position to judge, with its planeloads of hyperconservative imams being flown in from countries like Morocco.

No newcomer
Ah, but there's the rub. Imam ElBayly isn't fresh off the plane - he left Egypt in 1976 - and neither is he known as hyperconservative or intolerant. Quite the contrary. "I will never forget the light that shone from his face as he delivered a spontaneous message to the assembled," writes social activist Arlene Goldbard in her blog. She's describing the Aleph Kalla, a meeting of the Jewish renewal movement where the imam was a surprise guest. "Most wonderful of all," she writes, "was to see [this] brave man stand before a roomful of strangers and show us what it is to face one's fears with an open heart."

Okay, let me make this absolutely clear: this 'brave man' with a heart open enough to overcome any ingrained anti-Semitism has just called for Ayaan Hirsi Ali's life to be terminated, because - and I quote - "she has been identified as one who has defamed the faith."

Well-adjusted in the US
Then again, perhaps I'm looking at this whole thing the wrong way, and perhaps imam ElBayly is actually demonstrating how well-adjusted he is. After all, championing capital punishment in a country where more than a thousand people have been executed in the last thirty years could hardly be regarded as a failure to integrate.

And at least imam ElBayly is stressing that he wants Ayaan to have a fair trial, and that if she's found to be mentally unstable, she won't be punished at all. Because, he says, Islam "[is] a very merciful religion if you try to understand it." That last point actually sounds to me like a not-so-subtle dig at the US penal system, which has been repeatedly criticized by organisations like Amnesty International for executing people whose mental faculties are in question.

And what to make of the imam's protestation that Ms Hirsi Ali mustn't be brought to justice in the US, but in an Islamic country with Shari'a Law in place? Surely he knows, too, that she's about as likely to willingly show her face there as a turkey at a Thanksgiving dinner?

No...on second thought, I don't think Ayaan Hirsi Ali needs to lose much sleep over this. The imam, on the other hand, does deserve a lesson. So come on Pennsylviania, show us 'Eurabians' how to deal with clowns like this.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are the personal views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Radio Netherlands.

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 23 april 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali should be put to death

Source: Jihadwatch

Pennsylvania Imam Fouad ElBayly: Ayaan Hirsi Ali should be put to death

But only in a Muslim country, not in America, and "it's a very merciful religion if you try to understand it.

A "community debate" in Pennsylvania: "Furor over author Ayaan Hirsi Ali's visit stirs debate on religious freedom," by Robin Acton in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, with thanks to Joe:

...A community debate over religious freedom surfaced in Western Pennsylvania last week when Dutch feminist author Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali refugee who has lived under the threat of death for denouncing her Muslim upbringing, made an appearance at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown.

Islamic leaders tried to block the lecture, which was sponsored through an endowment from the Frank J. and Sylvia T. Pasquerilla Lecture Series. They argued that Hirsi Ali's attacks against the Muslim faith in her book, "Infidel," and movie, "Submission," are "poisonous and unjustified" and create dissension in their community.

Although university officials listened to Islamic leaders' concerns, the lecture planned last year took place Tuesday evening under tight security, with no incidents.

Imam Fouad ElBayly, president of the Johnstown Islamic Center, was among those who objected to Hirsi Ali's appearance.

"She has been identified as one who has defamed the faith. If you come into the faith, you must abide by the laws, and when you decide to defame it deliberately, the sentence is death," said ElBayly, who came to the U.S. from Egypt in 1976.

Hirsi Ali, an atheist, has been critical of many Muslim beliefs, particularly on subjects of sexual morality, the treatment of women and female genital mutilation. In her essay "The Caged Virgin," she also wrote of punishment, noting that "a Muslim's relationship with God is one of fear."

"Our God demands total submission. He rewards you if you follow His rules meticulously. He punishes you cruelly if you break His rules, both on earth, with illness and natural disasters, and in the hereafter, with hellfire," she wrote....

Although ElBayly believes a death sentence is warranted for Hirsi Ali, he stressed that America is not the jurisdiction where such a crime should be punished. Instead, Hirsi Ali should be judged in a Muslim country after being given a trial, he added.

"If it is found that a person is mentally unstable, or a child or disabled, there should be no punishment," he said. "It's a very merciful religion if you try to understand it."

Zahida Chaudhary, a member of the education council and education secretary at the Muslim Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh in Monroeville, insisted that Islam is a peaceful religion.

"The Prophet Mohammed was a peacemaker and a role model for humanity," she said. "My understanding is that he was a peaceful person who believed that religion was a choice. He tried to teach people and bring them into it, not punish them."

In fact, he said, "Whoever changed his Islamic religion, then kill him'" (Bukhari 9.84.57).

Posted by Sylvia

zaterdag 21 april 2007

Conversations in the Library

Source: Pan American Centre

Ayaan Hirsi Ali & Philip Gourevitch
Conversations in the Library:<br>Ayaan Hirsi Ali & Philip Gourevitch April 30, 2006 | The New York Public Library | New York City

LISTEN 


Discussed: Islamic Enlightenment, burning The Satanic Verses, living as a Muslim atheist in Holland, liberal betrayal, the Prophet Mohammed as a moral guide for contemporary culture, Christian and Muslim provincialism.

Read here the transcript of the (1 hour!) interview, held a year ago in New York Public Library.

Exerpt from that transcript:

HIRSI ALI: The West is not a monolith like Islam. You have many different groups and different people and different individuals. Of course many people have called it different names, but this is liberal betrayal. The liberals who were critical of Christianity and Judaism and all kinds of obscurantism now stand up and defend Islam because Muslims in the West are a minority. They are perceived to be vulnerable and they attach a lot of meaning to their religion, so the liberal response has been to say, “If it’s so valuable for them to hold on to these beliefs and they don’t want us to touch on it, then we shall not,” thereby preserving this culture of backwardness. That annoys me. It makes me very angry. I can only describe it as betrayal because in saying “Welcome, we love you to be here,” you indulge this escapism, this self-denial, this shutting yourself off from reality. You’re actually freezing this culture in place and thereby, without intending to, helping those tyrants in Islamic countries that use Islam as an instrument to oppress their populations.

Teneinde op de gemakkelijkste wijze kennis te nemen van dit zeer interessante interview, waar Salmon Rusdie ook nog een kritische duit in het zakje doet, is het aan te raden eerst de soundtrack in een apart scherm (via tabbed browing bijv.) te openen, daar op te starten en daarna in een nieuw scherm de 'transcript' te openen. Zeer makkelijk te volgen zo, mij (joop) lukte het in ieder geval probleemloos...kwestie van discipline...

Posted by Joop

donderdag 19 april 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: A critic of Islam

PPAC06_031 (Ayaan Hirsi Ali)

Source: The Santa Clara

Today, vital dialogue on a global controversy comes to campus by way of visiting author Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

A former Muslim turned feminist-atheist, Hirsi Ali is coming to Santa Clara to discuss her new book, "Infidel," as well as some of her previous works, including the script of the film "Submission."

"Submission," which aired Aug. 29, 2004, on the Dutch public broadcasting network, gained Hirsi Ali and director Theo van Gogh instant notoriety among Muslims worldwide.

The film's main goal was to highlight patriarchal structures within Islam and suggest that certain aspects of these configurations lead to the abuse and mistreatment of Muslim women.

In the film, the protagonist, a Muslim woman dressed in transparent dark clothing, is portrayed as having been raped and beaten by a relative. In addition, a bloody, beaten female body is employed as a vivid canvas for verses of the Qur'an.

The film is graphic; the response to it was murderous.

In November of the same year, director Theo van Gogh was stabbed to death on the streets of Amsterdam.

Attached to the knife buried in his chest was a note directly threatening Hirsi Ali. Following these threats, the author went into hiding for two months. Since coming out of hiding, she has been a strong critic of numerous religious practices within Islam.

She is also a strong proponent of secular society and has published two books: "The Caged Virgin: An Emancipation Proclamation for Women and Islam" and "Infidel," her autobiography.

Hirsi Ali is an infamous figure among Muslims for a myriad of reasons.

Some of the principal causes of ire are her public inflammatory challenges to Islamic Law, or Sharia, on the treatment of women in Islamic society (including female genital mutilation, a process Hirsi Ali underwent herself), homosexuals and severe punishments for adultery.

In addition, according to many Islamic scholars, Hirsi Ali has insulted the Prophet Muhammad by calling him a "tyrant" and by comparing him to Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein in an interview with the Dutch paper Trouw.

She has disputed the 'ismah,' or infallibility, of the Prophet Muhammad and contested the value of continued adherence to what she perceives to be archaic paternalistic codes in Islam.

By choosing to leave the Islamic faith in 2002, Hirsi Ali became an apostate. As an Islamic apostate, she is subject to either death or imprisonment, depending on various interpretations of the Sharia. Because of threats stemming from her open critique of Islam and her status as an apostate, an entourage of bodyguards follows her closely, as they will tonight when she speaks here.

Yet, in addition to controversy and increased security measures around campus, Hirsi Ali brings with her an invaluable aspect of Western, democratic society. She brings reasoned (albeit incendiary, at points) discourse and critique of religious tradition for tradition's sake. She challenges religious ideals that oppress or discriminate based on doctrine and dogma.

She also questions whether Islam and Western, secular society can harmoniously coexist, as many moderate Muslims claim, or whether the two institutions are inextricably at odds. Her responses to these concerns are highlighted in the Evening Standard, where she stated, "We risk a reverse takeover. In 50 years, a majority Muslim society could democratically vote for Sharia law, and then what you face is that Britain will slowly start to look like Saudi Arabia. Women will be veiled, driven away from the public sphere, polygamy will be rife."

In a time of heightened tensions between Islamic and Western nations, a thoughtful, frank debate on the merits and demerits of both Islam and secular, democratic society is needed. Ayaan Hirsi Ali will serve as a necessary catalyst for just such a dialogue at Santa Clara.

This presentation is the most important intellectual event so far this year at Santa Clara. If you can still pick up overflow tickets for the event, I suggest doing so.

Posted by Lucida

Local Islamic leaders push to cancel author's talk at UP

Source: The Tribune Democrat

Leaders of Greater Johnstown’s small Islamic community on Monday pressed Pitt-Johnstown to cancel a talk tonight by a best-selling author who they say has criticized their faith.

But the university said the address by Ayaan Hirsi Ali will go on.

Fouad ElBayly, president of the Islamic Center of Johnstown, and Mahmood A. Qazi, its founder and past president, met with Jerry Samples, Pitt-Johnstown’s vice president for academic and student affairs.

They tried to convince the school to cancel the scheduled appearance tonight of Hirsi Ali, a Dutch feminist and a New York Times best-selling author.

Hirsi Ali, described as one of Europe’s foremost critics of Islam, is scheduled to speak as part of the Frank J. and Sylvia T. Pasquerilla Lecture Series.

Her recently released book, “Infidel,” has climbed up the Times best-seller list.

She has been especially critical of what she contends is the lack of tolerance for dissenting opinions among Muslims, as well as what she says is their oppression of women.

Samples said his meeting with ElBayly and Qazi was congenial.

“They expressed their concerns and I understand their concerns,” he said.

He said the two men asked if they could come to the Richland Township campus and discuss their religion again in a public setting.

Samples said he told them he thought that was a fine idea.

Samples noted that Islam was discussed as part of several previous diversity events held at Pitt-Johnstown.

He met with ElBayly and Qazi in place of Albert Etheridge, Pitt-Johnstown’s president, who was not on campus Monday.

However, Etheridge was in touch with University of Pittsburgh officials about the concerns voiced by ElBayly and Qazi, Samples said. He added that Etheridge has visited the Islamic Center, which is in Paint Borough.

Qazi, who has resided in the region for approximately 13 years, said the Muslim community here gets along well with others.

“I don’t want this woman (Hirsi Ali) to create dissension among us,” he said. “I don’t want her to poison anyone’s mind.”

In a letter to Etheridge, Qazi said area Muslims are “enraged and deeply hurt” by the event.

Qazi said Hirsi Ali’s attacks on Islam are unjustified.

“By the same token, Christianity cannot be blamed for the atrocities being committed in (Northern) Ireland by the Irish Christians, both Catholics and Protestants, against each other,” the letter said.

Pitt-Johnstown spokeswoman Kim Miller said Hirsi Ali’s appearance tonight at the local campus remained as scheduled.

Security precautions were scheduled prior to the concerns voiced by ElBayly and Qazi and are listed on posters announcing Hirsi Ali’s UPJ appearance.

Posted by Lucida

donderdag 5 april 2007

Hirsi Ali's ally attacked by fellow Islam critics

Source: Radio Netherlands

In the past few weeks, a debate on the alleged conflict of interest presented by the dual nationality held by two deputy ministers in the Dutch government has demonstrated the ability of right-wing Freedom Party (PVV) leader Geert Wilders to set the political agenda.

But opposition to Mr Wilders is growing among fellow politicians and journalists, and even well-known Islam critics such as Afshin Ellian and Sylvain Ephimenco are now publicly distancing themselves from the PVV leader.

Their opponents, in turn, are jeering at them, saying they must be scared of the monster they helped create. These developments appear to mark a new episode in the Dutch Islam debate.

An open letter to Geert Wilders published in the 12 March edition of the magazine Opinio states:

"You are using pseudo-theological one-liners about the Koran and the Prophet to intentionally create as much resentment as possible among offended Muslims."

Sharp-tongued critic
The letter would not have created much of a stir had it been written by anyone other than columnist Sylvain Ephimenco, who in the past years has manifested himself as a sharp-tongued critic of Islam. He is one of a group of intellectuals known as The Friends of  Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who give their unconditional support to the former Somali-Dutch MP in her campaign against the "excesses of Islam."

Geert Wilders has never made a secret of the fact that his objections against immigrants mainly concern Muslims. But he has outdone himself with his recent diatribes against Islam. He has called the Prophet Muhammad a barbarian, an aggressive warlord and says that Muslims who want to stay in the Netherlands had better tear out and throw away half the Koran.

Popular broadsides
His broadsides against Islam are guaranteed to curry favour with a certain segment of the Dutch electorate, but create only increasing aversion among fellow politicians and leading commentators. Now Dutch Islam critics such as "The Friends of  Ayaan Hirsi Ali" are turning against him, too.

Early this month, columnist Afshin Ellian dealt the first blow: Mr Wilders, Afshin Ellian wrote in his column in the NRC Handelsblad newspaper of 3 March, is radicalising and rapidly developing into an extreme right-wing politician.

Notably, Afshin Ellian backed his criticism with a reference to former conservative VVD politician Frits Bolkestein who, in the early 1990s, opened the attack on Islam but has been saying for some time now that people like Geert Wilders have taken things too far. Others, including author Leon de Winter, philosopher Bart Jan Spruijt and Labour ideologist Paul Scheffer have made similar comments.

Manifesto
Sylvain Ephimenco's open letter reads as something of a manifesto for this group of critics. In it, Geert Wilders is blamed for "taking the debate hostage and polluting it by sponging off the words and thoughts of others, turning them into caricatures. It will come as no surprise that publicists who until recently took part in the debate are now leaving the space you occupy, probably in fear of being associated with you."

Sylvain Ephimenco says Geert Wilders is not just turning against extremists but against Muslims as a group, and that his statements about the Prophet and the Koran appear only serve to insult as many Muslims as possible. And this, in the full knowledge that: "To a Muslim, every page in the Koran is sacred."

Backs turned
Sylvain Ephimenco says Geert Wilders is going too far, which is why The Friends of Ayaan Hirsi Ali have turned their backs on him. However, Professor Emeritus of Sociology J.A.A. van Doorn rejects their criticisms. He is an old-fashioned left-wing intellectual who has for years rejected the criticisms of Islam as propounded by Afshin Ellian and others which, he says, only serve to drive Dutch Muslims and non-Muslims further apart.

He denies that Geert Wilders is turning the words of others into caricatures. In Trouw newspaper of 17 March he argues that:

"Geert Wilders' actions and statements follow on naturally from what Ayaan Hirsi Ali en her admirers have been saying for years."

Professor Van Doorn writes that Sylvain Ephimenco's indignation over Geert Wilder's attacks on Islam does not ring true. Didn't his much admired Ayaan Hirsi Ali call the Prophet a paedophile? Didn't his ally Afshin Ellian recently wonder aloud whether the Koran should  be banned as being a source of inspiration for terrorism?

Wilders as disciple

According to Professor Van Doorn, commentators like Afshin Ellian and Sylvain Ephimenco have for years been 'prompting' Geert Wilders. He is their disciple. But now that Geert Wilders is putting their words into action, they are taking fright and turning their backs on him. However, Professor Van Doorn argues it is now too late to pull back:  "The aforementioned commentators would do better to ask themselves whether they are not complicit in Geert Wilders' crusade."

Even left-wing magazine De Groene Amsterdammer has devoted a sarcastic commentary to the 'change of heart' on the part of the Dutch Islam critics. The item's author, Hubert Smeets, says that Ayaan Hirsi Ali and her friends appreciated the outspokenness of the late populist politician Pim Fortuin who was killed in 2002.

But Geert Wilders actually puts his money where his mouth is, and that's giving The Friends of Ayaan Hirsi Ali a bad case of cold feet. Fortunately they are honest enough to admit it squarely, which is much to be admired. De Groene Amsterdammer has created an award to express its admiration: the Woollen Sock. De Groene Amsterdammer says: "The first to be awarded the Woollen Sock will be columnists Afshin Ellian and Sylvain Ephimenco. At the end of the year, we will hand out a final award on the basis of a shortlist of Woollen Sock winners: the Green Wellington Boot."

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 3 april 2007

Unsafe in America

Source: AEI - by Fred Thompson *)

Editor's note: Click here to listen to the original radio commentary this transcript is based on.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali can't leave her Washington D.C. home without guards.

Born a Muslim in the African nation of Somalia, she was treated as property. Hirsi Ali, though, escaped a marriage, arranged by her father, to a cousin in Canada she'd never met.

Granted exile in the Netherlands, Hirsi Ali rose like cream and was elected to the Dutch parliament. She also wrote a script based on her experience volunteering in battered women's shelters. There, she learned that her fellow Somali immigrants were maintaining the feudal ways she thought she had left behind.

Resident Fellow - Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Resident Fellow
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, the great-grand-nephew of the famous painter, made her movie--but paid for it with his life. His Islamist murderer used a dagger to pin a note, promising Hirsi Ali's death, to the director's chest. Unsafe, and unwelcome to many, Hirsi Ali came to America last year and was able to live pretty much like a normal person.

But her new autobiography, Infidel, is out now and the usual suspects are furious that she would argue for the liberation of Muslim women. Due to serious and credible threats, she is once again surrounded by guards.

There were many Germans and other Europeans who came to America and warned of the Nazi threat in the 1930s, including writers and filmmakers. Can you imagine that any of them would have ever needed bodyguards?

Hirsi Ali does--right here in America. Yet too many people still don't understand what our country is up against. They might if they read her book.

*) Fred Thompson is a visiting fellow at AEI.

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 2 april 2007

Glimpsing the world from behind the veil

Source: NorthJersey.com - By Susan Campbell *)

"Infidel,"
by Ayaan Hirsi Ali
(Free Press, $26, 355 pp.)

Ayaan Hirsi Ali's haunting memoir, "Infidel," starts thus:

"One November morning in 2004, Theo van Gogh got up to work at his film production company in Amsterdam. He took out his old black bicycle and headed down a main road. Waiting in a doorway was a Moroccan man with a handgun and two butcher knives.

"As Theo cycled down the Linnaeusstraat, Muhammad Bouyeri approached. He pulled out his gun and shot Theo several times. Theo fell off his bike and lurched across the road, then collapsed. Bouyeri followed. Theo begged, 'Can't we talk about this?' but Bouyeri shot him four more times. Then he took out his butcher knives and sawed into Theo's throat. With the other knife, he stabbed a five-page letter onto Theo's chest.

"The letter was addressed to me."

If there is a more dramatic start to a memoir, I haven't read it, and Hirsi Ali, now a resident fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, never lets up in her taut retelling of her eventful life.

Van Gogh was a film director who had earlier worked from a script by Hirsi Ali on the controversial 2004 short documentary "Submission," which criticized the abuse of Muslim women. He was killed later that year, and Hirsi Ali, one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2005 and winner of numerous humanitarian awards, went into hiding.

Her story is the stuff of movies. Born to a Somali intellectual educated at Columbia University and a religious zealot, she was beaten by her mother, abandoned by her father and forced at age 5 to submit to ritual genital mutilation that her family believed would keep her pure until her wedding night.

During the excruciating procedure, her grandmother comforted her:

"It's just this once in your life, Ayaan. Be brave, he's almost finished."

Her sister suffered even more from a botched operation, and it wasn't until decades later that Hirsi Ali learned how rare it was to so carve up little girls.

In a complicated world of clans and cousins, Hirsi Ali at first was the most devout Muslim in her family. She wore a body-covering hidjab, but always there was the nagging notion that Allah never meant for her to be second-best. Early on, she and her sister told their father, who often was on diplomatic trips or in jail, that they didn't want to be girls.

Then she began to get a glimmer of the secular world from Western writers such as Barbara Cartland and Danielle Steele.

"All these books, even the trashy ones, carried with them ideas -- races were equal, women were equal to men -- and concepts of freedom, struggle and adventure that were new to me," Hirsi Ali wrote.

She began to question a culture that gave her secondary status, that permitted men to beat her, that precluded pursuing an education. She traveled to try to rescue family members stranded by a civil war, and her eyes were opened to the wider world.

The messages she gleaned from the glitzy work of Cartland and Steele were reinforced when she was pledged in an arranged marriage to a man she didn't know. Neither author's heroines were ever caught in such a trap, but Hirsi Ali was resourceful. On her way to meet her husband in Canada, she slipped into Holland. It was the early '90s, and the country had munificent refugee programs. She enrolled in the prestigious Leiden University and became an interpreter.

Eventually, she served in the Dutch parliament. After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on America, she grew more disenchanted with the teachings of her girlhood and eventually established herself as an outspoken critic of Islam.

She appears most troubled, however, by the particular honor-system Islam in which she was reared.

She quotes scriptures to show the Quran would not allow women to have power over their own lives (much less as members of Parliament), but most sacred-text scholars would be uncomfortable dismissing an entire religion based on cherry-picked scriptures.

Still, Hirsi Ali arrived at her conclusions after much thought and pain, and this is a disturbing and uncomfortable book.

*) Susan Campbell is a Courant staff writer.

Posted by Sylvia

zaterdag 31 maart 2007

Media Respond to Ayaan Hirsi Ali's Infidel

Source: AEI

In her autobiography, Infidel, AEI resident fellow Ayaan Hirsi Ali recounts her extraordinary transition from a third-world upbringing to her current status as one of Time's 100 most influential people in the world.

The following selections provide links to international press and media coverage of the release of Infidel:

"Unsafe in America," by Fred Thompson
Radio commentary on the ABC Radio Networks, March 30, 2007

"A Dangerous Woman," by Clifford D. May
Book review for Scripps Howard News Service, March 29, 2007

"High Infidelity: Ayaan Hirsi Ali's Brave Memoir," by Douglas Murray
Book review in City Journal, March 28, 2007

"Journey of the Mind," by Eric Weinberger
Book review in the Boston Globe, March 25, 2007

"Muslim Girlhood Forged a Fighter Against Oppression," by Carlin Romano
Book review in the Philadelphia Inquirer, March 20, 2007

"Free Radical," by Joseph Rago
Article in the Wall Street Journal, March 10, 2007

"Un-Veiled," by Joel Whitney
Article in the Village Voice, March 9, 2007

"True Unbeliever," by Neely Tucker
Article in the Washington Post, March 7, 2007

"She's No Fundamentalist," by Christopher Hitchens
Article on Slate.com, March 5, 2007

"The Gall to Speak Her Mind," by Anne Applebaum
Article in the Washington Post, February 27, 2007

"The High Price of Freedom," by Sandip Roy
Book review in the San Francisco Chronicle, February 25, 1007

"Uneasy Truths," by Ranen Omer-Sherman
Book review in the Miami Herald, February 25, 2007

"Infidel; Murder in Amsterdam; In the Name of Honour; Shame," by Paul Sheehan
Book review in the Sydney Morning Herald, February 17, 2007

"No Rest for a Feminist Fighting Radical Islam," by William Grimes
Book review in the New York Times, February 14, 2007

"Ayaan Hirsi Ali," by Tom Ashbrook
Interview on National Public Radio's "On Point," February 12, 2007

"Critic of Islam Finds New Home in U.S.," by William C. Mann
Book review and interview by The Associated Press, February 10, 2007

"Telling Her Story--Ayaan Hirsi Ali," by Naseem Ferdowski
Featured on ABC News, February 6, 2007

"'Infidel' and an Argument for Intolerance," by Neal Conan
Interview on National Public Radio's "Talk of the Nation," February 5, 2007

"Enter the Dutch 'Infidel,' Faithful to Herself," by Laurie Goodstein
Interview in the New York Times, February 4, 2007 

"The Fight for Muslim Women: A Feisty Memoir from a Controversial Champion of Female Rights," by Anne Applebaum
Book review in the Washington Post, February 4, 2007

"Taking the Fight to Islam," by Andrew Anthony
Book review in the Observer (London), February 4, 2007

"A Voice That Will Not Be Silenced," by Christopher Hitchens
Book review in the Times (London), February 4, 2007

"Out of Europe: Infidel, by Ayaan Hirsi Ali," by Luuk van Middelaar
Book review in the Wall Street Journal, February 3, 2007

"Dangerous Odyssey of Muslim Voltaire," by Rebecca Weisser
Article in the Australian, February 3, 2007

"My Life as an Infidel," by Penny Wark
Book review and interview in the Times (London), January 31, 2007

"Who Says 'Ladies First'?" by Deroy Murdock
Book review on National Review Online, January 29, 2007

"A Muslim Woman, Her Leadership and Its Costs," by Sol Schindler
Book review in the Washington Times, January 28, 2007

"Hirsi Ali: La Voluntad del Alma no Se Puede Coaccionar"
Book review on ABC News (Spain), January 22, 2007

"Una Mujer Frente a la Intolerancia," by Yolanda Monge
Interview in El Pais (Spain), January 7, 2007

Posted by Sylvia

donderdag 22 maart 2007

Muslim girlhood forged a fighter against oppression

Source: www.Philly.com  - Book Review by Carlin Romano

Ayaan Hirsi Ali came to prominence last year with &quot;The Caged Virgin,&quot; an account of her struggles in the Netherlands as she brought attention to how Europe&#0039;s Islamic communities treat their women. Her new book, &quot;Infidel,&quot; tells of her Islamic upbringing in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, and Kenya.

FRED ERNST / Associated Press
Ayaan Hirsi Ali came to prominence last year with "The Caged Virgin," an account of her struggles in the Netherlands as she brought attention to how Europe's Islamic communities treat their women. Her new book, "Infidel," tells of her Islamic upbringing in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, and Kenya.
Infidel
By Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Free Press. 353 pp. $26

Born six weeks early at barely more than 3 pounds, Somali-born Ayaan Hirsi Ali got off to a poor start fighting back.

Her older brother Mahad regularly picked on her and once pushed her into a feces-laden outdoor latrine. Her devout Islamic mother, who called her "dumb as a date palm," beat her throughout her childhood.

"Ma" tied Hirsi Ali's hands to her ankles with rope, put her on the floor on her belly, then whipped her mercilessly with a stick or wire.

When Hirsi Ali turned 5, a man came at the behest of her grandmother - though against the wishes of her more enlightened, absent father - and genitally mutilated her. He cut her clitoris and labia ("The entire procedure was torture"), then sewed up the area so the scar tissue formed a kind of "chastity belt."

Other not-so-sweet memories of childhood? Hirsi Ali's math teacher in Kenya beat her with a black plastic pipe. Her Kenyan Koran teacher, infuriated by signs of defiance, cracked her head against a wall, fracturing her skull and bursting a blood vessel in her eye. She had to undergo an operation on her skull.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali doesn't think she saw a toy until she was 8. She first used deodorant in her teens. Now, at 37, she appears on the cover of magazines like Marie Claire, a radiant beauty.

The great irony of Infidel, a memoir by the women's activist whose fight against Islamic oppression of women has made her an international human rights heroine, is that it's a tale of keeping the faith.

Faith that life can be free. Faith that a horrible childhood does not require a horrible adulthood. Faith that courage in life matters.

Last year, Hirsi Ali burst upon the world's media with a book and multiple controversies.

The book, The Caged Virgin: An Emancipation Proclamation for Women and Islam, documented her battles in the Netherlands where, as a social worker and later a member of Parliament, she faced death threats and experienced the 2004 murder of her fellow documentary maker, Theo van Gogh. Their crime? Bringing attention to the treatment by Europe's Islamic communities of their women.

Controversies enveloped her on several fronts last year beyond her opinions on Islam. Critics charged (and she acknowledged, as she had before) that she had lied about her name, date of birth and refugee status when she originally escaped to the Netherlands. Her neighbors, inconvenienced and angered by the 24-hour security escort surrounding her, sued to evict her from her apartment.

Tiring of the controversies, and sensing greater opportunity and freedom in the United States, Hirsi Ali resigned from the Dutch Parliament and accepted a position as a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington.

Now, in Infidel, a No. 1 best-seller in Europe, she tells her harrowing personal story.

Hirsi Ali's mother, Asha, born to a nomadic Somali clan, became a devout Muslim. Her father, Hirsi Magan, a Columbia University graduate in anthropology, helped lead the opposition Somali Salvation Democratic Front that opposed Somalia's post-independence dictator, Siad Barré, which meant he spent considerable time in jail and away from his family.

The book comes poignantly divided into two parts: "My Childhood" and "My Freedom." Notwithstanding the death threats that came later, the first part is certainly grimmer.

"There were so many funerals in my childhood," Hirsi Ali recalls. She, her mother, sister and brother (another sister and brother died as infants) found themselves exiled to Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, and Kenya. Before Hirsi Ali reached her teens, she'd learned Arabic, Amharic, Swahili and English in addition to her native Somali.

She "hated Saudi Arabia," where the teacher called her Aswad Abda, "black slave-girl." Ethiopia, by contrast, "felt like being free," though the poverty and the "frighteningly empty, creamy gray eyes of the blind beggar down the road" scared her.

In Kenya, she for a time refashioned herself as a devout Muslim, wearing the hijab. But she also began to read in English - the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, Nancy Drew stories, 1984, Huckleberry Finn, even Danielle Steel - opening up the horizons of a Western life.

She began her pursuit of it when, at 22, she escaped a marriage arranged by her father to a Somali-Canadian she'd never met, and hopped a train to seek asylum in the Netherlands. She earned a political science degree, worked as a translator and political researcher, and gained election to the Dutch Parliament, even as other parts of her life - such as trying to help her depressed sister adapt to the West - came to tragedy.

It's plain that Hirsi Ali took her early bent toward "the world of reason" from her educated father, who "encouraged us to ask questions," who loved the word why? (which her reverent mother hated), "who taught us to be honest because truth is good in itself."

Hirsi Ali explains the arc of Infidel by stating: "I want to make a few things clear, set a number of records straight, and also tell people about another kind of world and what it's really like."

That she does. Infidel teems with amazing passages, whether it's how the Saudis taught their children to hate Jews, or how the Dutch, for all their virtues, recoiled from confrontation with immigrant values. To those who consider life harsh when their flight is canceled by bad weather, Hirsi Ali's tale of suffering provides context.

As if serving as official historian of her own life, Hirsi Ali painstakingly chronicles almost every memory - tactile, moral, emotional - she can. To those impatient for plot twists, her story may move slowly. For those who think: How did this unique woman develop?, the layers of detail make her memoir a magnificent feat of self-scrutiny.

"People ask me if I have some kind of death wish, to keep saying the things I do," Hirsi Ali remarks in her introduction. "The answer is no. I would like to keep living."

That wasn't her wish when she swallowed "forty or fifty" pills from her mother's medicine drawer in Kenya, hoping to kill herself. Today she continues to challenge dogma, to help the very Muslim women pressured to revile her.

If Hirsi Ali is an infidel, she should consider it a badge of honor: a title we give someone who refuses to believe the worst that human beings can think. Yes, she needs bodyguards. But her two books and rising global stature have already immortalized her mind as a symbol of triumph over fear and ignorance. 


Contact book critic Carlin Romano at 215-854-5615 or cromano@phillynews.com. Read his recent work at http://go.philly.com/carlinromano.

Posted by Sylvia

Why Ayaan Hirsi Ali is wrong

Source: Sign and Sight

Halleh Ghorashi argues only openness to migrants' decisions can help steer clear of cultural fundamentalism.

French philosopher Pascal Bruckner accused Ian Buruma and Timothy Garton Ash of propagating a form of multiculturalism that amounts to legal apartheid. His fiery polemic unleashed an international debate. By now Timothy Garton Ash, Necla Kelek, Paul Cliteur, Lars Gustafsson, Stuart Sim, Ulrike Ackermann and Adam Krzeminski have all entered the ring. Read their contributions as well as Ian Buruma's initial response here.

I first saw Ayaan Hirsi Ali in 2002, when she appeared in a discussion on Dutch television. At that time I saw a strong woman who fought for her ideas: someone who dared to distance herself from her traditional Islamic background and in so doing, positioned herself against the traditional Islamic community in the Netherlands. Her arguments on the incompatibility of Islamic belief and women's emancipation were sharp.

I found Hirsi Ali's approach to the emancipation of Islamic women attractive and identified with her for different reasons. Firstly because 18 years ago I left my homeland Iran as a refugee from an Islamic regime, whose suppression in the name of Islam I had experienced both because of my political background (as a leftist) and because of my gender. Secondly, I was also greatly concerned with the emancipation of women, particularly of women who share my own background: women from Islamic countries.

However, my identification with Ayaan did not last long. Read more...

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 19 maart 2007

A feminist for the ages ...

Source: The Globe and Mail - by Theodore Dalrymple *)

Infidel_5Infidel
By Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Free Press, 350 pages, $32

The author of this autobiography (Infidel) is one of the most remarkable and significant public figures of our time. Propelled to world fame by the murder of Theo van Gogh, with whom she made a short film, Submission, about the systematic abuse of women that is sanctioned by Islam, she has remained dignified, modest and above all stalwart in her views. She has no thirst for martyrdom, but will not retreat before the threats of those whose strongest intellectual argument is the slit throat.

She was born in Somalia, to a man who put politics above his family, who abandoned his wife and three children for long periods of time, and whose activities meant that the young Ayaan led an unsettled existence as a refugee in Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya, which she describes with such great clarity that even those completely unfamiliar with these countries will feel they have visited them and achieved an insight into how life is lived in them.

At an early age, she was subjected to female circumcision. Growing up in an environment in which Islam was accepted unquestioningly as the basis of social structure, morality and politics, she herself fell for a time under the spell of Islamism. She did not even question Islam when a religious teacher fractured her skull in retaliation for a question that he thought was impertinent. There did not seem to be any other possible way of life.

But Hirsi Ali's natural curiosity and rebelliousness always resulted in mental reservations. (The desire to suppress such secret reservations is, in my opinion, one of the sources of fanaticism.) She asked herself such questions as why, if God is so merciful, his rules are so harsh and unforgiving? If all are created equal, why are women systematically accorded an inferior place in society? It began to dawn on her that some of the tenets of Islam might be a cover for the convenience of some at the expense of others, the bad example having been laid down by the Prophet himself.

Her journey toward what Muslims regards as apostasy -- and the test of the compatibility of Islam with freedom is a simple one, whether it will come to accept apostasy as perfectly normal and licit -- accelerated when her father arranged a marriage for her to a Somali living in Canada. This was regarded as a wonderful match for her by her "community," but having come into contact with a different tradition in Kenya, she could not accept that her own views should not be consulted in the matter of how she was to spend the rest of her life.

