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[Sarah Haider: Islam and
the Necessity of Liberal Critique]
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(Moderator) Hi everybody and welcome
to this next presentation entitled
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"Islam and the Necessity of Liberal Critique".
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I'd like to welcome Sarah Haider,
who is one of the co-founders
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of the Ex Muslims of North America group.
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So, please join me in welcoming Sarah.
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(Applause)
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(Sarah Haider) Hi Everyone,
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I'm Sarah, and for the last two years
I have worked to build an organization
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for non-theist ex-Muslims,
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those who once
identified themselves with Islam.
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and now call themselves atheists,
agnostics or deists;
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and the organization is called
Ex-Muslims of North America.
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We are a relatively new organization,
but we are growing quickly
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and we now have communities
of ex-Muslims
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in over fifteen cities.
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As you can imagine, it is notoriously
difficult for ex-Muslims
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to find others like ourselves.
Trying to build friendships among people
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who are often under siege and deep
in the closet is incredibly difficult.
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In the first place, how do you even find
people who are often deliberately
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doing their best to stay undercover?
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As an organization we work to provide
ex-Muslims with much needed support,
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support to free themselves
from the shackles of religion
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and to be themselves, to learn about
each other's suffering,
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and above all else, endure.
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We are in a peculiar situation,
my colleagues and I,
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we are intimately connected with more
godless ex-Muslims
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than likely anyone else in the world.
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I have heard thousands of stories
from hundreds of people,
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about their experiences with Islam.
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Some lucky few were able to leave
the faith with little consequence,
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the relationships with their families
and friends and communities
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remained intact.
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But for most, this was not the case.
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Our journeys have seen
tremendous struggles.
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For some the cost was only social,
loss of friends and families.
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For others, they risked their health and
mental well-being
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from being locked into psychiatric wards
to enduring physical violence
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from all family members.
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Ex-Muslims, arguably
more than any other group,
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are deeply familiar with the problems
entrenched within Muslim communities
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and inherent within Islamic scriptures.
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As most of us happen to be both
people of color
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and first- or second- generation
immigrants,
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we are doubly affected,
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both by hatred and violence
from Muslims,
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but also bigotry and xenophobia
from the broader American public.
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Despite all this, my experience
over the last two years
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has made me wary of speaking up,
even to an audience such as this.
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I always expected feeling unwelcome
from Muslim audiences,
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but I did not anticipate
an equal amount of hostility
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from my allies on the Left.
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For example,
when I first published a piece,
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fact-checking Reza Aslan,
who is a prominent Muslim scholar,
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on his dismissal of
female genital mutilation
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as only an African problem,
not a Muslim one,
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I got many responses from people
unhappy with what I wrote,
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almost all of whom
questioned my motives
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rather than addressing my claims.
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To my surprise, most of my critics
were not Muslims.
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Rather they identified as liberals
and sometimes even atheists.
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Some darkly alluded to my "agenda" and
others claimed that as a former Muslim,
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there was no way I could be trusted
with fair criticism.
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Now remember, I published a fact-check.
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It seems to me that it would be easy
to verify my claims,
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fact-check the fact-check, so to speak.
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But instead, Muslims and some people
on the Left preferred instead
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to throw around suspicions
about my character and my intentions.
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Those who oppose
Christian authoritarianism
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will find that the broad majority
of liberals, religious or non-religious,
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side with them
and will ofter their support
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in the fight to push religious morals
out of our politics and public life.
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Even religious liberals
sometimes look upon
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the politically-charged religious right
with distaste
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and some work with secularists
to keep them out of our politics.
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The executive director for
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the Americans United for {Separation of}
Church and State, for example,
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is an ordained minister.
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Atheists and secularists
can feel secure in the knowledge
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that their allies on the liberal Left
will stand with them
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when their target is
the far-right Christians.
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It makes sense: liberals don't share
much, many common values
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with the religious right.
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But when the same scrutiny
is applied to Islam,
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you find that inexplicably some people
on the Left begin to align instead
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with the Islamic religious right.
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The consistent exception has been
the secular and atheist communities.
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When luminaries of disbelief movement
like Harris and Dawkins speak about
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the horrors of Christianity and write
books condemning it, they are cheered,
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their works lionized, their presence
sought at events and conferences.
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But when they turn
the same critical gaze
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towards the religion of my family,
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they are told to cease
such offensive talk,
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to refrain from criticizing
the same oppressive forces
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that they criticized in the past.
