Burn the Korans!  Why not?

 

B

  

http://familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.7289/pub_detail.asp

 


>From Burning Heretics to Burning Books


September 8, 2010 -
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.172/author_detail.asp> The
Editor 


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http://familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20100908_TerryJones1.jpgCurrently,
the airwaves around the world are reverberating to the news of the proposed
actions of a few angry evangelical Christians. The congregation of the Dove
World Outreach Center, led by Pastor Terry Jones, intends to incinerate a
few thousand Korans on Saturday, the anniversary of 9/11. The small church
in Gainesville Florida has no more than 50 members.

 

This proposal is being met with horror from representatives of the Muslim
world and from the administration. Hillary Clinton, hosting an iftar dinner
at the White House, made a
<http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/World/Story/STIStory_576183.html>
statement to her Muslim dinner guests:

 

"I am heartened by the clear, unequivocal condemnation of this disrespectful
act that has come from American religious leaders from all faiths... as well
as secular US leaders and opinion makers."

 

She also said it was disgraceful and disrespectful. Attorney General Eric
Holder  <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39048161/ns/us_news-security/>
described the plan to burn Korans as "idiotic and dangerous."

 

General David Petraeus, senior general in Afghanistan, wrote in an email
that:

 

"images of the burning of a Quran would undoubtedly be used by extremists in
Afghanistan - and around the world - to inflame public opinion and incite
violence."

 

Robert Gibbs, White House spokesperson, announced: "Any type of activity
like that that puts our troops in harm's way would be a concern to this
administration." Philip J. Crowley, the State Department spokesman, said:

 

"We think that these are provocative acts. We would like to see more
Americans stand up and say that this is inconsistent with our American
values; in fact, these actions themselves are un-American. We hope that
between now and Saturday there will be a range of voices across America that
make clear to this community that this is not the way for us to commemorate
9/11. In fact, it is consistent with the radicals and religious bigots who
attacked us on 9/11."

 

It is strange to hear a member of this administration declare an action to
be un-American, considering the manner in which this administration has
acted recently. Surprisingly, the only person to view this as a clear-cut
case of
<http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2010/09/07/2010-09-07_terry_jones_
pastor_of_dove_world_outreach_center_will_go_through_with_koranburni.html>
freedom of expression - no matter how distasteful or offensive it may seem -
is New York Mayor, Michael Bloomberg.

He said:

 

"In a strange way, I'm here to defend his right to do that. I happen to
think that it is distasteful. The First Amendment protects everybody, and
you can't say that we're going to apply the First Amendment to only those
cases where we are in agreement. If you want to be able to say what you want
to say when the time comes that you want to say it, you have to defend
others, no matter how, how much you disagree with them."

 

Michael Bloomberg's comments have consistency. On
<http://www.nyc.gov/portal/site/nycgov/menuitem.c0935b9a57bb4ef3daf2f1c701c7
89a0/index.jsp?pageID=mayor_press_release&catID=1194&doc_name=http://www.nyc
.gov/html/om/html/2010b/pr337-10.html&cc=unused1978&rc=1194&ndi=1> August 3,
surrounded by religious leaders, he stood on a windswept Governor's Island
and spoke  how the government had no right to interfere with Imam Feisal
Abdul Rauf's religious freedom to build a mosque two blocks from Ground
Zero. Bloomberg had then said of 9/11:

 

"On that day, 3,000 people were killed because some murderous fanatics
didn't want us to enjoy the freedom to profess our own faiths, to speak our
own minds, to follow our own dreams and to live our own lives. Of all our
precious freedoms, the most important may be the freedom to worship as we
wish."

 

Whether one agrees with mosques at ground zero or not, or whether one thinks
burning Korans is distasteful or not, both issues involve freedom of
expression, and freedom of worship. And here, to his credit, Michael
Bloomberg is being morally straightforward and uncontrived. 

 

An administration that has argued that a mosque should be allowed near
Ground Zero, despite widespread opposition from American citizens, does test
credibility when its leading members loudly condemn a pastor's freedom of
expression. A general does not sound like a military leader if he suggests
that a conflict will worsen if a few people burn Korans. Due to restrictive
ROE guidelines, the military in Afghanistan is still compelled to act like a
team of social workers rather than as a war-winning team. 