On her way to join her husband in Canada, she escaped to Holland from Frankfurt airport, and there claimed asylum. Having already learned Somali, Arabic, Amharic, Swahili and English, she set about with determination to learn Dutch, which she soon mastered sufficiently to undertake a degree in political science at Holland's best university. Unlike many of her compatriots who sought asylum in Holland, she did not regard her hosts with contempt: On the contrary, she saw Holland as a free and decent society, a vast improvement on any she had hitherto known.

She went to work for the Dutch Labour Party, which -- being both left wing and influenced by feminism -- might have been expected to sympathize with the terrible plight of many Muslim women in Holland (exactly paralleled, incidentally, by what I saw in medical practice in Britain). However, the liberal guilt of the Labour Party made it unable to move beyond multiculturalism, the shallow view that all cultural beliefs are compatible and none is better than any other. This is a view gratifying to those who hold it, for it assures them that they are open- and generous-minded, but it is a self-satisfaction bought at the price of the suffering of others, a suffering more intense than any other, short of famine and civil war, known to me.

Hirsi Ali moved to a more conservative party, the Liberals, and was elected a member of the Dutch Parliament. This feat alone was remarkable. By now, her outspoken views about Islam in relation to the suppression of intellectual freedom and the subjection of woman had made her so notorious that she required permanent protection from zealots; the film she made with van Gogh was the last straw.

Hirsi Ali, who now lives in the United States, has had a profound effect on modern Holland, and through Holland the rest of Europe and possibly North America, which is an astonishing fact about a recently arrived immigrant from a culture as alien to the Dutch as the Somali. Until quite recently, the Dutch lived in a kind of complacent bubble, as if they had solved all social problems, and nothing could ever again disturb the even tenor of their society. They prided themselves that theirs was a country in which nothing happened. The assassination of Pym Fortuyn, and then of Theo van Gogh, disabused them of this mental idyll: Underneath the calm and prosperous crust of Dutch society, there was red-hot magma waiting to emerge volcanically.

I recently had the opportunity to witness Ayaan Hirsi Ali speak on the same platform as Tariq Ramadan, the grandson of the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, who is often presented as the spokesman for moderate Islam in Europe. She spoke like a rapier, he like a perfumed ointment; she believed in truth, he in conciliation (at least until the upper hand has been achieved). She was vastly the more impressive.

Many readers will feel uncomfortable with her unequivocal belief in the superiority of Western societies over Islamic societies; though, of course, the ability to doubt without courting martyrdom is precisely one of the superiorities. Possibly, she will strike some as strident and uncompromising; but her life history as recounted in this book gives her good reason to be uncompromising. Had she been prepared to compromise, she would now be confined to someone or other's household, at best well-treated, at worst badly abused, but at any rate cabin'd, cribbed and confin'd. This is one of the most crucial documents of our time, and is absorbing and pleasurable to read.

*) British writer and retired physician Theodore Dalrymple is the author of, among other works, Life at the Bottom: The Worldview That Makes the Underclass and Our Culture, What's Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses. For a time, he worked as a doctor and psychiatrist in Zimbabwe and Tanzania.

Posted by Lucida

donderdag 15 maart 2007

We are making a fatal mistake by ignoring the dissidents within Islam

Source: The Guardian

Some critical Muslim intellectuals think their faith is compatible with a liberal society. It's dumb to prefer Bin Laden

Are there credible versions of Islam that are compatible with liberal democracy as it has developed in the west? Can one be both a good Muslim and a good citizen of a free society? Or are Islam and the post-Enlightenment west like fire and water?

While I have been in Egypt over the last fortnight, exploring these issues with Muslims and non-Muslims in a pivotal society of the Middle East, a debate has been bubbling away on the web (see www.signandsight.com) in which various woolly and nefarious views on the subject have been attributed to me. Among the accusations is that I, who was so much engaged for dissidents under communism, show insufficient solidarity with the "dissidents of Islam" such as Ayaan Hirsi Ali. This charge is based on a misunderstanding of the principle of solidarity which prevailed in the struggle against communism and should do so now. That principle is: total solidarity in the defence of people unjustly persecuted, total freedom to disagree with their views.

Our solidarity is particularly important in the case of people like Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who are not so much dissidents of Islam as dissidents beyond Islam. For as she recounts in her new autobiography, Infidel, she made a long hard journey to the point where she stood in front of the mirror in a Greek hotel room and said out loud, in Somali, "I don't believe in God". So she speaks as an atheist - and lives in daily peril of being murdered by jihadist fanatics as a result. One reason solidarity is so important in such cases is that attitudes to apostasy are a critical test for Muslim attitudes to freedom altogether. Last week, I pressed leading members of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo on precisely this issue. Their equivocal answers were not reassuring.

I cannot say plainly enough that anyone must be free not just to leave or change their religion but to propagate their new views, whether atheist, Christian, Muslim, Baha'i or whatever. In the course of those debates they have the right (though not the duty) to cause offence, without being intimidated by any laws, police harassment or threats of extremist violence. I have said this many times already and I repeat it here. We must defend this freedom unflinchingly. But it does not follow that one must agree with all the persecuted person's views. As it happens, I think Hirsi Ali is almost certainly right about God. And she's definitely right about the shameful, unacceptable oppression of women in some Muslim families and communities in Europe. But I don't think she's right about Islam.

"Islam," she told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung last year, "is not compatible with the liberal society that has resulted from the Enlightenment." Many western secular intellectuals participating in these debates agree. But some Muslim intellectuals disagree. I think we should listen to them carefully. Apart from anything else, when it comes to discussing Islam they know what they're talking about.

Take Gamal al-Banna, for example, whom I visited in Cairo, in a cavernous, dark apartment lined from floor to ceiling with Islamic literature. He is the younger brother of Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. Their father, a learned imam, spent 40 years cataloguing some 45,000 reports of alleged sayings and doings of Muhammad (hadith). Now 86 years old, Gamal al-Banna has devoted his whole life to studying Islam and its relations to politics. A man of tranquil clarity, he became mildly agitated only when denouncing the perversion of Islam by Sayyid Qutb, the Egyptian apostle of extremist, takfiri Islamism and a hero to al-Qaida.

Gamal al-Banna argues that "there is no contradiction between total freedom of thought and religion" and that "Islam does not pretend to a monopoly of wisdom". Critical ideas about Islam should be fought "by words and not by confrontation, terrorism or takfir - passing anathema on someone by pronouncing them an infidel". As for apostasy, the Muslim has the right to withdraw from Islam, the verses of the Qur'an are very explicit concerning this issue: "There is no compulsion in religion" (al-Baqara, The Cow, II, 256). Withdrawal from religion is mentioned at least five times in the Qur'an, none of which is related to a penalty. In the period of the prophet, many people withdrew from Islam; one of them was a scribe of the Qur'an. The prophet did not punish any of them.

The saying often attributed to the prophet - "Whoever changes his religion must be executed" - is rejected as inauthentic by Imam Muslim, one of the earliest and most respected compilers of collections of hadith, but Imam al-Bukhari, another respected compiler, included it in his version. "The signs of falsification are very clear in this saying," comments Banna, "and it contradicts many verses in the Qur'an that confirm freedom of faith."

Compare this with Hirsi Ali's bold, bald statement in a speech in Berlin last year: "I think that the prophet Muhammad was wrong to have said that apostates must be killed." Which do you think reveals a deeper historical knowledge of Islam? Which is more likely to encourage thoughtful Muslims in the view that they can be both good Muslims and good citizens of free societies?

I'm not suggesting that we must choose only one or the other approach. We should listen to and support the dissidents beyond Islam, ex-Muslims like Hirsi Ali, but also the dissidents within Islam like Banna. He and other dissident Muslim intellectuals, such as Mohsen Kadivar in Tehran - their names scarcely known in the west - dissent from diverse conservative, state-sponsored and takfiri extremist positions, while remaining very much believing Muslims. For Islam exists as a monolith only in the imagination of the west. (And, one should add, in the western-influenced political dreams of some revolutionary Islamists). In fact, what has characterised the Muslim world throughout history is the great diversity of what Muslims say and do under the banner of Islam.

These dissidents within Islam are a small minority. So are the takfiri extremists who indoctrinate suicide-bombers. However, both these minorities have the capacity to appeal to larger numbers among the majority in between them - and especially to Muslims living in the west. So the voice of the dissidents needs to be heard more clearly. This struggle for Muslim hearts and minds should be decided by Muslims arguing among themselves, but we non-Muslims undoubtedly shape the context - and control many of the media - in which it is conducted.

The default position of some of the western secular intellectuals engaged in the current debate appears to be: the only good Muslim is an ex-Muslim. That is both patronising and counter-productive. It involves a simplistic parody of the real diversity of Islam. Of course we non-Muslims should try to make up our own minds about the nature of Islam, with the limited means at our disposal. But nothing could be more ludicrous and stupid than the western secular intellectual, having no Arabic and scant knowledge of Islamic history, philosophy or law, pronouncing confidently that Gamal al-Banna is a less true representative of Islam than Sayyid Qutb or Osama bin Laden. And stupid we should not be, if we wish to stay free.

zaterdag 10 maart 2007

She's No Fundamentalist

Source: Slate.com - By Christopher Hitchens

Infidel_1What people get wrong about Ayaan Hirsi Ali

W.H. Auden, whose centenary fell late last month, had an extraordinary capacity to summon despair—but in such a way as to simultaneously inspire resistance to fatalism. His most beloved poem is probably September 1, 1939, in which he sees Europe toppling into a chasm of darkness. Reflecting on how this catastrophe for civilization had come about, he wrote:

Exiled Thucydides knew
All that a speech can say
About Democracy,
And what dictators do,
The elderly rubbish they talk
To an apathetic grave;
Analyzed all in his book,
The enlightenment driven away,
The habit-forming pain,
Mismanagement and grief:
We must suffer them all again.

"The enlightenment driven away … " This very strong and bitter line came back to me when I saw the hostile, sneaky reviews that have been dogging the success of Ayaan Hirsi Ali's best seller Infidel, which describes the escape of a young Somali woman from sexual chattelhood to a new life in Holland and then (after the slaying of her friend Theo van Gogh) to a fresh exile in the United States. Two of our leading intellectual commentators, Timothy Garton Ash (in the New York Review of Books) and Ian Buruma, described Hirsi Ali, or those who defend her, as "Enlightenment fundamentalist[s]." In Sunday's New York Times Book Review, Buruma made a further borrowing from the language of tyranny and intolerance and described her view as an "absolutist" one.

Now, I know both Garton Ash and Buruma, and I remember what fun they used to have, in the days of the Cold War, with people who proposed a spurious "moral equivalence" between the Soviet and American sides. Much of this critique involved attention to language. Buruma was very mordant about those German leftists who referred to the "consumer terrorism" of the federal republic. You can fill in your own preferred example here; the most egregious were (and, come to think of it, still are) those who would survey the U.S. prison system and compare it to the Gulag.

In her book, Ayaan Hirsi Ali says the following: "I left the world of faith, of genital cutting and forced marriage for the world of reason and sexual emancipation. After making this voyage I know that one of these two worlds is simply better than the other. Not for its gaudy gadgetry, but for its fundamental values." This is a fairly representative quotation. She has her criticisms of the West, but she prefers it to a society where women are subordinate, censorship is pervasive, and violence is officially preached against unbelievers. As an African victim of, and escapee from, this system, she feels she has acquired the right to say so. What is "fundamentalist" about that?

The Feb. 26 edition of Newsweek takes up where Garton Ash and Buruma leave off and says, in an article by Lorraine Ali, that, "It's ironic that this would-be 'infidel' often sounds as single-minded and reactionary as the zealots she's worked so hard to oppose." I would challenge the author to give her definition of irony and also to produce a single statement from Hirsi Ali that would come close to materializing that claim. Accompanying the article is a typically superficial Newsweek Q&A sidebar, which is almost unbelievably headed: "A Bombthrower's Life." The subject of this absurd headline is a woman who has been threatened with horrific violence, by Muslims varying from moderate to extreme, ever since she was a little girl. She has more recently had to see a Dutch friend butchered in the street, been told that she is next, and now has to live with bodyguards in Washington, D.C. She has never used or advocated violence. Yet to whom does Newsweek refer as the "Bombthrower"? It's always the same with these bogus equivalences: They start by pretending loftily to find no difference between aggressor and victim, and they end up by saying that it's the victim of violence who is "really" inciting it.

Garton Ash and Buruma would once have made short work of any apologist who accused the critics of the U.S.S.R. or the People's Republic of China of "heating up the Cold War" if they made any points about human rights. Why, then, do they grant an exception to Islam, which is simultaneously the ideology of insurgent violence and of certain inflexible dictatorships? Is it because Islam is a "faith"? Or is it because it is the faith—in Europe at least—of some ethnic minorities? In neither case would any special protection from criticism be justified. Faith makes huge claims, including huge claims to temporal authority over the citizen, which therefore cannot be exempt from scrutiny. And within these "minorities," there are other minorities who want to escape from the control of their ghetto leaders. (This was also the position of the Dutch Jews in the time of Spinoza.) This is a very complex question, which will require a lot of ingenuity in its handling. The pathetic oversimplification, which describes skepticism, agnosticism, and atheism as equally "fundamentalist," is of no help here. And notice what happens when Newsweek takes up the cry: The enemy of fundamentalism is defined as someone on the fringe while, before you have had time to notice the sleight of hand, the aggrieved, self-pitying Muslim has become the uncontested tenant of the middle ground.

Let me give another example of linguistic slippage. In ACLU circles, we often refer to ourselves as "First Amendment absolutists." By this we mean, ironically enough, that we prefer to interpret the words of the Founders, if you insist, literally. The literal meaning in this case seems (to us) to be that Congress cannot inhibit any speech or establish any state religion. This means that we defend all expressions of opinion including those that revolt us, and that we say that nobody can be forced to practice, or forced to foreswear, any faith. I suppose I would say that this is an inflexible principle, or even a dogma, with me. But who dares to say that's the same as the belief that criticism of religion should be censored or the belief that faith should be imposed? To flirt with this equivalence is to give in to the demagogues and to hear, underneath their yells of triumph, the dismal moan of the trahison des clercs and "the enlightenment driven away." Perhaps, though, if I said that my principles were a matter of unalterable divine revelation and that I was prepared to use random violence in order to get "respect" for them, I could hope for a more sympathetic audience from some of our intellectuals.

Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His most recent book is Thomas Jefferson: Author of America. 

Posted by Sylvia

donderdag 8 maart 2007

Ayaan Hirsi ali

A tale of two sisters - by Alexander Linklater

Ayaan Hirsi Ali and her sister, Haweya, grew up in conditions that most western psychologists would consider traumatic. Circumcised as little girls in Somalia, and abandoned by their father, a rebel leader, they were raised as refugees in Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya. Isolated and desperate, their mother would beat them mercilessly. Subjected to harsh Islamic teachings, they were also beaten by their ma'alim - once so badly that Ayaan nearly died. The sisters grew up against a background of tyranny, war, exile, famine and religious dogma.

This story, told by Ayaan in her memoir, Infidel, might seem to allow plenty of room for the view that trauma lay behind the mental illness that would eventually consume Haweya. In 1994, after destroying her honour by having an abortion, she joined Ayaan as an asylum-seeker in Holland. There she had another abortion. In 1996, she was admitted to a psychiatric hospital with a severe psychotic disorder. She had been smashing her head against walls, screaming, "Allaahu Akbar! Allaahu Akbar!"

Read article


Life force

Natasha Walter on Infidel: My Life In the Name of Honour Unbowed: My Autobiography

Infidel: My Life, by Ayaan Hirsi Ali (368pp, Free Press, £12.99)
In the Name of Honour, by Mukhtar Mai, translated by Linda Coverdale (192pp, Virago, £10.99)
Unbowed: My Autobiography, by Wangari Maathai (352pp, William Heinemann, £17.99)

The autobiographies of these three women are very different, yet each comes at you with an almost raging power, like a river bursting its banks. Here is Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a woman from a traditional Somali family who was circumcised and pressured into marriage. Instead of staying obediently within her family, she sought asylum in Holland and became internationally famous for her criticism of Islamic culture. Here is Mukhtar Mai, a Pakistani woman who was gang-raped by order of a local court in a tribal dispute. Instead of being silenced by shame, she took her attackers to national court, and became a cause célèbre beyond her village and country. And here is Wangari Maathai, who grew up in a traditional Kikuyu community in Kenya. She didn't reject her background, but used it as a springboard for a movement for democracy and the environment that won her the Nobel peace prize. Each woman embodies a life that starts within the boundaries of local traditions and ends in the open spaces of globalised debate and activism.

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A life transformed by chance and choice

Mary Wakefield reviews Infidel: My Life by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

It's been a week since I finished Ayaan Hirsi Ali's remarkable autobiography, and I haven't stopped thinking about it or talking about it for long. I'd recommend her story to anyone: man, woman, Muslim, Christian, Jew - because it drags some hideous truths out from the shadows, and because it shows that even the most hopeless life can be transformed by the right mix of chance and choice.

I'd recommend it not just because it's fascinating, but because the author's transformation - from devout Muslim to atheistic humanist - will set you off on an unpredictable run of emotions, starting with shock, admiration, gratitude - and ending, perhaps, with a touch of unease.

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True Unbeliever - By Neely Tucker

'Infidel' Author Ayaan Hirsi Ali Brings Her Incendiary Views on Islam to Washington

People come along every now and then, idiosyncratic, opinionated, talented, flawed, impossible. You call them iconoclasts, troublemakers, provocateurs, opportunists, polemicists.

Camille Paglia, of the feminist and anti-feminist perspective, she's one of these. Michael Moore with his satirical film rants, Michael Eric Dyson in his race debates, Germaine Greer and the brand of feminism she called "the Push," and the late journalistic table-pounder Oriana Fallaci, too. Something between artist, scholar, journalist and radical.

So now, ladies and gentlemen, live from Somalia and the Netherlands! Give it up for new-to-Washington Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Muslim heretic, self-proclaimed "Infidel," whose memoir by that name is at No. 7 on the New York Times bestseller list!

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Sister in spirit: Hirsi Ali's 'Infidel' - By K A Dilday

The Somali-Dutch dissident's critique of Islam resonates with K A Dilday's experience of fundamentalist Christianity in the American south. But their distance lies also in the journey beyond.

There is a moment in Ayaan Hirsi Ali's autobiography, Infidel, when she speaks on the phone to an old friend from Somalia, just after the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001. She has been living in the Netherlands for nearly a decade. Abshir, an imam, is about to have heart surgery in Switzerland. Hirsi Ali suggests that the Qur'an may in fact sanction such attacks; that it encourages Muslims to behave such a way against infidels.

Abshir, who has been attending lectures by the Muslim scholar Tariq Ramadan, in Switzerland, says: "You're right, and I'm just as confused as you. I'm being operated on for my heart, but it is my head that is hurting." Hirsi Ali tells him that she is on the verge of leaving their faith. He's shocked, and tells her that he too is confused but that she shouldn't abandon their God. "We hung up awkwardly," she writes, "I knew I wouldn't be talking to him again."

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Enlightenment fundamentalism or racism of the anti-racists?

Pascal Bruckner defends Ayaan Hirsi Ali against Ian Buruma and Timothy Garton Ash, condemning their idea of multiculturalism for chaining people to their roots

Pascal Bruckner's fiery polemic has kindled an international debate. By now Ian Buruma, Timothy Garton Ash, Necla Kelek and Paul Cliteur have all stepped into the ring. Read their contributions here.

"What to say to a man who tells you he prefers to obey God than to obey men, and who is consequently sure of entering the gates of Heaven by slitting your throat?" - Voltaire

"Colonisation and slavery have created a sentiment of culpability in the West that leads people to adulate foreign traditions. This is a lazy, even racist attitude." – Ayaan Hirsi Ali


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The Gall To Speak Her Mind - by Anna Applebaum

Clearly, there is something about Ayaan Hirsi Ali that annoys, rankles, irritates. I am speaking as one who does not know Hirsi Ali -- the outspoken Dutch-Somali critic of Islam -- but as one who, while living in Europe, cannot seem to avoid meeting her detractors. Most recently I met a Dutch diplomat who positively glowered when her name was mentioned. As a member of the Dutch parliament, Hirsi Ali had, he complained, switched parties, talked out of turn and refused to toe whatever was the proper political line. Above all, it irritated him that she did not share his Dutch faith in political consensus.

For those who haven't encountered her name yet, suffice it to say that Hirsi Ali is a European of African descent with an almost American rags-to-riches life story. As a young woman, she escaped from her Somali family while en route to an arranged marriage in Canada, made her way to Holland, learned Dutch, attended college and eventually won a seat in the Dutch parliament. Along the way, she also made an intellectual journey -- beautifully described in her new book 'Infidel' from tribal Somalia, through fundamentalism, and into Western liberalism. After Sept. 11, 2001, horrified by some of the things Osama bin Laden was saying, she reached for the Koran to confirm a hunch: "I hated to do it," she wrote, "because I knew that I would find bin Laden's quotations in there."

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The high price of freedom - by Sandip Roy

AFTER FORSAKING MUSLIM BELIEFS, ALI SOUGHT EXILE, NOW FACES DEATH THREATS

After a Moroccan extremist gunned down Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam in 2004, he pinned a five-page letter into his victim's chest with a butcher knife. That letter was addressed to Somali refugee-turned-activist-turned-member-of-parliament Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Ali and van Gogh had just made a film that depicted a half-naked woman, the opening verse of the Quran projected on her torso. In the eyes of thousands of Muslims, it was just the latest in Ali's many transgressions against her faith.

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Uneasy truths - by Ranan Omer-Sherman

Source: Miami Herald

THE AUTHOR'S VIVID STORY OF HER ISLAMIC UPBRINGING AND HER EVENTUAL REBELLION AGAINST IT IS SPELLBINDING

Infidel
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Free Press
368 pages
$26

Ayaan Hirsi Ali thinks that individuals are the ultimate source of good and evil in the world and that there is no Hell. Embracing such plaudits might strike many as utterly safe, but their acceptance actually required a long and painful trek for this author whose memoir presents one of the most gripping, suspenseful life stories in recent memory.

Throughout this astonishing book, Ali's prose is precise, vivid and disturbing. She is famous for her controversial collaboration with Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh, on his short film Submission, which portrayed the suffering of women under fundamentalist Islam (it was Ali who insisted on the now-infamous image of a woman veiled in a transparent hidjab, inscribed with verses of the Quran on her naked flesh). In the ensuing uproar, both received death threats until the day that Van Gogh was shot by a Moroccan immigrant. As he lay in the street, the film director pleaded for his life, begging, ''Can't we talk about this?'' but his assassin cut his throat with a butcher knife and stabbed a letter addressed to Ali onto van Gogh's chest.

That violence bookends this immensely moving and ultimately irresistible story recounting Ali's life to the present. With luminous detail and admirable restraint, Infidel recounts her early life in a devout Muslim family and powerful clan system, the horrors of civil war, flight from a forced marriage and asylum in the Netherlands, the sad descent of her sister into madness after a life of abuse and much more.

Even before Submission's release, Ali was already a notorious figure as a member of the Dutch Parliament where she frequently spoke out against Holland's liberal multiculturalism that, driven by the imperative to ''respect'' immigrant cultures, was blind to the violence of those who did not share its values.

Ali's early life was an odyssey of jarring movements between Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Kenya and Ethiopia, usually because her father was being exiled for various political activities. Like most Somali girls, she suffered genital mutilation. Ali endured other physical traumas, including frequent beatings from other authority figures such as a life-threatening skull-fracture inflicted by an impatient Quran instructor. Violence was also dealt by her mother, who seemingly spent much time in helpless rage at her husband after her husband abandoned her and her children in preference for younger wives.

Though it would be years before Ali's outright rebellion against Islam, it seems that her father's secret remarriages provoked her earliest questions about the role of women. Given the lofty claims Azar Nafisi makes for the emboldening potential of literature in Reading Lolita in Tehran, I was intrigued by Ali's assertion that a crucial catalyst for lasting doubt came when she began to secretly read free-spirited novels featuring independent-minded women who made choices of their own: ``I was young, but the first tiny, meek beginnings of my rebellion had already clicked into place.''

Nevertheless, genuine change was long in coming. Her ties to Islam remained strong enough to cause her to reject her first great love, solely because he was a Christian. After the family's move to Mecca, Ali recalls a culture in which ''everything bad was the fault of the Jews,'' though no Saudi of her acquaintance had ever met a Jew. Though she often castigates extremist forms of Islam, Ali's essential fair-mindedness lead her to pause to admire some of its more benevolent attributes such as the ingenious hawala system of charity, a global network based on trust within the clan that distributes emergency funds to those in need. Her family was often dependent on the responses of strangers scattered around the world.

Even when the epic struggle of her earlier life gives way to the quieter details of her cultural adjustment to Holland's peace and serenity, readers will be rewarded by Ali's fiercely independent outlook and expanding consciousness as she becomes enraptured by the field of political science at Holland's most prestigious university. Surprisingly, these late developments provide a story as gripping as the tumult of her early years. After van Gogh's assassination, Ali's life became a paranoid and lonely nomadic existence. Shepherded by Holland's security services from one secure hiding place to another, she was cut off from the outside world. Less than a year ago, her Dutch citizenship was revoked and though later restored, she now resides in the United States, a defender of women's rights and an eloquent critic of reactionary Islam.

Still a target for terrorists, Ali is eager to tell the West uncomfortable truths. She warns that extremist forms of Islam persuade through sophisticated uses of media and technology: videotapes of martyrs, recordings of hate-filled sermons and the Internet. To counter that threat she argues that those who would reform Islam should wield weapons of satire, art and other creative forms of dissidence. While often horrifying and heartbreaking, Infidel is an ultimately inspiring story of defiance, resilience and truth-seeking.

Ranen Omer-Sherman is Gabelli Senior Scholar of Arts & Sciences at the University of Miami.

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 6 maart 2007

An interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Source: Guernica

Born in Mogadishu, Somalia, in 1969, Ayaan Hirsi Ali gained international recognition as the controversial member of Dutch Parliament who made a short film attacking Islam, called Submission Part 1. In the film, images of bare women's limbs are scrawled with verses of the Qu'ran which—Ali has said—denigrate and subordinate women. Theo van Gogh, the director of the film (Ali wrote the script), was killed in cold blood on the streets of Amsterdam, a note jabbed into his chest threatening Ms. Ali (and the United States to boot) with a fate like van Gogh's, whose last words were, "Can't we talk about this?" After the incident, Ms. Ali spent several months virtually kidnapped by her security team.

In her new book,
Infidel, Ms. Ali traces her journey from Somalia to Holland, from a life of exile (her father was a Somali warlord so the family was frequently on the lam) in Kenya and Saudi Araba; a life of suffering and subordination (she wore the hijab as a member of the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, was forced to undergo the painful practice of female circumcision, and was engaged to someone she didn't love); and a life of awakening. Infidel, she has inserted herself into the heart of perhaps the key debate of our times and hopes to prod Islam into an enlightenment period akin to what other religions have gone through.

It was the forced engagement that was the moral last straw, the offense that sent her into flight from her betrothed and her family and landed her in Holland, where her ascent to the halls of government was startlingly rapid. As a member of Parliament she argued that multiculturalists were too easy on Islam and that Holland should immediately take steps to improve treatment of Muslim women, to protect them from barbaric and chauvinistic practices like forced marriage and circumcision; and to ban Muslim schools where integration was impossible and Western values reviled.

Last fall, Ms. Ali took a job with the conservative think tank in Washington, D.C., the American Enterprise Institute. She comes to the U.S. with a powerful message for moderates, liberals and multiculturalists: not all cultures are equal; Islam is a threat to liberalism and liberalism is yet to offer an adequate response; and Islam is too defined by "seventh century ... jihadi bullshit" to be appeased or ignored. Discussing foreign policy with her is like playing a game of Risk. Ultimately, Ms. Ali's journey, she insists, is a journey from faith to reason, a journey which gave birth to a liberal—not of the communist but of the John Stuart Mill ilk. At AEI and with

--interview by Joel Whitney

ayaan10a.jpg

Guernica: It seems when you talk about Islam, it's not your style to say things in a gentle way...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I'm the gentlest of them all, honestly. (laughing)

Guernica: Maybe I just mean your word choice. Though of course your voice does sound quite gentle...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Do tell me: what is not gentle about what I say? I don't call for violence. I don't call for the abolition of Islam. I don't say that Muslims should be kicked out of the country. I don't say that they should be attacked. All I say is that being a Muslim, having been brought up as a Muslim, could we please ask Muslims to look at ourselves, could we please look at the Qu'ran and acknowledge that there is an urge, that it urges us to be violent, accept that it's in there and then change it. I don't see anything that's not gentle about that. It is not me who's not being gentle; it's the people who respond to that gentle nudge with violence who are not gentle.

Guernica: When you talk about the hatefulness of Islam, and you provide examples of statements made against Jews, I think perhaps some of your critics might call what you say a body of ungraceful generalizations...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Ok, it is an ungraceful generalization, but it should be understood to be—and I try to say it all the time, which is a truism by the way—it's not every Muslim, not every single Muslim who does that. But please look at the Arab media, the Islamic media. And what you see is the Jews are compared to monkeys, they're called "our enemies," "we should destroy them," and so on and so forth. Now what I'm saying is let's not deny that. We've been taught that. And why?

Because we've lived in dictatorships. And these dictators want to take advantage of us by first of all saying it is Islamic to be anti-Jewish, which is not necessarily true; yes, there were moments when the prophet was friends with the Jews and there were moments when he felt betrayed by the Jews; and he started to have these anti-Semitic verses in the Qu'ran. They pick these verses out. But by pointing out the facts such as the virulent hatred against the Jews, I'm not attacking all Muslims, and I'm not trying to be ungraceful and I'm not generalizing; I'm saying we have to acknowledge things like these to change.

We have to get rid of this idea that God is an entity that only says "I say so," because in that case God is a dictator.

Guernica: In your book, you write: "When people say that the values of Islam are compassion and tolerance and freedom, I look at reality, at real cultures and governments, and I see that it simply isn't so. People in the West swallow this sort of thing because they have learned not to examine the religions or cultures of minorities too critically, for fear of being called racist. It fascinates them that I am not afraid to do so."

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Ok, I can support this assertion with facts. And it's not only me—for four years now the Arab Human Development Report was being published year in and year out. And the Arab Human Development Report does not take into account research on non-Arab countries such as Iran, Pakistan and Indonesia. They only look at the 22 so-called Arab countries.

And the three deficits they point to in all of these states—including Iran—there is the lack of freedom, lack of knowledge, and the subjugation of women. And all of the [deficits], all are being supported in the name of Islam. Even an atheist like Saddam Hussein, who in the first decade of his reign was anti-religion, later on when the Americans came in he put [Islamic phrases] on the flag, and he started to just continue oppressing his own people, but this time in the name of Islam.

I tried to explain in the book that I used to be a member of the [Muslim] Brotherhood movement. And listening to bin Laden, and listening to al Qaeda, listening to all these [extremists] the only reason these people win from the moderates is because what they are saying is in the Qu'ran and what the prophet wanted and how they are acting is all consistent.

So the only way to preserve Islam on the one hand and counter them as moderate Muslims is to say "Well you guys are right. All this stuff is in the Qu'ran. The Qu'ran is written by human beings. And as human beings, endowed with reason, we can change this because we don't think that it's beneficial. Or even if we are not going to change it, we are going to believe that in its context, because the Qu'ran was written in a different time, in a different context, in a different age. We're going to move on; we're going to take from the Qu'ran those things that we think are compatible with human hearts." But the minute you start doing that, that's when hell comes in, and the radicals will say "Oh, but then you are not a believer because you are refuting what God says."

So that's why I say in the book, Ok, in that case, let's review the individual relationship between God or the concept of God and the individual... If we only see God as an entity that we submit to, but like other religions—and I think Jews have done this, Christians have done this; certainly Protestants have done this—instead see God as an entity that you can argue with, and that means propagating the idea that if you argue with God he won't send you to hell—[laughs]—

Guernica: Otherwise it's hard to win that argument.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Yes, of course—because he tells you "shut up." So we have to get rid of this idea that God is an entity that only says "I say so" (because in that case God is a dictator) and then you have an argument. And then you can probably win the hearts and minds of young people who just want to live. Not only young people; also older ordinary people who just want to lead a normal life, and for whom life is difficult enough as it is. Without coming with all this jihadi bullshit.

And so this is—saying jihadi bullshit, by the way, is not graceful—but I see the way to progress, the way to compete with these [radicals]. Because that's really what I'm focused on, [since] I was once a part of that. It was difficult to have conversations with them, because the minute you start pointing out inconsistencies, or the minute you say, "Hey, let's progress from there," then they get very, very angry, and then they translate that anger into, "Ok, you're not one of us," or [into] violence or the threat of violence.

What I also try to explain in the book is once I came to Holland and I took note of the history of Western philosophy, the history of Western political theory, what this reveals is that the West—for instance the Netherlands—wasn't always as prosperous as this; they went through hell, they went through their wars, religious wars; and they progressed because they acknowledged that the bible is full of a lot of stuff that makes us go to war with each other and with others, that the Catholic Church (which was the dominant church), was violent and exploits the poor and others, that even the Protestant reaction to it also brought about a lot of violence, and that the people who say this in their own time seem to also be not so graceful. [laughs] And many of them were harrassed and burned at the stake, and others migrated first to countries like Holland that were more tolerant and later to the US and Australia and so on.

What is going to be left of Saudi Arabia if you take away the Qu'ran and the Shar'ia and the prophet. There's simply going to be no Saudi state. They'll all want secularism; they'll all want democracy.

And so it is a part of human history that if you say, "Let's change the fundamental values that people have," there's also a stated interest in the status quo. Not talking about the prophet, not discussing the Qu'ran. And that could... I mean, I have powerful enemies. Look at a country like Saudi Arabia. What is going to be left of Saudi Arabia if you take away the Qu'ran and the Shar'ia and the prophet. If the Saudis simply stop taking the prophet seriously. There's simply going to be no Saudi state. They'll all want secularism; they'll all want democracy.

Guernica: Are you still at all ambivalent—perhaps emotionally—about Islam?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Philosophically, not so much emotionally. I studied political science, and you think one thing about something and then—the example from history: should the bomb have been dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Was that necessary or was it not necessary? And so you've got one professor's class who says it was absolutely necessary and the next day you attend another professor's class who shows you some facts and says, the Japanese were already defeated and it wasn't necessary and so on. Then you get into a state of doubt: you can't choose.

That's what happened to me in the time that I was in the Netherlands. And so I have no longer got any doubts about the [Muslim] Brotherhood. I don't think I belong—the moral framework that they have to offer me is not convincing. I think they have not withstood the challenge of liberalism to Islam. I think that Islam is a challenge to liberalism too... But of course I am a product of Islamic civilization—you can call it a civilization still: my parents, my heritage, and so on—and so I have this obligation, I feel this obligation, especially in the context of now, where there is a conflict between the Islamic world and the Western world. And such a conflict—I think that I can't just lie around and be silent on that and enjoy a life of Western progress and at the same time keep quiet about what is not right with us. That's my take on it: I don't believe in hell and heaven anymore. Or angels. I think Islam is a superstition like every other superstition. But now because it's a superstition, unlike Christianity, that hasn't been tested and hasn't gone through a process of enlightenment, I think it's a dangerous superstition.

I don't have nightmares about heaven and hell—but I used to have. I used to fear them a lot, and as I say in the book, that's when my emancipation started. And I think that's when every Muslim's (just like every Christian's who's had an emancipation) ever started. It [starts] when you relinquish the notion of hell, because then you can't be blackmailed all the time into doing things that you don't want to do, because there's that fear of hell. I didn't want to pray five times a day. It's not that I didn't want to, but when it came time to pray there was usually something I was doing that I found more interesting.

