Pope Benedict Not Really All That Sorry
By Gwynne Dyer
http://www.countercurrents.org/dyer200906.htm
20 September, 2006
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune


On a scale of 1 to 10, Pope Benedict's first attempt at apology was
barely a 3. He said nothing, but on Saturday Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone
told the world, "The holy father is very sorry that some passages of
his speech may have sounded offensive to the sensibilities of Muslim
believers."

That didn't stop the protests that have been building in the Muslim
world since the pope's Sept. 12 speech to an academic audience in
Germany, so Sunday he tried again. From his summer residence at Castel
Gandolfo, south of Rome, he said: "I am deeply sorry for the reactions
in some countries to a few passages of my address at the University of
Regensburg, which were considered offensive to the sensibility of
Muslims."

That won't stop the protests, because he really isn't sorry for what
he said. He's sorry for "the reactions in some countries" to his
remarks, but he implicitly stands by what he said. So is the pope
really anti-Muslim?

After the 9/11 attacks five years ago, the Catholic leader then known
as Cardinal Ratzinger told Vatican Radio that "it is important not to
attribute simplistically what happened to Islam" -- but then he added
that "the history of Islam also contains a tendency to violence." True
enough, but Christianity has its own history of violence: the
Crusades, the Inquisition and several other detours from the path of
peace and tolerance.

Just before he became pope last year, Benedict declared that Turkey
should not be allowed into the European Union because its Islamic
culture is incompatible with Europe's "Christian" culture. But the
real case for the prosecution rests on his invitation to Italian
journalist Oriana Fallaci to visit him last September.

Fallaci (who died last week) was an atheist, and her fame as a war
correspondent and interviewer was decades behind her. But she carved
out a second career as the most extreme anti-Muslim writer in Europe,
producing two bestselling books since 2002 that vilified Muslims as
dirty subhumans who multiply "like rats," and portraying Islam as an
irrational religion that breeds hatred.

Her next-to-last book, which presumably inspired the pope's
invitation, was "The Force of Reason," which argued that the West is
rational and reasonable, whereas Muslims aren't. And there was
Benedict in Germany last week, saying exactly the same thing. What a
coincidence.

Benedict quoted from the 14th-century Byzantine emperor Manuel II
Palaeologus, who told a Persian visitor that "spreading the faith
through violence is something unreasonable ... God is not pleased by
blood."

So far, so good -- but then Manuel asked his Muslim visitor: "Show me
just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things
only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the
faith he preached." Benedict quoted that, too, without further
comment. He ended his speech, 4½ pages later, by quoting the emperor
again: " 'not to act reasonably, not to act with logos, is contrary to
the nature of God,' said Manuel II, according to his Christian
understanding of God. ... It is to this great logos, to this breadth
of reason, that we invite our partners in the dialogue of cultures."
In other words, you Muslims are unreasonable, but if you do it our
way, then we'll finally get somewhere.

So now we know that the new pope is a parochial and intolerant man --
but anybody who paid attention to Cardinal Ratzinger's previous career
knew that already. Now he is in a position to do much more damage.

Pakistan's parliament has unanimously passed a resolution condemning
the pope's speech. Seven Christian churches in the occupied
Palestinian territories have been bombed, set ablaze or shot at. A
Catholic nun has been shot to death in Somalia. Most Muslims are well
aware that violence is an inappropriate way to protest accusations
that Islam is a violent faith, but why do they even care what the pope
says?

The real reason for the uproar is that so many Muslims feel under
attack by the West. Two Muslim countries have been invaded by the
United States and its allies since 9/11, and another, Lebanon, has
been bombed to ruins by Israel with full U.S. and British support.

At least 20 times as many Muslims have died in these brutal wars as
the number of Americans who died in the 9/11 attacks, and almost none
of them had anything to do with that terrorist atrocity. So the
suspicion grows among Muslims that all this is not really about 9/11
at all, and almost any minor insult to Islam from the West is enough
to trigger outrage from Morocco to Indonesia.

We haven't achieved a full-scale "clash of civilizations" yet, but
we're making progress.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist.

(c) Copyright 2006 Star-Tribune

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