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There is an instinct to pigeon-hole
anyone
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who says something negative about
Islam, to broadly label them
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in such a way that nearly guarantees
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that most on the Left will ignore
what they have to say.
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The first method, I found, of people dismissing my claims, has been that
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since as a brown person I can't easily
be painted as a bigot,
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is that I must be pro-war
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or broadly support the far-right agenda
in some way.
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This is not true.
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Sometimes I am called an Uncle Tom
or a house Arab.
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Another term thrown around
at ex-Muslims
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and other brown critics of Islam
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is "native informants".
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This was my first time hearing this.
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I won't go into the many reasons why
this is an impressively disgusting thing
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to call someone,
with the vague implication
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that we are brainwashed in some way,
or are betraying our own kind.
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While it is somewhat understandable,
why someone like Myriam Francois,
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who is a white convert to Islam, why she
would refer to us as native informants,
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it is beyond my comprehension how
such a transparently racist term
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was used by the journalist
Max Blumenthal
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in his article condemning Ayaan Hirsi Ali
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to cast a shadow over
her role in this debate.
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I wonder if Blumenthal
would feel comfortable
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using similarly racist terms
against anti-clerical dissidents
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from African-American
or other minority communities.
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Bill Maher is someone
who has been painted
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by the Left and the Right as a bigot.
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Once on his show though, Maher
mentioned the high rates of support
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for the death penalty for the crime of
atheism in Muslim communities.
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In response, Dean Obeidallah,
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who is a comedian and author
and liberal Muslim,
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attempted to defend the Muslim
countries by pointing out errors
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in the statistics Maher used.
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Let me quote his piece on CNN.
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He says - "a 2013 Pew poll
actually found
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that only 64% of Egyptians supported this"
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- by this he means the death penalty -
"still alarmingly high, but not 90%"
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and only thirteen Muslim nations have
penalties for apostasy, while 34 do not".
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Can we realistically imagine something
like that being published
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if it was about any other minority, in
an honest effort to downplay the horror?
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What if it was "only 64% of Americans
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support the death penalty
for converts to Islam"
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- Muslims don't have it that bad -
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"only 64% of French citizens support the
death penalty for Algerian immigrants"
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or "only 64% of Americans support
the death penalty for homosexuality"?
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How bad is the situation,
how terrible the human rights abuses
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and how little the worth
of the life of a human being,
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when 64% is viewed
as a defensive statistic?
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It is a situation as if fully
one-third of western nations
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had legalized the murder of Muslims,
how appalled would we be?
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What would the Left's reaction be?
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As an ex-Muslim I am horrified that
something like this would be published
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on the web-site
of a major news organization
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and not a single voice
was raised in outrage.
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Why is my life worth less?
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Does my simply being raised
in an Islamic tradition
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grant the Islamic religious right
overt ownership over me and my body,
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grant them license to murder me
and my fellow atheists?
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The claim actually being made
by citing this statistic was that Maher
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was supposedly making too much of
a fuss of atheist persecution by Muslims.
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Now I do not wish to denigrate
the author, Dean Obeidallah,
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but to illustrate
the depth of the problem,
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that in trying to defend what he
perceived to be an injustice to Muslims,
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he did not even notice
the depravity of what he wrote.
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As a consequence an audience
on the Left now frightens me
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nearly as much as
an audience of Islamists does.
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I have had to think long and hard about
whether I want to give this talk today,
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to what extent I should mince my words,
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and what consequence
it would have on my work.
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It's not my intention to cause offense
but I firmly believe
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that there are things that need to be
said, elephants in the room
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that no one but some bigots on the
far right are willing to acknowledge.
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We are all, I hope, familiar with what happened
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on January 7th at the offices
of Charlie Hebdo.
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Masked gunmen killed twelve people,
shouting Allahu Akbar!,
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later revealed to be two brothers,
French nationals of Algerian origin.
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There was global outrage and a large
show of solidarity for the cartoonists,
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which appeared to be the obviously
righteous things to do.
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Until of course the religious
began to speak up
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with claims of "provocation"
and hurt feelings.
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But that was to be expected, Islamists
have been saying that for years,
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and indeed, no religion really accepts
any form of ridicule
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- if they have a choice in the matter, that is say.
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However, what was more distressing to me,
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was the response from many
of my allies on the Left.