But I think if my parents were suddenly to turn up now—because that was a conditioning that went on forever—my reflex would be to behave in a certain way—of what's expected of me.

Guernica: You'd revert to the older role?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I think so. But now, as an adult, that would be temporal. And that's the difference between, say, 10, 20 years ago and now. Now I think I'd only do it because—what I get is sometimes ... it doesn't happen for a long time but when I've called and if someone says As Salam Alaikum—which is the Islamic greeting—and I without thinking about it just say Alaikum Salam. Or people say, god be with you, in Arabic and the only way to answer that is to say, I mean, god be with you. And that's a reflex. And I still do that, and I laugh about it. And when something unpleasant is happening and you're longing for something, I touch myself and say "Please god, please god." And I learned to say "god" in my language which is Allah. So I say, "Please Allah." And that's a reflex. And I think it's probably the same way that you kind of say "Jesus."

Guernica: True or false: there's anger in your movement away from Islam?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Of course there is an anger. If people's hands are cut off... this jihadi bullshit is like, "Let's all go back to the seventh century." Now I don't want to go back to the seventh century. And I know that many others like me in Islam don't want to go back. But all these people are blackmailed into the dogma that you don't argue with god. So you have to take the Qu'ran literally as the word of god forever, it never moves. You follow the example of the prophet as a moral guide, always.

Now the prophet has done a number of wonderful things, and he has said a number of good things. But measured by the standards of today, the prophet has also done a number of very immoral things: violence, his attitude towards women, gays, and also not leaving some sort of organization to form and reform. The sexual morality, the tribal... Islam was founded in the Arab deserts in a tribal setting. In such a tribal setting the most important asset that you have are men/boys, because they defend the tribe. The larger you are the more important you are. The whole notion of polygamy and getting as many children as you can and women as you needed... you have to know that the child in your tribe is your child and not someone else's child. So the notion of women being kept: that's what the prophet kind of institutionalized in Islam.

Does it make me angry? Yes it makes me angry because we Muslims on 9/11—(that's how I thought of it: we Muslims)—are now flying planes full of people into tall buildings and we are blaming outsiders for all our miseries. And maybe a lot of our miseries have been caused by outsiders. But please let's take a pause and look at what we are doing wrong. And if I see all these fathers and mothers teaching their children to seek knowledge, but don't go beyond what's written in the Qu'ran, then wondering why their children are ignorant; they fill their children with all sorts of notions of hell and how they are going to be punished, then saying my child is not creative enough in school—of course this is enraging.

And the way women are treated. What is enraging is not only the treatment but the way it's so justified in the religion. I translated for women who in the Dutch liberal context are rescued from these situations of abuse who then go back to the argument, I can't leave him. I have to bear with him because of the hereafter. It says in the Qu'ran: he can beat me when I'm disobedient and I've been disobedient. And I'm going to behave myself now. It's like, How long are you going to behave yourself? and she says, Well, it's god's command. I don't know if you are not enraged about it. I am enraged about the evangelicals or the Christians here wanting to introduce creationism in the science classes.

Guernica: Well, that might be a good place to ask you about the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), your new employers. A lot of their critics would point out that the neocons...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: The American Enterprise Institute is not a political entity; all [the journalists today] have asked me that. It's a think tank. What AEI tries to do is influence public policy.

Guernica: But they do have a preponderance of neoconservatives there.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: They do, and there are some Democrats there. They started as a free market think tank that wanted as little government interference as possible in the affairs of society—limited government. When I read about them I found very little on foreign policy. Their foreign policy seems to have started in the last few years. If there were a Democratic administration in the White House, they would try to influence that administration as much as possible. I haven't come into a political organization; I've come into a think tank. They think about different issues. There is a controversy between some of the scholars at the American Enterprise Institute and me—not all.

Guernica: Such as?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I think all the scholars who are against gay marriages, abortion, euthanasia; I know very little about it. I have my ideas on limited government, I'm for limited government but I'm also for—I mean, it's not as simple as that. I don't think that being a superpower, the wealthiest country on earth, and having your homeless people and psychiatric patients walking in the streets and eating out of garbage cans is something to be proud of. But I don't have the answer.

The issues that I've just discussed, the fact that I'm an atheist, I've discussed it with my employer and he said, "It's fine." They are not interested. He said, "We learn from people we find controversial." I'm talking about Chris Demuth, who employed me and he said controversy, for him, is the means to progress.

Guernica: That seems to be in line with your...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: That seems to be very much in line (laughs) with me. But also, going to a think tank, I didn't become a member of a church (laughs)—or some religious sect.

Guernica: So you don't see AEI as the neoconservative "brotherhood"?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: No, I don't see them as the neoconservative brotherhood. I just see them, some of our scholars, as having very very strong ideas, theories on how and in what direction American foreign policy should go. And in that they are right in the middle of the debate—leading—so I have nothing against that. I think if you want to refute it then you should just polish up your theories; don't complain that they are neocons.

Guernica: David Frum is there—

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Yes, he's a delightful guy.

Guernica: He coined the phrase "Axis of Evil."

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I don't know if he did—

Guernica: He sure did—ask him.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Ok, I will (laughs). If he did he should be proud of it.

Guernica: He should be proud of that?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Well, I think he should be. The mistake that the Bush administration should admit to is not so much that they made the wrong choices. They made the right analysis; they made the right choices. But what they did wrong was the execution of those choices. That was wrong.

Guernica: I'll need you to explain that. I mean, let me contextualize and play devil's advocate a bit. For instance, the John Kerry 2004 campaign argument was that bin Laden was the perpetrator of the crime we were interested in prosecuting, so to speak; he was in Afghanistan; there was a tyrant in Iraq, but without direct ties then. You go to Iraq and kill tens of thousands of Iraqis (Bush acknowledged 30,000 in December over a year ago; reports since then have said hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians); you're recruiting for Al Qaeda, inflaming hatreds, robbing moderates of their reasons and replacing those with hatreds and fears of long-term occupation, and you're creating, affirming a civilizational war to replace the Cold War, extremists against extremists, who look at giant posters of Abu Ghraib and see American hatred, not Muslim hatred—so in this context, the Iraq war was the right decision?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Well, look—that's the Kerry argument. That's not—

Guernica: This isn't the reality?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Not everything in there is clear.

Guernica: Ok, so pick that apart for me.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Let's start a bit earlier. We had up until 1989 a bipolar world. We had a world dominated by the Soviet Union on the one hand, and the Americans on the other hand. They called it the Cold War. In that time, the foreign policy of America was: American interest first. That's natural. In the history of the nation-state—I don't know how much you immerse yourself in the history of nation-states—is to say your own national interest first. America being as powerful as it is, and Soviet Russia being as powerful as it was, would say, "Ok, we need oil from you. What do you have? A dictator. You're not giving us your oil. We're going to remove this dictator and replace him with a dictator who's friendly to our interests."

That attitude was put forth many times; and it was called the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the West. But it wasn't cold. I am someone who comes from the third world. In the third world, the cold war wasn't cold. Millions had been killed. It was a proxy war.

The assumption that the administration made was to think they could go in there for a short while and show the people, "See, we are your friends," and everyone in Iraq would embrace democracy—from tribalism to democracy; from dictatorship to democracy—that was the mistake. There was no commitment to stay for fifty or a hundred years.

Now, after 1989, you get a unipolar world in which the United States is the country. Now, Bill Clinton, whom I admire, was distracted by this whole impeachment process. Republicans forever should be ashamed. Now, a new situation arises, which everyone in America and the West wakes up to after 9/11, that those people, that America, based on the old morality, bin Laden and the mujahideen and so on, had propped up against the Soviet Union, that that policy backfires. Not the next day, but ten years from that moment.

So then the whole debate started, in which the neocons, I still think, have the moral high ground, is to say we have to choose between different sorts of defending ourselves. One is to continue to exploit these nations. The American economy is dependent on oil. Oil is in the Middle East. Do we go out there and fetch it, and remove Saddam and put our own dictator there, or remove this one or that one? Or do we say we can create a mutual interest, we need your resources; the interest of our economy is in your countries, we will take that; but we are not only going to take it, we are also going to give you—your countries are complete disasters—we are going to bring you democracy?

Now, there are a number of arguments for that and there are a number of arguments against that. I would say that approach, in terms of moral standards, is far better than the former one. But if you choose that sort of argument—and that's where the Bush administration went wrong—which is: "Ok, we need your resources; we are going to bring you democracy"—the assumption that the administration made was that they thought that you could go in there for a short while and show the people, "See, we are your friends," and that everyone in Iraq would embrace democracy—from tribalism to democracy; from dictatorship to democracy—that is the mistake that was made. There was no commitment to stay for at least fifty years or a hundred years. That's one.

Second point... and I would say that's the second mistake that was made was: it's still not clear why Iraq first. After 9/11, especially after Afghanistan, Kerry is saying let's go to Afghanistan: I would have said let's do failed states first.

Guernica: Well, staying focused there before going somewhere else is what Kerry was saying, especially as it's devolving again...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: It is devolving again. And that's what I mean by commitment for years and convince the American people that for them to drive their cars, we need to get oil from there and that is how we have to commit to this, not to have terrorism and so on and so forth. Then it is not clear to me why it is that the United States went to Iraq. Iran was preparing nuclear weapons so in the Axis of Evil—Iran, North Korea, and which was the third one—

Guernica: Iraq?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: No, it's an axis—they don't work [together] like that. It was...

Guernica: Why are we forgetting this? I think it was Iraq.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: It was Iraq. Ok. So, in that threesome, I would start...

Guernica: So in your view he used it ["axis"] wrong. Better tell Frum...

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: [laughs] I would say in that axis, I would start with Iran. It was very obvious. And again if you look at what happened on September 11, the act itself—I think there were nineteen boys, sixteen of whom were Saudis. They were not Iraqis. And they were not Iranians. From a declaration of war point of view, and even from a resources point of view, Saudi Arabia was the most logical target to attack. The land that the United States should have occupied on the 12th of September should have been Saudi Arabia. That's where the ideology came from, that's where the money came from, and that's where the men came from who committed the attacks. Again, there are so many inconsistencies, so many mistakes, but the Kerry argument is not satisfactory. And the Bush administration inherited policy choices that had come to them in the form of failed states, where terrorists started to nestle and [take hold of the countries].

When Muhammed got his revelation, he got it in a cave, and he was illiterate. In my story, he's literate and he wakes up in a library. And he gets to see New York and he gets to think that this empire was built by his people.


The Bush administration had inherited a world in which, after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, nuclear material is out of the hands of the state and in the hands of people who are very poor who are selling it to very bad people—this was in the New York Times yesterday—that's a very dangerous world. And so they have to deal with that. The Bush administration had also inherited from the father Bush a notion that, as Americans, you could go into a country as the policemen for just a short while and that you can promise to the American people we are going to Somalia, we are going to Iraq, we are going to Afghanistan, or I don't know—wherever the choice is today—and there will be no American casualties. That's where all the numbers for the casualties will come from.

Now, I'm just trying to explain the shift in morality, in American foreign policy from just "grab and go," which was bad, to "Ok, we are going to set things right there." That shift in itself is a good shift. But the way it happened was catastrophic.

Guernica: That was actually part of Kerry's argument too—was that had they done it differently—had Bush truly built a coalition involving the UN—

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: The UN, no. This is clear, the UN—

Guernica: The argument is that having alienated so many people who could bring the invasion legitimacy, with the UN or other countries coming in after to help stabilize, as in the Balkans—especially with Americans so hated in some parts of that world—that they could never, we could never ourselves maintain stability....

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: That argument is strong as far as concerns Europe, and the Western powers. As far as concerns the members of the United Nations, they would never support it. If you talk to one of the people there and say you are on the list of dictators I am going to come for next, it is obviously not going to happen. So that's the problem with the United Nations; every nation is a member. So you wouldn't get only United Nations going after such an American policy. But yes, there could have been a better transatlantic [coalition] and I think both Republicans and Democrats will have to work [together].

Guernica: What do you make of how insistent neocons have been that invading Iraq was not about oil?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: It was about oil. Then why not invade Sudan or North Korea? The Middle East is interesting because...

Guernica: The public rationales Bush and all put on record were: first security, second humanitarian and democratic assistance.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Well, I think it was just another romantic naive moral adventure.

Guernica: True or false: Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a liberal?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Yes, but not liberal in the communist sense. Classical liberalism—John Stuart Mill.

Guernica: What will your next project be?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I'm working on another book, called Shortcut to Enlightenment, Part 1. I'm waking the prophet Muhammed up in the New York Public Library. When he got his revelation, he got it in a cave, and he was illiterate. In my story, he's literate and he wakes up in a library. And he gets to see New York and he gets to think that this empire was built by his people, his followers; and he discovers a few inconsistencies, such as what he sees as uninhibited capitalism ... So then he thinks, "No, this is not my philosophy, the people who built this are not my followers."

So he goes and finds out what his followers have been up to since his death—and he's very, very surprised. Because they're killing each other, they're targeting everyone else, they're weak. And so then he's very, very sad; and in that saddened state he encounters John Stuart Mill. And so they have a dialogue on the position of women in society and the relationship between men and women.

And in another chapter he has a conversation on the relationship of the individual and the community. And in another chapter he has a dialogue with Karl Popper on the open society and its enemies. And Karl Popper asserts that Islam is an enemy of the open society. And the last chapter is about what happens to the prophet after these dialogues. Does he convert to the ideas of these liberals or does he stick to his own?

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 20 februari 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is trying to spark another revolution

Source: The Washington Times - by Suzanne Fields

Female courage unveiled

A generation ago Betty Friedan wrote "The Feminine Mystique" to expose the misery of American housewives living in what she scorned as a "comfortable concentration camp." Gloria Steinem put on a bunny suit with a fluffy cottontail to dramatize the way the male customers regarded the bunnies at the Playboy Clubs.

Together they enlisted millions of followers and ushered in a feminist revolution on behalf of the most privileged women in the world.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is trying to spark another revolution, one that reveals Western women of that earlier revolution as engaging in child's play. In her memoir, "Infidel," Ms. Hirsi Ali targets the tortured legacy of Islam, the way in which a literal interpretation of the Koran makes it difficult for women in many Muslim cultures to thrive, or even survive. Her odyssey takes her from Somalia in her younger years to Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya, always seeking a larger vision for her life. She endured painful female circumcision at the age of five. As a teenager she took pride and pleasure in wearing the hijab that covers the entire body in black, declaring her faith to all. Her intellectual odyssey finally takes her to Holland, were she studied writers of the Enlightenment and began to understand and appreciate democracy and the freedom to think for herself. She began to question her faith.

The world first heard of Ayaan Hirsi Ali when filmmaker Theo van Gogh was murdered on the streets of Amsterdam by a Moroccan-born Dutch Islamist who pinned a note to Theo van Gogh's chest with a dagger. Ms. Hirsi Ali had worked with Mr. van Gogh on a documentary entitled "Submission," describing how Muslim women are often forced into arranged marriage and beaten if they disobey what the men understand as the teachings of Mohammed.

In Holland she worked as a Somali translator and listened to many accounts of Muslim women who had been beaten, bloodied and raped by the men in their lives. She became an aggressive advocate. She pushed the Dutch government to keep records of "honor killings," and the findings of a pilot project initiated by the Dutch parliament astonished the public. In only eight months in just two small regions of the country, 11 Muslim girls were killed by their families for bringing "dishonor" to the family. (Such offenses range from going out with a non-Muslim, running away from an arranged marriage, or wearing lipstick and modern dress.)

As a Liberal Party member of parliament, she urged the Dutch to quit tolerating the oppression of Muslim women in the name of multiculturalism. This was a hard sell. She urged Muslims who lived where they could enjoy free speech to start a debate to expose inequities inherent in Islam. This was a harder sell. She urged Muslim women to understand that their suffering was not ordained even though they found interpretations in the Koran that sustained it. This was the hardest sell of all.

"People who are conditioned to meekness, almost to the point where they have no minds of their own, sadly have no ability to organize, or will to express their opinion," she writes. She understands their meekness and fear; she travels with bodyguards.

Her friends and colleagues told her that Islam had nothing to do with September 11. She disagreed, and argued that September 11 had everything to do with Islam as the radicals teach it. Islamist violence, she says, has nothing to do with poverty, colonialism or Israel. Mohammed Atta, the leading hijacker, was exactly her age and she knew many men like him. She understood that these terrorists acted as if on behalf of Allah, counting on their brutal violence as validating "a one way ticket to Heaven." She accuses "stupid analysts," especially those who call themselves "Arabists," as spinners of fairy tales, who know nothing about the reality of the Islamists but blindly defend Islam as "a religion of peace and tolerance." Those who look for reasons everywhere but in the Koran to explain Osama bin Laden and his followers are like those who would analyze Lenin and Stalin without reading the works of Karl Marx.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali lives somewhere in Washington and works to expand her forum at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. Each chapter in her book "Infidel" reads like a perverse version of "Tales of the Arabian Nights." Muslims, she insists, can transform their religion into one of peace, but they have a long way to go. Well-meaning friends in the West can help by appreciating the difference between fancy and fact, between myth and reality.

Posted by Sylvia

zondag 18 februari 2007

Islamists' female victims

The Washington Times - by Diana West

Since the American female elected to hop off her pedestal to seek "equality" with the male of the species, Valentine's Day has been seen as a ritualistic throwback to the days when man would routinely strew the ground beneath the pedestal with candy hearts, red roses and assorted chocolates -- at least, metaphorically speaking. That is, ideally, he would do so metaphorically speaking.

But it's the ideal that counts. Valentine's Day, now driven as much by Hallmark as by the shadow of the pedestal, follows from a societal ideal deriving from the chivalric code -- a signal influence on Western civilization -- which celebrated women for nobility and strength of character.

Such origins, however remote in a post-feminist world, put the holiday in the middle of that clash we read about between the West and Islam. Distinctly non-Islamic (St. Valentine was a Christian martyr from pre-Islamic times), it embodies an old-fashioned salute to La Femme that helps distinguish the West from Islam. Where the West dreamed up the pedestal, Islam bought the burqa. Where the West gave liberty and justice a female face, Islam depicted womanhood as a lowly state of fearful passion. Where in the West sexual equality evolved, in Islam sexual inequality remains.

Such inequality makes it all the more astonishing that many of the most fearlessly outspoken dissidents to have emerged from the Islamic world are, in fact, women. I have five favorites, most of whom now live in the United States. Rather than simply enjoy Western freedom, however, they have each elected to bear witness, at great personal risk, to what they know. And for all their differences of experience, religion, culture and nationality, a common theme emerges: terrorism and the attendant dangers to liberal democracy come out of the founding texts and living traditions of Islam.

First comes Bat Ye'or, the historian of the group, who has spent decades documenting the overlooked histories of non-Muslim peoples, the dhimmi, who lived under repressive Islamic law. Such chronicles have contemporary relevance as Islam's influence expands across Europe and into America. Born in Egypt where Jews were persecuted by the government of Abdel Nasser, Bat Ye'or left the country a "stateless" refugee. British by marriage, she has written many books I wish our leaders would read, including "The Dhimmi," "The Decline of Eastern Christianity," and "Eurabia: The Euro-Arab Axis."

Nonie Darwish, daughter of an Egyptian intelligence officer charged with carrying out Nasser's vows to destroy Israel, saw life in Egypt from the Muslim perspective. But she never quite accepted it -- not even after her father became a "shahid," or Muslim martyr, when he was assassinated by Israel. Now a Christian, she has explained her skepticism in "Now They Call Me Infidel: Why I Renounced Jihad for America, Israel and the War on Terror." Her answer is must reading.

So is the cautionary tale Brigitte Gabriel tells in "Because They Hate: A Survivor of Islamic Jihad Warns America." Miss Gabriel, a Maronite Christian, was 10 years old when civil war broke out in 1975 in Lebanon -- a war she explains as an Islamic jihad against Lebanon's ancient Christian community. She spent the next seven years living in a bomb shelter subject to frequent shelling. After her mother was wounded and ministered to in an Israeli hospital, Miss Gabriel saw Jews in a light her government's propaganda had shut out. Another eye-opener.

Then there is Wafa Sultan, the Syrian-born psychiatrist and self-described "secularist" who became renowned last year in an Al Jazeera debate on the "clash of civilizations." ("It is a clash between civilization and backwardness... between human rights on the one hand, and the violation of these rights on the other," she said, among many other things.) She hasn't written a book yet, but everyone should read her transcript online at the Middle Eastern Media Research Institute (MEMRI).

Finally, there is Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Mogadishu-born, former Dutch parliamentarian who is probably the only ex-Muslim critic of Islam to be profiled in Vogue. ("Ali seems like a calm, reasonable woman in an Escada jacket, not at all like the kind of person who would call Muhammad a pervert or a tyrant.") With her autobiography, "Infidel," just out, Ms. Ali continues, calmly and reasonably, to press home politically incorrect points including the notion that rather than hijacking his religion, Osama bin Laden is following it.

Pedestals may be out, but these ladies deserve more than a box of candy. They deserve a podium.

Posted by Sylvia

zaterdag 10 februari 2007

Critic of Islam Finds New Home in U.S.

Source: Las Vegas Sun - By William C. Mann

Aha_4WASHINGTON (AP) - As a child, Ayaan Hirsi Ali fled violence in Somalia with her family. As an adult she fled Kenya to escape an arranged marriage. She left her adopted Holland after she was caught up in political turmoil and had her life threatened. Now Hirsi Ali - a brave critic of Islam to her supporters, a bigot to her critics - has found refuge in the intellectual bastion of leading U.S. conservatives.

Hirsi Ali joined the American Enterprise Institute last September, after a sometimes stormy 14 years in the Netherlands, where she was a member of parliament and became a central figure in two events that jolted the nation.

First, after she wrote a script for a film that depicted naked women with Quranic verses scrawled on their bodies, a Dutch-born Muslim gunned down the filmmaker, Theo van Gogh. A letter threatening Hirsi Ali was left on a knife plunged into van Gogh's chest.

Next, a fight within Hirsi Ali's political party over her Dutch citizenship brought down the government.

These days, Hirsi Ali is promoting her autobiography, "Infidel." It gives a graphic account of how she rejected her faith and the violence she says was inflicted on her in the name of Islam.

"I'm an apostate. That's why the book is called 'Infidel,'" she said in a telephone interview from New York.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations thinks Hirsi Ali's campaign amounts to slander and bigotry.

"We believe that contributes to a growing level of Muslim hatred in America," said the council's communications director, Ibrahim Hooper. "It is unfortunate that she had to bring that kind of hate from Europe to the United States."

Her new colleagues at the American Enterprise Institute laud Ali Hirsi as a brave voice taking on a taboo subject.

"She's very original, a very courageous thinker, and she has independence of mind," said Christina Hoff Sommers, an institute fellow who specializes, among other things, in feminism.

At the institute, Hirsi Ali's studies will involve Islam and women: the relationship between the West and Islam; women's rights in Islam; violence against women propagated by religious and cultural arguments; and Islam in Europe.

Many institute scholars have had a close relationship with the Bush administration. Among its senior fellows are former House Speaker Newt Gingrich; John R. Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations; and Lynne Cheney, wife of Vice President Dick Cheney.

It may seem like odd company for a woman born in a Mogadishu hospital 37 years ago.

"I've been accused of selling out," she said. "I've been told, 'You're hanging the dirty laundry outside.'"

Ali Hirsi's book provides a graphic account of how her grandmother had her subjected to genital mutilation, sometimes called female circumcision, when she was 5 years old. The practice began in Africa, before Islam, but some African Muslim societies still see it as a requirement of religion.

She also describes a time when she was a teenager in Kenya, a majority Christian country with many Muslim Somali refugees, and a Quran teacher cracked her skull after she challenged his insistence that students write Quranic verses on wooden boards and memorize them.

"I started to call him uncivilized and backward and said he lived in the time of ignorance before Islam had come around and this was an outrageous system," she said. The man bashed her head against the wall.

She lied to be accepted as a refugee in Holland, became a Dutch citizen, graduated from prestigious Leiden University and won a seat in the Dutch parliament for a party that was tough on immigration. She became known as a firebrand.

That led to her collaboration with van Gogh on the short television movie, "Submission." In 2004, a man enraged by the movie shot van Gogh seven times and slit his throat on an Amsterdam street, leaving the note threatening Hirsi Ali.

Her lie when she entered the country - she used an assumed name - caught up with her last year. By that time her falsehood was widely known, even to her good friend Rita Verdonk, the immigration minister. Because of a notorious similar case in which Verdonk expelled a young woman, she came under pressure to cancel Hirsi Ali's citizenship. She did, and the six members of the government's smallest coalition party resigned in protest. The government fell, although Verdonk had used a technicality to restore Hirsi Ali's Dutch citizenship.

Considering van Gogh's death, and her continuing outspokenness about Islam, Hirsi Ali said she no longer can feel safe without bodyguards in the presence of even moderate Muslims.

Unlike many world leaders, including Bush, who say Muslim terrorists are distorting the peaceful Islamic religion, Hirsi Ali said the terrorists in large part have truth on their side: The violence is in the Quran and the hadith, the traditions of the Prophet Muhammad, she said.

Islam today, she said, "is not my grandmother's amulet-wearing, superstitious sort of Islam that is just comforting for the believer." Today's Islam sees the world as its enemy, she said. "And you wage war against your enemies."

The Council on American-Islamic Relations' Hooper contends that she exaggerates to further her agenda.

"She is just one more Muslim-basher on the lecture circuit," he said.

Posted by Sylvia

dinsdag 6 februari 2007

Media Respond to Ayaan Hirsi Ali's Infidel

Source: American Enterprise Institute

In her autobiography, Infidel, AEI resident fellow Ayaan Hirsi Ali recounts her extraordinary transition from a third-world upbringing to her current status as one of Time's 100 most influential people in the world. 

The following selections provide links to press and media coverage around the world, anticipating the release of Infidel:

"Enter the Dutch 'Infidel,' Faithful to Herself," by Laurie Goodstein
Interview in the New York Times, February 4, 2007 

"The Fight for Muslim Women: A Feisty Memoir from a Controversial Champion of Female Rights," by Anne Applebaum
Book review in the Washington Post, February 4, 2007

"Out of Europe: Infidel, by Ayaan Hirsi Ali," by Luuk van Middelaar
Book review in the Wall Street Journal, February 3, 2007

"Taking the Fight to Islam," by Andrew Anthony
Book review in the Observer (London), February 4, 2007

"My Life as an Infidel," by Penny Wark
Book review and interview in the Times (London), January 31, 2007

"Dangerous Odyssey of Muslim Voltaire: Ayaan Hirsi Ali Is a Rare Public Example of Moral Courage for the West," by Rebecca Weisser
Article in the Australian, February 3, 2007

"Who Says 'Ladies First'?" by Deroy Murdock
Book review on National Review Online, January 29, 2007

"A Muslim Woman, Her Leadership and Its Costs," by Sol Schindler
Book review in the Washington Times, January 28, 2007

"Hirsi Ali: La Voluntad del Alma no Se Puede Coaccionar"
Book review on ABC News (Spain), January 22, 2007

"Una Mujer Frente a la Intolerancia," by Yolanda Monge
Interview in El Pais (Spain), January 7, 2007

Posted by Sylvia

maandag 5 februari 2007

Taking the fight to Islam

Source: The Observer - Guardian Unlimited - by Andrew Anthony

In 1989, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali Muslim, supported the fatwa against Salman Rushdie. But on moving to Europe her views changed and she turned against Islam. Two years ago she fled Holland after the brutal murder of her artistic collaborator Theo van Gogh. Who is this fierce critic who lives under the constant threat of death?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is not the only critic of Islam who lives with round-the-clock protection. But surely none wears their endangered status with greater style. The Dutch Somali human-rights campaigner looks like a fashion model and talks like a public intellectual. Tall and slender with rod-straight posture and a schoolgirl smile, she is a thinker of stunning clarity, able to express ideas in her third language with a precision that very few could achieve in their first. This combination of elegance and eloquence would be impressive in any circumstances. Under threat of death, it is nothing short of incredible.

A little over two years ago, a second-generation Dutch Moroccan by the name of Mohammed Bouyeri sent a letter to Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Aside from the destruction of Holland and Europe, Bouyeri called for the death of Hirsi Ali, whom he described as a 'fundamentalist unbeliever' and a 'soldier of evil'. His macabre method of delivering the correspondence was to impale the note in the chest of the filmmaker and outspoken maverick, Theo van Gogh, having already shot him eight times and cut his throat through to the spine. Van Gogh had made a short film with Hirsi Ali called Submission 1, in which lines from the Koran, detailing a man's right to beat his wife, were superimposed on the body of an actress portraying a victim of domestic violence.

The murder took place in broad daylight during the morning rush hour in a busy Amsterdam high street. Though the letter was addressed to Hirsi Ali, it was intended for a wider audience. Its message, while incoherent and rambling, was shockingly simple: say the wrong thing about Islam and nowhere is safe for you. It was medieval justice meted out in one of the most liberal and modern cities in the world. The killer, it turned out, was part of a cell linked to a fundamentalist network that stretched across Europe.

The murder of van Gogh had the unintended effect of bringing Hirsi Ali global recognition. While she was whisked away by Dutch security to an army base and on to a 'dismal motel' near an industrial estate in Massachusetts, cut off from the rest of the planet, the rest of the planet became suddenly very interested in her. The subject of numerous profiles, she was named the following year one of the '100 Most Influential People of the World' by Time magazine.

In Holland, though, Hirsi Ali was already both famous and infamous. In Amsterdam a few days after the murder, I spoke to Muslims on the street about the killing. The majority blamed Hirsi Ali. 'This woman is the cause of all the problems, telling lies about Islam,' one told me. 'If she hadn't sucked van Gogh into this, he'd still be alive today.'

The reason Bouyeri killed van Gogh rather than Hirsi Ali was that she was already under police protection. Two years before van Gogh's slaying, Hirsi Ali had called Islam 'backward' in a TV debate and was forced into hiding. Her subsequent media profile encouraged the Dutch Liberal Party to offer Hirsi Ali a position as an MP. She served with some distinction, focusing on issues such as domestic violence and female genital mutilation - the sort of campaigns that used to be part of frontline feminism but which had become increasingly neglected owing to multicultural sensitivities.

I met Hirsi Ali at her publisher's office in central London last week. Dutch bodyguards follow her everywhere she goes, and reportedly in Britain Special Branch officers afford further protection, though neither were in evidence. She looked as sharp as a pin in a black trouser suit, even if she was jet-lagged and tired, having flown in from her new home in the United States.

Last year Hirsi Ali, the most assimilated of all Dutch immigrants, was rejected by her adopted homeland twice over. Residents in her apartment block gained a court ruling, under European Human Rights law, stipulating that her presence placed her neighbours at risk, and she was duly evicted. At the same time a TV documentary alleged the MP had provided false information on her original asylum application. Hirsi Ali had admitted as much many times in interviews but nonetheless a minister in her own party decided to revoke her citizenship. In a farcical series of events, the citizenship was reinstated and the government collapsed. Meanwhile Hirsi Ali moved to Washington DC to take up a post at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think-tank.

She says she feels at home in America, a nation of immigrants. The move was only the latest, and perhaps least dramatic, in a lifetime of peripatetic reinventions. Born in Somalia to a resistance leader, she was exiled to Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia and Kenya. In Nairobi she joined the Muslim Brotherhood and in 1989 she believed that Salman Rushdie should be killed for having blasphemed the prophet. How she went from devout believer to fearless opponent, from a loyal clan member to being renounced by her family, from Africa to Europe, and from blind faith to unbending reason is the compelling story she tells in her new autobiography entitled, with characteristic bluntness, Infidel

Strictly speaking Hirsi Ali is not an infidel but an apostate, a designation that in the Koran warrants the punishment of death. The distinction is not without significance. In a poll published last week, one in three British Muslims in the 16-24 age group agreed that 'Muslim conversion is forbidden and punishable by death'.

This figure comes as no surprise to Hirsi Ali. She argues that Europe's determination to maintain cultural difference will lead increasing numbers of alienated Muslims to seek the unambiguity of fundamentalism. Liberals, she says, have shirked the responsibility of making the case for their own beliefs. They need to start speaking out in favour of the values of secular humanism. And they need to make clear that they are not compatible with religious bigotry and superstition. 'You have to say that if you want the Prophet Muhammad to be your moral guide in the 21st century and you are aware of the choices the Prophet Muhammad made towards unbelievers, women, homosexuals, do you really think you're going to succeed? You will get into some sort of cognitive dissonance if you at the same time want to adapt to a life here.'

Without an open and robust critique of the nature of the prophet's teachings, she goes on, 'these clerics proselytising radical Islam make much, much more sense. Because the radical Muslims say that democracy is bad, and the young Muslim mind says "Why is it bad?". Because the Koran says it's bad. That makes more sense than democracy is good, the rights of individuals must be observed but you can also hang on to what the Koran says. I say stop that and appeal to and challenge young minds.'

When it comes to words, Hirsi Ali is not one to look for the mincer. She speaks in a language that makes no concessions to the softening euphemisms of political correctness. Those immersed in circumspection and ever vigilant to the contemporary sin of offence are bound to ask themselves if she's allowed to say what she says. In this respect her predicament is reminiscent of the moment in Basic Instinct when Sharon Stone lights a cigarette under interrogation in a police station. She's told that's it's non-smoking environment and she replies: 'So arrest me.' Hirsi Ali's life is already in jeopardy. She's long past the point of polite restraint.

Some observers find her forthright approach refreshing and, indeed, intoxicating, but many recoil from her unadorned conviction. Writing in the New York Review of Books, the historian Timothy Garton Ash described Hirsi Ali as a 'slightly simplistic Enlightenment fundamentalist'. Last year when Garton Ash chaired a discussion with Hirsi Ali at the ICA, he seemed both to admire the incisiveness of her quietly spoken logic and to wince at its unshakeable conclusions.

'For him,' Hirsi Ali laughs, 'the Enlightenment is complex. For me, it isn't. There's nothing complex about it.' A student of 17th- and 18th-century political ideas, she doesn't mean that she thinks the Enlightenment was some kind of uniform philosophical movement. The simplicity, for her, is the legacy of the Enlightenment, the things we take for granted about Western sociopolitical culture: the rule of law, the rights of the individual, freedom of expression. To Hirsi Ali these are bedrock precepts that should not be compromised in the name of cultural diversity.

Most of the political classes would agree with her in principle but like to take a more nuanced, and often evasive, stance in practice. She was one of the few intellectuals, for example, who rushed to support the Danes in the cartoon crisis last year. If you believe in the right of freedom of expression, she says, you have to defend that right. In a debate a few years back, Hirsi Ali challenged the Swiss Muslim academic Tariq Ramadan, something of a poster boy for the multicultural left, to be more consistent and clear-cut in what he said. Was the Koran the word of God or a man-made text that was out of date? Ramadan responded by questioning Hirsi Ali's adversarial style. 'The question,' he said, 'is whether you want to change the mentality or please the audience.'

Does her bald delivery not further alienate Muslims, forcing them to cling to traditional values? Hirsi Ali is too smooth of skin and composure to bristle, but it is obviously an accusation she finds irritating.

'Tariq Ramadan is filled with contempt for Muslims because he believes they have no faculties of reason,' she replies in a beguilingly friendly tone, as though she had remarked that he had an excellent taste in shirts. 'If I say that terrorism is created in the name of Islam suddenly they take up terrorism? He gives me so much more power than I have. Why don't my remarks make him turn to terrorism? Because he's above that. Like many believers in multiculturalism, he puts himself on a higher plane. The other thing is that it's not about your style, it's about your content. Are my propositions right or wrong? Is it social, cultural and religious beliefs that cause economic backwardness or is it the other way round? My take on this is the cultural and religious elements are far more important to look at. That is what we should be looking at and not how I say it.'