 

Pastor Terry Jones is doing what he thinks is appropriate. It would be
unrealistic to suggest that there will be no reactions in the Muslim world.
It is to be expected that there will be violence, and probably deaths.
However, the hysteria on the part of the establishment in reaction to this
upcoming event shows how much they apparently fear the volatility of Islamic
extremists. 

 

Previous Outrages

 

We have been here before - the Salman Rushdie affair led to the burning of
books. Rushdie's book "The Satanic Verses" was deemed blasphemous and had
led to a death fatwa being issued by Ayatollah Khomeini on February 14,
1989. There were burnings of his book around the Muslim world. On
<http://www.atheists.org/Red_Herring_Rushdie_II> February 27, 1989, an
effigy of Rushdie was burned on Fifth Avenue, and in Karachi, Pakistan, a
British Council library suffered a bomb attack. A Pakistani guard was
killed. On
<http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/04/18/specials/rushdie-translator.html>
July 12, 1991, the Japanese translator of Rushdie's book - Hitoshi Igrashi -
was found stabbed to death. Nine days earlier the Italian translator had
been stabbed in his Milan apartment, but had survived.

 

In
<http://web.archive.org/web/20070630011507/http:/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ma
in.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/08/21/wfresc21.xml&sSheet=/news/2002/08/21/ixworld.h
tml> August 2002, a group of Muslims were arrested for plotting to destroy a
fresco in the Basilica of St Petronio (Bologna Cathedral) in Italy. The
fresco, by Giovanni a Modena depicted Hell and included an image of
Mohammed, depicted as he was described (disembowelled) in
<http://www.sacred-texts.com/chr/dante/in28.htm> Canto 28 of Dante
Aligheiri's Inferno. Two months earlier, a terror plot against the same
Cathedral had been thwarted.

 

In
<http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/23/world/religious-violence-in-nigeria-drive
s-out-miss-world-event.html> November 2002, after a journalist had said of
the Miss World beauty pageant that Prophet Mohammed would have wished to
marry one of the candidates, riots broke out in Kaduna, northern Nigeria.
Muslims attacked Christians, and vice versa, and more than 100 people died.

 

 On  <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3974179.stm> November 2, 2004,
film-maker Theo van Gogh, a descendant of the brother who had been the
patron of Vincent van Gogh, was murdered in the street in Amsterdam. His
assailant, Mohamed Bouyeri, had shot and stabbed van Gogh, and tried to
decapitate him. He had left a knife stuck in van Gogh's chest, which pinned
a note to the body, listing others who were targets to be killed. In court,
Bouyeri (pictured) showed no remorse. He held a Koran and
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4716909.stm> said: "the law compels
me to chop off the head of anyone who insults Allah and the prophet."

 

There followed more days of outrage. The cartoon protests which reached
their peak in February 2006 saw fifty people killed around the world. On
February 3 in London, terror-supporting Muslims from the Al-Muhajiroun group
organized a protest where placards carried the slogans: "Europe you will
pay, 9/11 is on its way" and "Behead those who Insult Islam."

 

Then, on September 12, 2006, Pope Benedict XVI delivered his
<http://www.ewtn.com/library/papaldoc/b16bavaria11.htm> address at
Regensburg University, his alma mater. Here he quoted Manuel Paleologos II,
the 14th century Byzantine emperor, who had said: "Show me just what
Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and
inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

 

Manuel Paleologos and his son would find themselves forced to accept the
supremacy of the Ottoman Sultan Murad II in 1424 who demanded that the
Byzantine Empire pay him a tribute. 

 

After the Regensburg speech, some were not so fortunate. In
<http://web.archive.org/web/20061114023244/http:/www.westernresistance.com/b
log/archives/003188.html> Iraq, an Assyrian priest, Father Paulos Iskander,
was beheaded, and a 14-year old Christian boy was crucified in Albasra. A
group calling itself "Kataab Ashbal Al Islam Al Salafi"
<http://www.aina.org/news/20060916154058.htm> threatened to kill all
Christians in Iraq if Benedict failed to apologize to prophet Mohammed. In
Somalia, five days after the speech, Sister Leonella Sqorbati, a Catholic
nun working in a hospital in Somalia, was
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article642421.ece>
murdered, shot in the back. A Somali imam, Sheikh Abubukar Hassan Malin,
urged Muslims to "punish" the Pope. He said: "Whoever offends our Prophet
Mohammed should be killed on the spot by the nearest Muslim."

