In one aspect, I completely agree with Lewis on his idea that Muslims
and the Westerners are different. In fact so much different that there
could be no point of reconcilition. However, I see that Lewis believed
that the West represents civilised humanity whilst Islam represents
barbarism and backwardness. 
This is the gist of his thoughts that governed his assertion about
Islam. 
While I see he offered his reason for the Islamic oppositions towards
the West, i.e. HATRED towards anything west, I will not offer any any
alternative reasons as I believe the West should not be enlighthen of
the real reasons for Muslims oppositions to the West. 
I would rather laugh quietly and secrectly so as not to alert them of
their total ignorance of the fundamental of Islamic teachings. To me,
ignorance of the west is a bless to the Muslims.
Let them drown in their own ignorance and arrogance.
We will take them by surprise later.
Insyaallah.           

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 18/08/2005 10:46:38 >>>
bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful



=== News Update ===



Malevolent fantasy of Islam 


By Alain Gresh  - August, 2005 (Le Monde diplomatique)

http://mondediplo.com/2005/08/16lewis 



FEW people had heard of Frits Bolkenstein until recently. But then,
before the referendum on the European Union constitutional treaty, the
media began to run scare stories about a mythical Polish plumber
poised
to come west and undercut honest French workers. Bolkenstein, who is
the
European commissioner for the internal market, is the author of a
directive that would allow, for example, a Slovak, working in France
for
a Slovakian employer, to be paid Slovakian wages. Some supporters of a
yes vote presented Bolkenstein's proposal as a gesture of solidarity
towards east European workers and dismissed those who opposed it as
narrow-minded nationalists. Bolkenstein might have been surprised to
find himself identified with proletarian internationalism: in the
early
1990s he was the first politician in the Netherlands, a country which
had been associated with tolerance, to assert that the values of
Muslim
immigrants were incompatible with those of his country.

Bolkenstein, speaking recently about Turkey's proposed membership of
the
EU and "migratory pressure", warned: "If this comes about, the
liberation of Vienna in 1683 will have been in vain" (1). He said
Europe
had stopped "them" at Poitiers, and at the gates of Vienna. Europe
would
stop them again. To demonstrate the danger, he quoted the historian
Bernard Lewis: "Europe will be Islamic by the end of the century"
(2).

Bolkenstein is not the first, nor the last, politician to emblazon the
banner of resistance to the "new barbarians" with Lewis's
academic
credentials. Lewis has two faces, like the Roman god Janus. He is a
British academic who moved to the United States in 1974. He is a
recognised expert on Turkey and has produced many publications on the
Muslim world. He is also an intellectual with a long-standing
involvement in politics, well-known for his unfaltering support for
Israeli policy and for excusing the Turkish military dictatorship. He
has been condemned in France for denying the Armenian genocide of
1915-17.

Under the Bush presidency, Lewis has become a valued US adviser. He is
close to the neoconservatives, particularly Paul Wolfowitz who in
2002,
as deputy defence secretary, paid this tribute at a ceremony held in
Lewis's honour in Tel Aviv: "Bernard Lewis has brilliantly placed
the
relationships and the issues of the Middle East into their larger
context, with truly objective, original, and always independent,
thought. Bernard has taught [us] how to understand the complex and
important history of the Middle East and use it to guide us where to
go
next to build a better world for generations" (3). In 2003 Lewis
encouraged the US administration to take the next step in Iraq. He
prophesied that the invasion would lead to a new dawn, that US troops
would be greeted as liberators, and that the Iraqi National Congress
under his friend Ahmad Chalabi, a shady exile with no real influence,
would rebuild a new Iraq.

Reviews of Lewis's works in French translation have kept quiet about
all
this (4). Obviously there is more to his research than a political
standpoint, but a single thread runs through it: the idea that the
Muslim world is fossilised in fundamental opposition to the West.
Lewis
coined the expression "clash of civilisations" as long ago as 1957,
at a
Middle East conference at Johns Hopkins University: "We shall be
better
able to understand this situation if we view the present discontents
of
the Middle East not as a conflict between states or nations, but as a
clash between civilisations" (5). The Suez war was then barely over
and
the Middle East was in turmoil. Arab nationalism was spreading like
wildfire. Political Islam had been marginalised. But as far as Lewis
was
concerned, the Arab desire for freedom had nothing to do with
politics,
but was merely the expression of hostility to western culture.