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Over and over I heard the claim that
Charlie Hebdo was somehow
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a racist publication, and while,
of course, of course,
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murder is always wrong
and should be condemned,
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it is nonetheless "understandable"
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that the gunmen would feel
provoked by the cartoons.
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Now, I don't know about you, but I don't
want to meet the man
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who "understands" why someone would
feel compelled to murder another man
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because he didn't like a cartoon
that he drew. (applause).
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It's important to realize that mocking
and critique are not that different
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in the eyes of the most religious people.
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There is no fair amount
of fair and friendly criticism
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that the very religious will accept if
they have the power to shut it down,
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as evidenced by the prohibition
on heretical speech
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in theocratic states throughout history.
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There is a curious
double-standard at play.
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When Muslim clerics and activists
that are known to be
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anti-Semites and homophobes
are welcomed on campuses,
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touring nationally, invited to give
lectures by Muslim student associations,
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while feminists like Asra Nomani,
who has been fighting
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for the equality of the sexes,
for the right of female entry
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to the priestly class,
is branded as a bigot
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by the same Muslim student organizations
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and the authorities
at universities like Duke
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succumb to this brazen attempt
to silence her.
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Similar patterns are repeated
across the Western world.
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Maryam Namazie,
who is an ex-Muslim activist,
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was dis-invited to speak at Trinity,
Ayaan Hirsi Ali at Brandeis.
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The British Students Union
now allies itself broadly
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with Islamist organizations such as CAGE.
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To quote Nick Cohen from his article
from the Guardian,
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"University managers are no better than
their teenage heresy hunters.
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They say they want to oppose
radical Islam in argument.
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The Lawyers' Secular Society
took them at their word.
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It tried to present an investigation
at the University of West London
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into Islamist groups that were
all over campuses,
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despite their record of advocating
Jew hatred, homophobia and misogyny.
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The university authorities
banned the secularists."
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Let me be clear. I don't think anyone,
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even bigots emerging from Muslim
communities or anywhere else,
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should be silenced.
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What I ask is that we stand up
for the right to speak of all,
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including those both
those who stand with us
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and those who call for the death
of our fellow dis-believers.
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Our society functions because
we believe that hurt feelings
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mean essentially nothing
in the eyes of our justice system.
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But of course it is claimed that
this is a special case,
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because these aren't just
personal hurt feelings,
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these are religious hurt feelings,
and not just any religion,
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but the religion of the underdog,
of the brown man.
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And the Left decided long ago
that the hurt feelings
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of the Christian religion mattered little,
and it was imperative
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that we disabuse the notion
that Christianity
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would ever feel safe from criticism
or even outright mockery.
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Indeed many of our greatest thinkers
have delighted in exercising this right.
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I want to quote Thomas Paine, from his
book, The Age of Reason:
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"Whenever we read the obscene stories,
the voluptuous debaucheries,
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the cruel and torturous executions,
the unrelenting vindictiveness,
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with which more than half
the Bible is filled,
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it would be more consistent that
we called it the word of a demon,
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than the word of God.
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It is a history of wickedness, that has
served to corrupt and brutalize mankind;
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and, for my part, I sincerely detest it,
as I detest everything that is cruel"
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I wonder if Paine had been murdered
for his outright contempt of Christianity,
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how different would the West look today?
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what message such a gruesome deed
would have sent?
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how many people would it have silenced
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with its promise of
more bloodshed to come
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if they had the audacity
to repeat his crime?
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Would that fear have silenced those who
insisted on the freedom of speech?
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How would that have affected
the face of our nation?
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Now I hope that you will reflect with me,
on the fact that
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not only was he not murdered,
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neither were his contemporaries
who mocked religion,
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also even then three centuries ago,
I don't believe he contemplated the idea
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that writing would actually
lead to his death.
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And yet, in the twenty-first century,
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this is the reality of those who speak out
against Islam in Muslim countries
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and increasingly in Western ones.
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It is not uncommon to hear from
commentators in various media outlets
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that the victims of Charlie Hebdo had
somehow provoked others
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with their offensive cartoons
into taking their lives.
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The sentiment seems to be that
the cartoonists must to some degree
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be held accountable for their own murders,
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even as dozens of cartoonists
from the East drew panels
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in support of their counterparts
in the West,
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risking their own lives
for freedom of speech.
