https://www.opendemocracy.net/5050/karima-bennoune/charlie-hebdo-there-is-no-way-they-will-make-us-put-down-our-pens

Charlie Hebdo: "There is no way they will make us put down our pens."
KARIMA BENNOUNE 8 January 2015

Pen against Kalashnikov: courage against atrocity. People of Muslim
heritage call for combatting Islamist ideology by political means and
mass mobilisation.

We are all Charlie!

To those who attacked Charlie Hebdo yesterday shouting "Allahu Akbar,"
I would like to say that your kind of God - a God of Hate and Murder -
is not Great. Nor is that God the God of most Muslims, but rather of
your own Islamist cult - which so many people of Muslim heritage
oppose. You are incapable of understanding satire; you openly revile
the beliefs of others but brook no criticism of the medieval notions
you believe. You claim to defend Islam while bringing only shame upon
it. You are offended by cartoons but not by killing. You claim to have
avenged the Prophet Mohamed but have instead defamed him with your
cowardly attack on unarmed journalists in his name.

As a Tunisian woman wrote to me afterwards, "It is so horrible,
claiming the name of God while killing these poor people. But, about
which God are they speaking?"  With an ironic outrage, worthy of
Charlie Hebdo itself, she insisted the deity would be "gratified" that
they are "making him a God of intolerance and blood."  In the name of
tolerance and peace, and in memory of the tragically murdered victims
in Paris, and of so many others - even more numerous - in places like
Peshawar, let us commit after this bleak January day to make 20 15 the
year we finally put an end to this ghastly jihad.

While first information suggests the authors of the Paris attack may
have claimed affiliation with Al Qaeda in Yemen, others suspect an
"Islamic State" link. In any case, their indisputable connection is
with the pernicious ideology of international Islamism and its myriad
armed manifestations.  These are, to quote Algerian sociologist
Marieme Helie-Lucas, "political movements of the extreme right that...
manipulate religion to achieve their political aims."  We must
collectively denounce that ideology and do all we can to defeat these
movements.   As Helie-Lucas and Maryam Namazie wrote in an online
petition in denunciation of the Charlie Hebdo attack, a statement
rapidly signed by activists from Iran to Sudan, "What is needed is
straight-forward analysis of the political nature of armed Islamists:
they are an extreme-right political force, working under the guise of
religion and they aim at political power.  They should be combated by
political means and mass mobilization...."

This latest horror is but one in a long line of Muslim fundamentalist
assaults on thought. "Those who combat us with the pen will die by the
sword," decreed the Armed Islamic Group in Algeria in the 1990s while
slaughtering intellectuals.  Just this December, an Algerian Salafist
called for the public execution, possibly by crucifixion, of prominent
writer Kamel Daoud, a free-thinker who recently made waves with his
rewriting of Camus's "The Stranger" from an Algerian perspective, and
who dared to say in a television appearance that Arabs must reflect on
the role of religion in their societies to move forward.

While I am first and foremost outraged by the Islamist ideologues who
make such threats, and the terrorists like those who perpetrated
yesterday's massacre, I also blame some liberals and left-wingers -
and even human rights advocates - in the West who have for years
apologized for Islamism and Islamist ideas, painted Islamists mainly
as victims with legitimate grievances standing up to the West, or
defenders of Muslim culture, rather than extreme right wingers with
guns determined on squashing human rights.  These Western apologists
have justified everything from the burqa to theocracy in the name of
cultural relativism - appalling many intellectuals of Muslim heritage
who are determined instead to buck extremism. Some of these  voices
were heard again in the U.S. media yesterday emphasizing the
"offensiveness" of Charlie Hebdo's content.  In Western academia, this
apologia has often been a politically correct stance, what Mahnaz
Afkhami  decries as "Islamic exceptionalism."  So, one way to
commemorate this terrible event and memorialize its victims is to
unequivocally defend universal human rights, including the right to
freedom of expression, and to make clear that they apply to all.  We
must dare to defend even the right to blaspheme, the right that the
Charlie Hebdo staff paid with their lives for asserting.

