http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2013\03\15\story_15-3-2013_pg3_3

Friday, March 15, 2013

COMMENT : The Lexicon wars: the meaning of jihad — Tammy Swofford

 Everyone hates the truth. The more visible jihad of recent decades falls in 
the category of mass murder, chaos, and anarchy

Cast of characters:

Council on American-Islamic Relations

Pamela Geller and the American Freedom Defence Initiative

Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) 2013

Robert Spencer: Jihad Watch 

If you own the language you control the dialogue. If you control the dialogue 
you have the ability to censor thought. If you censor thought you can 
infiltrate culture. Freedom of expression remains the breastplate of our 
American freedom. There are many who do not understand this dynamic. They speak 
against the very guarantee of our liberty. For me the issue is quite simple. 
Freedom of expression is a process and not an outcome.

There is a war going on. It is being waged within the political trenches of our 
nations. This is a war birthed within a digital age. Lexicon War. It is 
important that there be no real winner. And it is equally important that there 
is no real defeat. Because when it comes to freedom of expression, the process 
is extremely important. But the process is always open-ended and continuing. 
The outcome is never fully determined.

Let’s look at the latest American cast of characters. In the first Lexicon War 
we have CAIR v Pamela Geller. The Chicago branch of CAIR decided to run a 
series of advertisements as part of a bus campaign to raise the awareness of 
jihad as a personal and internal struggle. One ad says, “My jihad is to stay 
fit despite my busy schedule. What’s yours?” Not one to take it lying down, 
Geller mounted her own campaign in her usual trailblazing style. Her ads are 
all on the scale of: “Reloading, firing again, reloading, firing again, while 
screaming Allahu Akbar — victim of Major Nidal Hassan, Fort Hood jihad mass 
murderer. That’s My Jihad, what’s yours?”

You say struggle. I say kill. You say jihad of the tongue. Mine is of the pen.

The second case involves CPAC v Robert Spencer. The Conservative Political 
Action Conference is one of those ‘see and be seen’ events, kind of like the 
National Prayer Breakfast. No sane person really attends the prayer breakfast 
to pray. It is a time to bite the ankles of your nearest enemy and shove a 
thumb in the eye of the person who hates you. It provides the encapsulated 
moment to pander to the individual who has the influence to advance political 
agenda. The tables are bloated with perils of predilection.

In their infancy, these gatherings are attended by mavericks. But mavericks 
must be owned and cordoned. The powerful Beltway vortex acquires a new target. 
Within a few years, all such gatherings are reduced to attendance by career 
political mules. Swofford doesn’t talk to mules.

Robert Spencer? There is no middle ground on opinion about this man. He runs 
what is essentially a clearinghouse of information for jihad-of-the-nasty-kind. 
If a Muslim kills a Copt in Egypt, it will make the page. If a Muslim woman is 
the victim of an honour killing, it finds full bloom on his site. You get the 
point. Recently, his blog took the CPAC people’s choice award by an impressive 
voting margin. But when the topic came up regarding his right to freedom of 
expression at the CPAC event, the right to address his perceptions, he quickly 
became persona non grata. CPAC will now present his award in absentia. Ghost 
award.

Everyone hates the truth. The more visible jihad of recent decades falls in the 
category of mass murder, chaos, and anarchy. Anyone remember how many times the 
flight recorder for United Airlines 93 picked up the phrase Allahu Akbar as 
Muslim men terrorised their captives? 23. One score and three. XXIII. But the 
Lexicon War continues to rage between those who want intellectual ownership of 
the word jihad. On the one side are Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer, a dynamic 
duo who wish to remind us that jihad means killing fields. On the other side, 
those who wish to scrub any and all violent connotation of jihad and neutralize 
the word to be one with less emotional impact. My files present the shadow of 
both camps.

Let me quote a bit from a forum thread populated by Lal Masjid loyalists. This 
is your backyard. This discussion has a time stamp of September 2008 and is a 
three-page posting by a senior member. The topic begins with a discussion of 
infiltration of existing political systems, veers into a discussion about 
members of Hizb-ut-Tahrir in Jordan and finally lands on the topic of Jihad fi 
sabilillah (Jihad in the path of Allah). The remarks conclude with this 
paragraph:

“Because confusion usually surrounds what is meant by Jihad whether it is the 
Jihad al nafs or Jihad of the sword I do not exclusively mean one or the other 
and I do not exclude one or the other. What I mean by Jihad here is not just 
picking up a gun and fighting. Jihad is broader than that. What is meant by 
Jihad in this context is a total effort by the Ummah to fight and defeat its 
enemy. Rasulullah says: Fight the disbelievers with your self, your wealth and 
your tongues. It is what Clausewitz would refer to as ‘total war’ but with the 
Islamic rules of engagement. It is a battle in the battlefield and a battle for 
the hearts and minds of the people.”

Last week I pulled up a Facebook page of a photographer in Nablus. Men were 
lining up for venipuncture. They took the syringe with their blood and jihad of 
the pen was released onto a white banner. The images are very powerful. Words 
written in blood. Liquid anguish expressed for an injustice.

CAIR has a right to their bus campaign. Pamela Geller has the legal liberty to 
put the hard edges around their soft approach. Robert Spencer has the freedom 
to speak. And conservative enclaves with a propensity for group thought can 
police their demographic. Today I have enjoined my own freedom of expression as 
process and not outcome.

The writer is a freelance journalist and author of the novel Arsenal. She can 
be reached at [email protected]



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