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Two months ago, PEN, an organization
that has stood for free speech
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for nearly a century, announced their
decision to honor
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the magazine Charlie Hebdo
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with the PEN
Freedom of Expression Courage Award.
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Yet amongst those that were
members of PEN,
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there were some that refused to stand
with Charlie Hebdo,
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initially six table heads
and as of now, 204 writers.
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I would like to remind everyone
that we've been here before.
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When Salman Rushdie had a fatwa
calling for his death,
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PEN America under Susan Sontag's
stewardship stood for him,
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even while a significant percentage
of the intelligentsia cast him aside.
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Figures as diverse as
the Archbishop of Canterbury
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to multiple members
of the British Parliament,
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one of whom condemned Rushdie as,
quote, an outstanding villain,
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whose, quote, public life has been
a record of despicable acts of betrayal
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of his upbringing, religion,
adopted home and nationality.
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As there were eastern cartoonists
standing with Charlie Hebdo,
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there were Irani writers from the Muslim
world that stood in defiance
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and defended Rushdie, some of whom
were subsequently attacked.
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In light of the recent attack
in Garland, Texas,
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I'd like to share the prophetic words
of Norman Mailer,
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from over two decades ago:
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"In this week of turmoil we can now
envision a fearful time in the future
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when fundamentalist groups in America,
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stealing their page
from this international episode
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will know how to apply the same methods
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to American writers and bookstores.
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If they succeed it will be due to the fact
that we never found
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an honest resistance to the terrorization
of Salman Rushdie."
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Where in 1989 and 2005 authors
and cartoonists considered
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a vague possibility of retaliation,
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it has now metastatized
to an ever present threat;
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like clockwork the violence
intensifies and repeats.
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The cowardly response
in the intervening decade
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has also been repeated time and time
again, everytime emboldening the voices
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calling for the curtailment of free speech.
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The Rushdie fatwa was the first battle,
a battle in which we surrendered,
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and continue to pay the price
for that appeasement today.
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So why is it so difficult for many
on the Left to criticize Islam?
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Why do they shy away from it?
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I believe that the primary reason is that
many are simply incapable of separating
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the criticism of an idea with the hate
directed towards a people,
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and immediately call the first "racism".
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That idea should not
be entertained for very long,
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as if there can be no valid reasons
to critique an ideology
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rooted in seventh-century
patriarchal norms
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except for hatred toward the very people
imprisoned by those ideologies.
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There are people who use the phrase "Islamophobia"
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both to mean criticism of the people
and of the religion.
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I know that many Muslims do this,
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it is an easy way of stopping others
from criticizing their religion,
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but I believe that many in the West
use this word
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because they haven't quite thought
of why it might be harmful.
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Islamophobia is a meaningless term.
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It serves to confuse and to muddle two
very different forms of intolerance,
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based on two very different reasons,
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towards which there should be
two very different reactions.
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Sometimes it is claimed
that the critique of religion
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is critique of the identity
of the believer,
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and is therefore bigotry.
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This person's identity happens
to be based on ideology,
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so if you criticize their ideology,
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you are necessarily generating
hate towards that person.
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But I wonder what would happen
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if we applied this type of thinking
to everything?
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What if New Agers decided that criticism
of New Age spiritual healing
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was a form of hate against people
who chose to identify that way?
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What if Hindus decided
criticism of the caste system
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was a deeply offensive form of racism
against Hindu people?
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How much of that would that retard reform?
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There is another version
of this argument
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which claims that criticism
or ridicule of Islam
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feeds into the bigotry
by the far-right
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and therefore causes harm,
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and I want everyone to know that
the argument is almost never
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that Islam doesn't deserve the critique
or ridicule as a religion,
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but that it is harmful to voice this
for the damage it would do.
-
Now one of the writers that opposed the
award for Charlie Hebdo claimed that,
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quote, the narrative
of the Charlie Hebdo murders
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-- the narrative of the
Charlie Hebdo murders --
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white Europeans killed in their offices
by Muslim extremists
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is one that feeds neatly
into the cultural prejudices
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that have allowed our governments
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to make so many disastrous
mistakes in the Middle East
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-- the narrative of the Charlie Hebdo murders!
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I read that statement and I realized that
for some writers
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the problem wasn't just
that the cartoons were offensive,
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it was that the reaction of Muslims
to the cartoons fed into
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a stereotypical Muslim trope,
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a reaction that was very
inconvenient for a group
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trying to paint a picture
of a peaceful Islam,
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despite mounting evidence to the contrary.