Many people of Muslim heritage - from Saudi Arabia to Sudan, from
Afghanistan to Algeria, have been in the frontlines of the fight
against terror and extremism . But so many more of us in the diasporas
need to find the courage to speak out in support of them.  After the
Sydney attack and on the same day as the Peshawar massacre, CNN
featured a Muslim American blogger whining about the fact that Muslims
are expected to condemn jihadist attacks.  I no longer have any
patience for this sort of view.  Those of us who are proud of our
heritage, who have diverse and complex relationships with the Islam of
our forebears, can make a difference by speaking out against every
single one of these crimes whose miserable perpetrators wrongfully
claim to act as agents of the religious heritage we value.  (This is
akin to suggesting that Jews can advance the cause of human rights by
criticizing the Israeli government's violations since it claims to
represent them, even while they are in no way collectively responsible
for such abuses.)  We should have a Million Muslim March, or the
virtual equivalent, every single time an event like this happens.

Our community organizations should move from reactive condemnations of
terrorism post hoc, to proactive, systematic efforts to root out
Islamist ideology through awareness-raising, and humanist education.
We must also do more to support those doing this work back home in our
countries of origin.  As difficult as it can be to speak out in our
highly charged contemporary environment in which the Western far right
campaigns against Islam - akin to "walking on a tightrope" as one
young Arab-American activist recently described it - it takes just a
fraction of the moral courage shown by those most at risk.  Pakistani
lawyer Asma Jahangir, who has to have armed guards in her Lahore
office, implored the diaspora community to speak out about the
slaughter in countries like hers when I interviewed her.

It is especially critical not to blame the victims for the Paris
attack, however challenging some of their drawings and writings may
have been for some.  That is what satirists do - push boundaries.
That is their right, and indeed modern society needs those who dare to
claim that none of our emperors have any clothes.  Charlie Hebdo are
equal opportunity offenders, lampooning the Pope, Jewish orthodoxy and
the Mullahs.  Many people of Muslim heritage appreciate satire.  The
late great Pakistani arts promoter Faizan Peerzada told me of the
Danish cartoons that Charlie Hebdo reprinted, "if this cartoon was
seen by Mohamed, he would have had a laugh.  As simple as that."

Meanwhile, the extreme right wing and other anti-Muslim forces in the
West cannot be allowed to overlook such defiance among people of
Muslim heritage, or to smear all of Islam or its adherents -  or
immigrants writ large - because of attacks like the one in Paris.  As
Caroline Fourest, an expert on fundamentalisms and former member of
the editorial staff of Charlie Hebdo told me yesterday, the magazine
is itself both anti-fundamentalist and secularist - and resolutely
anti-racist.  "Racism must not be an excuse for fundamentalism.  And
fundamentalism must not be an excuse for racism," she insisted. "We
have to fight both at the same time."  She is absolutely correct, and
these will both be long struggles.

After twenty years of writing about Muslim fundamentalist violence, I
am running out of synonyms for atrocity.  And for courage.  During my
recent research about opposition to fundamentalism among people of
Muslim heritage, I was given a copy of the newspapers published at
Press House in Algiers on the very next day after a 1996 Armed Islamic
Group bombing there that killed 18 press workers and their neighbors.
I have thought about this story a great deal in the last 24 hours.

Somehow the Algerian journalists rallied back in 1996 and got their
editions out, working to do so in the rubble of their offices before
the smoke had even cleared.  One of them, a woman named Ghania Oukazi,
posed the following question in that day's heroic papers, a question
just as relevant now. "Pen against Kalashnikov.  Is there a more
unequal struggle?"  She answered it herself with this commitment.
"What is certain is that the pen will not stop."  Yesterday's terror
attack in Paris is a stark reminder that to defeat all forms of
fundamentalism and terror we must always honor Ghania's pledge.  As
Caroline Fourest exclaimed when telling me her surviving former
colleagues were determined to rally and get an issue of Charlie Hebdo
next week: "there is no way they will make us put down our pens."

Read more interviews and analysis with people of Muslim heritage
working to challenge fundamentalisms: Frontline Voices Against Muslim
Fundamentalism

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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