All the same, it's fair to say that her audience is made up largely of white liberal males, rather than the Muslim women she wishes to liberate. In Holland, a female Muslim politician named Fatima Elatik told me: 'She's appealing to Dutch society, to middle-class Dutch-origin people. She talks about the emancipation of women but you can't push it down their throats. If I could talk to her, I would tell her that she needs to get a couple of Muslim women around her.'

Hirsi Ali dismisses this as 'a very silly remark. I started off in a position where none of these women were visible anyway except as proxies to be put forward to get subsidies from the government. Just keep singing we're discriminated against. No Muslim women are allowed into this debate by their own groups. So it's way too early. By the time these women are assertive enough, I won't be around. It will be one generation on.'
She also argues that it's important to address white liberals because they need to overcome the self-censoring effects of post-colonial guilt. 'If you want to feel guilty,' snaps Hirsi Ali, 'feel guilty that you didn't bring John Stuart Mill and left us only with the Koran. It doesn't help to say my forefathers oppressed your forefathers, and remain guilty forever.'

There is no zealot like the convert, goes the old saying, and many commentators have concluded that Hirsi Ali is a prime secular example. 'In a pattern familiar to historians of political intellectuals,' wrote Garton Ash, 'she has gone from one extreme to the other'. The word on Hirsi Ali is that she is 'traumatised' by her upbringing and her subsequent adoption of a Western lifestyle. It's the word that Ian Buruma uses to describe her condition in his book Murder In Amsterdam

Needless to say, she finds this appraisal of her ideas patronising. It was, she says, partly in an effort to combat this impression that she wrote Infidel. 'People can see that there is not much trauma in my story.'

That depends on what you think constitutes trauma. The account of being held down by the legs, aged five, and having her clitoris and inner labia cut off with a pair of scissors will certainly alarm many readers. 'I heard it,' she writes, 'like a butcher snipping the fat off a piece of meat.' The fierce beatings she receives at the hands of her embittered mother, and the fractured skull inflicted on her by a brutal religious teacher, these too would leave psychological scars on most of us.

But as Hirsi Ali writes, they were normal events in her childhood and in the lives of people she knew. Death and illness were commonplace in Africa, and by African standards she lived well. There is nothing melodramatic in Hirsi Ali's prose. It's matter-of-fact and also, as she is quick to point out, entirely subjective. It's possible, she says, that her family will remember things differently. 'But it's my story and if you undertake such an endeavour you have to be honest. Usually people make excuses for their culture and family etcetera. I could tell the story that we in the Third World have things that the West could learn from, which is obviously true, but that isn't what I wanted to show. My argument is that western liberal culture is superior to Islamic tribal group culture.'

Hirsi Ali was born Ayaan Hirsi Magan 38 years ago in Mogadishu, Somalia. Her father, Hirsi Magan Isse, was a leading figure in the Somali Salvation Democratic Front. He was imprisoned by the Somali dictator Siad Barre during much of Hirsi Ali's childhood, and thereafter she lived in exile with her mother and brother and sister, largely estranged from her father, who remarried. In Kenya she gained a limited amount of freedom from the strict Somali clan system, though its extended network continued to circumscribe her life.

She was a good but not exceptional student at school in Nairobi and went on to attend a secretarial course. Her mother and religious instructors brought her up to distrust unbelievers and to hate Jews, who, she was told, were responsible for all the problems of the world. Her mother did not want her daughters to work and in 1992 her father announced that he had arranged a marriage to a distant cousin living in Canada. Hirsi Ali maintains that she had no desire to marry the man but also, given family and clan honour, no choice. 'I was condemned to a predictable fate,' she writes, 'that of being a subservient wife to a stranger.'

En route to her husband in Canada she stopped over in Germany, and from there she went to Holland where, in a sudden surge of self-empowerment, she claimed asylum. She was told that running away from an arranged marriage was no reason to be awarded refugee status, so she made up a story about fleeing persecution in Somalia. It was then that she changed her name to Ali, the better to elude her infuriated clan.

She marvelled at the free room and board and health care provided by the Dutch state: '...all these people were busy helping you, and this for foreigners. How on earth did they treat their own clans?' Not all her fellow refugees were quite so appreciative. Many complained of racism and saw themselves as victims of European imperialism. 'The Europeans had colonised Somalia,' writes Hirsi Ali in characterising this sense of grievance, 'which was why we all had no qualifications and were in this mess to begin with. I thought that was so clearly nonsense. We had torn ourselves apart, all on our own.'

Little by little, she dropped the trappings of her culture and religion. First she removed her headscarf, then she wore jeans, rode a bicycle, fraternised with Dutch people, and with Jews, went to a pub, later drank a glass of wine, and eventually she met and moved in with a Dutch man. But her younger sister, who had been more of a rebel, joined Hirsi Ali in Holland and grew increasingly religious, to the point of psychosis. She returned to Africa and died following a miscarriage.

Working as a translator for Dutch social services, Hirsi Ali came across a hidden world of domestic violence, honour killings and of women entombed in the home, unable to speak Dutch or English and with no idea about the society in which they lived. 'While the Dutch were generously contributing money to international aid organisations,' she writes, 'they were also ignoring the silent suffering of Muslim women and children in their own backyard.'

She took a degree in political science at Leiden university - no mean feat for a refugee without any previous academic ambition - after which she became a researcher with a Labour party think tank, looking at immigration. By now her belief in Islam was precariously loose but she still held on to the idea that she was a Muslim. But the events of 11 September 2001 changed that. 'The little shutter at the back of my mind, where I pushed all my dissonant thoughts, snapped open after the 9/11 attacks, and it refused to close again. I found myself thinking that the Koran is not a holy document. It is a historical record, written by humans. It is one version of events, as perceived by the men who wrote it 150 years after the Prophet died. And it is a very tribal and Arab version of events. It spreads a culture that is brutal, bigoted, fixated on controlling women, and harsh in war.'

She decided that what the Muslim world needed was its own Voltaire. And after she wrote an article outlining her ideas and concerns, some readers decided that they had found their new Spinoza, the 17th-century Jewish refugee from the Inquisition who came to Holland and founded the Enlightenment.

No doubt Hirsi Ali's critics would find the comparison hard to stomach. Spinoza was against religious persecution, whereas Hirsi Ali, say her opponents, is an arch exponent of Islamophobia. One such critic has written a stinging attack on Hirsi Ali in this month's Times Literary Supplement. Maria Golia, an Egyptian-based academic, writes: 'Hirsi Ali seems far more interested in indicting Islam than helping damaged women, whose horror stories she conveniently trots out whenever she needs to bludgeon home a point.'

She takes Hirsi Ali to task on female genital mutilation which, she points out, is not an Islamic practice. Hirsi Ali wanted the Dutch government to institute medical checks on young girls in vulnerable circumstances. Golia calls the idea 'institutionalised violence' and prefers an approach that 'requires understanding of context and coalition-building, not to mention compassion and subtlety'.

It should be said that in Infidel Hirsi Ali specifically states that FGM predates Islam, is not limited to Islam and that it is not practised in many Islamic countries. However, she adds, it is very often 'justified in the name of Islam'. Indeed one need only look at the advice of the leading Egyptian cleric, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, who is considered one of the most influential scholars in Islam. Qaradawi has been promoted by London mayor Ken Livingstone as a moderate voice, but on his Islam-online website he writes of female circumcision: 'Anyhow, it is not obligatory, whoever finds it serving the interest of his daughters should do it, and I personally support this under the current circumstances in the modern world.'

She characterises the manner in which liberals sidestep such details as a confusion of facts and strategy. 'Some people will accept that Islam is backward but they're not going to say that because Muslims will be offended. "We want them to become liberals, so we're just going to trick them into a secular humanistic way of thinking."' At this she lets out a giggle, as if tickled by the absurdity of the idea. 'But people are aware of what's going on. That's why many Muslims are suspicious of liberals. Because they know they are not being taken seriously.'

Perhaps a more telling symbol of the growing cultural gap between mainstream Western society and doctrinaire Islam is the veil. Again Hirsi Ali does not look around for a fence to sit on. 'The veil,' she says, 'is to show that women are responsible for the sexual self-control of men.' It's a surgical observation, cutting right through to the bone of the issue. She goes on to note that in all communities where the veil is actively observed boys are not taught to restrain themselves. 'They look upon all those who are not veiled as women who are looking for sexual contact and they just go about molesting and being a nuisance.'

But what about those women who say that the veil has nothing to do with sex, that is a demonstration of their love of Allah.

'That is a very small group of women?'

But are you to deny them their right to dress as they please?

'No,' she insists, 'I don't want to deny them that and I don't want anyone to deny them that.'

Her solution is secular civic space - for example in schools and government offices - in which all religion is removed. The French model then? That's hardly been a great success. 'It's never been tried,' she counters. 'The French have voiced it but never implemented it. They've created these zones outside Paris where people from Third World countries are put together and excluded from the secular neutral model. They've preached secular Republicanism and practised multiculturalism, that's the whole French hypocrisy.'
Hirsi Ali doesn't really do small talk. She's not interested in talking about her private life, whether she is in a relationship, how often she thinks about the danger she is in, her everyday life in America, or any of the sort of personal details that fascinate people who want to know what it's like to live life under threat of death. This is partly because she is not supposed to give away any information that may aid potential attackers. But more than that, it's because she really only wants to talk about ideas. To some readers, especially Muslim readers, it may seem that she only wants to talk about one idea: the danger of Islam.

Certainly, it's a major preoccupation. But for all her clinical rhetoric, Hirsi Ali is not really interested in carving the world into two blocks of clashing civilisations. At heart she is a universalist, a passionate believer in human rights. If you believe in equality for women, then you must believe in equality for all women, regardless of their culture or religion. Her deepest wish is to allow the world's oppressed peoples, especially women, to share in the fruits of reason. 'And to do that,' she says, 'someone's got to shake the tree.'

As she sees it, Islamic society is inimical to development. 'So everyone wants to move here, and they want to make this place look like there. We shouldn't cling to the customs and beliefs that caused us to move out in the first place. Unfortunately people in the Third World think that just by moving house they leave their misery behind. And that's what the integration debate is about: if you take those values with you and come here, it's not going to change your misery.'

This is in essence what Tony Blair said a few weeks back when he spoke about a 'duty to integrate', and suggested that those people looking to move to Britain who didn't agree with British values should perhaps think about not coming. To some, Blair's comments were tantamount to a crude 'send 'em back' agenda. This in itself is perhaps reason to be thankful for Hirsi Ali. She knows what life is like without the benefit of the freedoms and rights that Europe has established and she, at least, is not afraid to emphasise how crucial it is not to lose them.

But of course in voicing her opinion in the style she does, she risks lumping together over a billion people from different nations, cultures and traditions as a single 'problem'. For Hirsi Ali, the problem is one of self-definition. If Muslims want to assert a religious text as the basis of their public identity, then they have to accept public debate of that text and its ideas with all the discomfort and offence that may involve.

In truth there is probably room for both what Hirsi Ali calls 'Tariq Ramadan gymnastics' and her more uncompromising approach. Though it may say something for our incurable self-loathing that it is Hirsi Ali, the most fervent admirer of European liberalism, that we've effectively sent packing.

Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali is published by Free Press in paperback, £12.99.

Posted by Lucida

vrijdag 2 februari 2007

My life as an infidel

Source: Times on line - by Penny Wark

In fear for her life, anti-Islam Somali Ayaan Hirsi Ali tells our correspondent she regrets writing the film that led to the killing of director Theo Van Gogh

The girl at the other end of a long room says she is cold. Shy and nervous too, I note. She’s going to get some socks, and disappears. She’s slender, understated, almost childlike in her physical uncertainty. When she returns she is wearing well-worn slippers beneath her jeans and she curls her feet under her on a sofa.
This is Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the world-famous human rights campaigner, or preposterous critic of Islam, depending on your point of view. Time magazine named her as one of itsr 100 most influential people in 2005, recognising that her demands for reform of the faith in which she was brought up had placed the issue on the international agenda. In 2004 she had written the screenplay for Submission Part 1, a short film designed to expose the subjugation of women within the Muslim faith. Two months after it was shown, her fellow film-maker, Theo Van Gogh, was shot dead by an Islamic extremist. The assailant used a knife to pin a note to his chest saying that Hirsi Ali would be next.

Subsequent publicity has painted Hirsi Ali as a formidably strong woman, fearless, uncompromising and almost one-dimensional: a designer-clad cipher who repeats her mantra ad infinitum without apparent emotion. She is against injustice done in the name of Islam, whether it is honour killings or circumcision and other forms of brutalisation to women. She is intolerant of Muslim fundamentalism. So it is curious to meet her and see that there is vulnerability beneath the public persona, or to use her language, to find that the reality does not entirely match the image.

The restricted view of her has come about for several reasons. Since 2002, when she first received death threats, she has been guarded by security teams, and until now we have known only the outline of her life: her migratory upbringing as a Muslim in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya, her circumcision at the age of 5, her flight from an arranged marriage to Holland where she sought asylum, her rejection of Islam, her emerging campaigning which led her to become a Dutch MP, the controversy around Submission and her subsequent rejection by the Dutch authorities.

Now she has filled in the gaps by writing Infidel, her autobiography, in which we learn of the forces that made her. I ask her to summarise them in a few words and this is what she says: “Moving — a true nomad. Bigotry between the clans and the Somalis and non-Somalis, the Muslims and non-Muslims. Resilience — no sulking, no pouting, giddy up, get going. No emotions or showing emotions. You are required to behave in a certain way and as soon as the door closes and you’re in a private sphere, you relax.

“So, my mother, she’s screaming and shouting and breaking the furniture, but as soon as someone knocks on the door we all go, chin up, pretend that nothing was happening. This is one of the most salient things: the perfect face for the outside world, that sense of dignity. Resilience and dignity, those were the things.”

This is very African, and it explains a lot. She speaks softly, but so quickly that when I transcribe the tape of our conversation I have to slow it down to catch every word. Most questions she answers with polemic, but I know what she believes so I try to disarm her by saying that she doesn’t look 37. It is true, she wears no make-up and she looks more like 17; the strain of the past few years has not taken its toll on her face. “Yes, but it does take it on the mind,” she replies. “I find it easier to let go, not make a fuss about small things. Every time we are put in a position to think about life and death it becomes relative to make a fuss about not getting your coffee right.”

Does she ever do anything frivolous, I ask. “Yes!” she says with a little snuffly giggle. “A very good social life.” Thank goodness for that.

What she can tell me about her private life is limited by her security. We are on the East Coast of the US; I am asked not to be more specific, and when The Times photographer arrives the guards supervise his work to ensure that the location can not be traced. What we can talk about is Hirsi Ali’s past.

The middle of three children, she grew up with her mother, an austere and depressed woman whose moods were not helped by the almost constant absence of her husband, a rebel leader. Hirsi Ali was born in Somalia, where aggression was regarded as a survival tactic and your identity revolved around your clan and family. As a Muslim, she learnt too that it was her duty to submit to men, and to Allah.

At the same time, Allah was a mysterious force to which she never entirely related, partly perhaps because of her family’s habit of never explaining things to children. When she was circumcised, at 5 with scissors and no anaesthetic, she was told only that this would keep her pure, and in adolescence she came to believe that submitting to God involved the suppression of her sexuality and the self. She asked questions and argued; this theme is always there and would affect her relationships in adult life. Books, from Jane Austen to crime thrillers, told her of a world of freedom, adventure, individuality and romance and she wanted to fall head over heels in love, but when she was 22 and her father arranged her marriage to a man she regarded as a peabrain, running away was a logical step.

In the Netherlands she felt like Alice in Wonderland. She had to learn to tell the time (she had used the sun) and swiftly discovered that unless she could show that she was in fear of persecution she would not be gran-ted asylum. So she lied, saying she was fleeing war-torn Somalia (she had come from Kenya), was granted Dutch citizenship and began to enjoy a world that she perceived as a liberal and tolerant paradise: trains ran on time, there were gays in the Cabinet, she noted. She studied political science at university, and as she lived a Western life she slowly came to understand that a moral framework was possible without religion.

“In the past few years I was in Holland I transgress,” she says. “I have a boyfriend with whom I sleep without being married to him. I engage and become good friends, intimate friends, with unbelievers. I become good friends with Jews, who are a certain sort of unbeliever. Every time a little voice in my head tells me I’m sinning, I succeed in pushing it behind me until the eleventh of September. And it’s like a day of judgment when you’re pushed into this. You have to make a choice. That gap between self image and reality, it’s too wide and it’s bound to crack.”

So Hirsi Ali began to speak out, but while other commentators took care not to say anything that might offend Islamic fundamentalists, she let rip, knowing that her words would be all the more inflammatory because they came from within the faith.

“I’m very unambiguous: there’s something in our faith, in Islam, that makes it legitimate to kill people who are Jews, who are sinners. From acknowledging that, the change will come. My contribution is to say we can make it [the change] less bloody and we can make it certain, but we have to face changing the fundamental principles of the faith, starting with the concept of Hell.

“I know thousands of Muslims who don’t want to kill other people but they are afraid that if they disagree with bin Laden, who quotes directly from the Koran, that they disagree with God and the Koran and the Prophet. That has put a large number of Muslims in a mindset of cognitive dissonance. Deep denial. Meanwhile they’re teaching their children to obey Allah, to be true to the Koran, and his footsteps. It’s that that I want to tackle.”

Her boldness has been noted many times, and I have no doubt that she is a woman of considerable conscience. In person she has an unsettling presence: a combination of little giggles, gentle smiles, and exclamation marks that soften the hard-line proseltysing. Did she understand what she was getting into? Surely she knew that writing the words of the Prophet on the naked bodies of the women she filmed for Submission was as blasphemous as you can get? If so, did she seek to provoke, and did she recognise that what she was doing was dangerous, to herself and to others?

In her first book, The Caged Virgin, she wrote that she did not write Submission to provoke, but now the nuance has changed: “Yes, that it would be seen as provocative, that I had seen. I also knew that some people would see it as a reason to kill, and I discussed that with Theo Van Gogh. Throughout. I was under protection at the time. He had no protection and I told him, listen, just don’t put your name on there, this is going to lead to trouble.

“Theo said, ‘I’m not really a target for them. You are the one who is at risk.’ How convinced he was, I’m not sure afterwards because he had come to America to find out if he could move abroad.”

Does she wish she hadn’t made Submission? “Yes. When Theo was killed I wish I hadn’t made it. If I could prevent it in any way . . .”

The guards had left the room in which we sit but they return; she is used to talking with witnesses. “I wasn’t surprised by the reaction of Muslims. I’d been a Muslim myself and I’d reacted in the same way when Islam was criticised. Where I lived before, Kenya and Ethiopia, I would never dream of saying that the Prophet is a pervert and a tyrant [she said this in an interview published in 2003], and if I did I would have been down very quickly. This was not the case in Holland. You have a justice system and you have law and order. It is one of the most liberal nations in the world. So I expected there to be some sort of debate, and they [Muslims] would say they are very angry and some people would say, well, we’ll get used to it.”

What happened instead is that some young Muslims started to make death threats against her. She didn’t take them seriously — “because it’s Holland” — but the Dutch Government responded by putting her under heavy protection, shutting her up and quelling the political unrest she had caused, as well as keeping her alive. This lasted for a lonely and miserable 75 days when she was denied e-mail, allowed phone calls only in the presence of guards, kept in military bases and often didn’t know where she was: a series of privations about which she is ungracious.

“Could I foresee that?” she says of the death threats. “Not in precisely the way it went, but there was going to be a reaction, yes. Of course it [what I’m doing] is dangerous because it tackles age-old convictions and before you can change that there is some danger. But that’s not an argument not to change it.”

It seems, then, that she misjudged the Netherlands, assuming that because it was tolerant, she could speak freely without causing unrest. She was naive. Does she believe that the forceful way she has presented her criticism of Islam is the only way to have the debate? “I’ve been very me in my approach,” she responds with another of her snuffly giggles. “What I find disturbing is all the talk about the style in which a debate is presented. It is beside the point.” She says a lot more on this but fails to flesh out her argument, showing only that she refuses to compromise. This much evidently became apparent to the Dutch authorities who clumsily revoked her citizenship last year, removing the woman some see as an icon, and others regard as a source of trouble.

Her book is fascinating, but strange too because while the first half — which tells of her family life — is open and emotional, her descriptions of her years in the Netherlands are remote, circumspect. So there is a strong sense of where she has come from, and a less tangible one of where she is now or where she is going. Now an atheist, she comments that living without rules is harder than living with them. “It would be much easier if I just had road maps telling us do this, do that. Halal, haram.” I imagine too that security robs you of the sense of being rooted and suggest that she is protecting people in the Netherlands, and that the recent sense of loneliness reflects the emotional hole within her that comes from being apart from her family, and her father’s rejection of her.

“All that is true,” she says. “The first half is very much in the past and I had emotionally, mentally, dealt with it. What happened after 2002 I haven’t really dealt with yet. I’m still living it.”

It is ironic that a woman who has spent much of her life asking questions and seeking freedom has sacrificed her physical freedom by speaking out. There are moments when she looks over her shoulder, she concedes, but the next day the sun shines: she is an optimist, she insists. The real sacrifice, she suggests, is the loss of her family.

“That started off by taking a train [to the Netherlands] and I know I caused a rupture. My father recovered from that in ’97 when he decided to forgive me. We became intimate again as long as we avoided the subject of marriage! Then in 2000 — ‘She’s on the TV again and she says Islam is bad for you.’ Then he gets another call — ‘She’s been threatened.’ He just doesn’t get it so he calls and says, ‘What are you doing?’ “I tell him, ‘Dad, there are people who beat their wives in the name of Islam’. He said, fight for the rights of women as much as you want, but keep Islam out of it. Instead I put Islam at the centre of the debate and that puts him in a position where he has to make a choice between his daughter and his faith. His choice up to now has been to put down the telephone when I call. I think he’s just full of grief and doesn’t know what to do.

“That is probably the highest price — intimacy in all its forms, whether it’s rushing out to get some milk or the relationship with my father, or with a man. This is a huge price I have to pay. I tell you it’s worth it.”

She is able to have a relationship, she says, but can say no more. Children? She shrugs. “I can only say, well I want to have children, but I can’t say I’m going to have them.”

She works for a Washington think-tank, and is writing another book she says no one else would publish. She has never seen herself as a politician, she says. “For that you need a host of skills I just don’t have, don’t even want to have.” This is true: diplomacy, marketing, a certain slippery flexibility come to mind. I’m not sure she has the ego either. What she does have is the ability to bring down the emotional shutters, which can be useful only when you are cut off from your old life and, friends apart, live through your rhetoric.

The Infidel: The Story Of My Enlightenment by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Free Press £12.99. Available from Times BooksFirst for £11.69. 0870 1608080. www.timesonline.co.uk/booksfirst

Posted by Sylvia

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maandag 29 januari 2007

Martin Luther King Award

Martin_luther_king_award

Read more about the celebration here...

Video of Ayaan Hirsi Ali's speech on receiving the Martin Luther King Award

(bron)

Posted by Sylvia

zondag 28 januari 2007

Infidel

Source: Washington Times

InfidelTitel: Infidel
Autor: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Free Press, $26, 367 pages, illus.

- Reviewed by Sol Schindler *)

How does a pious young Muslim girl who loves and obeys her parents turn into a T-shirt-blue-jeans-wearing vocal feminist? Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who was that young girl, has written about the process in a book called "Infidel," a term some Muslims have used to describe her.

    Ayaan was the daughter of a proud, strong woman who divorced and later married the man of her choice, the charismatic Hirsi Magan. He had just returned from the United States with a degree from Columbia in anthropology, and was putting his considerable talent and energy into making a new, democratic Somalia. Thus when Siad Barre led a coup and became dictator, Mr. Magan was outraged and began working against him. In time he was arrested and thrown into prison, leaving his wife and three small children in care of her mother.
    When Ayaan was five, with her father in prison and her mother traveling, her grandmother, very much a traditionalist, decided it was time for the children to be circumcised. Male circumcision is mandatory in Islam, but female circumcision, though practiced in several Muslim countries, is not and is unknown in the larger Muslim countries of Central and South Asia.

    Mr. Magan being what was known as a liberal in those days was against it, but he was in prison. The grandmother, daughter of a nomad, believed in djins, evil spirits and demons, and felt it was time to make her grandchildren pure. Female circumcision consists of the excision of the clitoris and inner labia, with the outer labia being sewn together with a small opening for urination, a very bloody and painful operation that became etched in the memory of the small child.

    In time Mr. Magan was able to escape from prison with the help of a friendly official (later executed for his act of friendship) and took refuge in Ethiopia. From there he flew to Saudi Arabia where his family could join him.

    Mr. Magan secured employment and the family for once had ample funds, but again happiness was elusive. He was discontent because the Saudis constrained all political activity although he persisted in secrecy; the mother could not go anywhere without a male escort, inhibiting mobility; while the author resented being called aswad abda, black slave girl, by her Arab teachers. These problems ended when the family was given 24 hours to leave the country and they took refuge in Ethiopia, and later Kenya.
    In Nairobi, Ayaan matured with the usual teenage problems, but the pivotal point in her life was when her father selected the man to be her husband. Osman Moussa had come all the way from Canada to find a traditional Somali spouse, because the Somali girls in Canada were according to him loose and immoral.

He was not bad looking and had lots of money. Everyone considered him a marvelous catch, except for the author who found him "an idiot, dull, trite, and a bigot." She expressed her misgivings to her father but these were waved aside. She had no easy way out and decided to go through with the ceremony which had already been arranged.

    But when it came time for her to join Osman in Canada, who was waiting for her while she secured a visa, she planned simply to disappear. She spoke English, which she had learned in Kenya, and had a certificate from a secretarial school which she felt would enable her to gain employment. She felt England would be the best place for her to go.

   When the plane landed in Germany, however, she discovered she would need a visa to get to Great Britain, whereas the Netherlands was only an hour and a half away, and no visa was required. She immediately went there and applied for sanctuary as a refugee.

   Holland was like an epiphany for her. She marveled at the tolerance and understanding the Dutch officials showed her, a complete stranger. Because of her zeal and energy she soon became valuable as a translator, was admitted to the university and took classes in political science.

    She slowly discarded old habits, and took to blue jeans so that she could ride a bicycle, the standard method of transportation. She succeeded in gaining a master's degree and then joined the Wiardi Beckman Institute as a junior researcher and began writing papers both for the institute and on her own. She focused on the inadequacies of Muslim integration into Dutch society and basically blamed the imams who were too rigid and doctrinaire in their teachings.

   As a result she gained celebrity and considerable popularity. In an amazingly short time she was elected to the Dutch parliament as a member of the Liberal Party (in Western Europe liberals are the right wing; they believe in capitalism and are somewhat against the welfare state). The ever politically correct Dutch could vote liberal and be free of any charges of racism when the candidate was African.

    In her role as a leader against reactionary Islam she joined a famous filmmaker, Theo Van Gogh, to make a short film entitled "Submission" whose thesis was that the Koran is an act of man, not of God, and can, therefore, be interpreted and applied to the modern era in a way different from seventh-century Arabia. Inevitably, death threats arrived.

    There is a special Dutch police force, the DKDB, that protects the royal family and members of parliament. Since the author had become a member of parliament, she was now under their protection. She pleaded that this protection be extended to Theo Van Gogh. He, however, wanted no part of it. A short time later he was assassinated, and the author's security intensified. She was even told she would be safer out of the country. The reader might wonder why it was so difficult for the Dutch to protect a single citizen in their own country.

    When it became officially known that she had fudged her asylum request papers by not giving her complete full name, something she had admitted to early on in both print and TV, she was asked to resign from parliament. This she did, and accepted a position with the American Enterprise Institute here in Washington.

    Interestingly, a Jan. 19 story in The Washington Times noted that the number of imams in the Netherlands had dropped significantly because of a hardening attitude of the Dutch government. Acts do have their consequences.

    The author still loves the Dutch and their culture, and feels herself Dutch in spirit. Whether she remains here or returns to the Netherlands, which she says she wants to do, one can be sure her pen and her mind will be working actively for the betterment of her fellow men and women.

  *) Sol Schindler is a retired Foreign Service Officer who writes and lectures on international affairs.

vrijdag 19 januari 2007

Ladies First

Source: AEI - by Ayaan Hirsi Ali *)

Ayaan_hirsi_ali_3Bigotry has not been eliminated, but a great deal of Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream has been achieved in America. In large part because of the energy and activism of groups such as the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). But also, importantly, because the battle was being fought in a culture where individual rights had come to be understood and actively defended. A culture that values life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Dr. King, if he were alive today, would be delighted to see that little black children and little white children often go to school together, sit down together for meals, and play together. He would see it as his dream come true that black and white Americans are friends, colleagues and spouses.

But if Dr. King were alive today he would also notice that segregation still exists. Oh, he would feel the thrill of success to learn that there are no legal barriers in the US that put black people in a position of disadvantage. But he would notice that demolishing legal barriers between citizens is only half the battle. Nothing illustrates this invisible segregation better than what happened in New Orleans last year and how the nation in turn responded--or did not respond.

Dr. King’s dream for equality went beyond blacks and whites. The Jewish community, for one, can relate to it through their own struggles. Sixty years ago it was the Nazis in Europe who were bent on exterminating them in the name of racial purity. Today it is a global network of radical Muslims who call for a holocaust in the name of their faith. 

On a global level Dr. King Jr. would be pleased to note that Nelson Mandela is free and that apartheid was brought to an end with the minimum of violence. But he would be deeply distressed by the combination of slave trade and genocide that continues, day after day, in Darfur, Sudan.

***

What has all this got to do with me? I have only just arrived in America and I have never been a victim of racial prejudice. By the time I was born, the part of Africa I grew up in--Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya--was independent. The white man had gone home.

The generation belonging to my parents and grandparents talked of oppression by the white man. But when the white man left, he clearly didn’t take the oppression with him. Almost all the bigotry and persecution in Africa nowadays is committed by blacks against other blacks. Proof yet again that just as virtues of kindness, generosity and inclusion transcend skin colour, so do vices of cruelty, greed and exclusion.

I am being acknowledged here today because CORE wants to take Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream beyond racial inequality. CORE wants to be a platform from where the greatest inequality of our time, perhaps of all time, can be battled.

This is gender inequality: an inequality most obscene, expressed through acts such as mutilation, beatings, rape and murder--and almost all this aggression is justified in the name of culture and creed. Atrocities committed against girls and women in the most intimate setting of all: in the home; by dad or mom; by a brother or a sister; by a husband or his mother. The sort of persecution I talk about is one in which the religious leaders, the politicians, aunts and uncles, fathers and mothers, all share the staunch belief that girls--that women--are born of a lesser god.

I was born into this culture. And I stress my emphasis on the word “culture”.

When I first came to a Western country, I was astonished to find men who said, "Ladies first"--yes, ladies first. I was amazed because I was born and raised in a culture that put me last because I was born a girl; where I was confined, because of my gender; where all the burden of what is considered good sexual conduct was for me to bear because I am female.

Whereas here in this culture, where men say "ladies first":

  • I saw how couples often struggle together to carry the burden of parenthood.
  • I saw how parents prepare their sons and daughters equally to learn the skills of securing a livelihood.
  • I saw how schools and even governments coach boys and girls in understanding and restraining their sexuality.

If I allow myself to be inspired by Martin Luther King Jr., then my dream is that those lucky enough to be born into a culture of "ladies first" will let go of the myth that all cultures are equal.

Human beings are equal; cultures are not.

A culture that celebrates femininity is not equal to a culture that trims the genitals of her girls.

A culture that holds the door open to her women is not equal to one that confines them behind walls and veils.

A culture that spends millions on saving a baby girl’s life is not equal to a one that uses its first encounter with natal technology to undertake mass abortion simply because baby girls are not welcome.

A culture with courts that punish a husband for forcing his wife to have sex with him is not equal to a culture with a tribunal that decrees a young woman be gang-raped for talking to a boy of an allegedly higher caste.

A culture that encourages dating between young men and young women is not equal to a culture that flogs or stones a girl for falling in love.

A culture where monogamy is an aspiration is not equal to a culture where a man can lawfully have four wives all at once.

A culture that protects women’s rights by law is not equal to a culture that denies women their alimony and half their inheritance.

A culture that insists on holding open a position for women in its Supreme Court is not equal to a culture that declares that the testimony of a woman is worth half of that of a man.

Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream of racial equality has become a reality for some and remains a dream for many. It has become a reality for the few people privileged enough to live in this culture that values the human individual regardless of race or gender. It is this culture that provides me with the vocabulary, the legal tools, the material resources, the platforms, and most of all, the opportunity to meet like minded individuals who will stand for the rights of those fellow girls and women who haven’t been as lucky as me or you.

It is within this culture that it pays to fight for equality.

Unfortunately, it is this culture that is under threat today. Many of those born into it take it for granted--or worse, apologise for it.

So dear men and women of colour, and dear women of all colour: Let’s join together to protect this culture of life, this culture of liberty, this culture of "ladies first."

*) Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI.

Posted by Sylvia

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woensdag 17 januari 2007

Burkini

View video

Muslim women unable to wear revealing swimwear are turning to a new design nicknamed the "Burkini."

The practical and stylish costumes are the idea of a Sydney-based Muslim designer. Krystyna Gajda reports.

Source: BBC

Posted by Sylvia

vrijdag 12 januari 2007

Confronting Holocaust Denial

Source: American Enterprise Institute - by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Also published in Internatonal Herald Tribune on December 15, 2006

One day In 1994, living in Ede, a small town in Holland, I got a visit from my half-sister. She and I had applied for asylum in Holland. I was granted one, she was denied. The fact that I got asylum gave me the opportunity to study. My half- sister could not.

In order for me to be admitted to the institute of higher education I wanted to attend, I needed to pass three courses: language, civics and history. It was in this preparatory history course that I, for the first time, heard of the Holocaust. I was 24 years old; my half-sister was 21.

In those days, the daily news was filled with the Rwandan genocide and ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia. On the day that my half-sister visited me, my head was reeling from what happened to 6 million Jews in Germany, Holland, France and Eastern Europe. I learned that innocent men, women and children were separated from each other. Stars pinned to their shoulders, transported by train to camps, they were gassed for no other reason than for being Jewish. It was the most systematic and cruel attempt in the history of mankind to annihilate a people.

I saw pictures of masses of skeletons, even of kids. I heard horrifying accounts of some of the people who had survived the terror of Auschwitz and Sobibor.

I told my half-sister all this and showed her the pictures in my history book. What she said shocked me more than the awful information in my book.

With great conviction my half-sister cried: "It's a lie! Jews have a way of blinding people. They were not killed, gassed nor massacred. But I pray to Allah that one day all the Jews in the world will be destroyed."

My 21-year-old sister did not say anything new. My shock was partly at her reaction in the light of so much evidence and partly because of the genocides of our own time.

Growing up as a child in Saudi Arabia, I remember my teachers, my mom and our neighbors telling us practically on a daily basis that Jews were evil, the sworn enemies of Muslims whose only goal was to destroy Islam. We were never informed about the Holocaust.

Later in Kenya, as a teenager, when Saudi and other Gulf philanthropy reached us in Africa, I remember that the building of mosques and donations to hospitals and the poor went hand in hand with the cursing of Jews. Jews were said to be responsible for the deaths of babies, epidemics like AIDS, for the cause of wars. They were greedy and would do absolutely anything to kill us Muslims. And if we ever wanted to know peace and stability we would have to destroy them before they would wipe us out. For those of us who were not in a position to take arms against the Jews it was enough for us to cup our hands, raise our eyes heavenward and pray to Allah to destroy them.

Western leaders today who say they are shocked by the conference of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran denying the Holocaust need to wake up to that reality. For the majority of Muslims in the world the Holocaust is not a major historical event they deny; they simply do not know because they were never informed. Worse, most of us are groomed to wish for a Holocaust of Jews.

