http://www.economist.com/books/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8663231

A critic of Islam
Dark secrets

Feb 8th 2007
>From *The Economist* print edition
Ayaan Hirsi Ali blames Islam for the miseries of the Muslim world. Her new
autobiography shows that life is too complex for that
Eyevine

SAY what you will about Ayaan Hirsi Ali, she fascinates. The Dutch-Somali
politician, who has lived under armed guard ever since a *fatwa* was issued
against her in 2004, is a chameleon of a woman. Just 11 years after she
arrived in the Netherlands from Africa, she rode into parliament on a wave
of anti-immigrant sentiment, only to leave again last year, this time for
America, after an uproar over lies she had told to obtain asylum.

Even the title of her new autobiography reflects her talent for reinvention.
In the Netherlands, where Ms Hirsi Ali got her start campaigning against the
oppression of Muslim women, the book has been published under the title "My
Freedom". But in Britain and in America, where she now has a fellowship at
the conservative American Enterprise Institute, it is called "Infidel". In
it, she recounts how she and her family made the cultural odyssey from
nomadic to urban life in Africa and how she eventually made the jump to
Europe and international celebrity as the world's most famous critic of
Islam.
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Read as a modern coming-of-age story set in Africa, the book has a certain
charm. Read as a key to the thinking of a woman who aspires to be the Muslim
Voltaire, it is more problematic. The facts as Ms Hirsi Ali tells them here
do not fit well either with some of the stories she has told in the past or
with her tendency in her political writing to ascribe most of the troubles
of the Muslim world to Islam.

Ms Hirsi Ali's father, Hirsi Magan Isse, was one of the first Somalis to
study overseas in Italy and America. He met his future wife, Asha, when she
signed up for a literacy class he taught during Somalia's springtime of
independence in the 1960s. The family's troubles began in 1969, the year Ms
Hirsi Ali was born. That was also the year that Mohammed Siad Barre, a
Somali army commander, seized power in a military coup. Hirsi Magan was
descended from the traditional rulers of the Darod, Somalia's second biggest
clan. Siad Barre, who hailed from a lesser Darod family, feared and resented
Ms Hirsi Ali's father's family, she says. In 1972, Siad Barre had Hirsi
Magan put in prison from which he escaped three years later and fled the
country. Not until 1978 was the family reunited with him.

As a young woman, Ms Hirsi Ali's mother, Asha, does not seem to have
inhabited "the virgin's cage" that the author claims imprisons Muslim women
around the world. At the age of 15, she travelled by herself to Aden where
she got a job cleaning house for a British woman. Despite her adventurous
spirit, in Yemen and later in the Gulf she found herself drawn to the stern
Wahhabi version of Islam that would later clash with the more relaxed
interpretation of Islam favoured by Ms Hirsi Ali's father and many other
Somalis. She and Hirsi Magan fell out not long after the family moved to
Kenya in 1980. Hirsi Magan left to join a group of Somali opposition
politicians in exile in Ethiopia and did not return to his family for ten
years.

Ms Hirsi Ali says her mother had no idea how to raise her children in a
foreign city. She frequently beat Ayaan and her sister, Haweya. Although
they and their brother, Mahad, attended some of Nairobi's best schools,
Haweya and Mahad dropped out early on. Ms Hirsi Ali herself meanwhile fell
under the sway of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Some of the best passages in the book concern this part of her life. As a
teenager, Ms Hirsi Ali chose to wear the all-encompassing black Arab veil,
which was unusual in cosmopolitan Nairobi. "Weirdly, it made me feel like an
individual. It sent out a message of superiority," she writes. Even as she
wore it, Ms Hirsi Ali was drawn in other directions. She read English novels
and flirted with a boy. Young immigrants of any religion growing up with
traditional parents in a modern society will recognise her confusion: "I was
living on several levels in my brain. There was kissing Kennedy; there was
clan honour; and there was Sister Aziza and God."

Ms Hirsi Ali sounds less frank when she tells the convoluted story of how
and why she came to seek asylum at the age of 22 in the Netherlands. She has
admitted in the past to changing her name and her age, and to concocting a
story for the Dutch authorities about running away from Somalia's civil war.
(In fact she left from Kenya, where she had had refugee status for ten
years.) She has since justified those lies by saying that she feared another
kind of persecution: the vengeance of her clan after she ran away from an
arranged marriage.

However, last May a Dutch television documentary suggested that while Ms
Hirsi Ali did run away from a marriage, her life was in no danger. The
subsequent uproar nearly cost Ms Hirsi Ali her Dutch citizenship, which may
be the reason why she is careful here to re-state how much she feared her
family when she first arrived in the Netherlands. But the facts as she tells
them about the many chances she passed up to get out of the marriage—how her
father and his clan disapproved of violence against women; how relatives
already in the Netherlands helped her to gain asylum; and how her ex-husband
peaceably agreed to a divorce—hardly seem to bear her out.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is not the first person to use false pretences to try to
find a better life in the West, nor will she be the last. But the muddy
account given in this book of her so-called forced marriage becomes more
troubling when one considers that Ms Hirsi Ali has built a career out of
portraying herself as the lifelong victim of fanatical Muslims.

Another, even more disturbing story concerns her sister Haweya's sojourn in
the Netherlands. In her earlier book, "The Caged Virgin", which came out
last year, Ms Hirsi Ali wrote that her sister came to the Netherlands to
avoid being "married off". In "Infidel", however, she says Haweya came to
recover from an illicit affair with a married man that ended in abortion. Ms
Hirsi Ali helped Haweya make up another fabricated story that gained her
refugee status, but the Netherlands offered her little respite. After
another affair and a further abortion, Haweya was put into a psychiatric
hospital. Back in Nairobi, she died from a miscarriage brought on by an
episode of religious frenzy. "It was the worst news of my life," Ms Hirsi
Ali writes.

Mental illness, abortion, failed marriages, illicit affairs and differing
interpretations of religion: much as she tries, the kind of problems that Ms
Hirsi Ali describes in "Infidel" are all too human to be blamed entirely on
Islam. Her book shows that her life, like those of other Muslims, is more
complex than many people in the West may have realised. But the West's
tendency to seek simplistic explanations is a weakness that Ms Hirsi Ali
also shows she has been happy to exploit.

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-- 
André

http://www.andrekenji.com.br
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/andken/


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