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It is quite clear that allegiances here
aren't to the truth,
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instead the aim is to selectively hide
inconvenient truths,
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truths that are deemed to be harmful,
should they ever be acknowledged.
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I assume the fear is that we do not want
to give support to actual bigoted people.
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Anyone who watches Fox knows
how they use fear-mongering tactics
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to promote xenophobia.
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But the liberation of a billion and a half
Muslims in the world,
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Muslims who are suffering under the yoke
of an ever-present theological authority,
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should be at the forefront of our minds.
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As has been repeated hundreds of times
by critics like myself,
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the primary victims of Islamism
are Muslims,
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be it in terms of terrorism, violence,
misogyny, freedom of expression,
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religion, and economic decline.
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Yet bizarrely, these concerns are
secondary still to not presenting offense.
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Still there are others that believe
that people in the West
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have no right to speak about
problems of "brown cultures"
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due to the legacy of colonialism
and other forms of violence
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the West has cast upon the East.
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This is a strange argument because
it ignores the history of the world,
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a history in which various nations, Muslims and non-Muslims,
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have succumbed to the ebb-and-flow
of conquest, repeatedly,
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for all of recorded history.
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Many Islamic countries in fact had
horrific laws before colonialism.
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Two of the epicenters of Islamic thought,
Iran for Shia Islam,
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and Saudi Arabia for Sunni Islam,
resisted colonialism.
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In fact, Saudi Arabia was founded in 1744
as an extremist state,
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the first iteration of which was
destroyed by the Ottomans,
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due to their religious fanaticism.
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The first Saudis in fact attacked
and desecrated
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some of the most holy Muslim sites
and were stopped
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not by intervention of the West
but by other Muslims
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that viewed them as dangerous fanatics.
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There was then no American imperialism,
no frame of wars against other Muslims,
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and yet, fundamentalist Wahabbis existed,
and were attacking other Muslims
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very much the same way
that ISIS attacks them today.
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Reform is impossible when you constantly
shift the conversation away
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from Islamic fundamentalism, and back
to western violence and imperialism.
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But don't get me wrong.
It is important to discuss this,
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it is important to discuss imperialism
and the harm that it caused.
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But violence in the name of Islam
has terrorized the Middle East
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ever since its inception,
and it is important
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that we don't derail this conversation.
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The moral paralysis out of fear of the
right, out of fear of furthering bigotry,
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by shame of prior crimes committed
by other white people
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should not trump all considerations.
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When I read articles of why Muslims
should not be ridiculed
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I get a sense of condescension, a sense
that there are those who believe
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that the most essential trait of
brown people is their religion,
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a defining feature in fact,
and due to this
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they presume that we won't reform
or we can't,
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that religion is something
inherent to who we are
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and that it won't respond
to pressure, to change
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the way Christianity responded
to pressure by secularists.
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While they believe themselves
to be supporting tolerance,
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what they are really supporting is
the religious right of the East,
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and not just any religious right, not the
religious right that we have here,
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it's a religious right the West
hasn't seen for centuries.
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To me, someone who opposes the most
foundational liberal principle,
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the freedom of expression,
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in order to protect the sensibilities
of this Islamist religious right
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is a liberal only in name.
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In fact, what kind of person holds two
different groups of people accountable
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to two different standards of
acceptable behavior but a bigot?
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Islam, like all patriarchal religions,
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is a tool used to justify abuse
of women and minorities.
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Does our concept of tolerance extend
towards tolerance
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of systematic subjugation
of women and minorities?
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What else can excusing abuse made
in the name of tolerance be called
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other than a benevolent,
self-serving form of bigotry?
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No matter how seemingly
compassionate the motivations,
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we must not hesitate in being honest
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in calling out our allies for their
hypocrisy and their illiberal mores.
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Sometimes I feel as though people
view secularism and free-thinking
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to be concepts owned by the West,
something inherently Western.
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To push secularism and free thought
to Muslims then
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is to push a Western identity onto them.
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It is no more than ignorance of history
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to feel that Enlightenment ideals can
only be shared by this civilization,
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rather than a progression
of all of humanity.
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Indeed throughout history
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there have been champions
of these very same ideals,
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there have been free-thinkers
in every culture in the world
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that have bled for these ideals.
