Free Radical 
Ayaan Hirsi Ali infuriates Muslims and discomfits liberals. 

BY JOSEPH RAGO 
Saturday, March 10, 2007 12:01 a.m. EST 
Wall Street Journal
NEW YORK--Ayaan Hirsi Ali is untrammeled and unrepentant: "I am supposed to 
apologize for saying the prophet is a pervert and a tyrant," she declares. "But 
that is apologizing for the truth." 
Statements such as these have brought Ms. Hirsi Ali to world-wide attention. 
Though she recently left her adopted country, Holland--where her friend and 
intellectual collaborator Theo van Gogh was murdered by a Muslim extremist in 
2004--she is still accompanied by armed guards wherever she travels. 
Ms. Hirsi Ali was born in 1969 in Mogadishu--into, as she puts it, "the Islamic 
civilization, as far as you can call it a civilization." In 1992, at age 22, 
her family gave her hand to a distant relative; had the marriage ensued, she 
says, it would have been "an arranged rape." But as she was shipped to the 
appointment via Europe, she fled, obtaining asylum in Holland. There, "through 
observation, through experience, through reading," she acquainted herself with 
a different world. "The culture that I came to and I live in now is not 
perfect," Ms. Hirsi Ali says. "But this culture, the West, the product of the 
Enlightenment, is the best humanity has ever achieved." 
Unease over Muslim immigration had been rising in the Low Countries for some 
time. For instance, when the gay right-wing politician Pim Fortuyn--"I am in 
favor of a cold war with Islam," he said, and believed the borders should be 
closed to Muslims--was gunned down in 2002, it was widely assumed his killer 
was an Islamist. There was a strange sense of relief when he turned out to be a 
mere animal-rights activist. Ms. Hirsi Ali brought integration issues to 
further attention, exposing domestic abuse and even honor killings in the 
Dutch-Muslim "dish cities." 
In 2003, she won a seat in the parliament as a member of the center-right VVD 
Party, for People's Party for Freedom and Democracy. The next year, she wrote 
the script for a short film called "Submission." It investigated passages from 
the Quran that Ms. Hirsi Ali contends authorize violence against women, and did 
so by projecting those passages onto naked female bodies. In retrospect, she 
deeply regrets the outcome: "I don't think the film was worth the human life." 
The life in question was that of Van Gogh, a prominent controversialist and the 
film's director. At the end of 2004, an Islamist named Mohammed Buyeri shot him 
as he was bicycling to work in downtown Amsterdam, then almost decapitated him 
with a curved sword. He left a manifesto impaled to the body: "I know for sure 
that you, Oh Hirsi Ali, will go down," was its incantation. "I know for sure 
that you, Oh unbelieving fundamentalist, will go down." 
The shock was palpable. Holland--which has the second largest per capita 
population of Muslims in the EU, after France--had always prided itself on its 
pluralism, in which all groups would be tolerated but not integrated. The 
killing made clear just how apart its groups were. "Immediately after the 
murder," Ms. Hirsi Ali says, "we learned Theo's killer had access to education, 
he had learned the language, he had taken welfare. He made it very clear he 
knew what democracy meant, he knew what liberalism was, and he consciously 
rejected it. . . . He said, 'I have an alternative framework. It's Islam. It's 
the Quran.' " 
At his sentencing, Mohammed Buyeri said he would have killed his own brother, 
had he made "Submission" or otherwise insulted the One True Faith. "And why?" 
Ms. Hirsi Ali asks. "Because he said his god ordered him to do it. . . . We 
need to see," she continues, "that this isn't something that's caused by 
special offense, the right, Jews, poverty. It's religion." 
 