 

Since then, Christians have had their
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/iraq/article1672819.ece>
throats slit in Turkey for producing Bibles, publisher Martin Rinja had his
home subjected to a firebomb attempt after he planned to publish a book on
Aisha's the child-bride of Mohammed, artist Lars Vilks was physically
attacked for his pictures of Mohammed as a dog, and then Jihad Jane was
arrested for allegedly assisting a plot to kill him. Kurt Westergaard, the
Danish cartoonist who had depicted Mohammed with a bomb in his turban, had
his home invaded by a Somali Muslim brandishing an ax.

 

Over a very short period, the world has been forced to accept the petulant
histrionics of people regarded as only a "minority" of the Muslim Ummah, and
in response, the West has been expected to censor itself.

 

No longer bowing to threats? 

 

Muslims may feel that they do not want their prophet insulted or their
sacred books burned, and this is understandable, but the period of tolerance
for Islamic threats seems to be over. After the Revolution Muslim site
issued a veiled death threat to the creators of South Park, for depicting
Mohammed in a bear suit, something changed in the zeitgeist. 

 

This year, Everybody Draw Mohammed Day burst onto Facebook on May 20.
Cartoons of Mohammed, some scatological and some tasteless, were posted onto
a Facebook Page. What was unusual was the manner in which people - voting at
a rate of around 70 per minute - were declaring that they "liked" the page.
These people posted their approval under their usual names, with their faces
visible. The total of "likes" came close to 100,000 before Facebook pulled
the plug for the obscenities contained in some images.

 

Daniel Pipes
<http://familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.7290/pub_detail.asp> notes
in an article in today's Family Security Matters that a decade ago, the
vocal opposition to the Ground Zero Mosque proposals would have been
"inconceivable." He argues that the threat of Islamism could be faced down
if the protesters who have now found their voice reserved their rage for
Islamism only, and did not cross into the zones of attacking Islam.

 

Unfortunately, what is happening now, and is happening in Gainesville
Florida, is a reaction that has been forced. It is undoubtedly true that
most Muslims are peaceful and good citizens. But their public political
representatives, those who control the "Islamic agenda" in all the countries
of Western Europe and in America too, are almost exclusively Islamists. And
this is the problem. When the president spoke of Imam Rauf's freedom of
religion to turn a property into a mosque, there were Muslim Brotherhood
supporters in his audience in the White House Dining Hall. The Muslim
advisers to many Western democratic governments have an agenda to ultimately
see the West become a Muslim  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waqf> waqf, a
scene of conquest that should never revert to anything other than Islam.
These Islamist advisers would happily see Sharia enforced and democracy
abolished, and are therefore the worst people to give advice to a democratic
administration. 

 

Ed Cline has recently
<http://familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.7271/pub_detail.asp>
claimed that there are aspects of the Judeo-Christian tradition (Moses'
genocidal behavior towards the Midianites) that are violent. It is obvious
that until fairly recently, people were burned or hanged as witches in
European courts, and at Salem, Massachusetts, under Christian law. The
Catholic Church burned heretics, as did Protestants. When Calvin took
control of Geneva, executions of heretics took place. The worst excesses of
the protestant and Catholic churches ended with the Enlightenment.

 

While the West went through its Enlightenment, Muslim nations (the Barbary
States) were still kidnapping Christians and holding them to ransom or
working them to death. The Founding Fathers were forced to pay ransoms to
the despots of North Africa, to save the lives of American sailors who had
been taken hostage. Only firepower, in the Second Barbary War of 1815, put
an end to this practice.

 

I have not had space to cover the frequent abuses of Christian minorities in
Muslim countries, such as Pakistan. Here, a mere false rumor of a Koran
being burned caused a Muslim mob to descend upon Sangla Hill in Punjab
province on  <http://www.columban.com/joint_memorandum.htm> November 12,
2005. Chanting "Christian dogs" the mob attacked three churches and church
properties. In Egypt, where the Muslim Brotherhood has become more
influential, attacks upon Copts and their churches have escalated over the
last five years. In Egypt, Christians make up 10 percent of the population,
and in Pakistan, they are less than 3 percent.