As subsequent events shook the region, Lewis reacted with indifference
and even contempt. Although it was in fact another author, Samuel
Huntington, who popularised his clash of civilisations theory, Lewis
revisited his argument in an article published in 1990: "The
struggle
between [Islam and Christianity] has now lasted for some 14
centuries . . . For the first thousand years Islam was advancing,
Christendom in retreat and under threat. The new faith conquered the
old
Christian lands of the Levant and north Africa, and invaded Europe,
ruling for a while in Sicily, Spain, Portugal, and even parts of
France.
The attempt by the Crusaders to recover the lost lands of Christendom
in
the east was held and thrown back, and even the Muslims' loss of
southwestern Europe to the Reconquista was amply compensated by the
Islamic advance into southeastern Europe, which twice reached as far
as
Vienna. For the past 300 years, since the failure of the second
Turkish
siege of Vienna in 1683!
  and the rise of the European colonial empires in Asia and Africa,
Islam has been on the defensive, and the Christian and post-Christian
civilisation of Europe and her daughters has brought the whole world,
including Islam, within its orbit . . . It should by now be clear that
we are facing a mood and a movement far transcending the level of
issues
and policies and the governments that pursue them. This is no less
than
a clash of civilisations - the perhaps irrational but surely historic
reaction of an ancient rival against our Judaeo-Christian heritage,
our
secular present, and the worldwide expansion of both" (6).

Put simply, they don't like us, not because of what we do, but
because
they reject our love of freedom and because they have been on the
losing
side for 200 years. Why did Nasser nationalise the Suez Canal Company
in
1956? Out of Muslim hatred of the West. What caused the fall of the
Shah
of Iran and the revolution of 1979? Muslim hatred of the West. Why do
the Palestinians constantly rise up against the occupation of their
lands? Hatred of the West. Iraqi resistance? Hatred of the West. The
conflicts in Kosovo and Bosnia? Muslims' refusal to be ruled by
infidels. It's all obvious. And it explains why they hold democracy
in
such contempt.

According to Lewis, Islam's weakness over the past two centuries has
forced it to seek allies in its battle against western democracy.
Hence
its disastrous support for the Axis powers against the Allies during
the
second world war and for the communists against the US (7). It is
curious how other observers failed to notice this alliance between
Riyadh and Moscow, or between Islam and communism, during the war in
Afghanistan.

Lewis as a historian prefers to indulge in flights of fancy, rather
than
address concrete facts such as oil, the Palestinian exile and western
intervention. "For centuries," he writes, "the world view and
self-view
of Muslims seemed well-grounded. Islam represented the greatest
military
power on earth . . . The Renaissance, the Reformation and the
technological revolution passed virtually unnoticed in the lands of
Islam, where they were still inclined to dismiss the denizens of the
lands beyond the western frontier as benighted barbarians."

Of the 17th century he says: "While generally contemptuous of the
infidel West, Muslims were not unaware of western skills in weaponry
and
warfare" (8). In fewer than 10 pages, Lewis skims over almost 1,000
years of history, with its rival centres of power, schisms and
alliances
(some with Christian powers), loftily summing up what "the
Muslims"
thought, whether they were leaders or ordinary people, nations or
classes, Sunni or Shia.

His premise is that they are fundamentally different from us. They
don't
even like western music (9). Tourists rushing through the streets of
Cairo don't hear Mozart or Brahms wafting from shops in the souks,
but
are the cafes of Paris or London any different? Edward Said, who was a
great lover of opera and classical music, protested: "Several major
Arab
capitals have very good conservatories of western music: Cairo,
Beirut,
Damascus, Tunis, Rabat, Amman, even Ramallah on the West Bank. These
have produced thousands of excellent western-style musicians who have
staffed the numerous symphony orchestras and opera companies that play
to sold-out auditoriums all over the Arab world. There are numerous
festivals of western music" (10).

Said wondered why Lewis used western music to condemn Islam. What
about
the extraordinary richness of the Muslim musical tradition? As Said
pointed out elsewhere: "The core of Lewis's ideology about Islam is
that
it never changes . . . that any political, historical and scholarly
account of Muslims must begin and end with the fact that Muslims are
Muslims" (11). It cannot be long before a US scientist discovers an
Islamic gene, which will explain why they are so different from the
rest
of civilised humanity.

===


-muslim voice-
___________________________________
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