I remember the presence of Western philanthropists, nongovernmental organizations and such institutions as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Their agents brought those they thought of as needy medicine, condoms, vaccines, building materials--but no information on the Holocaust.

Secular and Christian donors and relief organizations did not come with an agenda of hate, but neither with a message of love. This was surely a missed opportunity in the light of the hate- spreading charities from oil-rich Muslim countries.

The total number of Jews in the world today is estimated to be around 15 million, certainly no more than 20 million. In terms of fertility, their growth can be compared to that of the developed world, and in terms of aging too.

On the other hand, the Muslim population is estimated to be 1.2 to 1.5 billion people, and it is not only rapidly growing but also very young. What's striking about Ahmadinejad's conference is the (silent) acquiescence of mainstream Muslims.

I cannot help but wonder: Why is there no counter-conference in Riyadh, Cairo, Lahore, Khartoum or Jakarta condemning Ahmadinejad? Why is the Organization of the Islamic Conference silent on this?

Could the answer be as simple as it is horrifying: For generations the leaders of these so-called Muslim countries have been spoon-feeding their populations a constant diet of propaganda similar to the one that generations of Germans (and other Europeans) were fed that Jews are vermin and should be dealt with as such. In Europe, the logical conclusion was the Holocaust. If Ahmadinejad has his way, he will not wait for compliant Muslims ready to act on his wish.

The world needs conferences of love, a promotion of understanding of cultures and antiracist campaigns, but more urgently the world needs to be informed again and again of the Holocaust. Not only in the interest of the Jews who survived the Holocaust and their offspring, but in the interest of humanity in general.

Perhaps the first place to start is to counter the Islamic philanthropy that comes laced with hatred against the Jews. Western and Christian charities in the third world should take it upon themselves to inform Muslims and non-Muslims alike, in the areas where they are active, about the Holocaust.

*) Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI

Geplaatst door Sylvia

zaterdag 6 januari 2007

The Killings of Non-Muslims is Legitimate

The Killings of Non-Muslims is Legitimate A known British Mullah Mr. Anjum Chaudri describes the "Killing of Innocent" Non-Muslims civilians in the suicide bombing as "Legitimate". For videos containing simialr views of world's #1 Muslim debator and most watched Scholar Dr. Zakir Naik & other popular Muslim scholars, please visit http://www.real-islam.org/audio/ ... (more)


 

Geplaatst door Joop


Om van de schrik bij te komen kan je hier ff geestelijk bijtanken

donderdag 21 december 2006

Why they deny the Holocaust

Source: Los Angeles Times - December 16, 2006

On top of nearly constant anti-Semitic propaganda, much of the Muslim world hasn't even heard of it

By Ayaan Hirsi Ali, AYAAN HIRSI ALI, a Somali immigrant who served in the parliament of the Netherlands until earlier this year, is the author of "Infidel," an autobiography to be published in February

ONE DAY IN 1994, when I was living in Ede, a small town in Holland, I got a visit from my half-sister. She and I were both immigrants from Somalia and had both applied for asylum in Holland. I was granted it; she was denied. The fact that I got asylum gave me the opportunity to study. My half-sister couldn't. In order for me to be admitted to the university I wanted to attend, I needed to pass three courses: a language course, a civics course and a history course. It was in the preparatory history course that I, for the first time, heard of the Holocaust. I was 24 years old at that time, and my half-sister was 21.

In those days, the daily news was filled with the Rwandan genocide and ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia. On the day that my half-sister visited me, my head was reeling from what happened to 6 million Jews in Germany, Holland, France and Eastern Europe.

I learned that innocent men, women and children were separated from each other. Stars pinned to their shoulders, transported by train to camps, they were gassed for no other reason than for being Jewish.

I saw pictures of masses of skeletons, even of kids. I heard horrifying accounts of some of the people who had survived the terror of Auschwitz and Sobibor. I told my half-sister all this and showed her the pictures in my history book. What she said was as awful as the information in my book.

With great conviction, my half-sister cried: "It's a lie! Jews have a way of blinding people. They were not killed, gassed or massacred. But I pray to Allah that one day all the Jews in the world will be destroyed."

She was not saying anything new. As a child growing up in Saudi Arabia, I remember my teachers, my mom and our neighbors telling us practically on a daily basis that Jews are evil, the sworn enemies of Muslims, and that their only goal was to destroy Islam. We were never informed about the Holocaust.

Later, as a teenager in Kenya, when Saudi and other Persian Gulf philanthropy reached us, I remember that the building of mosques and donations to hospitals and the poor went hand in hand with the cursing of Jews. Jews were said to be responsible for the deaths of babies and for epidemics such as AIDS, and they were believed to be the cause of wars. They were greedy and would do absolutely anything to kill us Muslims. If we ever wanted to know peace and stability, and if we didn't want to be wiped out, we would have to destroy the Jews. For those of us who were not in a position to take up arms against them, it was enough for us to cup our hands, raise our eyes heavenward and pray to Allah to destroy them.

Western leaders today who say they are shocked by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's conference this week denying the Holocaust need to wake up to that reality. For the majority of Muslims in the world, the Holocaust is not a major historical event that they deny. We simply do not know it ever happened because we were never informed of it.

The total number of Jews in the world today is estimated to be about 15 million, certainly no more than 20 million. On the other hand, the world's Muslim population is estimated to be between 1.2 billion and 1.5 billion. And not only is this population rapidly growing, it is also very young.

What's striking about Ahmadinejad's conference is the (silent) acquiescence of mainstream Muslims. I cannot help but wonder: Why is there no counter-conference in Riyadh, Cairo, Lahore, Khartoum or Jakarta condemning Ahmadinejad? Why are the 57 members of the Organization of the Islamic Conference silent on this?

Could the answer be as simple as it is horrifying: For generations, the leaders of these so-called Muslim countries have been spoon-feeding their populations a constant diet of propaganda similar to the one that generations of Germans (and other Europeans) were fed — that Jews are vermin and should be dealt with as such? In Europe, the logical conclusion was the Holocaust. If Ahmadinejad has his way, he shall not want for compliant Muslims ready to act on his wish.

The world needs to be informed again and again about the Holocaust — not only in the interest of the Jews who survived and their offspring but in the interest of humanity.

zaterdag 25 november 2006

Europe's tolerance finds its limit

Source: Canada National Post

Geert_wilders_1Geert Wilders, leader of the far-right Freedom Party, says the Netherlands is about to be engulfed by an "Islamic tsunami" and wants bans on building religious schools and mosques.

Death of multiculturalism

Tolerance may have died in Europe the day Mohammed Bouyeri murdered Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh.

On the morning of Nov. 2, 2004, as Mr. van Gogh cycled to work in Amsterdam, the bearded young man in a long Middle-Eastern-style shirt fired at him with a handgun.

The mortally wounded filmmaker tried to run for cover. But the killer chased him, shot him once more and slit his throat from ear to ear.

Then, he plunged two knives, one with a five-page letter attached, into the body.

The note began: "This is my last word, riddled with bullets, baptized in blood ... "

It was filled with jihadist slogans and threats and contained a blood-curdling diatribe against Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born Dutch politician who had written the script of Mr. van Gogh's last film, Submission. The 10-minute short about the abuse of Muslim women had upset some Muslims because it showed sacred Koranic texts superimposed on a semi-naked woman.

Bouyeri's missive ended with a threatening chant: "I know for sure that you, O America, are going to meet with disaster. I know for sure that you, O Europe, are going to meet with disaster. I know for sure that you, O Holland, are going to meet with disaster."

The savagery of the killing triggered revulsion across Europe. Today, the continent is attempting to cope with increasingly bitter racial and religious squabbles and is riven with doubts about its future.

Decades of open-door immigration policies have transformed Europe through the arrival of several million immigrants, mostly Muslims, from North Africa, Turkey and Southwest Asia.

But as the region became one of the most multicultural regions on Earth, its people have gradually turned against the policies that made it this way.

From Amsterdam to Paris and Brussels to Berlin, politicians want to restrict immigration and force recent arrivals to integrate more thoroughly into their new homelands.

The Netherlands, where 6% of the country's 16 million people come from Islamic countries, has found itself at the forefront of a general hardening of European attitudes toward Muslim minorities.

In the two years since Mr. van Gogh's murder, the Dutch government has adopted sweeping reforms aimed at forcing immigrants to integrate more fully into society. Immigrants must now pass a language test within five years of arrival or risk being deported. They must also take special integration classes when they apply for a visa.

Rotterdam has published a code of conduct suggesting that immigrants speak Dutch when out in public and the government runs courses to train imams in Western values.

This week, elections in the Netherlands seemed to reinforce the growing distrust between the native and immigrant populations when the Freedom Party, a previously insignificant far-right fringe group, won nine seats in parliament.

Led by Geert Wilders, a strident radical who goes out of his way to insult Muslims and warn that the Netherlands is about to be engulfed by an "Islamic tsunami," the Freedom Party is now the fifth- largest in the Dutch parliament.

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donderdag 23 november 2006

Setting Themselves Apart

American Enterprise Institute - by Resident Fellow Ayaan Hirsi Ali

AhaliBritish Prime Minister Tony Blair says the Muslim veil is a mark of separation, which makes the integration of Muslim women into society more difficult. He's right. Those who wear the veil deliberately set themselves apart.

Many are coerced into shrouding their bodies. The veil is the visible symptom of their more comprehensive subjection. They are required to be obedient, to ask permission of their male guardians when they leave the house, often with a chaperone. These victims of force, whether they live in England or in Saudi Arabia, almost always have very limited education. They are married young, through arranged or forced marriages, and are groomed for docility. They do not appear in unemployment statistics, or any statistics at all. As ordained by their faith, they are invisible.

Those women who voluntarily choose the veil are different. Often they are literate, verbally forthright and independent. Many are recent converts--"born again" Muslims and Islamic activists who may be well integrated into society. Yet they have made a clear choice. They reject the Western lifestyle. The veil is an expression of the moral philosophy they hold and wish to impose upon others. They seek to provoke, to intimidate. In many European cities it is increasingly common to see girls, sometimes as young as 5, with headscarves tied tightly around their necks, or even little veils. They are taught to keep away from boys, from unbelievers and from Muslims who are weak in the faith--in other words, other unveiled Muslim little girls. That is precisely the purpose of the veil.

The veil also manifests division of the sexes. Women must veil; men do not. Underlying this simple dogma is a sexual morality that holds women responsible for the sexual conduct of men. Men may become aroused to sinful thoughts at the sight of a woman. For that, the unveiled woman will be punished in hell by Allah. Australia's most senior Muslim cleric, Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali, recently spoke about a group of Muslim men jailed for many years for gang rapes: "If you take uncovered meat and place it outside on the street...and the cats come and eat it...whose fault is it--the cats' or the uncovered meat? The uncovered meat is the problem." He went on: "If she was in her room, in her home, in her hijab, no problem would have occurred."

The most wicked aspect of this "morality" is the complete lack of male responsibility for male conduct. And this sexual morality clashes deeply with that of the West, which emphasizes female eroticism in fashion, music, films, advertising. Feminists may argue the merits of all this, but one distinction remains important. In the West, there exists an assumption that men are capable of sexual restraint. It is this presumption that makes it possible for us women to freely take part in public life and make our own private choices. The victim of rape in a miniskirt did not ask for it, and the husband who rapes his wife is guilty of a felony.

And what of the debate over the separation of church and state, as waged in France? No single religion may dominate the public space. Everyone may freely exercise their religion--a right not enjoyed in Saudi Arabia, Iran or Pakistan--but they may not seek to impose it on others. They may not wear "ostentatiously visible" insignia of religion in schools.

Muslim women who veil in Western societies violate all these norms. They are being immodest and invasive. They will succeed only in creating hostility. To every woman who decides to walk out the door looking like Batman and then complains of being ridiculed, I say, you are inviting it. Bear it or shed it.

Values Matter

American Enterprise Institute by Ayaan Hirsi Ali *)

Congress of the Danish (Classical) Liberal Party  (Denmark)

Ahali_2Goddag. Jeg er meget glad for at være her i dag. Tak fordi jeg måtte komme.

Ladies and gentlemen of Venstre, Denmark’s [Classical] Liberal Party.

Let me start by thanking you for giving me the Freedom Award of Venstre in 2004. At the time I was unable to come and accept this prize in person because this prestigious event coincided with the terrible murder of Theo van Gogh and the decision of my country’s security authorities to hide me in the US for my safety.

Today I am honored to be here as a ‘surprise guest’ at this year’s Party Convention. I was invited by your party leader to say a word or two on values in relation to the issue of the integration of minorities in Europe.

The debate on the integration of non-Western minorities into western societies is essentially a debate on conflicting values and views.

On the one hand there is a clash in faith, ideals, attitude, habits and approach to life between the mainstream of the native populations of Europe and the communities from non-Western countries. Where this clash involves faith, it is often some Muslim minorities who find it most difficult to reconcile the demands of their religion with the secular demands of the country they live in.

On the other hand there is a conflict in view (approach) between the political and intellectual elite of European nations on how to deal with this tension between immigrants and natives.

Clash of Values between the Immigrants and the Natives

For a proper understanding of the roots for the tension between the natives of Europe and those who come in search of a better life from non-Western nations we cannot ignore the difference in moral ethics between and within the societies today’s immigrants come from and the western societies they emigrate to. Of course there are myriad differences. But I am only concerned with those differences that might explain the clash in values that we are witnessing today in Europe between the natives and immigrants. Three are worth mentioning.

First, in the non-Western societies that the immigrants of Europe come from, the natural conflict between social cohesion and individual liberty have not been settled. Second, no balance has been found between faith and reason. Third, the place of religion in the public arena has not been defined.

Few of the states, in the developing world that were established shortly after the decolonization process are relatively successful. Many have failed. The immigrants who come in search of a better a life and settle here permanently are those who depart from failing or failed states. The loyalty of individuals in these countries to the state is secured by force through the military and police.

States that require absolute obedience from their citizens do not foster knowledge and curb individual enterprise and creativity. Thus any form of education that is felt by the authoritarian state to be in conflict with its interest in power is discouraged. Often, most inhabitants from these weak, failing or failed states revert back to their original tribal or clan or religious loyalties. Religious, tribal and clan unities in turn demand from their individual members such loyalty that when the interests of the individual collide with that of the group, the individual must give in.

As a result only those traits in a person are encouraged that are seen to be essential for the collective. These traits are obedience to the state, tribal or religious authority and the duty to attack (be intolerant of) any behavior by other individuals within or outside of the group that may in anyway undermine the (short-term) common interest of the group in question. Often because tribes and religious groups lack military and police power they secure individual loyalty through superstition and the grooming of their members in elaborate traditions, rites and customs. Curiosity and scientific research is not encouraged for that will only diminish group cohesion. This leads us to the conclusion that most non-Western immigrants have not gone through the process of individualization, rationalization and secularization that European societies have gone though. The mere arrival in Paris, London and Berlin from Africa, Asia or the Middle East does not lead a person automatically to a change in attitude, tastes or outlook in life. Values are the results of many years of grooming and can only take many years--even generations--before old morals will be replaced with new ones.

I am aware of the fact that I am generalizing. The reality is of course more complex. There are huge differences between people living in cities and those in the rural areas. There are differences among individuals in the amount of importance they attach to faith and tribal constraints. There are those immigrants who, once they come here, find it very easy to retain some of their tribal or religious customs that are compatible with life in a hyper-modern society like this one. It is not my intention to dismiss all immigrants as lacking individuality, or to describe them as being ignorant, superstitious and intolerant.

My concern is only with those immigrants who have adjustment problems without of course explaining away all adjustment problems as a question of values. It is an attempt to identify those values that some immigrants bring with them from home that might have been a source of survival or even wealth in the country of origin but lead to conflict and stunt their opportunities here.

A Polarized Leadership

The second level of conflict in relation to the future of immigrants in Europe is the disagreement between the politicians and intellectuals (scholars, journalists, publicists, etc) of Europe.

This conflict is not so much about values but about views.

The Socio-Economic Approach

One school of thought sees the integration-question primarily as having socio-economic causes and therefore socio-economic remedies. Poverty is the cause of migration and poverty is the cause of bad integration. Once the cycle of poverty is broken the second and third generations will adjust easily. The best way to break this poverty cycle is through affirmative action. The state must legislate and subsidize an anti-poverty campaign. Poor people eat badly in general and suffer all sorts of health problems and are badly housed. The state, it is said, must provide the funds for good food (vegetables are more expensive than junk food), health care and proper housing facilities. Neighborhoods should be given youth centers for recreation and sports activities. All these activities are to be performed by the state through social workers and civil servants of the city council.

These street level bureaucrats are to use the services of an army of advisers ranging from anthropologists to experts on child care and experts on conflict mediation. When values are an issue at all, according to this school of thought, the values of immigrants deserve as much respect as those of the natives. When conflict arises it is state employees who engage so called community leaders and ask them to mediate between neighbors and parents emphasizing all along the importance of tolerance and mutual respect.

All extraordinary demands made by minorities in relation to their faith, culture and traditions must be accommodated in principle. Where costs cannot be met by the immigrant communities then the state must help out financially. Many of those who adhere to this school of thought assume that the source of the tension between immigrants and natives has to do with xenophobia and the desire of natives to discriminate. Thus they put the burden of the adjustment squarely on the shoulders of the natives. The natives should be patient, tolerant and welcoming. That is one approach.

The Socio-Cultural Approach

The other approach is favored by those who put the emphasis on the socio-cultural variables. They believe that the customs and convictions that immigrants bring with them from home can be obstacles to their successful integration here.

This view is held by politicians and scholars who have converted from the socio-economic approach. It is really a reaction to the failure of the policies that were implemented in the past three to four decades based on the social-economic model of integrating immigrants and minorities in Europe.

While this socio-cultural approach is relatively new and still highly controversial, those who favor it do not deny the existence of discrimination and the need for the natives to adjust as well but they put a great deal of the responsibility to integrate on the shoulders of the immigrants.

Immigrants must learn the language of the society they live in. They must not wait until they are ‘activated’ by the state to work but must find jobs themselves. They must learn and accept the constitution and take the initiative to find out about the culture and the habits of the society they live in.

Political allegiance is a prerequisite for earning citizenship and bringing in spouses from the countries of origin must be discouraged through legislation. Immigrants who have an issue with the policy choices of the state or town they live in must engage in dialogue through the accepted modes of democratic dissent: the use of violence is not one of the accepted modes of dissent.

Planned immigration, law enforcement and the stimulation of the individual responsibility of the immigrants is the motto. Discrimination should be eliminated, but affirmative action must be limited as well. Customs and edicts of faith that curb the freedom of other individuals--including one’s own family members--are not to be tolerated anymore and perpetrators of crimes justified via religious arguments must be actively brought to justice. Moral and cultural relativism, in the thinking of those who favor this approach, lead more to disintegration and isolation of immigrants and not to their happiness.

Due to several incidents since the 11th of September--the bombings in Madrid and London, the murder of Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam, the cartoon crisis here, the torching of cars in the suburbs of Paris, the veil-debate in the UK--this view is gaining more and more popularity in almost all the European countries.

The Danish liberal party was perhaps the first to acknowledge that the social-economic approach with its Marxist principles and relativist policies had led to a crisis in the integration of minorities. And that this crisis could--in the light of global events--only get worse. It is your party that adopted a value based agenda. The first policies to rescue immigrants from a life of state dependency were devised and implemented by your party. Of course with the necessary help from other parties as that is the nature of coalition systems. Other European countries that condemned you five years ago are now coming to learn from you.

All this is marvelous and you deserve heartfelt compliments for what you have accomplished.

But does this mean that the clash of values and views has been resolved?

Certainly not!

Fortunately, an ever-growing number of European leaders accept that such values as individual freedom and responsibility, curiosity, rationality, hard work and tolerance are the key to success in a liberal society. But such values are the result of years of grooming and practice. Education and peer influence make it easier for immigrants to acquire such values and integrate rapidly.

That is why the biggest challenge in the coming years is how to tackle the structural segregation and self segregation of large numbers of immigrants. I am talking about the neighborhoods and schools that have come to be called ‘black’. Places that are separated from the rest of society through a combustible combination of ethnicity, fanatical religious groups, poverty and crime.

For your value-based integration approach to be successful on the long term your party and other liberal parties of Europe need to address this issue with urgency. Nothing is more controversial than the issue of segregation. In the debate that followed the riots in the French suburbs last year some suggested that the Banlieues be torn down and the inhabitants spread across France. Tearing down such neighborhoods and relocating communities is of course the best solution for segregation. However, this solution will not succeed unless those who move and those who live in the neighborhoods where people are moved to see a shared interest in becoming neighbors.

The good thing about political parties is that they seek power in order to reshape society. The special thing about classical-liberal parties is their love of tackling challenges and their belief in making progress through trial and error.

I can imagine the leadership of this party trying to work out ways to get rid of these ghettos and the party members--you, ladies and gentlemen-in persuading regular Danes, of their interest to accept an immigrant as a neighbor and or an immigrant child as a schoolmate to their children. This effort of persuasion applies to the immigrants in the ghettos as well.

In any case I wish you good luck and a great deal of common sense in dealing with this and all the other challenges you may encounter in running this valiant nation.

Tak.

*) Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI

dinsdag 21 november 2006

Ayaan Hirsi Ali surprise guest in Danmark

Ayaan Hirsi Ali was flanked by bodyguards, as she appeared as a surprise guest at Venstre's conference in Odense.

Source: Politiken.dk - Translation by John

On Sunday Ayaan Hirsi Ali was a surprise guest at the Venstre (Left) party's conference in Odense, Danmark, where she made a speech about breaking down the barriers between immigrants and people with a Danish background.

The former Dutch member of parliament Ayaan Hirsi Ali urged the avoidance of separation between immigrants and people with a Danish background, when she appeared as a surprise guest at Venstre's conference in Odense.

The challenge applies to everyone - also the Venstre party. "Immigrants should learn the language in their new country and not wait to be stimulated.  But the indiginous people should also be open and hospitable." said the critical of islam, Ayaan Hirsi Ali from the podium.

Wrote manuscript for a murdered director's film
The Somali born Hirsi Ali became internationally known, when a muslim fanatic murdered film director Theo van Gogh in 2004.  She had written the manuscript to van Gogh's controversial film Submission about women's difficulties in an islamic society.

Since then, she has been in contact with the Danish prime minister Anders Frogh Rasmussen of the Venstre party several times, and in 2004 she received Venstre's freedom prize, which she accepted in her absence, as she was living in hiding because of death threats.

Began her speech in Danish
Ayaan Hirsi Ali won smiles from Venstre's deligates when she began her speech in Danish. "Jeg er meget glad for at være her i dag. Tak fordi jeg måtte komme" ("I am very pleased to be here today. Thanks for inviting me.")

vrijdag 3 november 2006

Dutch prosecutors launch probe into imam who reportedly cursed filmmaker Van Gogh

Source: Herald Tribune

THE HAGUE, Netherlands: Dutch prosecutors launched a criminal investigation Thursday into a Muslim cleric who reportedly cursed Theo van Gogh just weeks before an Islamic radical shot and stabbed the filmmaker to death.

The announcement came two years to the day after Van Gogh was slain on an Amsterdam street by Mohammed Bouyeri, who is serving a life sentence for the murder.

The daily newspaper De Volkskrant this week reported that Sheik Fawaz Jneid, of the As-Soennah mosque in The Hague, denounced Van Gogh and lawmaker Ayaan Hirsi Ali in a 2004 sermon, calling on God to give Van Gogh an incurable illness and Hirsi Ali cancer. The paper said it had a recording of the sermon, and had translated it into Dutch from Arabic.

Bouyeri left a note threatening Hirsi Ali after killing Van Gogh. Hirsi Ali, a prominent critic of fundamentalist Islam, wrote the screenplay for Van Gogh's film "Submission," which many Muslims considered blasphemous.

Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk told NOS radio she would investigate Fawaz's residency status to see if it was possible to deport him, and would ask prosecutors to investigate if he had committed a crime.

But Verdonk's spokesman, Arnoud Strijbis, said later that immigration authorities had confirmed Fawaz was a Dutch citizen.

"We have freedom of speech in the Netherlands, but the question has earlier been raised of whether you should be able to say anything," Verdonk said. "I think that wishing people illnesses and that kind of thing, that shouldn't be allowed, so I think that it should be examined, if we, within our criminal justice system, can do something about it."

Elizabeth Woestem, a spokeswoman for the Hague Public Prosecutors Office, said an investigation was being launched to see if the sermon breached any laws. She said it was too early to say what laws may have been broken.

It is not the first time prosecutors in The Hague have studied the imam's preaching.

"We have investigated earlier sermons in 2003, 2004 and 2005," Woestem said. "But we found no criminal acts."

Municipal legislators in The Hague in 2005 asked if the mosque could be closed down because of the content of some of Fawaz's sermons, but city officials said shutting the mosque was impossible because of free speech laws.

A man who answered the phone at the As-Soennah mosque Thursday said Fawaz was not immediately available for comment.

The man, who declined to give his name, said the imam did not deny making the comments, but that nobody at the mosque had seen Bouyeri, who lived in Amsterdam, attending sermons there before Van Gogh's murder.

Last year, three imams from a mosque in the southern Dutch city of Eindhoven had their visas revoked after a secret service report said they were spreading fundamentalist propaganda and allowing recruitment for terrorist groups to take place at the mosque. All three imams denied the accusations.

dinsdag 31 oktober 2006

Lessons from Holland

Source: The Ottawa Citizen

Europe's challenge: The murders of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh and politician Pim Fortuyn, as well as the Danish cartoon riots, have led some to declare that Western Europe is in the throes of a new clash of civilizations pitting Muslim immigrants against non-Muslims. Senior writer Dan Gardner visited Holland and Denmark recently and found that, while there are some serious problems, the situation is not as bleak as it is often depicted.

ROTTERDAM - The young man says he doesn't have time to talk to me. He has a train to catch. But as he whips open the door to Rotterdam's central train station, he gives me a two-word answer to my question. "Holland sucks!"

Inside, he pauses and dashes back out to clarify. "Rotterdam and the Netherlands suck. There's a lot of racism, especially in the police." With an angry nod, he darts inside.

I haven't mentioned this young man's ethnicity, but any Dutch person could guess. He is Moroccan. They would also know that the excellent English he speaks -- the English taught in Dutch schools and heard on Dutch television -- means he was born and raised in the Netherlands. He is therefore the son of Moroccans who are, most likely, illiterate Muslim peasants from Morocco's remote Rif mountains.

And that, in turn, means he is a Dutch citizen -- a Dutch citizen who hates his country.

The reason any Dutch person could surmise all this is that there is nothing terribly exceptional about this young man. Go to any train station in Holland, pick out the brown face of a young Muslim man, especially a young Moroccan, and there is a good chance you will hear some variation of "Holland sucks!"

Holland has a problem. France, Germany, Britain, Denmark and the other prosperous nations of Western Europe have the same problem. Over the last four decades, these countries became home to large numbers of immigrants, many of them Muslim. It was an unprecedented social experiment and the results are, to say the least, discouraging.

Immigrants suffer unemployment, poverty and segregation out of all proportion to their numbers, while their children drop out of school and into trouble at an alarming rate: Most of the faces in prisons across Western Europe are black or brown. As for the faces of Muslim women, they are sometimes hardly to be seen at all, thanks to men who use harsh discipline -- even honour killings -- to control their daughters and wives and keep them out of the schools, streets and workplaces.

Religious fundamentalism is also festering in Europe's ghettoes. And along with it, Islamism -- the utopian political program of Muslim fundamentalists. Local boys have been caught plotting terror in the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Germany, France and the United Kingdom -- the usual words of hate and holy war spoken on "martyrdom" videos made by suicide bombers can now be heard in the working-class English accents George Orwell knew and loved.

Holland -- solid, peaceful, little Holland -- was shaken to its core by the 2004 murder of filmmaker and provocative critic of Islam Theo van Gogh and the attacks on mosques and churches that followed. The killer was Mohammed Bouyeri, the son of Moroccan immigrants, born in Amsterdam, educated in Dutch schools, a Dutch citizen. He pinned a five-page manifesto to van Gogh's chest with a knife.

In country after country, fears that immigration is going horribly wrong have boosted the political fortunes of critics, populists, racists, even the occasional fascist. In Denmark, the issue dominates national politics; the Danish twice elected a centre-right government that significantly restricted immigration and gave the fairy tale kingdom of Hans Christian Andersen a new image, fair or not, as a land of xenophobes and racists. When the publication of cartoons ridiculing the Muslim prophet Mohammed was followed by deadly rioting across much of the world earlier this year, many observers were not surprised that the newspaper that lit the match was Danish.

In the Netherlands, the first man to seize this new source of political energy was Pim Fortuyn, a wildly gay former sociologist and provocateur who saw in Islam a threat to the tolerant Dutch society he loved. Mr. Fortuyn looked set to shake up Holland's cosy political establishment when he was assassinated on May 6, 2002 (by an animal rights activist, though the furious debate about immigration undoubtedly contributed to the deed). In the years since, Mr. Fortuyn has been lionized by much of the Dutch population, while many politicians now vie to be deemed his successor.

Of course, any Canadian who reads a newspaper knows most of this already. Europe's troubles have become a staple of the North American media.

Journalists inclined to the left focus on what they see as a racist, anti-Muslim backlash -- the CBC television reporter who equated Holland's centre-right government with the racist cranks of the British National Party, for example -- while those on the right emphasize what they deem to be the failings of Muslim immigrants and the deluded nostrums of multiculturalism.

It is the right's take, however, that is heard more often. Books with titles such as Menace in Europe, While Europe Slept and Eurabia depict a continent that believes in nothing slowly being subverted and converted by Islamic hordes whose faith is absolute. In the right-wing blogosphere, past Islamic invasions of Europe -- the last was in the 17th century -- pepper discussions of the latest terrorism arrests.

Big-name conservative pundits rarely go that far, but the picture they paint is bleak, nonetheless. "The fact is that the people of Europe are losing their homelands," philosopher Roger Scruton wrote recently, while the multinational firebrand Mark Steyn declared, "I find it easier to be optimistic about the futures of Iraq and Pakistan than, say, Holland or Denmark." That was in 2002. In 2005, with Iraq in flames, Mr. Steyn wrote that he hadn't changed his mind.

It's all very grim stuff. And here I have to make a confession.

I've contributed some bleak words about Europe, too. "Mental walls can be found in country after country across the continent," I wrote earlier this year. "On one side is a majority that is rich, established, old and dwindling. On the other is a minority that is poor, alienated, young and growing. And all across the landscape is an atmosphere of incomprehension, doubt, suspicion and fear."

I wouldn't write the same today, not after I recently spent some time in the Netherlands and Denmark. It's not that I was wrong. There is plenty of incomprehension, doubt, suspicion and fear in Europe. It's that there is much more to the picture than that. What I wrote was too simplistic, too extreme.

The same is true of most of the dark reports in the media. It's not that the problems don't exist. Unemployment, poverty, segregation, crime and the subordination of women are only too real. So is the growing Islamist movement and the threat of terrorism. And, yes, there is racism and a backlash.

But what's seldom mentioned is what's going right. And contrary to the relentless reports of failure and hate, there is much that's going right -- and good reason to believe more will go right in future.

"There is indeed a problem with integration. Among some youngsters, it is not going well," concedes Geert Mak, a renowned journalist and historian whose many books on the Dutch and European past routinely top Holland's bestseller charts. "But there have been lots of inquiries done and every time the same kind of figures are coming out. Twenty per cent or perhaps 25 per cent are not doing well. But for 75 or 80 per cent, the integration is going normally, or even quite well when you look at what kind of villages these people are coming from."

The origins of modern immigration in Europe are completely different than in North America. In the late 1950s and 1960s, Western Europe's economies grew so rapidly, they ran up against severe labour shortages. At first, companies and governments recruited temporary workers from Italy, Spain, Portugal and the Balkans, but then they looked further abroad -- to Turkey, North Africa and elsewhere in the Muslim world -- and saw bigger, cheaper pools of labour. "There were a lot of people who migrated to Istanbul or Casablanca to do their jobs in the wintertime and in the summer they went back to the villages," notes Mr. Mak. "They had done this already for dozens of years. So the Dutch government thought, let's hire these people and instead of bringing them to Casablanca, fly them to Amsterdam."

They were not migrants. They were "guest workers." They were poor. Almost all were men. Most were illiterate. They came from a few, isolated, rural regions -- such as Morocco's distant Rif mountains -- and their views reflected the tribal, deeply conservative values of those places.

The guest workers were ideal for the limited purposes of the managers who imported them. They worked hard for low wages and were happy with what they got. And because they were strangers in these decidedly strange lands, they would never organize, complain and make demands. How could they when they didn't even speak the language?

The system worked as intended until 1973. That year, the Arab oil embargo hammered European economies. Manufacturing -- where almost all the guest workers were employed -- was hit especially hard. Factories fell like giant dominoes. Whole industries collapsed: Europe was shifting from an industrial, manufacturing-based economy to a post-industrial economy of services.

But still the guest workers didn't leave. Even a precarious existence at the bottom of the ladder in Europe was more promising than the back-breaking toil in the fields at home. And there was always the dole. "The attitude in Holland was we don't discriminate and social security was quite generous. All these immigrants thought we were mad," Mr. Mak says. "Then a new thing started."

After a decade or more living alone, guest workers started asking if they could bring their families. Social Democrats supported reunification as a matter of fairness. Christian Democrats also approved it on the grounds that it was pro-family. "So the wife and kids came. Nobody realized at that time that Holland had started an enormous immigration."

It's almost impossible to imagine today, but almost no one at the time understood that the temporary workers had become permanent residents and that Europe, an exporter of migrants for centuries, had, for the first time in modern history, become an importer. Across the western half of the continent, governments simply assumed that some day all these foreigners would go back to their countries. "They said the families are staying but they go back after a few years," Mr. Mak says. "The kids can go to school and learn a little Dutch, but after all they will go back. So there were no introduction programs, no language programs, nothing."

The migrants thought no differently. Of course they would go back. When? Some day. Not this year, of course. Perhaps next. But the departure was delayed again and again and this mental limbo lasted for decades.

"This process went on until the end of the 1990s," says Mr. Mak. "I was with a few Turkish students and I asked them, 'Be honest, when was the decision made that the family would stay in Holland, that your parents would die in Holland?' They were six students. For two, the decision was not yet made. For the four others, it was the end of the 1990s. So these families had already stayed 30 or 40 years in Holland but still had the idea to go back."

These are the almost accidental origins of Europe's immigrant communities. There are other sources, including migrants from former colonies and asylum seekers who arrived mainly in the 1980s and 1990s. But the primary source of immigrant communities in Europe remains the guest workers, their families and their descendants. And that fact has immense ramifications.

When conservative pundits write about Europe's immigration problems, the standard narrative goes like this: During the 1980s and 1990s, leftist multiculturalism dominated and, as a result, no one dared to talk about the problems in immigrant communities and no one demanded that immigrants conform to the basic rules and norms of Europe; but after the Sept. 11 attacks, the murder of Theo van Gogh, the London subway bombings and other events, multiculturalism was discredited and now the Netherlands and other countries are demanding that immigrants live up to the best European values of tolerance, freedom and the rule of law.

Nonsense, says Mr. Mak. What dominated official thinking in the 1980s and 1990s wasn't mushy multiculturalism. It was wilful blindness -- a refusal to see not only the problems of the immigrant communities, but the very fact that there were immigrant communities. "They didn't want to see it and were not interested at all. The Dutch government only accepted that Holland is an immigrant country in the middle of the 1990s," he notes. And "most of the neglecting was done by right-wing governments, by the Christian Democrats and Liberals. They were all involved in looking away. And that's not tolerance. It was just denial."