 

The Muslim World exists as if there never was, and never will be, an
Enlightenment. And despite the prettified words of Western leaders who want
to gain Muslim votes, many aspects of strict Islam will never meld with
Western "liberal" democracy. But the people see what is happening and are
alarmed.

 

France has been fiercely secular since the Revolution of 1789, but even
there, recent bullying by Muslims has led to scenes in Paris. Here, certain
regions have been hijacked by Muslims who blatantly break the law by holding
<http://morganinterviews.zoomshare.com/files/cbn.htm> prayer meetings in the
streets, blocking traffic while "guards" patrol menacingly.

 

 Robert Redeker is a French philosopher who wrote of the intolerance of many
Muslims to French secular ideals, and the manner in which the left-wing
appeased Islamist thought. He wrote an article, published in Le Figaro
newspaper of September 19, 2006, entitled "
<http://web.archive.org/web/20061114022927/www.westernresistance.com/blog/ar
chives/003001.html> What should the free world do in the face of Islamist
intimidation?"As a result of this article, Redeker was subjected to death
threats and had to move home several times.The last sentence of the article
stated: 

 

"Whereas Judaism and Christianity are religions whose rites reject and
delegitimize violence. Islam is a religion that, in its own sacred text, as
well as in its everyday rites, exalts violence and hatred."

 

Instead of getting universal support, Redeker found himself being grilled by
France's intellectual thought police, condemned for "political
incorrectness." As Christian Delacampagne
<http://www.commentarymagazine.com/viewarticle.cfm/the-redeker-affair-10813?
page=all> writes:

 

Among members of the media, Redeker was scolded for articulating his ideas
so incautiously. On the radio channel Europe 1, Jean-Pierre Elkabach invited
the beleaguered teacher to express his "regret." The editorial board of Le
Monde, France's newspaper of record, characterized Redeker's piece as
"excessive, misleading, and insulting." It went so far as to call his
remarks about Muhammad "a blasphemy," implying that the founder of Islam
must be treated even by non-Muslims in a non-Muslim country as an object not
of investigation but of veneration.

 

My translation of Redeker's original article can be read
<http://web.archive.org/web/20061114022927/www.westernresistance.com/blog/ar
chives/003001.html> here. In France, the resistance to Islamic extremism
takes the form of pork and wine parties. Other groups have set up in Europe,
though some of these could be seen as "reactionary" rather than having a
defined purpose.

 

In America the current administration's apparent love affair with Islam,
including Islamism (judging by the Islamist representatives invited to iftar
dinners) has alienated many Americans. 

 

The affair of the Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville is just a
reaction to the current situation. It is rare for anyone in the
administration to dare to take time to praise Christianity or Judaism, yet
Islam - which is still a minority religion in America - is on the front
pages ad nauseam, and is constantly being engaged with and apparently
promoted by politicians who should be upholding the Establishment Clause of
the First Amendment.

 

Such apparent bias towards a religion that is alien to, and (in its
strictest form) even antithetical to the American Way of Life, is bound to
create a backlash. The Ground Zero Mosque has heightened the sensitivities
surrounding 9/11, and a sense that the administration has "sided with the
enemy," with that enemy being Islamism. 

 

Pastor Terry Jones is preparing to do something that is perhaps unwise, and
is certainly going to offend many Muslims, including the vast majority of
Muslims who try to live their lives as good citizens. But Pastor Jones is
resolute, and his bravery can be respected. Now the media has become
involved, he could become a target.

 

Burning Korans, or burning any book, is genuinely distasteful. But if
Muslims have the freedom to worship in their mosques in America, and are
supported in this by the administration, then Christians who choose to burn
books must also be allowed to carry out their freedom of expression. No laws
are broken, and no-one is physically hurt.

 

If the only reasons to argue against this event in Florida are that such
actions will invoke violence, then what does that say about the nature of
Islam? And if an administration responds cooperatively to fears of threats
and intimidation by extremists, what does that say about the nature of the
West today? 

 

 <http://familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.172/author_detail.asp> The
Editor,  <http://familysecuritymatters.org/> Family Security Matters

 

 



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