https://sabrangindia.in/article/how-zakir-naik%E2%80%99s-words-can-hurt

How Zakir Naik’s Words can Hurt

Written by Javed Anand | Published on: July 5, 2016

The Daily Star, Bangladesh reported late last evening, July 4, that
two of the five Bangladeshi militants who hacked to death 20 people at
a restaurant in Dhaka’s diplomatic zone used to follow three
controversial Islamists, including Indian Islamic preacher Zakir Naik.
Militant Rohan Imtiaz, son of an Awami League leader, propagated on
Facebook last year quoting Peace TV’s controversial preacher Naik
“urging all Muslims to be terrorists”, SabrangIndia brings to its
readers a piece on the controversial preacher, banned for hate speech
by both UK and Canada




Let’s grant even the venom-spewing their freedoms. Agreed, freedom of
speech is meaningless if there is no space for the offending word. No
democracy can survive in the absence of freedom of speech, freedom of
conscience,agreed. But should there be no Laxman Rekha that even in a
democracy none must cross? If not instigation to hatred, could
incitement to violence perhaps mark the boundaries of individual
freedom?

So, let’s grant our home-grown televangelist, Dr Zakir Naik his
freedoms. His freedom to hurt national sentiments: “If you (Americans)
eat pigs you behave (wife-swap) like pigs”. His freedom to hurt
religious sentiments: “Jews and pagans are the worst eternal enemies
of Islam”. His freedom to outrage those who care about gender justice:
“women who get raped are asking for it” (dumb woman,didn’t Islam tell
you to expose nothing more than your face and wrists?). His freedom to
condemn sexual minorities: “death for homosexuals”. His freedom to
send fellow Muslims to the gallows: “apostasy is a one-way street”.
His freedom to grant special privilege to the male gender: “Man is
more polygamous by nature as compared to a woman “.

What about his statements on terrorism? “Every Muslim should be a
terrorist… to selective people, i.e., anti-social elements;” “If he
(Osama bin Laden) is fighting the enemies of Islam, I am for him… If
he is terrorising America the terrorist, the biggest terrorist, he’s
following Islam.”

How does one “read” such statements? It all depends on who is reading
them. In his self-defence after the [UK] visa ban, Dr Naik offers two
clarifications: one,“Due to the fact that he (Osama Bin Laden) has not
been convicted in respect of 9/11 and as Dr Zakir Naik cannot verify
the claims against him, he "neither considers him a saint nor a
terrorist”; two,“the quote is from a lecture he delivered in 1996,
almost five years before 9/11”.

But the clarifications only raise further questions:

Dr Naik cannot decide about Osama because the latter has not been
convicted for 9/11 and because he (Naik) cannot independently verify
the claims against Osama since,“I’m not in touch with him. I don’t
know him personally. I (only) read the newspaper.” Interesting. On
what basis then did he arrive at his “America-the-greatest-terrorist”
conclusion: newspaper reports, personal acquaintance with ex-President
Bush,or a non-existent verdict of the International Criminal Court?

If the relevant quote is from a 1996 lecture, what stopped Dr Naik
from coming clean a few months ago when in an NDTV programme,anchor
Barkha Dutt threw that very statement at him? Why did his response so
agitate Maulana Mehmood Madni of the Jamiat-ul-ulema-e-Hind?

Is lip service enough to condemn terrorism in the name of Islam? In
these terror-torn times,would Dr Naik care to inform us how much time
and attention was paid to this malady of current-day Islam during his
10-day long “Islam Peace Conference-2009” in Mumbai? How frequently
does the terror scourge figure in discussions or debates on his Peace
TV channel?

What about his statements on terrorism? “Every Muslim should be a
terrorist… to selective people, i.e., anti-social elements;” “If he
(Osama bin Laden) is fighting the enemies of Islam,I am for him… If he
is terrorising America the terrorist, the biggest terrorist, he’s
following Islam.”

Above all,as a devout Wahhabi, Dr Naik insists on a literal reading of
the Quranic verses torn out of the socio-cultural realities of a
primitive Arab society over 1,400 years ago. Which is why, like all
literalist readers of Holy Scriptures, he is incapable of extracting
the normative, universal ethico-moral principles embedded in the
context-specific passages of the text. Which is why what he peddles as
Islam is nothing but out-of-date, petro-dollar sponsored Wahhabism
that is repugnant to modern sensibilities. The digression apart, where
is the guarantee that some Muslims with fevered imaginations would not
“read” Dr Naik’s utterances selectively and literally just as he
himself reads the Quran and the Hadith?

Consider this: Dr Naik is reportedly a big hero for Najibullah Zazi,
the Afghan-American arrested last year for plotting to bomb the New
York subway, Dr Kafeel Ahmed of Bangalore origin who tried to storm
Glasgow airport in an explosives-packed car and Mumbai’s Rahil Sheikh
accused in the 7/11 train blasts.

No one accuses Dr Naik of being part of any terror network. But should
a self-proclaimed champion of peace be so reckless in his use/misuse
of inflammable words? Or are we dealing here with calculated
ambiguity, a deliberate playing with fire? Until the televangelist
learns to mind his language, I go with the British Muslims for Secular
Democracy (BMSD) and the British Muslims Forum (BMF) in supporting the
visa ban.

P.S.: On second thoughts,the ban should perhaps be revoked on
condition that while in the UK, Dr Naik agrees to a discussion with Dr
Taj Hargey on ‘The Status of Women in Islam’ and with Inayat
Banglawala on ‘Rights of Gay Muslims’. A trustee of BMSD, Dr Hargey is
also chairman of the Muslim Educational Centre of Oxford and an imam
at its mosque. Dr Hargey has an open invitation to women scholars to
his mosque to lead mixed-gender Friday congregational prayers. But he
might not shock our own doctor so much as Banglawala, media secretary
of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB),a large nationwide,mainstream
Muslim organisation that even today is considered by many to be a
hybrid of the Jamaat-e-Islami and the Muslim Brotherhood. Horror of
horrors, through a recent article in the Guardian, UK,Banglawala has
appealed to MCB to include a gay Muslim support group as an affiliate!

No one accuses Dr Naik of being part of any terror network. But should
a self-proclaimed champion of peace be so reckless in his use/misuse
of inflammable words? Or are we dealing here with calculated
ambiguity, a deliberate playing with fire?

Imagine the 150 million viewers of Peace TV being treated to such a
rich discourse on diversity in Islam.

This article was published in The Indian Express on July 1, 2010, fast
on the heels of the UK Visa ban to the Islamic preacher

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Peace Is Doable

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