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http://www.signandsight.com/features/2120.html
Pascal Bruckner and the reality disconnect

Pascal Bruckner wants to forbid the word 'Islamophobia'. What should
be the next to go: Racism? Relativism? By Alan Posener

The French writer Pascal Bruckner wants to forbid a word. Which sounds
more like a typically German obsession. But for Bruckner,
"Islamophobia" is one of "those expressions which we dearly need to
banish from our vocabulary". One asks oneself with some trepidation
which other words we "dearly need" to get rid of: Right-wing populism?
Racism? Relativism?But let that ride. Bruckner's essay has the
advantage of stating the case against "Islamophobia" clearly and
concisely and thus allowing those who – like myself – propose to hang
on to the word until a better one comes along to answer in a similar
clear and concise way.

Let me present Bruckner's arguments in his own words:

"Iranian fundamentalists invented the word Islamophobia, formed in
analogy to 'xenophobia', in the late seventies. The aim of this word
is to declare Islam inviolate. Whoever crosses this border is deemed a
racist."

The argument that Islamists coined the phrase in order to portray any
and all criticism of Islam as a symptom of illness (a phobia being an
irrational fear), may be right or wrong. It is, however, irrelevant.
Remember that the word "Antisemitism" was also coined by reactionaries
who wanted to give their hatred of the Jews, inspired by Christian
Antijudaism, a "scientific" gloss. In point of fact, the "Antisemites"
never had anything against any other Semites (for instance Arabs), and
their hatred was reserved for a people which (pace Thilo Sarrazin) was
and is one of the world's most ethnically diverse. And yet we still
use the expression today, and not only to characterize the ideology
developed by its European inventors. For instance, few people today
would hesitate to call Martin Luther an Antisemite, just because he
knew nothing about race and genetics and therefore didn't call on
pseudoscience to justify his murderous hatred of the Jews.

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Brucker's article:
http://www.signandsight.com/features/2123.html

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