Many Europeans still can't quite grasp that the foreigners in their midst are not leaving. "Even now that I've been here 20 years, I get the question 'are you going back?'" Halleh Ghorashi says, her eyes wide with incredulity. In 1988, when she was 26, Ms. Ghorashi fled her native Iran for the Netherlands. In short order, she learned Dutch, got a university degree and earned a PhD in anthropology.

Today, she is a professor of integration at the Free University of Amsterdam -- and still people wonder when she is leaving. "The idea that migration is temporary, they don't want to give it up."

The usual theory on immigration holds that three generations are necessary for full integration into the larger society. There aren't many third-generation immigrants in countries like the Netherlands and they are mainly to be found in playgrounds and primary schools. It's simply too early to declare Europe's experience with immigration a failure.

And that's if the generations are measured from the arrival of the first guest workers. Arguably, it should not be. The better baseline is the moment when both newcomers and governments realized and accepted that immigration is a reality. And that wasn't until the 1990s.

By that measure, Europe's immigration experiment is barely more than a decade old. Writing if off so soon is absurd.

Italian-Americans provide an interesting comparison. Large-scale Italian immigration to the U.S. began in the 1880s. By the 1890s, it had spawned large, poor, Italian-speaking crime-ridden ghettoes. Italians were feared and despised: In 1891, the largest mass lynching in American history took the lives of 11 Italian men in New Orleans.

Of course, Italian immigrants ultimately did integrate and the U.S. was deeply enriched. But that process took more than half a century to come to fruition.

Mr. Mak cites another historical example, one much closer to his home.

"We are having the same kind of problems now with the Moroccan people as we had with the Jewish people in the 19th century," he says. Most of Amsterdam's Jewish population had come from eastern Europe a century earlier "but they lived in ghettoes. They were really not very much integrated." At the end of the 19th century, Mr. Mak says, newspapers wrote "exactly the same way about Jews as people today are writing about Moroccans."

The Social Democratic party, led by prominent Jews, pushed for what we would today call integration policies. Foremost among them was building social housing in middle-class neighbourhoods so the poor wouldn't be isolated in slums. And, since the poor were disproportionately Jewish, it was mostly Jews who moved in.

Along with free, integrated public schools, the new policies made all the difference. Within a generation, Amsterdam's Jewish population became a pillar of the city (a pillar later torn away by the Holocaust).

The critical element, Mr. Mak says, is patience. "This was not a job done in two or three years. It took a generation."

Thanks largely to last year's riots in French suburbs and a stream of frightening conservative commentary -- which fails to mention that the French have always opposed multiculturalism and have instead taken the hard line on assimilation urged by conservatives -- a grim new image of Europe's immigrant neighbourhoods has coalesced in the imagination of many. Veiled women flitting by like shadows. Packs of feral young men roaming the streets. Bearded fundamentalists glaring at any white face that dares show itself. Poverty, filth, graffiti, violence and fear: These are ghettoes, alien places detached from the prosperous and uncomprehending societies that surround them.

I wish I could report having found such a place. It would make a terrific story. But the worst neighbourhood I could come up with is a place called Kanaaleiland, in Utrecht, a city close to Amsterdam.

In Kanaaleiland, a 1960s-era housing development that is home to 15,000 people, there are no packs of feral young men, no glowering fundamentalists, not even any veiled women that I could see. The neighbourhood is certainly poor by Dutch standards. Seventy per cent of those living in the long, low apartment blocks are first- or second-generation immigrants, mostly of Turkish or Moroccan background. The expected satellite dishes -- no news story about immigrant communities is complete without a reference to the term "dish city" -- poke out from every second balcony. But there's no trash scattered about, no burned-out cars, little graffiti, nothing rusted or decayed or falling down.

For a journalist, the place is hopelessly lacking in colour. But apparently there's a solution for that. Nathan Rozema, the director of a government-funded social services agency who is showing me around, points to the entrance of one building that's a little more run-down than the rest. Reporters always take pictures of that, he says. Those are the only pictures that appear in the newspapers and on television. Nearby, there's a lush canal, a wooded park and a pretty Moroccan mosque, but these never make it into the media. They also don't mention that the building they're using to portray the desired urban squalor is scheduled to be torn down and replaced.

Another useful technique for juicing up the dull reality is to speak only to the teenagers loitering around the corner store, who will, on cue, deliver the usual "Holland sucks" sentiment. Next to the corner store, however, is a halal butcher shop whose chipper young owner, Terza, earned an economics degree before going into business and is as enthusiastic about the future as the huddled masses who once got off the boat at Ellis Island. Reporters don't quote Terza much.

"Some French government officials visited here and they laughed," says Mr. Rozema. "They say, is that your problem? That's nothing! So you don't have a scary feeling here."

These, of course, are only anecdotes and impressions. By themselves, they don't prove anything. To really understand the reality, we must gather broad empirical data -- an important caveat to bear in mind when reading frightening books such as Menace in Europe which are long on anecdotes and appallingly short on data.

Segregation is a good place to start. The alarmists say ghettoes are growing all over Europe. Is that true? If so, it should be obvious in the numbers.

It turns out it's not obvious at all. Sako Musterd, a geographer at the University of Amsterdam, looked at ethnic segregation -- the degree to which members of an ethnic group live in neighbourhoods with disproportionate levels of that ethnic group -- in the Netherlands between 1980 and 2004. He found that the great majority of immigrants, including Turks and Moroccans, do not live in even modestly segregated neighbourhoods.

He also found that levels of segregation have not generally increased or decreased over the last 21/2 decades. "Remarkably, in Rotterdam, where populist politicians make a lot of noise about increasing levels of segregation, segregation levels appeared to be decreasing steadily," he writes in a forthcoming paper. "This happened from way before the populists started their campaigns."

Mr. Musterd has also compared segregation levels in Europe with those in the U.S. and discovered that the problem is far worse on this side of the Atlantic. Even if American blacks are removed from the calculations -- because of their unique history -- segregation in most cities of continental Europe is "still clearly lower" than in the U.S.

Another major indicator is employment. In the Netherlands, the employment rate for non-migrants in 2004 was 67 per cent. Immigrants did worse, with employment rates ranging widely from 62 per cent for Surinamese and an appalling 37 per cent for Moroccans. But in a forthcoming paper, Mr. Musterd shows that the trend over the last decade is positive: "All migrant categories succeed in making the gap narrower."

It's also important to realize that negative commentary of immigrants -- particularly Muslims, and most of all Moroccans -- may in part be self-fulfilling. Several studies have found that when applications to employers are made in which all information is identical except the name of the applicant -- Moroccan in some cases, Dutch in others -- the "Dutch" applicant is invited to an interview far more often the Moroccan. This isn't surprising, given the horrible image of young Moroccans in the Netherlands, but it surely a good way to fulfilling the stereotype of Moroccans as young, jobless and angry.

There is also evidence of a growing Dutch-immigrant middle class. Leading the way are immigrants from the former Dutch colony of Surinam, says Gideon Bolt, a social geographer at the University of Amsterdam. "The Surinamese have the advantage that they came here knowing the language. You see an emerging middle class that tends to move out of the larger cities. They tend to go to smaller cities. And very recently you see a trend among Turks. There is not so much socio-economic differentiation but it is starting to emerge and we see a middle class starting to move out of the bigger cities."

The story is much the same with education. Migrants, particularly Turks and Moroccans, do poorly but the trend is in the right direction. "Between 1995 and 2003, the share of Turkish and Moroccan youth that started a higher education track almost doubled from somewhat over 10 per cent to approximately 20 per cent." The level for natives is 32 per cent.

In Canada and the U.S., Muslim immigrants are actually better-educated than the native population. That's not surprising, given that North American immigration policies, in contrast to Europe's guest-worker programs, favour skills. The massive gap in education between Muslims in North America and those in Europe is the strongest testimony to the disastrous approach Europe took in the 1960s and the lingering effect of that terrible mistake.

Another key piece of information is the level of social contact between first- and second-generation immigrants and native Dutch. That's a little harder to measure, but according to a 2005 government report, surveys taken between 1994 and 2002 show a trend toward more social contact outside one's own group -- there is "a diminishing ethnic distance," as the report puts it.

The ultimate form of social contact is marriage, and on that score the news is not good. In recent years, according to Statistics Netherlands, the Dutch national statistics agency, between 50 and 60 per cent of Turkish- or Moroccan-Dutch married someone from Turkey or Morocco. Not only does such a high rate of marriage from the old country slow integration, it brings new migrants to Europe who have the same poor, semi-literate, tribal, ultra-conservative backgrounds as the original guest workers.

But here again, there is reason for optimism. The figure above includes first-generation immigrants, but when young Turks and Moroccans are asked, Statistics Netherlands notes, only 10 per cent "think it is important that their partner grew up in Turkey or Morocco. Only time will tell whether they will actually opt for a partner who grew up in the Netherlands or prefer a partner from Turkey or Morocco."

Not surprisingly, social scientists have found that migrants, particularly Muslims, are far more conservative in their attitudes toward women than native Dutch. Only three per cent of natives "completely agreed" that if a man does not want his wife to have a job, she should accept it, compared to 27 per cent of Moroccans and 29 per cent of Turks. Sixteen per cent of native Dutch said a woman should quit her job if she gives birth, compared to 39 per cent of Moroccans and 38 per cent of Turks.

What's interesting, however, is that large majorities of Turks and Moroccans did not strongly support these views. That hardly supports the common claim that Holland's Muslim communities are awash in brutal sexism.

Another positive sign is the fertility rate of Muslim women. As a general rule, uneducated women living in a society where women have little control over their lives will have four, five, six or more babies. As women become better-educated and take more control of their lives, fertility falls.

Not surprisingly, older Muslim women -- all first-generation immigrants -- gave birth to far more children than do native Dutch women. Not so second-generation Muslim women. Their fertility rate "hardly differs from that of native Dutch women," notes Statistics Netherlands. Falling Muslim fertility also puts the lie to claims routinely heard in conservative circles, and often in mainstream publications, that Rotterdam (or Amsterdam) will soon be Europe's first majority Muslim city. Not true, according to Statistics Netherlands. As of 2004, Muslims were only 13 per cent of the total population of Greater Amsterdam and 14 per cent in Rotterdam. The two big Dutch cities are indeed close to having immigrant majorities but Muslims make up only 54 per cent of all non-Western immigrants in the Netherlands. In 2006, Muslims in Holland are expected to top one million, or six per cent of the total population of 16.4 million -- hardly the "Eurabia" feared by some.

In his paper summing up the data on integration, Sako Musterd concludes, "there still are substantial differences between population categories. However, serious and promising positive developments could also be shown."

Translated into ordinary English, that means: There are problems but things are getting better.

In the tempestuous weeks following the murder of Theo van Gogh in 2004, as arsonists attacked mosques and churches and politicians declared the country to be "at war," Geert Mak published a short essay. Please, he asked his countrymen, calm down.

"A kind of fever of xenophobia" overtook the Netherlands, he says. The focus on the failings of immigrants, particularly Muslims, was intense. The language was harsh.

Conservatives celebrated the moment as the shattering of old delusions, but Mr. Mak saw little constructive in it. "Just saying these young Muslim guys are criminal doesn't solve the problem. You don't solve a problem with hostility."

Hostility may, however, make the problem worse. "If you are isolated, if you are marginalized, if you are labelled, you get frustrated," says Haleh Ghorashi. "And that's the basis for radicalization and for criminal activity."

It's also a good way to stop integration in its track. A young man whose parents came from Morocco, who was born in the Netherlands and has never lived anywhere else, will naturally feel ties to the land he knows and the land he thinks he knows through his parents. This is the story of immigrants everywhere. As time and generations pass, the links to the new country grow stronger while those to the old wither.

But if you tell this young man over and over he is Moroccan, and you tell him Moroccans are criminals and troublemakers, he may well decide you are right. He is 100-per-cent Moroccan. To hell with Holland and to hell with you.

Ms. Ghorashi says that's precisely what's happening now. "Migrants are seeing themselves as entirely Moroccan or Iranian and they do not claim their Dutchness." From this come Dutch citizens telling foreign journalists that Holland sucks.

The alienation is far from universal, however. Some immigrant groups, notably Surinamese, are more likely to identify themselves as Dutch and to feel accepted as Dutch. Meanwhile, Holland's little Chinese community -- also a legacy of guest workers -- is far from integrated and yet the Dutch have nothing negative to say about the people who are generally perceived to be honest and hard-working.

A kind of immigrant hierarchy has formed, with migrants from Western countries and former colonies on top. Beneath them are Muslims -- a category which is applied to countries, not individuals, so that even a woman who flees Iran because she is an atheist Marxist, as Ms. Ghorashi did, is lumped in with Muslim. But Muslim is further broken down, with those believed to be harder-working and less trouble -- Turks and Iranians -- placing higher. At the bottom of the bottom are Moroccans.

Perhaps not coincidentally, the Dutch intelligence agency reports that the ranks of domestic, potentially violent Islamists are almost entirely made up of second-generation Moroccans.

A recent report commissioned by the immigration minister found that the political climate of the past half-decade and the escalating criticism of Muslims has generated a widespread sense of rejection and humiliation among the second-generation Moroccans who are the focus of it all. More than unemployment and poverty, the report concluded, these feelings are what lead some to radical Islam and e

© The Ottawa Citizen 2006

zondag 29 oktober 2006

Muslim women are the key to change

Source: Times on line and American Enterprise Institute

Ahirsi_ali_2 Ayaan Hirsi Ali *) lives under a death threat for daring to challenge the Islamic patriarchy and says the West must support women like her if it wants to spread freedom

Ideas can be dangerous. I have learnt that the hard way. But I know that when it comes to freedom and human rights these precious ideas, so valued in the West, are worth fighting for. As a young Muslim woman, born in Somalia, I abandoned my family to avoid an arranged marriage to a distant cousin and fled to Holland. I was just 23 and I had no idea back then that my refusal to submit to a traditional Muslim woman’s life would come to dominate my whole career.

So for me, the debate that is raging about the veil, particularly the niqab, which covers most of the woman’s face save for the eyes, goes to the very heart of the matter of liberty for Islamic women. Not just freedom for its own sake, but from a life of repression, subordination and violence.

Last week, for example, a senior Muslim cleric in Australia alluded in a sermon to unveiled women as “uncovered meat”. Sheikh Taj El Din al-Hilaly’s remarks prompted outrage, but he will have many faithful followers who agree with him.

Such insults to women are all the more reason to welcome the recent stand by Jack Straw and Tony Blair on the niqab. Not only is it a “visible mark of separation” as Straw described it, but also a visible sign of subjugation. At the same time it serves to condemn the male as well. If I were a man I would find it insulting because it supposes that all men are incapable of sexual self-restraint.

Like Straw I have also drawn on my experience of dealing with constituents. I served three years as an MP in the Dutch parliament, devoting myself to speaking out about female rights in Islamic societies. I often had to translate for poor women immigrants who were usually barely educated and nearly always in thrall to men.

In Islamic societies the veil functions as a constant reminder to the outside world of a stifling morality that makes a Muslim man’s honour entirely dependent on the respectable, obedient behaviour of the female members of his family.

I am living proof that Muslim women in the West can only benefit from turning away from the principles in their faith that justify subordination and embracing those of liberty in their host cultures. But there is a high price for urging Muslims to examine their beliefs. I have received death threats for becoming an infidel and two years ago the airing of a film about the oppression of women which I made with the director Theo van Gogh resulted in his murder by an Islamic terrorist.

The arguments for and against the veil will rage on, but what increasingly alarms me is the emergence of a post 9/11 generation of young women in the West who are out to make a statement by wearing the niqab. They enjoy all the western freedoms but choose to flaunt the veil. They are the female equivalent of the radical young men who travel to Pakistan and come back wanting to blow up trains.

Such men see themselves as companions of the prophet and they are “high” on religion. Both groups have completely succumbed to totalitarian seduction; they are the worst enemies of Islam, both to its image and to its chances of reformation.

The existence of this noisy female minority, many of them wealthy and educated, hides the fact that there are thousands of poorer women in Europe and millions across the Muslim world who have no voice and no choice. They are punished and threatened for daring to follow a different path.

In my book The Caged Virgin (Simon & Schuster) I tell the story of my friend Samira Ahmed, a 24-year-old girlishly pretty woman with a smile that seduces even the gloomiest of faces. Born to a family who left Morocco in the early 1980s and settled in the Netherlands, she is one of 10 children.

In the summer of 2005 I attended her graduation ceremony in Amsterdam where she received a diploma in education and a record 10 score (the highest possible) for her thesis. But behind the celebration lay tragedy. When I arrived for her graduation I noticed the happy class, a total of 35 students, gathered in clusters around coffee stands. Family and friends accompanied the students, chatting, carrying gifts and flowers. But not for Samira: no one from her family showed up.

Two years earlier Samira had had to sneak away from home because she wanted to live in a student house like her other friends. At home she had shared a bedroom with her siblings and every move she made was monitored by her mother and sisters; outside the house her brothers kept watch. They all wanted to ensure that she would not become westernised.

Samira had endured terrible physical and psychological violence at home. Her family always had a pretext to question her, go through her stuff and forbid her from setting foot outside the house. She was beaten frequently. She could bear it no longer and left.

Soon afterwards, in the summer of 2003, she got in touch with me. I went with her to the police to file a complaint against her brothers, who had threatened to murder her. According to them Samira’s death was the only way to avenge the shame she had brought upon the family for leaving their parents’ house. The police said they could do nothing. They said there were thousands of other women like her and it was not the police’s duty to intervene in family matters.

Ever since she left Samira has been in hiding, moving from house to house and depending on the kindness of strangers. Mostly she is brave and faces life with a powerful optimism. Sometimes, however, she has a sad, drawn look on her face that betrays her worries.

Today, on her graduation day, she is glowing, clutching her diploma. Her worries are far from over, though. She has no money; she has to find a job — and with her Moroccan name that will be far from easy. She also lives in fear of being discovered by her brothers and slaughtered. This is no joke, for in just two police regions in Holland 11 Muslim girls were killed by their families in a year.

It is women like Samira who politicians need to target because they hold the key to the future. They are going to become mothers and they are going to be the mothers of sons. We need to focus on them in order to prevent the next generation falling into the trap of the jihadist’s promise.

To my mind there are three categories of Muslim women living in the European Union who we need to reach. First, there are girls like Samira, intelligent and willing to take a chance on shaping their individual futures along a path they choose for themselves. They face many obstacles as they try to assimilate in western society and some may lose their lives trying to attain their dreams.

Second, there are girls and women who are very dependent and attached to their families but who cleverly forge a way to lead a double life. Instead of confronting their families and arguing about their adherence to custom and religion, these girls use a more tactful approach. When with family (in the broadest sense of the word, which also includes their community) they put on their headscarves and at home obey every whim of their parents and menfolk.

Outside the home, however, they lead the life of an average western woman: they have a job, dress fashionably, have a boyfriend, drink alcohol, attend cocktail parties and even manage to travel away from home.

The third group are the utterly vulnerable. Some of these girls are imported as brides or domestic workers from the country of origin of the immigrants with whom they come to live. These girls are removed from school once they attain puberty and locked up at home. Their families get away with this form of modern slavery because the authorities rarely take notice of these young women.

The girls have often been brought up to be absolutely obedient; they perform household chores in the house of their parents or husband without question. They can hardly read or write.

When they marry they generally bear as many children as their individual fertility allows. When they miscarry most of them view this as God’s will, not as a lack of proper healthcare which they are usually prevented from seeking for religious reasons.

When a woman in this subjugated state is violently abused by husband, brother or father, she considers it her own fault and promises to behave better in the future.

Some abused women may be tempted to rebel by running away or informing the authorities when their life becomes too painful. Those who act on such a temptation are likely to be killed by their own family or husband, or end up in prostitution or in women’s shelters. Some who have shown signs of rebellion are lured back to their country of origin by parents or husbands and simply dumped there.

For a while now I have been asserting that the most effective way for EU governments to deal with their Muslim minorities is to empower the Muslim women living within their borders.

The best tool for that is education. Yet the education systems of some EU countries are going through a crisis of neglect, particularly with regard to immigrant children. And in the matter of faith schools we are now paying the price of mixing education with ideology.

I think religion is taking up far too much time, attention and space in our society. Blair needs to look at the segregation of boys and girls and ask himself why young girls in primary schools are veiled. Are we saying that five and six-year-olds are sexual symbols, “uncovered meat”? As a society we must understand that saving young girls from all kinds of repression is important. Many are removed from school when they reach puberty, often when they start to behave like British teenagers. That is the precise moment when teachers, mentors and feminists need to identify those girls at risk, those who want to be emancipated and who face the risk of forced marriages and violence.

We want women like Samira to choose the career they want, the number of children they want and the husbands they want. We want them to be free. Girls like her need our help so badly.

*) Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a research fellow at the Washington think tank American Enterprise Institute

woensdag 25 oktober 2006

Britain is turning on the US, at its own peril

By Melanie Philips

Melanie_philips_1 Everyone knows that Europe is a continent stuffed with craven, terror-appeasing fromages who loathe America. Britain, by contrast, led by the lion-hearted Tony Blair, is full of stalwarts who stand shoulder to shoulder with the United States in the defense of the West. Right?

Wrong. Fury at Prime Minister Blair for being President Bush’s “poodle” has reached such a pitch that the most successful Labor prime minister in memory is being forced out of office because of his support for U.S. policy in Iraq and Israel. Labor’s members of Parliament say his refusal to break with America by calling for an earlier cease-fire in Lebanon was the last straw. The disturbing fact is that Britain is consumed by a rampant anti-Americanism and an allied hostility toward Israel, which are driving public debate into irrationality, prejudice and appeasement.

In a Populus poll last month in The Times of London, 62% said the government should change its policy by distancing itself from the United States, being more critical of Israel and declaring a timetable for withdrawing from Iraq. An August YouGov poll in The Spectator magazine revealed that while 53% wanted a tougher anti-terrorism policy, 45% wanted to be allied more closely with the European Union than with America. Only 14% supported closer U.S. ties.

As a result, the prospects for the alliance between Britain and the United States in the post-Blair era do not look promising. Despite being an instinctive Atlanticist, Gordon Brown, the most likely successor as Labor prime minister, is thought to be only a reluctant backer of the war in Iraq, according to a new autobiography by former Labor minister David Blunkett.

Meanwhile David Cameron, the new young leader of the opposition Conservative Party, made a speech last month distancing himself from U.S. foreign policy and blaming America for fanning the flames of anti-Americanism. The outcome might be that Britain increasingly snuggles up to the EU over foreign policy while an irritated America, bereft of its principal advocate in Europe, moves toward isolationism.

Much of Britain’s anti-Americanism is driven by the usual suspects, such as far-left lawmaker George Galloway or newspapers such as the ultra-left Guardian. Galloway, for instance, said during an interview with GQ magazine earlier this year that the assassination of Blair by a suicide bomber would be “morally justified.”

Left-wing discourse, now staple fare on the BBC and applauded even by conservatively minded audiences in panel discussions, proclaims that the United States is the fount of Third World oppression and the greatest threat to world peace.

But British animosity toward the U.K.’s most important and historic ally is wider and deeper. Partly it derives from simple snobbery, the long-standing British belief that Americans are vulgar upstarts who lack the gravitas that Britain has accrued from a thousand years of history.

Probe further, however, and you discover anguish at the progressive junking of that history. Schools, for example, no longer teach the history or values of the British nation on the grounds that national identity based on a majority culture is viewed as “racist.” Instead, they promote multiculturalism, the doctrine that minority value must have equal status to those of the majority. Loss of confidence in Britain’s role in the world has demoralized its governing class so badly that it has come to believe that the nation state is the principal source of all ills from prejudice to war, and that legitimacy resides instead in supranational institutions.

So no international action can be taken without sanctification by that holy of holies, the United Nations. As a result, the British regard Bush’s “unilateral” foreign policy with undiluted horror. This is made worse by disdain for Bush himself, regarded as a tongue-tied cowboy who actually believes in God — to the post-religious British, the nearest thing to a certificate of lunacy.

The biggest single cause of British anti-Americanism, however, is Israel. Despite being the target for more than half a century of genocidal Arab and Muslim aggression, Israel is widely perceived in Britain as the regional bully, and its acts of self-defense are viewed as the principal motor behind both the Middle East impasse and Islamic grievance because of its supposed refusal to allow the Palestinians to have a state of their own.

Thus John Denham, chairman of the parliamentary Home Affairs Select Committee, wrote that Israel’s policies were making Britain a target for terror. America brought the 9/11 attacks upon itself, goes this type of thinking, because of its support for Israel — and the only reason Britain is now threatened by Islamic terror is because of Blair’s support for the United States.

This has opened a Pandora’s box of anti-Jewish prejudice in Britain.

A recent report by the Parliamentary Committee Against Antisemitism found that since 2000, anti-Semitism is on the rise in Britain. It is now common to read in the news media, for example, that the Jews are engaged in a global conspiracy that has subverted U.S. foreign policy to serve the interests of Israel and put the rest of the world at risk. In April, for instance, The Independent newspaper illustrated an interview on the subject of the “Israel lobby” in America with a picture of the American flag in which the stars of the union were replaced with the Stars of David. The headline: “The United States of Israel.” Thus the prejudice against America is inextricably conflated with prejudice against Jews and the Jewish state.

The dismaying truth is that, even after the suicide bombings in London, America’s defense of the free world against Islamic terror is widely viewed in Britain as the cause of that terror. The paranoid bigotry that drives the jihad — that the United States and its Jewish puppet masters make up a giant conspiracy of evil — is being increasingly echoed within Britain’s non-Muslim population.

The very idea that weakening the alliance with the United States would be in Britain’s interests is madness. But in a country that has lost its way, rationality is a commodity in short supply.

vrijdag 20 oktober 2006

My Freedom

Book Review: Ayaan Hirsi Ali's "My Freedom"

Source: The Moderate Voice - by Michael van der Galien

Mijn_vrijheid_4 As promised, here is my review of Ayaan's latest book: "My Freedom" or actually "Mijn Vrijheid" since it has not been published in English just yet.

"My Freedom" is one of the most intriguing autobiographies I have ever read. Ayaan knows how to create a particular distance from the scenes she describes, without losing a certain personal tone. This combination proves to be an absolute winner: the 'distance' allows the reader to think for himself, to form his own opinion about different matters, while at the same time understanding how particular events shaped Ayaan and caused her to be the woman she is today.

She describes perfectly, for instance, how her mother became disappointed in life, which caused her to - in a way - radicalize and to lash out at her daughters, even to beat them severely, whenever she considered such to be - somewhat - necessary.

Ayaan explains the early life of her mother and later the way she treated her (and her sister and brother) with the before-mentioned combination: as an observer to a dgree, yet mixed with a personal 'touch' as well. This causes the reader to have mixed feelings about Ayaan's mother: on the one hand one can sympathize with her, on the other one greatly dislikes her as well. To feel sorry for her, but to despise her as well.

Ayaan's father is described by Ayaan as a remarkable, incomprehensible man. He is / was quite secular, especially for contemporary Somali society. One sympathizes with him, one respects him, it is clear that he loves all of his children, albeit especially Ayaan - he wants / wanted what is best for them, but on the other hand, he has no problem with leaving them all behind without further notice, marry a new wife and to start all over again. Also, although, he loves Ayaan, his own honor, that of the family and of the tribe, and of course Islam, prove to be of superior interest to him in the end nonetheless.

From a Somali perspective he is modern, perhaps even liberal. From a Somali perspective he deserves respect and perhaps even adoration. From the perspective of a Westerner however, one cannot help but conclude that although one 'likes' him - as far as one can 'like' someone, one really does not know - one can only conclude that he is - at the same time - a failure, as a man, a husband as a father and even as a statesman.

The main focus of the book is - of course - the development Ayaan went through herself: from being raised to become a good 'baari' (a submissive woman, adhering to every demand of her husband, a good Muslima, etc.) to a critic of integration and a fighter for womens-rights in Muslim communities in the West.

This development, this transformation is a remarkable one and perhaps one of the main reasons why she is as greatly respected as she is today. To be able to understand the true nature of this transformation, to understand how rare and how special Ayaan is in this regard, this book is quite simply a necessity.

Without becoming too heavy, yet leaving some room for the emotions she felt at the time, she describes how she was - for instance - circumcised, how her father arranged a marriage for her with a cousin living in Canada, how severe and common the beatings where she was forced to undergo, etc.

This book is quite obviously about Ayaan herself, but it is also about much, much more. She explains the culture of Somalia in a way that makes it completely understandable to Western readers and she also spends a lot of attention to the so-called 'pure Islam of the prophet' as preached by the Muslim Brotherhood. Muslim 'preachers' who were severely sponsored / funded by rich Saudis, came to Somalia when Ayaan was a high school student and influenced many, many people.

One female teacher of hers at high school had lived in Saudi Arabia herself and, as a result, adhered to a very literal interpretation of the Islam as in the Saudi tradition: one in which women are oppressed, in which they are mere slaves or even less, as animals, andsoforth.

She describes how this changed many, many people - especially women - in Somalia. How she herself, even, got influenced by it and started to dress and behave accordingly.

She describes the tricks the Muslim Brotherhood and organizations like it use to become popular and the results of it.

Ayaan explains that, when she first arrived on European soil, how shocking life in the West was for her, but how she got attracted to it as well: women who dressed in Western clothing (to her half-naked yet not being instantly raped by the first man they passed), couples publicly showing their love for each other (holding hands, kissing), things like that.

It was different, but highly attractive, scary but adventurous. She decided to not do what her father wanted her to do (go to her husband in Canada - she had to travel through Germany) but instead to flee towards freedom: to the Netherlands. There her transformation continued, she explored, she went to the University of Leiden to study as to learn better to think for herself and to form her own opinions until she became a critic of certain aspects of Islam, integration and, at last, broke with Islam entirely.

But she also describes how fellow Somali refugees (well, people who applied for it) and other Muslim immigrants reacted to her change and to Dutch culture an sich. She describes how many of her fellow Somali refugees, also many individuals who did receive permission to stay here, despised and continue to despise the West, despise Dutch culture, consider the Dutch to be 'infidels' and worse, refuse to learn the language well, refuse to integrate, yet were and still are more than willing to benefit from the Dutch welfare system nonetheless: How they lock themselves up in their own communities, in disgust of the world surrounding them, yet accepting the check they receive every month without hesitation.

In the end, "My Freedom" is an absolute must-read to everyone interested in Ayaan's work and life as to understand this remarkable lady better. However, not just to understand her better, but also to understand 'Pure Islam' better, to become more aware of the attitude of many immigrants and of course of Somali culture.

In short, if one wants to understand the issue of integration and of radicalization better - and how to do something about it - one cannot afford to ignore this informative and even inspiring book.

dinsdag 17 oktober 2006

The Owl and the Ostrich

Ahirsi_ali_1

Source: American Enterprise Institute

2006-2007 Grano Speakers Series

By Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Posted: Tuesday, October 17, 2006
ARTICLES
Toronto Star  (Canada)
Publication Date: October 15, 2006

In Africa we sometimes used animals to say things on sensitive issues to avoid discussing the messenger instead of the message. So I shall use the ostrich and the owl to sketch the two most important positions on the issue of immigration and pluralism in Europe.

The view of things, as the ostrich sees them, in Europe today is bright. He sees an open market of 450,000,000 people with an amazing potential. He sees a thriving economy and the free movement of people, goods, money and services. Immigration, to the ostrich, can only be viewed as an opportunity for an aging native population. Borders are better open than closed. Islam is a faith like Christianity and Muslims shall adapt their religion to life in Europe.

According to the ostrich, very soon there shall be a European Islam, signs of which are already visible in the young women in tight jeans, high heels, black sleeveless tight tops and matching head scarves, all designed by Prada. This Prada Islam will replace the old rural one and function as a vaccine against the Wahhabi Islam of the Saudis.

The overrepresentation of migrants in the wrong statistics, such as unemployment, unfinished education and crime, is to the ostrich no more than a temporary affair. It's a period that all people from underprivileged backgrounds go through. This unpleasant fact in the history of immigrants shall be short, as long as there is economic growth.

According to the ostrich, the wealthy natives should stop whining about the backwardness of immigrants and concentrate on the benefits. The ostrich points to the nurses, nannies, construction workers, grocers, bag carriers, cleaners, factory workers and a host of other jobs natives won't do but are necessary to keep the economy going.

The ostrich is not worried about the flow of migrants transforming the culture and society of Europe in any negative way. The societies migrants come from will grow, mature, become rich and the flow will dwindle. The ostrich sees only one thing as a setback: the xenophobia of native Europeans. If only the inherently racist white society was to overcome its fear of what is alien, it would notice how migrants have improved the cuisine, the music, the arts and the economy of Europe. The mantra of the ostrich is borrowed from Monty Python: "Always look on the bright side of life."

Then we have the owl. The owl is a night bird and gets, more often than the ostrich, a glimpse of the dark side of things. He sees all that the ostrich does not see or, rather, he sees all that the ostrich sees. Europe is healthy and wealthy but the old owl worries that Europe may not be so wise.

The shadow side of the free movement of people, for instance, is the trade in women and children for the ruthless sex industry as well. Weapons of all sorts go unnoticed from hand to hand, from country to country, unnoticed by the various member states. Some of these weapons could be biological, chemical or worse.

The old owl sees how poor migrants are exploited by cruel employers who hire and fire them at will with little or no pay, again unnoticed or ignored by labour unions. The owl can't help but notice that even after the recent amnesty, Spain has an estimated one million illegal immigrants. The United Kingdom roughly half a million. France, 200,000 to 400,000, if you trust the French. I think there are more. Germany, about one million. The Netherlands, 125,000 to 225,000 and so on.

The owl perceives the scale of the problem in Europe as being vast and the results for illegal immigrants detrimental. "Look," says the owl, "these are human beings who are often being abused, extorted and have no legal recourse." The owl acknowledges unreservedly the need for migrants in Europe, the aging populations and the decreasing population growth, but also sees that selection of migrants is not always based on who is useful for the economy.

The owl sees that Islam is not Christianity and that not all Muslims understand or want to share in any European future based on European values of freedom, tolerance and an attitude of live and let live. The owl cannot ignore the success of the Islamist totalitarian movement financed from Saudi Arabia and other petroleum nations in the Middle East, parts of Asia and parts of Africa.

The owl sadly looks on as poor kids are taught to view themselves as victims and the society in which they live as the enemy. He can't help but notice that Muslim migrants are receptive to the seduction of Islamism. Even worse, there are now natives converting to this brand of totalitarianism.

He can't help but notice that most of the people who migrate to Europe are from Muslim countries; the shrinking populations of Europe do not only represent an economic problem, but a more serious problem of a clash of values.

The owl can't ignore the growth of the extreme right-wing movements and parties. He fears that the debate on pluralism in Europe will be hijacked by two uncompromising extremes: whites' power fascism and Islamo-fascism.

The owl thinks that the ostrich is right; we should always look on the bright side of life but be careful not to get delusional, perhaps because, unlike the ostrich, the owl has no neck to bury in the sand.

Foretelling the future can be fun for astrologists, prophets and crystal-ball gazers. For academics, it is not. If you get it right, you will be damned like Samuel Huntington. If you get it wrong, you will be called a certified idiot. So instead of predictions, we draw rough sketches of a best-case and a worse-case scenario.

In a worse-case scenario, the warnings of the owl will not be heeded. The optimism of the ostrich will be abandoned. The monopoly of force that is now exclusive to states will be challenged by armed subgroups. European societies will be divided along ethnic and religious lines that are hostile to each other. An already deteriorating education system will not succeed in grooming the youth to believe in a shared past, let alone a shared future. The educating of kids will be left in the hands of their particular ethnic or religious community.

