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Townhall.com

Reviewing the National Review
Diana West (back to web version) | Send

April 11, 2005

If Kafka met Monty Python, and George Orwell edited their collaboration,
they might have come up with something like the following real-life
exchange.

It took place in an Australian court where two Christian pastors were found
guilty of "religious vilification" of Muslims by lecturing to their flock
on Islam -- a set-up that right away projects grimly satirical
possibilities. At one point during the trial, defendant Daniel Scot began
to read Quranic verses in his own defense. The Pakistani-born pastor hoped
to prove to the judge that his discussion on the inferior status of women
under Islam, for example, had a specific textual basis in the Quran.

 As he began to read, a lawyer for the Islamic Council of Victoria, the
plaintiff in the case, objected. Reading these verses aloud, she said,
would in itself be vilification. Scot, ultimately convicted, put it best:
"How can it be vilifying to Muslims when I am just reading from the Quran?"

Like a frustrating dream, the Australian experience echoes a depressingly
similar situation in this country. Not in a court, not at a
church-sponsored seminar, but in journalism. In the marketplace, literally,
of ideas. I'm talking about an online bookstore run under the imprimatur of
National Review magazine. There, "The Life and Religion of Mohammed" (Roman
Catholic Books, 2005) by J.L. Menezes, a Roman Catholic priest, used to be
for sale. So did "The Sword of the Prophet," (Regina Orthodox Press, 2002)
by Serge Trifkovic.

Suddenly, last week, they weren't. It seems that the Council on American
Islamic Relations (CAIR) decided National Review shouldn't sell these
books. The magazine could have told the, shall we say, controversial Muslim
lobby group -- three of whose former associates have been indicted on
terrorism-related charges, and whose executive director, Nihad Awad, has
publicly declared his support for Hamas -- to run along and boycott books
somewhere else. Instead, National Review whipped those tomes off their
e-shelves practically before CAIR could get its "action alert" online. Just
a little pressure -- including a CAIR letter about the books to Boeing
Corp., a big National Review advertiser -- did the dirty trick. (CAIR
promised to copy its letter to ambassadors of Muslim nations that buy
Boeing planes.)

Here's the thing. I am not writing to mount a defense of these eminently
defensible books, nasty bits and all, including, according to advertising
copy, "the dark mind of Mohammed," his multiple wives (among them a little
girl), "rapine," "warfare," "conquests" and "butcheries." Suffice it to
say, as crack scholar-author of Islam Robert Spencer has written,
"Everything with which CAIR took issue can be readily established from
Islamic sources." (And if that doesn't suffice, read his analysis, "CAIR's
War Against National Review," at www.frontpagemag.com.) He should know. Not
only is Spencer familiar with the books in question, he happens to have
written the ad copy for the Menezes book CAIR found so objectionable.

Of greater concern is the philosophical battle National Review declined to
fight, and the reasons the magazine declined to fight it. According to
National Review editor Rich Lowry's post at National Review Online, because
the magazine's book service is put together by an independent publisher,
and since the CAIR-provoking copy wasn't written by a National Review
staffer, Lowry saw no capitulation in removing the Menezes book at CAIR's
behest. (National Review recently returned "The Sword of the Prophet" to
its bookstore.) "In contrast," he wrote, "Robert Spencer and some others on
the right feel very strongly that it is important to discredit Mohammed and
Islam as such in order to win the war on terror. That's certainly their
prerogative, but it is not the tack NR has taken ... ."

This statement reveals an unnerving disconnect. The study undertaken by
Spencer and kindred Islamic scholars isn't calculated to "discredit
Mohammed and Islam" -- as if "discrediting" Mohammed and Islam would
convince jihadis to make peace. The fact is, a thorough examination of the
expansionist, religious-cum-political ideology of Islam is vital to any
successful defense against its jihadist expression. Ignoring facts about
Mohammed and Islam, given their role in animating terrorism, would be like
ignoring facts about Marx and communism in that earlier ideological
struggle National Review championed -- worse, even, considering the
inspiration Muslims draw from the personal life of Mohammed.

But what may be most damaging about National Review's act of
reference-cleansing is that it helps legitimize CAIR's drive to tar all
criticism of Islam as "hate speech" and, thus, squelch it.

This, of course, was roughly what an Australian court ruled against
Preacher Scot. It can't happen here? Maybe not. But the only way to
preserve freedom of speech is to speak freely.

�2005 Newspaper En
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The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
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"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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