Ms. Hirsi Ali was forced into living underground; a hard-line VVD minister 
named Rita Verdonk, cracking down on immigration, canceled her citizenship for 
misstatements made on her asylum application--which Ms. Hirsi Ali had admitted 
years before and justified as a means to win quicker admission at a time of 
great personal vulnerability. The resulting controversy led to the collapse of 
Holland's coalition government. Ms. Hirsi Ali has since decamped for 
America--in effect a political refugee from Western Europe--to take up a 
position with the American Enterprise Institute. But the crisis, she says, is 
"still simmering underneath and it might erupt--somewhere, anywhere." 
That partly explains why Ms. Hirsi Ali's new autobiography, "Infidel," is 
already a best seller. It may also have something to do with the way she 
scrambles our expectations. In person, she is modest, graceful, enthralling. 
Intellectually, she is fierce, even predatory: "We know exactly what it is 
about but we don't have the guts to say it out loud," she says. "We are too 
weak to take up our role. The West is falling apart. The open society is coming 
undone." 
Many liberals loathe her for disrupting an imagined "diversity" consensus: It 
is absurd, she argues, to pretend that cultures are all equal, or all equally 
desirable. But conservatives, and others, might be reasonably unnerved by her 
dim view of religion. She does not believe that Islam has been "hijacked" by 
fanatics, but that fanaticism is intrinsic in Islam itself: "Islam, even Islam 
in its nonviolent form, is dangerous." 
The Muslim faith has many variations, but Ms. Hirsi Ali contends that the 
unities are of greater significance. "Islam has a very consistent doctrine," 
she says, "and I define Islam as I was taught to define it: submission to the 
will of Allah. His will is written in the Quran, and in the hadith and Sunna. 
What we are all taught is that when you want to make a distinction between 
right and wrong, you follow the prophet. Muhammad is the model guide for every 
Muslim through time, throughout history." 
This supposition justifies, in her view, a withering critique of Islam's most 
holy human messenger. "You start by scrutinizing the morality of the prophet," 
and then ask: "Are you prepared to follow the morality of the prophet in a 
society such as this one?" She draws a connection between Mohammed's taking of 
child brides in the first century A.D. and modern sexual oppressions--what she 
calls "this imprisonment of women." She decries the murder of adulteresses and 
rape victims, the wearing of the veil, arranged marriages, domestic violence, 
genital mutilation and other contraventions of "the most basic freedoms." 
These sufferings, she maintains, are traceable to theological imperatives. 
"People say it is a bad strategy," Ms. Hirsi Ali says forcefully. "I think it 
is the best strategy. . . . Muslims must choose to follow their rational 
capacities as humans and to follow reason instead of Quranic commands. At that 
point Islam will be reformed." 
This worldview has led certain critics to dismiss Ms. Hirsi Ali as a secular 
extremist. "I have my ideas and my views," she says, "and I want to argue them. 
It is our obligation to look at things critically." As to the charges that she 
is an "Enlightenment fundamentalist," she points out, rightly, that people who 
live in democratic societies are not supposed to settle their disagreements by 
killing one another. 
And yet contemporary democracies, she says, accommodate the incitement of such 
behavior: "The multiculturalism theology, like all theologies, is cruel, is 
wrongheaded, and is unarguable because it is an utter dogmatism. . . . 
Minorities are exempted from the obligations of the rest of society, so they 
don't improve. . . . With this theory you limit them, you freeze their culture, 
you keep them in place." 
The most grievous failing of the West is self-congratulatory passivity: We face 
"an external enemy that to a degree has become an internal enemy, that has 
infiltrated the system and wants to destroy it." She believes a more drastic 
reaction is required: "It's easy," she says, "to weigh liberties against the 
damage that can be done to society and decide to deny liberties. As it should 
be. A free society should be prepared to recognize the patterns in front of it, 
and do something about them." 
She says the West must begin to think long term about its relationship with 
Islam--because the Islamists are. Ms. Hirsi Ali notes Muslim birth rates are 
vastly outstripping those elsewhere (particularly in Western Europe) and 
believes this is a conscious attempt to extend the faith. Muslims, she says, 
treat women as "these baby-machines, these son-factories. . . . We need to 
compete with this," she goes on. "It is a totalitarian method. The Nazis tried 
it using women as incubators, literally to give birth to soldiers. Islam is now 
doing it. . . . It is a very effective and very frightening way of dealing with 
human beings." 
 
All of this is profoundly politically incorrect. But for this remarkable woman, 
ideas are not abstractions. She forces us back to first principles, and she 
punctures complacencies. These ought to be seen as virtues, even by those who 
find some of Ms. Hirsi Ali's ideas disturbing or objectionable. Society, after 
all, sometimes needs to be roused from its slumbers by agitators who go too far 
so that others will go far enough. 
Mr. Rago is an editorial page writer for The Wall Street Journal.
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