The European states will find themselves limiting civil liberties. Europeans will come to accept the de facto implementation of Sharia law in certain neighbourhoods and even cities. The exploitation of the weak, women and children will be commonplace. Those who can afford to emigrate will do so. This emigration will compound an ongoing brain drain but also an outflow of money and expertise.

On a global level, Europe will be overtaken in economic growth by China. Russia shall not shy away from teaching all Europe a lesson. Besides, Turkey may fall into the hands of the Islamofascistic nationalists vying for power today and decide to become unpredictable. European societies may catch themselves begging the U.S. for help or reverting back to the short-lived, precarious alliances of 19th-century politics. Instead of an evergrowing union, future generations may witness an ever disintegrating one.

In a best-case scenario, Europeans will heed the caution of the owl without losing the liveliness of the ostrich. This wise and optimistic approach will be translated into a three-dimensional, comprehensive immigration assimilation policy designed on an EU level. First, controlled or planned immigration. Second, an intervention, sometimes proactive, in countries that generate large-scale exoduses. And third, an active assimilation policy. Member nations that do not meet this or frustrate this policy will be penalized legally and financially.

Coming to the first dimension, we will see, in a best-case scenario, a reform of current migration policy. The unplanned ad hoc migration and alien policies designed by member states will be abandoned and replaced with a planned one. This will require European immigration and naturalization services compared to that of the U.S. on a federal level.

Right now, Europe has 25 immigration and naturalization services, each with its own visa, short-term and long-term regulations, and each with its own naturalization procedures. Each member state assumes border control it no longer has or can't afford. The system is contradictory, open to abuse and difficult to control for law enforcement officials.

In a best-case scenario the EU will introduce quotas such as those in the United States, based on the selection of migrants and who is beneficial to the economy and who is not. The current system in most European countries is designed to attract the highest number of people with truly heartbreaking stories, not the highest number of people who are willing and able to adapt to the European society. This will be changed.

The 1951 United Nations Refugee Convention will be adapted to an age that is entirely different from the age in which it was created and adopted and recognize the intense difficulties it has brought numerous Western nations, which struggle with the assimilation of millions of refugees and their descendants.

The second dimension of that policy, that optimistic policy, is an intervention plan directed at Europe's neighbouring states or failed states that create conditions under which people have to migrate in large numbers. This interventionist plan will consist of aid, trade, diplomatic pressure and military intervention, if necessary. That's taboo in Europe at the moment.

Right now the EU selects the countries it wants to aid based on lists provided by the World Bank or the United Nations. The criteria for aid are based on such vague notions as the 100 poorest countries or countries with good governance or some other goody-goody sounding reason. If one takes heed of the precautions of the owl, one cannot help but think that Europe must start with its immediate neighbours when it comes to improving other societies.

In a best-case scenario, countries will qualify for interference--some call it aid--based on the number of migrants they produce. To strengthen the argument for this type of interference, the EU will respect the rules of proper free trade. This means that subsidies on agricultural products in the EU will be stopped in order to allow products from third world countries to be sold fairly on European markets.

Aid given to these nation states will consist of trying to decrease those factors that push out migrants. This does not mean that there would no longer be reasons for migrants to leave their home countries, but the political, economic and humanitarian reasons for large numbers of people to risk their lives in the sea and in the hands of smugglers in order to travel to the EU will not be nearly as pressing as they are now.

Finally, in a best-case scenario, the EU will implement an assimilation program guided by the lessons learned from the failed policies of member states that attempted to integrate non-Western migrants based on a theory of multiculturalism. It will acknowledge that the basic tenets of Islam are a major obstacle to integration. In practice, Muslims will continue to enjoy religious freedom within the EU, as long as exercising that precious right does not infringe upon the freedoms of others, including daughters and wives.

The argument of the French is that the freedom of conscience and thus, faith, is best guaranteed by a neutral state. Much as I admire the American way of doing things, the French model seems to me to be the best in dealing with the problem of assimilation. It's geared best towards the folly of all religions that indoctrinate helpless children with the superstitions their parents subscribe to.

In a best-case scenario, there will be no schools indoctrinating poor kids with a hostile view of life. Outside school, parents may favour their religion. When a child is old enough to make one's own decisions, he or she will choose whatever faith or secular mind he or she wants to adhere to. Most important of all, he or she will have learned in school not to impose but to respect the freedoms of the other.

This means a clear departure of the old policies that were based on multiculturalism. While the prevention of ghettos is key in helping the integration of migrants, the best instrument for a reasonably quick and effective integration of migrants is education.

In a best-case scenario, the EU policy makers will invest in girls and women, protect them from violence, punish those who try to limit their freedoms and encourage them on and on to finish school, earn their own living and get complete control over their bodies and sexuality.

In a best case scenario, the EU policy makers, hopefully with the consent of the labour unions, will reform the welfare state; the regulations pertaining to the hiring and firing of employees will be made more flexible, making it easier for migrants to enter the labour market. We need, for the sake of integration, structural reforms that inform, that reward hard work and discourage idleness; reforms that punish discrimination in the labour market, reforms that ensure a climate of legal order and stability where wives do not have to be afraid of their husbands, where daughters do not have to be afraid of their fathers or their brothers, where girls can go to school without fear of being harassed by male members of their community, reforms that prevent genital mutilation and reforms that can ban radical preachers who preach violence and encourage their followers to engage in acts of violence.

In short, we need reforms that end the misguided policies that have brought Europe into its current predicament.

The combined vision of the ostrich and the owl is indeed possible in Europe but requires a great deal of willpower, leadership and, above all, the recognition that tolerating oppressive cultures and encouraging more mass migration from Islamic countries often hurts precisely the people we seek to help: abused women in Islamic countries, young jobless men, and Europeans who live in working-class neighbourhoods who wonder how it all could have gone so wrong.

A misguided vision brought Europe to its current predicament; an idealistic vision, convinced of the inherent superiority of enlightened values over the values of oppressive cultures, a vision steeped in individual rights, the rule of law and the equality of men and women, can help guide Europe out of it. It is possible. Europe is not yet lost and members of its immigrant communities can indeed integrate into a European society.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI.

Related Links
Women the Future of Freedom
Source Notes:  This article is an edited version of a Grano lecture delivered by Ayaan Hirsi Ali in Toronto on October 11th, 2006.

Women Go "Missing" by the Millions

Ayaanhirsiali

Source: American Enterprise Institute

By Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Posted: Tuesday, October 3, 2006
ARTICLES
International Herald Tribune   
Publication Date: March 25, 2006

As I was preparing for this article, I asked a friend who is Jewish if it was appropriate to use the term "holocaust" to portray the worldwide violence against women. He was startled. But when I read him the figures in a 2004 policy paper published by the Geneva Center for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces, he said yes, without hesitation.

One United Nations estimate says from 113 million to 200 million women around the world are demographically "missing." Every year, from 1.5 million to 3 million women and girls lose their lives as a result of gender-based violence or neglect.

How could this possibly be true? Here are some of the factors:

In countries where the birth of a boy is considered a gift and the birth of a girl a curse from the gods, selective abortion and infanticide eliminate female babies.

Young girls die disproportionately from neglect because food and medical attention is given first to brothers, fathers, husbands and sons.

In countries where women are considered the property of men, their fathers and brothers can murder them for choosing their own sexual partners. These are called "honor" killings, though honor has nothing to do with it.

Young brides are killed if their fathers do not pay sufficient money to the men who have married them. These are called "dowry deaths," although they are not just deaths, they are murders.

The brutal international sex trade in young girls kills uncounted numbers of them. Domestic violence is a major cause of death of women in every country. So little value is placed on women's health that every year roughly 600,000 women die giving birth.

Six thousand girls undergo genital mutilation every day, according to the World Health Organization. Many die; others live the rest of their lives in crippling pain.

According to the WHO, one woman out of every five worldwide is likely to be a victim of rape or attempted rape in her lifetime.

What is happening to women and girls in many places across the globe is genocide. All the victims scream their suffering. It is not so much that the world doesn't hear them; it is that fellow human beings choose not to pay attention.

It is much more comfortable for us to ignore these issues. And by "us," I also mean women. Too often, we are the first to look away. We may even participate, by favoring our sons and neglecting the care of our daughters. All these figures are estimates; registering precise numbers for violence against women is not a priority in most countries.

Going forward, there are three challenges:

Women are not organized or united. Those of us in rich countries, who have attained equality under the law, need to mobilize to assist our fellows. Only our outrage and our political pressure can lead to change.

The Islamists are engaged in reviving and spreading a brutal and retrograde body of laws. Wherever the Islamists implement Shariah, or Islamic law, women are hounded from the public arena, denied education and forced into a life of domestic slavery.

Cultural and moral relativists sap our sense of moral outrage by claiming that human rights are a Western invention. Men who abuse women rarely fail to use the vocabulary the relativists have provided them. They claim the right to adhere to an alternative set of values - an "Asian," "African" or "Islamic" approach to human rights.

This mind-set needs to be broken. A culture that carves the genitals of young girls, hobbles their minds and justifies their physical oppression is not equal to a culture that believes women have the same rights as men.

Three initial steps could be taken by world leaders to begin eradicating the mass murder of women:

A tribunal such as the court of justice in The Hague should look for the 113 million to 200 million women and girls who are missing.

A serious international effort must urgently be made to precisely register violence against girls and women, country by country.

We need a worldwide campaign to reform cultures that permit this kind of crime. Let's start to name them and shame them.

In the past two centuries, those in the West have gradually changed the way they treat women. As a result, the West enjoys greater peace and progress. It is my hope that the third world will embark on this effort. Just as we put an end to slavery, we must end the gendercide.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI.

Related Links
Women the Future of Freedom
Save the Women, Save Ourselves
Related Event: Women in the Middle East: The Beacon of Change

Tunisia moves against headscarves

Source: BBC news, Cairo - By Heba Saleh

Two women in the Tunisian capital on 12 October 2006
Islamic headscarves are banned in schools and government offices
The Tunisian authorities have launched a campaign against the Islamic veil worn by some women to cover their hair.

Police are applying with renewed vigour a decree dating back to 1981 which prohibits women from wearing Islamic headscarves in public places.

In recent days, senior officials have hit out at what they describe as sectarian dress worn by people who use religion to hide political aims.

Human rights groups describe the move as unconstitutional.

Police in Tunisia have been stopping women on the streets and asking them to remove their headscarves and sign pledges that they will not go back to wearing them.

Under a ban introduced in 1981, women in Tunisia are not allowed to wear Islamic dress in schools or government offices. Those who insist on it face losing their jobs.

One woman said she was barred from entering her son's school wearing a headscarf.

'Unconstitutional'

The President, Zine El Abidine Ali, described the headscarf as a sectarian form of dress which had come into Tunisia uninvited.

Other officials said Islamic dress was being promoted by extremists who exploited religion for their political ambitions.

Tunisian human rights activists accused the authorities of depriving women of a basic freedom guaranteed by the constitution.

They say many people are upset by the ban, but that in a country where dissent is not tolerated they dare not show their anger.

Mr Ben Ali has been keen to restrict the spread of ideas or signs and religious symbols which could strengthen the country's outlawed Islamic opposition.

In the 1990s he moved to crush Tunisia's main moderate Islamic movement when fighting erupted in neighbouring Algeria between Islamists and the state.

See also: Tunisia attacked over headscarves - 26-09-2006

Related: Court backs Turkish headscarf ban - 10-11-2005

vrijdag 6 oktober 2006

Straw: I'd rather no one wore veils

Source: Guardian Limited

Veil

The row over whether Muslim women should wear veils today intensified when Jack Straw said he would rather they were not worn at all.

Mr Straw, the leader of the Commons, insisted he did not want to be "prescriptive" of Muslim women's dress, but said the increasing trend towards covering facial features was "bound to make better, positive relations between the two communities more difficult".

The row ignited yesterday after the Blackburn MP said he had made clear to women wearing the niqab (full veil) at constituency surgeries that he would prefer them to remove the facial garment because face to face conversations were of "greater value". The row over whether Muslim women should wear veils today intensified when Jack Straw said he would rather they were not worn at all.

But the Lancashire Council of Mosques said he had "misunderstood" the issue and it was "deeply concerned" by his "very insensitive and unwise" statement.

"For such a seasoned and astute politician to make such a comment that has shocked his Muslim constituents seems ill-judged and misconceived," a spokesman said. "Many of these women find Mr Straw's comments both offensive and disturbing."

In an article for his local paper, Mr Straw yesterday revealed that no one had refused his request, and most "seemed relieved".

Asked today whether he would rather the veils be discarded completely, he said: "Yes. It needs to be made clear I am not talking about being prescriptive but, with all the caveats, yes, I would rather."

He said he was concerned about the development of "parallel communities" in which different religious groups did not mix.

"You cannot force people ... where they live, that's a matter of choice and economics, but you can be concerned about the implications of separateness and I am," he told the BBC's Today programme.

Mr Straw later told GMTV: "It is about personal choice, and I think it's quite important that we should think about the implications, because seeing people's faces is fundamental to relationships between people.

"I've been struck by the discussions I've had with Muslim ladies - only a few, but it's an increasing, if low, trend - about why they wear the veil and about whether they've thought about implications for race or religious relations - it's their decision.

"Interestingly, the Muslim Council of Britain have made it clear there's great controversy among Muslim scholars about whether it is obligatory or not; you obviously have to respect all these schools of thought."

He said he "just thought it was quite important to put out on the table something which is there in any event".

Mr Straw insisted that he respected those who wore the veil and would never demand it was removed, but added that, in conversation, it was important to "not only hear what people say but see what they mean".

The Conservative policy director, Oliver Letwin, said it would be a "dangerous doctrine" to start telling people how to dress, while the Liberal Democrat party chairman, Simon Hughes, dubbed the remarks "insensitive and surprising".

The Islamic Human Rights Commission said Mr Straw was "selectively discriminating".

Rajnaara Akhtar, who chairs the Project Hijab organisation, said the MP had shown a "fundamental lack of understanding about why women wear the veil".

George Galloway, the Respect MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, called on Mr Straw to resign, saying he was effectively asking women "to wear less".

However, Dr Daud Abdullah, of the Muslim Council of Britain, said he understood Mr Straw's views. "This [the veil] does cause some discomfort to non-Muslims. One can understand this," he said, adding that Muslim opinion was divided on the wearing of the veil.

Labour party colleagues, including the party chair, Hazel Blears, gave their backing to Mr Straw and said his request to constituents was "perfectly proper".

Downing Street said he was expressing a private opinion.

· Britain's Muslims are more than twice as likely to be unemployed than followers of other faiths and up to five times as likely to live in overcrowded housing, an Office of National Statistics survey revealed today.

It was the first time the ONS had analysed the country along its religious as well as ethnic lines.

'I felt uneasy talking to someone I couldn't see'

This is Jack Straw's column in the Blackburn-based Lancashire Telegraph, which prompted the debate

Source: The Guardian

"It's really nice to meet you face-to-face, Mr Straw," said this pleasant lady, in a broad Lancashire accent. She had come to my constituency advice bureau with a problem. I smiled back. "The chance would be a fine thing," I thought to myself but did not say out loud. The lady was wearing the full veil. Her eyes were uncovered but the rest of her face was in cloth.

Her husband, a professional man whom I vaguely knew, was with her. She did most of the talking. I got down the detail of the problem, told the lady and her husband that I thought I could sort it out, and we parted amicably.

All this was about a year ago. It was not the first time I had conducted an interview with someone in a full veil, but this particular encounter, though very polite and respectful on both sides, got me thinking. In part, this was because of the apparent incongruity between the signals which indicate common bonds - the entirely English accent, the couple's education (wholly in the UK) - and the fact of the veil. Above all, it was because I felt uncomfortable about talking to someone "face-to-face" who I could not see.

So I decided that I wouldn't just sit there the next time a lady turned up to see me in a full veil, and I haven't.

Now, I always ensure that a female member of my staff is with me. I explain that this is a country built on freedoms. I defend absolutely the right of any woman to wear a headscarf. As for the full veil, wearing it breaks no laws.

I go on to say that I think, however, that the conversation would be of greater value if the lady took the covering from her face. Indeed, the value of a meeting, as opposed to a letter or phone call, is so that you can - almost literally - see what the other person means, and not just hear what they say. So many of the judgments we all make about other people come from seeing their faces.

I thought it may be hard going when I made my request for face-to-face interviews in these circumstances. However, I can't recall a single occasion when the lady concerned refused to lift her veil; and most I ask seem relieved I have done so. Last Friday was a case in point. The veil came off almost as soon as I opened my mouth. I dealt with the problems the lady had brought to me. We then had a really interesting debate about veil wearing. This itself contained some surprises. It became absolutely clear to me that the husband had played no part in her decision. She explained she had read some books and thought about the issue. She felt more comfortable wearing the veil when out. People bothered her less.

OK, I said, but did she think that veil wearing was required by the Qur'an? I was no expert, but many Muslim scholars said the full veil was not obligatory at all. And women as well as men went head uncovered the whole time when in their hajj - pilgrimage - in Mecca. The husband chipped in to say that this matter was "more cultural than religious". I said I would reflect on what the lady had said to me. Would she, however, think hard about what I said - in particular about my concern that wearing the full veil was bound to make better, positive relations between the two communities more difficult. It was such a visible statement of separation and of difference.

I thought a lot before raising this matter a year ago, and still more before writing this. But if not me, who? My concerns could be misplaced. But I think there is an issue here.

maandag 2 oktober 2006

"Darling, It Hurts to Be Alone"

Ayaan_hirsi_ali_2 A final meeting with Oriana Fallaci leaves great life lessons about politics and the struggle for truth.

Source: AEI - by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

I met her on a Friday afternoon. Early in May I visit a woman in Manhattan who has spoken and written much about the threat of radical Islam. Through Twan Huys, a correspondent for Dutch Public Television, she was able to get in touch with me and insisted that I visit her at some point. At that moment, I know only of her forceful condemnation of radical Islam.

When I ring the doorbell and the door opens, I am let in by a woman who is extremely fragile physically. She is very small, very thin, pale. She greets me by saying "Darling, I don’t have long to live, but it is wonderful that you’re visiting me. I have cancer." On the way up, on the staircase, she continues to speak and says "The Muslims could not beat me. Mussolini’s fascists could not beat me." She talks to me of an incident in Latin-America, during a shooting round where she was lumped together with dead bodies and someone accidentally discovered her. She tells me about the lawsuit that was filed against her in Italy, in a bid to silence her. "All those devilish forces could not beat me. But cancer, cancer, the cancer that’s eating my brain…"

In her living room she insists that we drink champagne, to celebrate that I'm with her. "And you're so young," she says. Hesitantly, I offer to get the bottle and to open it, but she says "No, I can still do this, I still have to do this." When I see how much her hands tremble and how tiny she is in proportion to the large champagne bottle, I insist on helping her. "No," she says. "I still want to do this, because I'm able to."

Then she begins to speak. And as fragile as her physical body is, so strong and resilient is her spirit. I listen, and after a discussion of her life travels through Italy, through the Middle East, and now in the U.S., she arrives at what brought our life paths together: the threat of radical Islam.

Suddenly she changes the subject. "You must have a child," she says. "I only regret one thing in my life, and that is that I do not have children. I wanted them, tried to have them, but I tried too late, and I failed." "Darling," she says, "it hurts to be alone. Life is lonely. It must be, sometimes. Still I would very much have liked to have a child. I would have liked to pass on life."

She hands me her books, in Italian. Then many life lessons follow. "Darling, don't let life pass you by." She refuses to let me say goodbye and invites me to visit her again. This morning I still wanted to visit her again, when I heard, on the radio, that the life of this greatness was over. "Darling, when the cancer kills me, many will celebrate." I will mourn her.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI.

zaterdag 30 september 2006

The Hymen and the Veil

Thecagedvirgin_1 Ayaan Hirsi Ali
The Caged Virgin
The Free Press
From: $18,32
187 pp

Source: Richard King Blogspot & Sydney Morning Herald, 23/09/2006

Richard_king_1The other day I attended a lecture on The Hague and international law in which His Excellency Judge Christopher Weeramantry, former Vice President of the International Court, argued for a less Eurocentric approach to the question of international justice. One of his more controversial points concerned the moral status of Islam. Contrary to popular opinion, he argued, Islam was not an obstacle to justice. Medieval Islamic scholars had developed the notion of ‘double truth’ by which religion and reason could coexist. Islam was not, in itself, a problem, and looked at properly might be part of the solution.

This approach has much to recommend it, but it is also jarringly reminiscent of the argument put forward by the NRA in the wake of some small arms atrocity, viz. ‘It isn’t guns that do the damage, merely their irresponsible owners.’ Moreover, I can think of many ‘Muslims’ who do see Islam as part of the problem. One such is Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born, former Dutch MP, who, if she hasn’t crossed swords with the Judge, has almost certainly crossed his path, possibly while strolling around the Binnenhof. For Hirsi Ali, Islamic fundamentalism is built, not on sand, but on the rock of doctrine. That is why this collection of essays is subtitled ‘A Muslim Woman’s Cry for Reason’.

Born into an Islamic family, subjected to genital mutilation and threatened with marriage to a distant cousin, Hirsi Ali escaped (her word) to the Netherlands in 1992. Since then she has become a ferocious critic of political and non-political Islam, a crusade that has earned her much respect and not a little odium theologicum. Her most controversial action to date has been to write the script for Submission (included in this excellent book), an eleven-minute, low-budget film dealing with the misogyny inherent in Islam. In 2004, the film’s director, Theo van Gogh, was murdered in Amsterdam. Pinned to his ritually mutilated body was a note informing Hirsi Ali to expect a similarly bloody end.

Though Hirsi Ali has much to say on the history and politics of Islam in general, it is, as the title of her book suggests, to the treatment of women that she turns first of all for an explanation of what she calls its ‘mental and material backlog’. Premodern customs such as female circumcision (apologese for genital mutilation) are singled out for particular censure. Though Islam does not condone this practice, it is Hirsi Ali’s determined contention that its ‘cult of virginity’ keeps it alive. ‘The essence of a woman is reduced to her hymen. Her veil functions as a constant reminder to the outside world of this stifling morality that makes Muslim men the owners of women …’ (The proximity of ‘hymen’ and ‘veil’ in that passage is, at once, confronting and resonant.)

If Hirsi Ali has a secondary target, it is the ‘muzz-headed’ multiculturalism that makes ‘a virtual institution of Muslim self-segregation and isolation’. The question of how a secular society accommodates a determinedly non-secular community is one that European societies have failed to answer adequately. ‘Group rights’ has come to replace integration and advocacy for ethnic and religious minorities is left to so-called community leaders who tend to resist all change from without. This, for Hirsi Ali, is a calamity. ‘The tragedy for many Muslims is that their inability to criticise the dogma of religion in their own countries will be continued in Europe.’

As I write this, it is five years and a day since the Twin Towers crumbled to rubble and dust, an event to which Hirsi Ali refers a number of times in this necessary book. Since then, a certain self-hatred has set in in the minds of many Western progressives. The Caged Virgin is, if nothing else, a call to pull ourselves together – to start believing that we’re part of the solution.

vrijdag 29 september 2006

She won’t be hanging out at the Wellesley Women’s Center...

Source:  Independent Woman Forum 

Feminists in the United States have been surprisingly MIA when it comes to getting involved in helping women in a part of the world where women really are oppressed. 

Ayaan Hirsi Ali may be one of the bravest women in the world—and she’s not hanging out at the Wellesley Women’s Center. The Somali-born former member of the Dutch parliament, critic of the treatment of women in the Muslim world, and associate of slain filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, will soon be working around the corner from the IWF at the American Enterprise Institute.

Christopher Hitchens writes about "Dutch Courage" (she has been kicked out of the Netherlands), and Suzanne Fields writes about the oppression of women that hasn’t aroused much anger from U.S. feminists:

"'The Caged Virgin', Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s passionate plea for the emancipation of Muslim women, has just been published here, an eloquent petition for simple justice for women whose abuse is often concealed, like their bodies draped in the chador. She tells Muslim women to read John Stuart Mill’s 1869 essay ’The Subjection of Women’ to begin to understand how women in the West were finally recognized as the equal of men. She laments the way Muslim women are socialized to believe that their oppression is right and just, and she shows how ‘multiculturalism’ insulates them in subjugation, preventing them from joining the larger culture.”

zondag 24 september 2006

The Liberals' War

Why is the left afraid to face up to the threat of radical Islam?

BY BRET STEPHENS
The Wall Street Journal Sunday, September 17, 2006 12:01 a.m. EDT

Here's a puzzle: Why is it so frequently the case that the people who have the most at stake in the battle against Islamic extremism and the most to lose when Islamism gains--namely, liberals--are typically the most reluctant to fight it?

It is often said, particularly in the "progressive" precincts of the democratic left, that by aiming at the Pentagon, the World Trade Center and perhaps the Capitol, Mohamed Atta and his cohorts were registering a broader Muslim objection to what those buildings supposedly represented: capitalism and globalization, U.S. military power, support for Israel, oppression of the Palestinians and so on.

But maybe Ms. Newman intuited that Atta's real targets weren't the symbols of American mightiness, but of what that mightiness protected: people like her, bohemian, sexually unorthodox, a minority within a minority. Maybe she understood that those F-16s overhead--likely manned by pilots who went to church on Sunday and voted the straight GOP ticket--were being flown above all for her defense, at the outer cultural perimeter of everything that America's political order permits.

This may be reading too much into Ms. Newman's essay. Yet after 9/11 at least a few old-time voices on the left--Christopher Hitchens, Bruce Bawer, Paul Berman and Ron Rosenbaum, among others--understood that what Islamism most threatened wasn't just America generally, but precisely the values that modern liberalism had done so much to promote and protect for the past 40 years: civil rights, gay rights, feminism, privacy rights, reproductive choice, sexual freedom, the right to worship as one chooses, the right not to worship at all. And so they bid an unsentimental goodbye to their one-time comrades and institutions: the peace movement, the pages of The Nation and the New York Review of Books, "the deluded and pathetic sophistry of postmodernists of the left, who believe their unreadable, jargon-clotted theory somehow helps liberate the wretched of the earth," as Mr. Rosenbaum wrote in the New York Observer in 2002.

Five years on, however, Messrs. Hitchens, Bawer, et al., seem less like trendsetters and more like oddball dissenters from a left-liberal orthodoxy that finds less and less to like about the very idea of a war on Islamic extremism, never mind the war in Iraq. In the September issue of The Atlantic Monthly, James Fallows, formerly Jimmy Carter's speechwriter, argues that the smart thing for the U.S. to do is declare victory and give the conflict a rest: "A state of war with no clear end point," he writes, "makes it more likely for a country to overreact in ways that hurt itself." Further to the left, a panoply of "peace" groups is all but in league with Islamists. Consider, for instance, QUIT!--Queers Undermining Israeli Terrorism--a group that, in its hatred for Israel, curiously fails to notice that Tel Aviv is the only city in the Middle East that annually hosts a gay-pride parade.

-0-0-0-0-

An instinct for pacifism surely goes some way toward explaining the left's curious unwillingness to sign up for a war to defend its core values. A suspicion of black-and-white moral distinctions of the kind President Bush is fond of making about terrorism--a suspicion that easily slides into moral relativism--is another.

But there are deeper factors at work. One is appeasement: "Many Europeans feel that a confrontation with Islamism will give the Islamists more opportunities to recruit--that confronting evil is counterproductive," says Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-born, former Dutch parliamentarian whose outspoken opposition to Islamism (and to Islam itself) forced her repeatedly into hiding and now into exile in the United States. "They think that by appeasing them--allowing them their own ghettoes, their own Muslim schools--they will win their friendship."

A second factor, she says, is the superficial confluence between the bugaboos of the Chomskyite left and modern-day Islamism. "Many social democrats have this stereotype that the corporate world, the U.S. and Israel are the real evil. And [since] Islamists are also against Israel and America, [social democrats] sense an alliance with them."

But the really "lethal mistake," she says, "is the confusion of Islam, which is a body of ideas, with ethnicity." Liberals especially are reluctant to criticize the content of Islam because they fear that it is tantamount to criticizing Muslims as a group, and is therefore almost a species of racism. Yet Muslims, she says, "are responsible for their ideas. If it is written in the Koran that you must kill apostates, kill the unbelievers, kill gays, then it is legitimate and urgent to say, 'If that is what your God tells you, you have to modify it.' "

A similar rethink may be in order among liberals and progressives. For whatever else distinguishes Islamism from liberalism, both are remarkably self-absorbed affairs, obsessed with maintaining the purity of their own values no matter what the cost. In the former case, the result too often is terror. In the latter, the ultimate risk is suicide, as the endless indulgence of "the other" obstructs the deeper need to preserve itself. Liberal beliefs--and the Rachel Newmans of the world--deserve to be protected and fought for. A liberalism that abandons its own defense to others does not, something liberals everywhere might usefully dwell on during this season of sad remembrance.

Mr. Stephens is a member of The Wall Street Journal's editorial board. His column appears in the Journal Tuesdays.

"When I was 19, I moved to New York City. . . . If you had asked me to describe myself then, I would have told you I was a musician, an artist and, on a somewhat political level, a woman, a lesbian and a Jew. Being an American wouldn't have made my list. On Sept. 11, all that changed. I realized that I had been taking the freedoms I have here for granted. Now I have an American flag on my backpack, I cheer at the fighter jets as they pass overhead and I am calling myself a patriot."

-- Rachel Newman, "My Turn"
in Newsweek, Oct. 21, 2001

donderdag 21 september 2006

'A Dissident Of Islam'

New_york_april_2005_039_3

Source: Washington Post

While her security contingent waits outside the Georgetown restaurant, Ayaan Hirsi Ali orders what the menu calls "raw steak tartare." Amused by the redundancy, she speculates that it is intended to immunize the restaurant against lawyers, should a customer be discommoded by that entree. She has been in America only two weeks. She is a quick study.

And an exile and an immigrant. Born 36 years ago in Somalia, Hirsi Ali has lived in Ethiopia, Kenya, Saudi Arabia and the Netherlands, where she settled in 1992 after she deplaned in Frankfurt, supposedly en route to Canada for a marriage, arranged by her father, to a cousin. She makes her own arrangements.

She quickly became a Dutch citizen, a member of parliament and an astringent critic, from personal experience, of the condition of women under Islam. She wrote the script, and filmmaker Theo van Gogh directed, "Submission," an 11-minute movie featuring pertinent passages from the Koran (such as when it is a husband's duty to beat his wife) projected on the bodies of naked women.

It was shown twice before Nov. 2, 2004, when van Gogh, bicycling through central Amsterdam in the morning, was shot by an Islamic extremist who then slit his throat with a machete. Next, the murderer (in whose room was found a disc containing videos of "enemies of Allah" being murdered, including a man having his head slowly sawed off) used another knife to pin a long letter to van Gogh's chest. The letter was to Hirsi Ali, calling her a "soldier of evil" who would "smash herself to pieces on Islam."

The remainder of her life in Holland was lived under guard. Neighbors in her apartment building complained that they felt endangered with her there and got a court to order her evicted. She decided to come to America.

Holland evidently tolerates everything except skepticism about the sacramental nature of multiculturalism. One million of the country's 16 million residents are Muslims, and the political left has appropriated the European right's traditional celebration of identity grounded in racial and ethnic traditions and culture. But the recoil of many Dutch people from Hirsi Ali suggests that the tolerance about which Holland preens is a compound of intellectual sloth and moral timidity. She was more trouble than the Dutch evidently think free speech is worth.

Her story is told in a riveting new book, "Murder in Amsterdam," by Ian Buruma, who is not alone in finding her -- this "Enlightenment fundamentalist" -- somewhat unnerving and off-putting. Having experienced life circumscribed by tribal and religious communities (as a girl she suffered the genital mutilation called female circumcision), she is a fierce partisan of individualism against collectivism.

She reminds Buruma of Margaret Thatcher's sometimes abrasive intelligence and her fascination with America. He is dismissive of the idea that she is a Voltaire against Islam: Voltaire, he says, offended the powerful Catholic Church, whereas she offends "only a minority that was already feeling vulnerable in the heart of Europe."

She, however, replies that this is hardly a normal minority. It is connected to Islam's worldwide adherents. Living sullenly in European "dish cities" -- enclaves connected by satellite television and the Internet to the tribal societies they have not really left behind -- many members of this minority are uninterested in assimilation into open societies.

She calls herself "a dissident of Islam" because, given what Allah supposedly enjoins and what she knows is right, "the cognitive dissonance is, for me, too much." She says she is not "a militant atheist," but the emphasis is on the adjective.

Slender, elegant, stylish and articulate (in English, Dutch and Swahili), she has found an intellectual home here at the American Enterprise Institute, where she is writing a book that imagines Muhammad meeting, in the New York Public Library, three thinkers -- John Stuart Mill, Friedrich Hayek and Karl Popper, each a hero of the unending struggle between (to take the title of Popper's 1945 masterpiece) "The Open Society and Its Enemies." Islamic extremists -- the sort who were unhinged by some Danish cartoons -- will be enraged. She is unperturbed.

Neither is she pessimistic about the West. It has, she says, "the drive to innovate." But Europe, she thinks, is invertebrate. After two generations without war, Europeans "have no idea what an enemy is." And they think, she says, that leadership is an antiquated notion because they believe that caring governments can socialize everyone to behave well, thereby erasing personal accountability and responsibility. "I can't even tell it without laughing," she says, laughing softly. Clearly she is where she belongs, at last.

maandag 4 september 2006

Women, the Future of Freedom

Source: American Enterprise Institute Monday, August 28, 2006

By Ayaan Hirsi Ali

One of my heroines is Samira Ahmed, a 24-year-old girlishly pretty woman with large, brown, doelike eyes, dark, curly hair and a smile that seduces even the gloomiest of faces to lighten up and smile back. Besides her good nature, she is inquisitive and has a strong will to be her own person. Born to a family who left Morocco in the early 1980s and settled in The Netherlands, she is one of 10 children.

In the (northern) summer of 2005, I attended her graduation ceremony at a training college in Amsterdam. Samira received a diploma for pedagogy and a record 10 score (the highest possible) for her thesis.

This is the celebratory side of Samira's story, for there is also a tragic side. When I arrived for Samira's graduation I was received like all the other guests in a reception area just outside of the auditorium where the ceremony was to take place. I noticed the happy class, a total of 35 students, gathered in clusters around coffee stands. Family and friends accompanied them, chatting, carrying gifts and flowers wrapped in cellophane. Proud fathers and mothers, flushed siblings teasing their red-faced brothers and sisters, boyfriends and girlfriends happy just to be there to witness an achiever in the family.

On Samira's stand none of her family showed up: no brother, no sister, no cousin, no nephew, no niece. Two years earlier, Samira had to sneak away from home because she wanted to live in a student house like her Dutch friends Sara and Marloes. At home she had shared a bedroom with some of her siblings and had no privacy at all. Every move she made in the house was monitored by her mother and sisters; outside the house her brothers kept watch. They all wanted to make sure that under no circumstances would she become Westernised.

Samira had endured terrible physical and psychological violence at home. Her family always had a pretext to question her, go through her stuff and forbid her from setting foot outside the house. She was beaten frequently. There were rumours in her community that she had a Dutch boyfriend. The beatings at home became harsher. Samira could bear it no longer and left. Soon afterwards, in the summer of 2003, she got in touch with me. I went with her to the police to file a complaint against her brothers, who had threatened to murder her. According to them, Samira's death was the only way to avenge the shame she brought upon the family for leaving their parents' house.

The police said they could do nothing to help her except file the complaint. They said there were thousands of other women like her and it was not the police's duty to intervene in family matters. Ever since she left, Samira has been in hiding, moving from house to house and depending on the kindness of strangers. Mostly she is brave and faces life with a powerful optimism. Samira reads her textbooks, does her homework, and turns her papers in on time. She accepts invitations to student parties from Sara and Marloes and makes an effort to enjoy herself.