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There have been countless free-thinkers
that challenged faith,
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that tried but sadly failed to interpret
scripture in a less misogynist way,
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even in patriarchal Islamic societies.
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For example, the seventeenth century had
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the crown prince of the Mughal dynasty,
Dara Shikoh,
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who was committed to rights of all
religions, Hindu, Sikh, Muslim alike,
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working to bridge the gaps between
the leading lights of all faiths.
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As you may anticipate,
this was not to last,
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Dara was murdered by his own brother,
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claiming that Dara's tolerance
was a sign of his apostasy,
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a brother that is now revered in Muslim
circles as being a guardian of the faith.
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Similarly, there have been women
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that have led the charge
for their own rights.
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Exactly two hundred years ago,
Fatima Baraghani was born in Iran,
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an extremely intelligent woman, who as
per custom was married young,
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and wasn't allowed to further
pursue her education.
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She was attracted to a radical movement
brewing in the country,
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which espoused equality of the genders.
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She joined and rose to be one
of the leading lights of that movement.
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To symbolize a break from Shariah,
in one gathering,
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she took off her traditional veil
in front of an assemblage of men
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and brandished instead a sword.
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Now this sight caused such a shock
among the crowd,
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that many grown men screamed aloud.
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One man cut his own throat in horror,
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fleeing the scene as blood poured
from his neck. {Laughter}
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But she did not enjoy freedom or live
long after this incident.
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The tragedy of the Eastern past isn't
that we haven't given birth to reformers
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but that the violence of our oppressors
has eliminated us, time and again.
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Even in modern times, one Somali author,
Abdisaid Abdi Ismail, wrote a book
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where he audaciously argued
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that Islam doesn't actually call
for a death penalty for apostasy.
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He was rewarded for his efforts by
having his life threatened,
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and calls for his book to be burned.
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A British reformist, Maajid Nawaz, has had
fatwas issued calling for his death
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for simply saying on a tweet
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that a cartoon of Muhammad
doesn't personally offend him.
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The religious right has been murdering
reformers for centuries,
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but we are still here,
fighting for our future,
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the same fight that the West has had
much greater success in.
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It is strange that the very same people,
who should (?) tamp down on the power
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of the Christian right and use the advances
that the West has had,
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to insist that we must be defined
by our religious right.
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Let us assume, for the sake of argument,
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that we can all concede the idea that
Islam, as a religion, needs reform,
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or at the very least, Muslim communities
do, both in the West and abroad,
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and in the way they choose
to practice their faith.
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I happen to believe this.
All the data we have corroborates this.
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There's a large amount of evidence
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which clearly demonstrates
rampant misogyny,
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bad attitudes towards homosexuals
and apostasy within the Muslim world,
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supported by the law and widely
accepted by the people.
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In an effort to draw attention away
from the role of religion in all this,
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some have chosen to instead use
excuses by a variety of reasons,
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none of which make sense,
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because Muslim countries share
almost nothing between them all,
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except the predominant religion -
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not socio-economic status,
not education or literacy levels, not GDP,
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not cultural background or history,
not race or ethnicity, not language,
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not political system,
not the history of Western colonization.
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What they do share is theology.
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Obviously Islam isn't the root of
all evil, but it is an important factor.
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What we have here is a right wing
in the West who believes
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that Islam personifies evil
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and a Left which refuses to even
look into it as a source of harm.
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The question then becomes,
how do we achieve reform
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without actually mentioning
any problems in Islam?
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How do we achieve progress
while shying away
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from one of the foundational aspects
of how harmful practices are justified?
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Most cultures are responsive to selective pressure,
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and by insisting that no pressure
be applied,
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we are acting as a brake on any progress.
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We have plenty of evidence
that a push for secularism
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or a presence within secular cultures
can change behavior,
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and even the beliefs of Muslims.
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For example, if you compare
Muslims in the US
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with Muslims in the Middle East,
you will find across all metrics,
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that their opinions are less extreme
and more in line with liberal values,
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than those of the population
of their origin countries.
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Many Muslims believe that
their religion is immutable,
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that every word of which is true,
and reformers insult them
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when they demand change.
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Yet profound changes in the way
Muslims practice their religion
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have occurred in the past.
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Many Muslim countries practiced
slavery up until the twentieth century,
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with some countries abolishing slavery
as recently as 1981,
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citing religious sanction of the practice
as a justification.
