[Mb-civic] A war of values,
not religion - Jeff Jacoby - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sun Nov 6 07:17:47 PST 2005
A war of values, not religion
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | November 6, 2005
THE PRINCE of Wales was at the White House last week, hoping, the Daily
Telegraph reported, ''to convince President Bush of the merits of Islam
. . . because he thinks the United States has been too intolerant of the
religion since Sept. 11, 2001." This is a drum Prince Charles has been
beating for years. In 1993, for example, he scolded those in the West
who peddled ''unthinking prejudices" about Muslim culture -- for
example, ''that sharia law of the Islamic world is cruel, barbaric, and
unjust." Two months after 9/11, he was lambasting the American attitude
toward Islam as ''too confrontational."
More to Charles's liking, presumably, would be something more
conciliatory and politically correct. Something like this:
''The killers who take the lives of innocent men, women, and children
are followers of a violent ideology very different from the religion of
Islam. These extremists distort the idea of jihad into a call for
terrorist murder against anyone who does not share their radical vision.
. . . Many Muslim scholars have already publicly condemned terrorism,
often citing chapter 5, verse 32 of the Koran, which states that killing
an innocent human being is like killing all of humanity."
If that's the way Charles thinks Bush ought to speak about Islam, I have
good news for him: It is. Those were Bush's words. He spoke them on Oct.
17 at the fifth annual White House ''iftaar" dinner during the Muslim
month of Ramadan. He praised the ''countless acts of kindness" that
followed the recent earthquake in Kashmir. ''For the first time in our
nation's history," he said to applause, ''we have added the Koran to the
White House library."
Too intolerant? Considering that America is at war with the forces of
Islamofascism, and that for 25 years Americans have been attacked or
killed by radical Muslim terrorists, the president's words about Islam
were remarkably benign and uncritical.
As indeed they have been since 9/11, when he went out of his way to
proclaim the peacefulness of Islam -- sometimes in the company of Muslim
leaders whose history has been far from peaceful.
Of course, it goes without saying that most Muslims are not terrorists.
Of course many people professing Islam are compassionate and generous.
Of course Islam should not be gratuitously insulted. But neither should
it be sugar-coated or kowtowed to. Yet too many Western elites are
unwilling to speak plainly about the problems within Islam itself, or to
hold Muslim culture to what should be universal standards of decency and
justice. Far from being ''too confrontational" in their attitude toward
Islam, they have been too indulgent and deferential, careful never to
say anything that might be deemed insensitive. One result has been an
increase in extremist behavior: Witness the ''Eurofada" raging in the
streets of Paris.
We do Muslims no favors by excusing attitudes or practices that ought
always to be deemed inexcusable. In Australia's Victoria state, the
Herald Sun reported recently, police have been issued a ''religious
diversity handbook" that advises them ''to treat Muslim domestic
violence cases differently out of respect for Islamic traditions and
habits." The Australian Police Multicultural Advisory Bureau's handbook
provides guidelines for modifying police procedures to accommodate
minority sensibilities.
Sikhs, for example, ''should not be disturbed" when reading their holy
scriptures, a practice that normally takes 50 hours. Photographing
Aborigines is discouraged, since it might raise fears of ''sorcery and
spiritual mischief." And Muslim wife-beaters should be treated with kid
gloves, in deference to Islamic norms. ''In incidents such as domestic
violence," the handbook instructs, ''police need to have an
understanding of the traditions, ways of life, and habits of Muslims."
Could anything more perfectly capture the moral bankruptcy of
multicultural relativism? The Koran may tolerate wife-beating (Sura
4:34: ''As for those from whom you fear disobedience, admonish them and
send them to bed apart and beat them"), but why on earth should Australia?
''All Muslim husbands are not wife-beaters," remarks Robert Spencer, a
scholar of Islam, ''and it is condescending and irresponsible . . . to
give those who are a free pass, instead of denouncing the practice
unequivocally and calling upon Muslim men to heed the better angels of
their nature." In much the same way, he says, the West's unwillingness
to ''confront the elements of Islam that jihad terrorists use to justify
violence, for fear of offending moderate Muslims, " ends up undercutting
the ability of those very moderates to demand reform from within.
The war against radical Islam is above all a war of values -- the values
of liberty, equality, and human dignity against the values of jihad. The
jihadis don't hesitate to proclaim their values. We must not be shy
about defending ours.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/11/06/a_war_of_values_not_religion/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20051106/a3897157/attachment-0001.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list