Sometimes, however, she has a sad, drawn look on her face that betrays her worries. Once in a while she just weeps and confides that she wishes her life were different, perhaps more like the lives of her Dutch friends. Today, however, on her graduation day, she is glowing, clutching her diploma and returning the kisses of her friends. Her worries are far from over, though. She has no money; she has to find a job, and with her Moroccan name that will be far from easy in The Netherlands; she has to find another new place to live; she lives in an unending fear of being discovered by her brothers and slaughtered by them. This is no joke, for in just two police regions in The Netherlands (The Hague area and the southern section of the province of South Holland), 11 Muslim girls were killed by their own families between October 2004 and May 2005 for ''offences'' similar to those committed by Samira.

In my mind, there are three categories of Muslim women in Dutch society. I suspect that this distinction applies to other European Union countries with large Muslim populations as well. First, there are girls such as Samira: strong-willed, intelligent and willing to take a chance on shaping their individual futures along a path they choose for themselves. They face many obstacles as they try to assimilate in Western society and some may lose their lives trying to attain their dreams.

Second, there are girls and women who are very dependent and attached to their families but who cleverly forge a way to lead a double life. Instead of confronting their families and arguing about their adherence to custom and religion, these girls use a more tactful approach. When with family (in the broadest sense of the word, which also includes their community), they put on their headscarves and at home obey every whim of their parents and menfolk.

Outside the home, however, they lead the life of an average Western woman: they have a job, dress fashionably, have a boyfriend, drink alcohol, attend cocktail parties and manage to travel away from home for a while.

The third group are the utterly vulnerable. Some of these girls are imported as brides or domestic workers from the country of origin of the immigrants with whom they come to live. Some are daughters of the more conservative families. These girls are removed from school once they attain puberty and locked up at home. Their families get away with this form of modern slavery because the authorities rarely take notice of these young women. The girls have often been brought up to be absolutely obedient: they perform household chores without question. Their individual wills have been bent to the servitude taught at their parents' house and put into practice in their husbands' homes or the homes of the people who import and enslave them. They can hardly read or write.

When they marry, they generally bear as many children as their individual fertility allows. When they miscarry, most of them view this as God's will, not as a lack of proper health care, which they are usually prevented from seeking because of their families' religious reasons.

For a while now I have been asserting that the most effective way for European Union governments to deal with their Muslim minorities is to empower the Muslim women living within their borders. The best tool for empowering these women is education. Yet the education systems of some European Union countries are going through a crisis of neglect, particularly with regard to immigrant children. We are paying the price of mixing education with ideology. However, let me stick to the important subject of freeing women from the shackles of superstitious belief and tribal custom.

The biggest obstacle that hinders Muslim women from leading dignified, free lives is violence--physical, mental, and sexual--committed by their close families. Here is only a sample of some of the violence perpetrated on girls and women from Islamic cultures:

  • Four-year-old girls have their genitals mutilated: some of them so badly that they die of infections; others are traumatised for life from the experience and will later suffer recurrent infections of their reproductive and urinary systems.
  • Teenage girls are removed from school by force and kept inside the house to stop their schooling, stifle their thinking and suffocate their will.
  • Victims of incest and sexual abuse are beaten, deported or killed to prevent them from filing complaints.
  • Some pregnant victims of incest or abuse are forced by their fathers, older brothers, or uncles to have abortions in order to keep the family honour from being stained. In this era of DNA testing, the girls could demonstrate that they have been abused. Yet instead of punishing the abusers, the family treats the daughter as if she had dishonoured the family.
  • Girls and women who protest their maltreatment are beaten by their parents in order to kill their spirits and reduce them to a lifelong servitude that amounts to slavery.
  • Many girls and women who can't bear to suffer any more take their own lives or develop numerous kinds of psychological ailments, including nervous breakdown and psychosis. They are literally driven mad.
  • A Muslim girl in Europe runs more risk than girls of other faiths of being forced into marriage by her parents with a stranger. In such a marriage -- which, since it is forced, by definition starts with rape -- she conceives child after child. She is an enslaved womb. Many of her children will grow up in a household with parents who are neither bound by love nor interested in the wellbeing of their children. The daughters will go through life as subjugated as their mothers and the sons become -- in Europe -- dropouts from school, attracted to pastimes that can vary from loitering in the streets to drug abuse to radical Islamic fundamentalism.

European policy-makers have not yet understood the huge potential of liberating Muslim women. They are squandering the single best opportunity they have to make Muslim integration a success within one generation. Morally, governments need to eradicate violence against women in Europe. This would make clear to fundamentalists that Europeans take their constitutions seriously. Now, most abusers simply think that Western rhetoric about the equality of men and women is cowardly and hypocritical, since Western governments tolerate the abuse of millions of Muslim women when they're told it's in the name of freedom of religion.

Muslim women such as Samira would make sure to prepare their own children for a life in modern society. These women would plan their family with a chosen partner. This planning reduces the chances for dropouts among their children. They value education and would emphasise its importance for their children. They value work and aspire to make a contribution to the economy. They would provide the greying European economy with the human resources it needs instead of adding to its social welfare rolls.

The children of successful Muslim women are more likely to have a positive attitude towards the societies in which they live. They will learn at an early age to appreciate the freedom and prosperity they live in and perhaps even understand how vulnerable these freedoms are and defend them.

Why are European leaders so slow to appreciate the great role Muslim women can play in a successful integration of immigrants in the European Union? Some blame can be attributed to the passivity of universities and non-governmental organisations in addressing immigrant women's rights. The academic community unanimously condemns violence against women, whether it is committed by family or the state, but it has been negligent in investigating and providing the necessary legal framework and data to help policy-makers make women's rights a priority.

In spite of having Arab and Islam faculties, most universities in Europe serve as activist centres to further the Palestinian cause, instead of research and teaching centres for Muslim students. Non-governmental organisations are embarrassingly silent on this fight for human rights. Oh, yes, there is one in Norway that pays attention, Human Rights Watch, run by a brave, determined woman, Hege Storhaus. But in the bigger countries, no NGO yet monitors the number of times an honour killing is committed in a member state, or the number of times a girl is circumcised, or the number of times a girl is removed from school and forced into a life of virtual slavery.

However, there is room for some optimism. Awareness is growing in Europe about the breadth and persistence of violence against Muslim women and girls, justified by culture and religion, committed by family. Some governments have acknowledged that they should take action to fight against this and all types of violence against women. Yet we are a long way from conditions where girls such as Samira can lead a life without fear. What a waste that Europe is blind to this golden opportunity that lies at its feet.

*) Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a resident fellow at AEI.

AEI Print Index No. 20577

zondag 20 augustus 2006

I Say, Three Cheers For Ayaan

Source: Outlook India.com  by Taslima Nasrin
Even if she unfairly blames Islam for all atrocities on its women, hers is a significant voice on their behalf

The_caged_virgin_1 Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Muslim by birth, is a daring woman. She has dared to raise questions despite knowing that a Mussalman is prohibited from raising any question on Islam. But these questions are hardly new. They have all been raised before at different times. Yet Ayaan’s questions come from a novel experience not shared by many. She wrote the script for the film Submission, for which Dutch director Theo Van Gogh died on Amsterdam’s roads.

Before this, Salman Rushdie’s Japanese publisher was killed for committing the sin of publishing his books; even his Norwegian publisher was shot. But there’s a difference between Rushdie and Ayaan: Rushdie is a writer; he never declared jehad against Islam. Ayaan, on the other hand, dreams of abolishing all the misdeeds and terrorism that have arisen out of the faith.

Though born in sub-Saharan Africa, Ayaan’s seen, at very close quarters, the life of an immigrant Muslim community in a Western European nation. She entered politics while fighting the repression of women of her community and later became an MP. This marks her out from the usual anti-Islam activists, even from those born Muslim. Ayaan’s questions may not be new, but they need to be reiterated, especially by women, since Islam represses them the most.

But Ayaan’s problem is that she puts the burden of all traditional and patriarchal repression of women squarely on Islam. For her, Islam is responsible for child marriage, incest, purdah, the insistence on chastity, female foeticide, genital mutilation, honour killing and everything else. This, even according to a rabid anti-Islamist like me, is too much.

Ayaan believes these evils can be wiped out by getting rid of Islam. But what has religion got to do with it? All male-dominant societies, irrespective of their religion, torture women equally. Christian societies burned thousands of women alive before they built secular nations and introduced equal rights for men and women. Hindus have thrown young widows on their husbands’ pyres. Ayaan attacks Islamic societies for not being as liberal about pre-marital sex as Christian and Jewish ones. But surely conservative Christian, Jewish, Buddhist or Hindu societies are equally rigid on it.

It’s true that while most societies have marched towards progress, equality and egalitarianism, Muslim societies have not greatly succeeded in bringing about equality between men and women. Sadly, Muslim societies are still in darkness. The reasons vary in different Islamic countries. While the Muslim people’s ignorance, lack of education, power play and dictatorial behaviour are behind the rise of Islamic fundamentalism, the Islamophobia of the Western world is no less responsible. America’s long-standing terrorism against Palestine and Iraq has now pushed Muslim youth into fundamentalism. There were once secular movements like the pan-nationalist movement in West Asia, led by atheist or secular Muslims, but they have all been crushed by Western conspiracies. While I do believe that Islam alone is not responsible for women’s problems, I also maintain that there is no need for Islam to live on. A secular nation and a secular education system will help build rational human beings in a scientific, taboo-free and healthy environment. To demolish anti-women beliefs and rituals, it’s important to shake the foundation of male-dominant societies.

For instance, there is a strict taboo in Muslim families on talking about birth control, abortion and sexual violence. But this is not related to Islam so much as to culture and customs. Ayaan talks about many such cultures and customs, which she feels are connected to religion. But they aren’t. Let’s take honour killing or female genital mutilation.

Traditionally, all male-dominant societies have used women’s bodies to grow the male family tree.

Chastity belts were prevalent in ancient Europe to stop women from having a physical relationship with other males. Women were literally the property of men. This belief has transmitted into Islam and Judeo-Christian religions. Sexual acts outside marriage are prohibited in Islamic and Judeo-Christian ethical contexts, and are considered sinful. Offences against the virtue of chastity are most often perceived as fornication or adultery. Since all religions encourage male dominance, such sexist rules have found easy berth in religion. But female genital mutilation is a practice prevalent among the tribals of Africa. Amnesty International has clearly said that it is not a religious practice required by the Islamic faith. It has however become a "law by custom". Neither of the two main sources of Muslim law, the Quran and the Sunnah, mentions the practice, and most Islamic scholars agree that it is not a religious rite.

Ayaan says even honour killing is Islam’s problem. But it happens in Muslim societies due to backwardness and lack of education. The killing of people for sexual crimes has been prevalent since 1700 BC, before Islam. The code of Hammurabi focuses on the perception that a woman’s virginity belongs to her family. In Peru from 1200 BC to 1532 AD, alleged adulterers were punished by having their hands and feet tied to a wall. In ancient Roman times, the pater familias retained the right to kill an unmarried but sexually active daughter or adulterous wife. In ancient empires in Europe, Christian law punished crimes like adultery with stoning. Jewish law punished certain sexual misconduct for both men and women with capital punishment as approved by a court or Sanhedrin.

Amnesty sees honour killing as "the mere perception that a woman who contravenes the code of sexual behaviour damages honour. The regime of honour is unforgiving; women on whom suspicion’s fallen are not given a chance to defend themselves, and family members have no socially acceptable alternative but to remove the stain by attacking the woman".

Because Islam allows cousin marriages, it’s said to accept incest. But this is prevalent among many other religions and cultures. Marriage between kin—between a maternal uncle and niece or cousins—is allowed in south Indian states like Andhra Pradesh as it is in Jewish, Islamic or Zoroastrian communities. Among Marathi communities such as the Marathas, Kunbis, Malis or Mahars, it’s common to have a brother’s daughter wed a sister’s son. Since the Arabs comprise many tribes, they have the most cousin marriages. This practice dates back to pre-Islamic times.

In many regions, communities live and grow for generations on local mores and rules, irrespective of the religion. The Bengali Muslims have more in common with the culture of the Bengali Hindus and not of the Arab Muslims. Religion and culture are two different things. Some religions have subsumed local cultures but the two are essentially different. It is not the fault of that religion to have adopted ancient, outdated customs but of the people to not have protested against that adoption and instead abide by anti-women traditions. Ayaan has very unreasonably put the blame of all the atrocities against women on Islam; her arguments are one-sided and adamant in many cases. But she has still managed to make vital points. She has stood by the immigrant Muslim women in the Netherlands and sought to help them. Her book can act as a guide to oppressed women, with its 10 guidelines for women wanting to leave their husbands.

The chapter ‘The need for reflection within Islam’ touched a chord in me and revived memories of being attacked by fundamentalists for having the same beliefs as Ayaan. The attacks continue.In any corner of the world, women who protest their oppression will always be torn to shreds by upholders of morals, traditions, patriarchy and religion. I say three cheers for Ayaan. For her courage to criticise Islam despite being born in a Muslim family. Women are so repressed and benumbed in an Islamic society that a fellow protester fills my heart with hope. Muslims must take the responsibility to enlighten the rest of their community and create a rational, scientific and secular society. The change has to come from within. Nobody can impose democracy from outside. Similarly, no one can impose women’s independence from outside. No nation can practice democracy without the right to free speech. Unless we get rid of the old, foul, wasted values and ignorance, we can’t move towards equality.

Male reformers are useless. To break the rigidity of Muslim society, and to reject Islam, we need thousands of angry women presently in the grip of the venomous snake of Islam. Once they hit back, how long can it sting?

Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Israel

Ayaan_hirsi_ali_1 Source: The Jerusalem Post 
by Manfred Gerstenfeld

Her preoccupation with security is felt throughout our conversation. Before Ayaan Hirsi Ali arrives in the hotel where we meet, one of her state-provided guards tells me she can only sit at one specific table in the lobby. Elsewhere she may be shot at through the windows. When she arrives, surrounded by tall bodyguards, two young Danish men in the room come over to express their admiration for her.

When we start to talk, she is worried about somebody who remains seated too close to us for her taste. I explain that he is probably a foreigner who has no idea who she is. Finally the hotel manager, who is very honored by her visit, suggests that we continue our conversation in his office.

On Israel
"I visited Israel a few years ago, primarily to understand how it dealt so well with so many immigrants from different origins," she says. "My main impression was that Israel is a liberal democracy. In the places I visited, including Jerusalem as well as Tel Aviv and its beaches, I saw that men and women are equal. One never knows what happens behind the scenes, but that is how it appears to the visitor. The many women in the army are also very visible.

"I understood that a crucial element of success is the unifying factor among immigrants to Israel. Whether one arrives from Ethiopia or Russia, or one's grandparents immigrated from Europe, what binds them is being Jewish. Such a bond is lacking in the Netherlands. Our immigrants' background is diverse and also differs greatly from that of the Netherlands, including religion."

Not all of Hirsi Ali's reactions to what she saw in Israel were positive, however.

"From my superficial impression, the country also has a problem with fundamentalists," she says. "The ultra-Orthodox will cause a demographic problem because these fanatics have more children than the secular and the regular Orthodox."

On Palestinians
"I have visited the Palestinian quarters in Jerusalem as well. Their side is dilapidated, for which they blame the Israelis. In private, however, I met a young Palestinian who spoke excellent English. There were no cameras and no notebooks. He said the situation was partly their own fault, with much of the money sent from abroad to build Palestine being stolen by corrupt leaders.

"When I start to speak in the Netherlands about the corruption of the Palestinian Authority and the role of Arafat in the tragedy of Palestine, I do not get a large audience. Often one is talking to a wall. Many people reply that Israel first has to withdraw from the territories, and then all will be well with Palestine."

On Double Moral Standards
"The crisis of Dutch socialism can be sized up in its attitudes toward both Islam and Israel. It holds Israel to exceptionally high moral standards. The Israelis, however, will always do well, because they themselves set high standards for their actions.

"The standards for judging the Palestinians, however, are very low. Most outsiders remain silent on all the problems in their territories. That helps the Palestinians become even more corrupt than they already are. Those who live in the territories are not allowed to say anything about this because they risk being murdered by their own people."

On Islam
Hirsi Ali's criticism of Islam is more general. "Almost nobody in the West wants to understand that Islam's problems are structural. Contemporary Islam hardly exists. Islam stopped thinking in the year 900 and has stood still for more than a thousand years. Western Muslims, however, live in an environment where you can think independently without your head being chopped off by somebody.

"If one wants to meet contemporary Muslims, one has to go to the Ahmadiyya movement. The Muslim mainstream, however, considers them heretics. I have been educated as a Muslim and I want to change some of Islam's tenets. This makes me a heretic and thus radicals want to eliminate me."

Hirsi Ali explains why she is a danger to radical Muslims.

"They realize that I know too much about Islam. I am also a woman. If a woman no longer believes, she frees herself. They are deathly afraid that if one drops out, others may follow; that is how herds function."

The writer is Chairman of the Board of Fellows at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. This interview was part of a major project of about 100 interviews with prominent Dutch people on the Dutch attitude toward Jews and Israel, which was funded by the Israel Maror Foundation.

dinsdag 15 augustus 2006

Muslims face extra checks in new travel crackdown

Source: Times

The Government is discussing with airport operators plans to introduce a screening system that allows security staff to focus on those passengers who pose the greatest risk.

The passenger-profiling technique involves selecting people who are behaving suspiciously, have an unusual travel pattern or, most controversially, have a certain ethnic or religious background.

The system would be much more sophisticated than simply picking out young men of Asian appearance. But it would cause outrage in the Muslim community because its members would be far more likely to be selected for extra checks.

Officials at the Department for Transport (DfT) have discussed the practicalities of introducing such a system with airport operators, including BAA. They believe that it would be more effective at identifying potential terrorists than the existing random searches.

They also say that it would greatly reduce queues at secur-ity gates, which caused lengthy delays at London airports yesterday for the fifth day running. Heathrow and Gatwick were worst affected, cancelling 69 and 27 flights respectively. BAA gave warning yesterday that the disruption would continue for the rest of the week.

Passengers are now allowed to take one small piece of hand luggage on board but security staff are still having to search 50 per cent of travellers. Airports have also been ordered to search twice as many hand luggage items as a week ago.

BAA was criticised yesterday for failing to commit itself to recruiting more security staff and for claiming that its existing 6,000 staff at seven airports would be able to handle the extra searches. Tony Douglas, the chief executive of Heathrow, said that X-ray screening of hand luggage would be much faster under the new rules on size and contents, leaving staff free to carry out more searches.

The new measures, which include a ban on taking any liquids through checkpoints, are expected to remain in place for months. A DfT source said it was difficult to see how the restrictions could be relaxed if terrorists now had the capabil-ity to make liquid bombs.

The DfT has been considering passenger profiling for a year but, until last week, the disadvantages were thought to outweigh the advantages. A senior aviation industry source said: “The DfT is ultra-sensitive about this and won’t say anything publicly because of political concerns about being accused of racial stereotyping.”

Three days before last week’s arrests, the highest-ranking Muslim police officer in Britain gave warning that profiling techniques based on physical appearance were already causing anger and mistrust among young Muslims. Tarique Ghaffur, an assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said: “We must think long and hard about the causal factors of anger and resentment.

“There is a very real danger that the counter-terrorism label is also being used by other law-enforcement agencies to the effect that there is a real risk of criminalising minority communities.”

Sir Rod Eddington, former chief executive of British Airways, criticised the random nature of security searches. He said that it was irrational to subject a 75-year-old grandmother to the same checks as a 25-year-old man who had just paid for his ticket with cash.

Philip Baum, an aviation security consultant, said that profiling should focus on ruling out people who obviously posed no risk rather than picking out Asian or Arabs.

A DfT spokesman refused to make any comment or answer any questions on profiling.

AIRPORT UPDATE

  • British Airways plans to cancel forty short-haul and four long-haul flights from Heathrow today as well as eleven domestic flights from Gatwick. Other airlines expect to operate near-normal schedules.

  • All airports will allow passengers to carry one small piece of hand luggage, but no liquids are allowed through the security search point other than prescribed medicines and baby food.
  • zaterdag 5 augustus 2006

    Portrait of a 'heretical' lady

    Source: The Jerusalem Post

    When the Ayatollah Khomeini imposed a fatwa on Salman Rushdie in 1989, Ayaan Hirsi Ali was a pious 20-year-old Muslim who applauded the Iranian leader for putting a price on the apostate's head.

    "All I knew is that he had insulted the prophet, and anyone who insulted the prophet deserves to die," recalls Hirsi Ali. In 2003 - after she renounced her faith and entered the Dutch parliament - Hirsi Ali became known as the "Dutch Salman Rushdie" for the torrent of death threats she incited for her crusade against Islam.

    A few years ago, she met Rushdie in New York and apologized for once siding with the Islamists against him. He obviously accepted her olive branch, providing the cover endorsement for Hirsi Ali's new book of essays, The Caged Virgin.

    Hirsi Ali doesn't sound like an embattled activist over the phone. Her quiet, flute-y voice matches the fine-featured face which peers with calm resolve out of photos. But her language is the opposite of delicate. Hirsi Ali has called the Prophet Muhammad a "tyrant," a "pervert" and a "pedophile" for counting a nine-year-old among his nine wives.

    Running through The Caged Virgin is Hirsi Ali's conviction that Islam is inimical to individual rights because it calls for the individual's unquestioning submission to God. Hirsi Ali argues that Islam enforces an unyielding hierarchy - leading down from Allah, to the Prophet, to religious leaders and then fathers - which brooks no space for individual freedom. Hirsi Ali bats off the suggestion that this account could equally apply to other monotheistic religions, which demand obeisance to a single God.

    "Judaism and Christianity have gone through a long history of enlightenment and reflection," she says. "But the Islam that we see today tends towards the seventh century. Islamic reformists throughout the centuries have been harassed and exiled and killed."

    Her view of the Koran as a rubber stamp for violence against women - reducing Islamic women to caged virgins, denied sexual freedom and rights - provides no room for Muslim feminists, who believe that Islamic theology can be rescued from patriarchal custom. The Caged Virgin includes a Q + A with the writer Irshad Manji - a lesbian and a practicing Muslim - who calls for the teachings of the Koran to be extricated from the male-dominated cultures that abuse them. But Hirsi Ali disagrees.

    "Religion is an expression of culture, and Islam is an expression of desert Arab male culture. Being an atheist - believing that religion was created by man and not the other way round - we have to recognize that we can't separate the two."

    HIRSI ALI was born in Somalia in 1969, immediately prior to the military coup of Siad Barre, which vanquished the democratic hopes of the newly independent country. Her father, Hirsi Magan Isse, was a Colombia-educated dissident politician, forced into exile with his family after Barre's ascent. The family moved to Saudi Arabia, where Hirsi Ali was reared on myths about a global Jewish conspiracy.

    "When we opened the tap and no water came from it, our neighbors would say, 'The Jews have done it. They want to dehydrate us,'" she recalls. "When it rained, we got that from God's blessing. But if there were fires, if there were floods, if there were diseases, it was always caused by the evil Jews."

    The family received official warning to leave Saudi Arabia after the regime got wind of Magan Isse's insurgent activities. Hirsi Ali spent her youth moving between countries as political circumstances fluctuated - to Ethiopia, then Kenya, then back to Somalia and finally Kenya again.

    Magan Isse was determined to exempt his daughter from the tradition of ritualized female genital mutilation. So when Hirsi Ali was five, her grandmother arranged for the operation without her father's knowledge.

    "As a child it's something that you're proud of. You know that it happens to everyone else, and if it doesn't happen to you, you'll be isolated by the other kids," she says.

    Despite his distaste for female "circumcision," Magan Isse was proud to offer Hirsi Ali up for an arranged marriage 17 years later, when a distant cousin arrived from Canada looking for a wife.

    "In the Somali tradition, an arranged marriage is an honorable marriage. It's an obligation of the father to arrange marriage for his children."

    Before flying on to Canada to meet her new husband, Hirsi Ali was scheduled to spend a few days with relatives in Germany. Instead, once in Germany, she took a train to the Netherlands and sought refugee status.

    "I felt deep in my heart that whatever had happened - even if I had gone to Canada - I would have sabotaged the marriage."

    Why Holland? "Because it was next to Germany and the train could take me there," she explains. "I didn't know anything about Holland. I wanted to go to the UK, but I had to travel by air or by ship, and in both cases you have to show you have a legal visa."

    Hirsi Ali was granted asylum in three weeks - a length of time unheard of today. She learned Dutch while working in various unskilled jobs, before long becoming a translator in hospitals and shelters for battered women. Hirsi Ali was shocked to discover that the abuse of Islamic women remains rife in the West. She was similarly taken aback by the state's refusal to interfere with what they regarded as "cultural matters."

    Hirsi Ali says Muslims account for only 5.5 percent of the Netherlands' population, but make up over 50% of the women in Dutch refuges.

    COMPLETING a political science degree at Leiden University, Hirsi Ali became grounded in the Enlightenment thinkers who anchor her essays - Spinoza, Kant and Voltaire.

    "The years at university were the happiest times of my life. It was an environment where reason ruled. Everyone is civilized and kind and happy. It's just an environment where civilization reaches its peak."

    After graduating, Hirsi Ali became an immigration researcher at a think tank aligned with the left-of-center Labor Party. Two weeks into her stint, the September 11 attacks occurred, triggering her loss of faith.

    "I was pushed to think clearly about whether I was on Bin Laden's side or not. I started to think, 'Do I really believe in this God who demands blood and mayhem?'"

    In the wake of the September 11 attacks, Hirsi Ali became a sought-after media spokesperson on Muslim affairs. Asked on television for her response to the far-right politician Pim Fortuyn's description of Islam as a "backward religion," Hirsi Ali sent shock waves through the Labor Party by conceding his picture. She argued that the Dutch multiculturalist program was complicit in the abuse of women by allowing Muslim communities a great level of autonomy, while funding 700 Islamic schools, clubs and mosques.

    In short order, Hirsi Ali broke ranks with the left, shifting her allegiance to the center-right VVD Party.

    "It started with the emphasis that the Labor Party was putting on migrants as a group. It was, 'You want to discuss the rights of individual women who are abused, but the whole group of migrants must integrate and find jobs first. Then we will attend to the grievances of women,'" Hirsi Ali says. "The VVD Party, on the other hand, was stressing individual rights and obligations. It was much easier to defend that position than just to lie back and hope that one day the lives of all migrants would be okay and thereby that of women."

    Despite not having planned on a political career, Hirsi Ali became a parliamentary member in January 2003.

    "I was planning to be an academic. That's why I went to a think tank. But there's just a moment when you have to take part in politics if you feel that other people are not doing the right job. In 2002, I just thought everyone was blind to the situation of Muslim women, and I couldn't just stand on the sideline and start pointing out that everyone was getting it wrong. I thought I'd do it for four years. Within two years I had managed to convince everyone that there was something terribly wrong in Holland with the living conditions of Muslim women."

    The gay demagogue Pim Fortuyn - outraged by Muslim intolerance of homosexuals - was assassinated by a Dutch animal rights activist in May 2002. Then came the murder of the filmmaker Theo van Gogh in 2004, after his collaboration with Hirsi Ali on the short film Submission - the first of a series they planned to produce together. The film depicted four semi-naked Islamic women, half-clothed in traditional garb. The Koranic verses allegedly authorizing violence against women were written on their lacerated flesh, as they described the physical abuse they suffered from their husbands.

    Van Gogh was stabbed and shot by a young Moroccan-born jihadist while bicycling to work in Amsterdam. With his knife, the killer attached a letter to Van Gogh's corpse, assuring Hirsi Ali that she would be next. Ever since becoming a public figure, Hirsi Ali had round-the-clock police protection. She traveled in armor-plated cars and was always trailed by a party of bodyguards. But Van Gogh - who had used epithets such as "goat-fucker" and "pimp" to describe Muhammad since the early '90s - didn't believe that he needed police protection.

    "He said he didn't believe in the capabilities of the people who would be protecting him and he would be losing his privacy. He thought it was different in my case because I had become an apostate and there were so many examples of apostates being killed by Arab men."

    LAST YEAR, Hirsi Ali was hauled before court by an Islamic lobby group seeking to prevent her from making Submission: Part 2. They also called for certain passages from the Dutch edition of The Caged Virgin to be excised, claiming that they were causing psychological harm.

    "The court thought that the passages were taken out of context and the court had no power to prevent something from being made that hasn't been made yet. The judge also warned that I be careful what I say next time, but that had no legal significance."

    In May, Hirsi Ali was rounded on by a member of her own political party. Following "allegations" on a television program that she lied about her identity to win asylum in 1992, the Dutch immigration minister, Rita Verdonk, declared Hirsi Ali's passport invalid.

    At the urging of Dutch refugee workers, Hirsi Ali had claimed she was fleeing the civil war in Somalia rather than an arranged marriage. When claiming asylum, she also lied about her date of birth and changed her father's name, Magan, to Ali, in order to hide from her family - fabrications which she had long spoken publicly about.

    Verdonk retracted her decision after touching off a public uproar. But by then Hirsi Ali - who had already decided to leave politics - announced she was resigning from Parliament to take up a position at the American Enterprise Institute - a Washington-based neo-conservative think tank.

    "I had accomplished in Parliament what I wanted to do, which was put the suffering of Muslim women on the country's agenda," she says. "I wasn't planning a political career, so I'm going back to scholarship. For now, I'm only interested in writing and making the films, developing this tension between the Muslim and Western mind."

    On June 30, the Dutch cabinet resigned after the ruling coalition lost the support of a vital minor party, who demanded Verdonk's resignation.

    Next year, Hirsi Ali will start filming Submission: Part 2 - a project that the American Enterprise Institute has been fully supportive of.

    "I gave them a proposal, in which I mentioned how I was going to represent the Prophet Muhammad in New York and have him talk to a number of Western thinkers, and they said, 'No problem.'"

    She acknowledges the irony of being a feminist activist employed by an organization affiliated with the Republican Party.

    "It is ironic, but I talked to different think tanks and it was only the American Enterprise Institute that said, 'We welcome controversy.' I would have total intellectual freedom."

    The identities of her collaborators on Submission: Part 2 will remain anonymous.

    "After Van Gogh's death, I've learned a lesson, and that is, you have to make a film without putting the identity of the people out there. You have to be smarter than the killers."

    zaterdag 29 juli 2006

    Power to the Pedophiles

    Source: City Journal - by Theodore Dalrymple

    The real danger of a Dutch court’s loony decision - 19 July 2006

    Once upon a time, satire was a commentary on life, but nowadays it seems as if life is a commentary on satire. How else are we to describe the decision of the Dutch court to allow the Brotherly Love, Freedom, and Diversity Party to contest the next elections?

    The party was formed by pedophiles, and its political program consists of lowering the age of consent to sexual intercourse from 16 to 12, the legalization of the possession of child pornography and of sexual intercourse with animals (provided, of course, that they are not ill-treated and do not suffer as a result), as well as legal license to broadcast pornography during the day and violent pornography at night. It wants also to remove the taboo on pedophilia—a taboo that party spokesmen claim has strengthened since the conviction of Marc Dutroux in Belgium, who kidnapped six girls for sexual purposes and starved and tortured four of them to death. Perhaps he wouldn’t have felt obliged to kill them, the party contends, if pedophilia had not had such a bad name in the first place.

    The problem with the court’s ruling is not that it is likely to bring the Brotherly Love Party to power. The party is most unlikely to receive the 5 percent of the votes that it needs to attain parliamentary representation. Nor is it likely to encourage many of the Dutch to change their sexual practices, though it might in the long run encourage experimentation precisely because of the breaking of the taboo.

    But the ruling opens even wider the dangerous gulf between the pays légal and the pays réel. According to a survey, 82 percent of the Dutch population want the party outlawed, and this huge majority cannot consist entirely of straitlaced Calvinists. It is not as if Dutch society were illiberal and offered no opportunity whatever for the expression of sexual difference, or as if it prescribed an inflexible sexual code. But even the liberal Dutch obviously feel that society has to draw a line somewhere.

    Courts do not exist merely to codify the prejudices of the population, of course, however strong they might be. Yet when court rulings are too radically disconnected from the moral sensibility of the population, the law itself comes into disrepute and loses the legitimacy that is nine tenths of its power. There is then a risk of a breakdown of law and order, and of a violent political backlash. It is not surprising that one of the leaders of the Brotherly Love Party recently had to flee a trailer park where he was staying.

    There is another nagging worry about the ruling in Holland’s present circumstances. If society cannot protect itself from the activities of a handful of pedophiles whose ability to threaten it with violence is minimal, how will it protect itself (and on what basis) against the activities of the far more numerous, determined, and dangerous Islamists? Will this ruling be seen in times to come as but a sentence in the long Dutch suicide note?

    donderdag 27 juli 2006

    Arab world fed up with Hizbullah

    Source: Jerusalem Post - By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

    With the exception of the Palestinians, the Arab world appears to be united in blaming Iran and Syria for the fighting in Lebanon. Until last week, Arab political analysts and government officials were reluctant to criticize Hizbullah in public. But now that Hizbullah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah and his top aides are in hiding, an anti-Hizbullah coalition is emerging not only in Lebanon, but in several other Arab countries as well.

    The Palestinians and Hizbullah feel that their Arab brethren have once again turned their backs on them. On Monday, hundreds of Palestinians who marched in downtown Ramallah in support of Hizbullah chanted: "Hassan Nasrallah is our hero, the rest of the Arab leaders are cowards" and "O beloved Abu Hadi [Nasrallah's nickname], bomb, bomb Tel Aviv." The second battle cry is reminiscent of the famous slogan the Palestinians used during the first Gulf War: "O beloved Saddam, bomb, bomb Tel Aviv."

    Hizbullah and their supporters were hoping that the massive Israeli military operation in Lebanon would trigger large-scale protests throughout the Arab world, creating instability and threatening to bring down some of the Arab regimes.

    But the response on the Arab street has been so disappointing for Hizbullah that its leaders are now openly talking about an Arab "conspiracy" to liquidate the Shi'ite organization. The few Hizbullah supporters in Ramallah, the Gaza Strip and some Arab capitals have therefore been directing most of their criticism against the Arab presidents and monarchs, accusing them of serving the interests of the US and Israel.

    read more

    _____________________________________

    Satellite

    Nasrallah in Damascus

    From this post:

    "........Egyptian-born physician said Hizbullah and Palestinian fighting against Israel would not be ended with "cease-fires or agreements."

    "The war with Israel does not depend on cease-fires ... . It is a Jihad for God's sake and will last until (our) religion prevails...from Spain to Iraq," al-Zawahri said. "We will attack everywhere."

    Al-Zawahri wore a gray robe and white turban. A picture of the burning World Trade Center was on the wall behind him along with pictures of two other terrorists....."

    zondag 23 juli 2006

    Enemy of the faith

    The Caged Virgin
    Ayaan Hirsi Ali Free Press, 208pp, £12.99
    ISBN 0743295013
    Are Muslim women really caged virgins, victims of an inherently misogynistic theology? In claiming this, Ayaan Hirsi Ali is guilty of grossly misrepresenting Islam, writes Fareena Alam

    Source: New Statesman

    It's obviously what I've been waiting for all my life: a secular crusader - armed with Enlightenment philosophy, the stamp of the liberal establishment and the promise of sexual freedom - swooping into my harem and liberating me from my "ignorant", "uncritical", "dishonest" and "oppressed" Muslim existence. At least that is what Ayaan Hirsi Ali thinks I've been waiting for. Her latest book, The Caged Virgin, is a collection of essays intended to unveil the sexual terrorism she says is inherent in Islam. In reality, it is a smash-and-grab aggregation of inconsistencies, platitudes and poor scholarship.

    Ayaan Hirsi Ali was born Ayaan Hirsi Magan in Somalia in 1969, but grew up in Kenya. As a young adult she moved to Germany, and l