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Saudi Arabia's slave population
was estimated at 300,000
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a scant 50 years ago,
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and it was international pressure
that forced abolition.
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Under pressure from the
British Empire to abolish slavery
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a little over a century ago,
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the Sultan of Morocco cited
the inerrancy of the Quran
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to make the case for the divine
sanction of slavery.
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Later the chief minister of Morocco,
Muhammad Idris,
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wrote in response to anti-slavery
efforts, that
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"we do not interfere in religious
principles which you profess,
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likewise you should not interfere
in our religion".
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In the face of Ottoman unwillingness
to condemn the status of slaves
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as enshrined in Shariah,
a British statesman sarcastically stated,
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one might well ask the Sultan
to become a Christian.
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Yet today, most if not all Muslims
are repulsed by the idea of slaves.
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Did they abandon the Quran which
seemed to clearly condone slavery
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a mere century ago?
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Or were we able to shift
mainstream consensus
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by standing up for our moral principles?
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I wonder what would have happened
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if the benevolent bigots of the West,
of the Left today,
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who feel that it is more important
to respect a culture
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for the sake of respecting a culture
had existed back then.
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How many millions would be
living in chains today?
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There is another common narrative,
of the West as oppressors,
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how racism here feeds
into the oppression of a minority.
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Champions of Islam have gone
on record using it as a cudgel
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to beat against the back of progress.
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We need to be aware that
the victim versus the oppressor dynamic
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isn't set in stone the way some people
would have you believe.
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One can be a victim in one context
and an oppressor in another.
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A Muslim man may deal with racism
at work, real racism,
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may see career setbacks,
and goes home and beats his hijabi wife
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because he was raised
in a misogynistic tradition,
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using Quran's verse as justification.
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Should we not criticize his behavior
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because of his victimization
in one aspect?
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An imam may be an anti-Semite,
a homophobe, he may be indoctrinating
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a generation of impressionable minds
into his harmful ideas.
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Yet the same imam might also
be a victim of bigotry
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when he aims to launch a new mosque.
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He may be the target of
local xenophobic attitudes.
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In lieu of his sufferings,
should we pretend
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his other despicable behaviors
do not exist? or do not matter?
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Are we to sacrifice one for the other?
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Instead, can we not stand
against all oppressions,
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stand for the equal rights of others,
while simultaneously working
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against bigoted narratives in religion?
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One of my ex-Muslim colleagues
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beautifully summed up
the same sentiments,
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when she was talking about
the misogynistic nature of the hijab,
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quote, feminism is defending
women, Muslim women,
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who wear the hijab for whatever reason,
against shaming or attack.
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Feminism is not categorically
denying that the hijab can be coercive,
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body-shaming, slut-shaming, restrictive
or psychologically crippling.
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We cannot avoid reality
because we are afraid
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of the consequences
of acknowledging facts.
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Is it ethical to avoid educating our
children about Darwinian evolution
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simply because it has fed
into Social Darwinism in the past?
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Our silence about uncomfortable truths
simply underscores
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the cost of our inaction and
the consequences loom ever larger.
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We are paralyzed by our own insecurities,
by our fear
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that the truth will empower
the worst of us, rather than set us free.
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We have those on the Islamic far right
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who say that there is no room
for reform in Islam,
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because Islam is,
and always has been perfect.
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We have their counterparts
from the far right in the West,
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who coincidentally also view Islam
as beyond reform,
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but for different reasons,
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as something that is irredeemably
and permanently evil.
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Between those two extremes,
we have the average Muslim,
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who is forced to choose
between the devil he knows,
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Islamic dominance and supremacy, over
the devil he doesn't, Western bigotry.
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The liberal Left needs to present
a different path,
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not acquiesce to either form
of religious dominance.
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We must remember that there is
no inevitable march of progress,
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no guarantee that tomorrow's world
will be more just, more equal,
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more rational, more tolerant
or reasonable.
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Liberal rights without liberals
to champion them
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are values without influence,
with no defense.
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Let's not let our empathy
for oppression of one group
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excuse their oppression of another.
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Thank you!
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{Standing applause}
Claude Almansi
Thank you so much for the transcript, Kevin!
I've re-added the introduction by the moderator, and started splitting your part in caption-sized chunks. Then I'll finish that and sync the chunks into subtitles.