McCarthy continues to demonstrate his total ignorance of Islamic matters by
pretending there is such a mythical creature as a "moderate Muslim" who does
not adhere to the Koran.

 

Any so-call "moderate Muslim" who does not adhere to the Koran, is by
Islamic law, a blasphemer, an apostate and NOT a Muslim

 

B

 

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9179/pub_detail.asp

April 6, 2011


More Koran Burning


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.162/author_detail.asp>
Andrew McCarthy


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Comments (1)
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/comments.asp?id=9179> 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110406_DoveKoran2.jpg

 

Terry Jones' Koran-burning ceremony at Gainesville, Florida.

 

 <http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/263867/koran-burning-jonah-goldberg>
Jonah, my problem with the Koran burning stunt is that it is
counterproductive. I hear what you're saying about decency. But on that
score, I don't find the burning any more offensive in principle than I do
its opposite extreme: the bizarro hyper-reverence with which the Koran is
handled by the Defense Department.

 

Down at Gitmo, the Defense Department gives the Koran to each of the
terrorists even though DoD knows they interpret it (not without reason) to
command them to kill the people who gave it to them. To underscore our
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2005/06/dhimmitude-at-gitmo-kid-gloves-for-the-qu
ran.html> precious sensitivity to Muslims, standard procedure calls for the
the book to be handled only by Muslim military personnel. Sometimes, though,
that is not possible for various reasons. If, as a last resort, one of our
non-Muslim troops must handle or transport the book, he must wear white
gloves, and he is further instructed primarily to use the right hand
(indulging Muslim culture's taboo about the sinister left hand). The book is
to be conveyed to the prisoners in a "reverent manner" inside a "clean dry
towel." This is a nod to Islamic teaching that infidels are so low a form of
life that they should not be touched (as Ayatollah Ali Sistani
<http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/127958/re-sistani-falters-andrew-c-mcc
arthy> teaches, non-Muslims are "considered in the same category as urine,
feces, semen, dead bodies, blood, dogs, pigs, alcoholic liquors," and "the
sweat of an animal who persistently eats [unclean things]."

 

This is every bit as indecent as torching the Koran, implicitly endorsing as
it does the very dehumanization of non-Muslims that leads to terrorism.
Furthermore, there is hypocrisy to consider: the Defense Department now
piously condemning Koran burning is the same Defense Department that itself
did not give a second thought to
<http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2009/05/bibles-destroye.html>
confiscating and burning bibles in Afghanistan.

 

Quite consciously, U.S. commanders ordered this purge in deference to sharia
proscriptions against the proselytism of faiths other than Islam. And as
<http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/263790/no-more-dhimmitude-andrew-c-mcc
arthy> General Petraeus well knows, his chain of command is not the only one
destroying bibles. Non-Muslim religious artifacts, including bibles, are
torched or otherwise destroyed in Islamic countries every single day as a
matter of standard operating procedure. (See, e.g., my
<http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/146936/our-friends-saudis-keep-your-bi
bles-crucifixes-and-stars-david-home/andy-mccarthy> 2007 post on Saudi
government guidelines that prohibit Jews and Christians from bringing
bibles, crucifixes, Stars of David, etc., into the country - and, of course,
not just non-Muslim accessories but non-Muslim people are
<http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/243899/tolerant-pose-andrew-c-mccart
hy> barred from entering Mecca and most of Medina, based on the classical
interpretation of an injunction found in what Petraeus is fond of calling
the Holy Qur'an (sura 9:28: "Truly the pagans are unclean . . . so let them
not . . . approach the sacred mosque").

 

I don't like book burning either, but I think there are different kinds of
book burnings. One is done for purposes of censorship - the attempt to purge
the world of every copy of a book to make it as if the sentiments expressed
never existed. A good modern example is Cambridge University Press's
shameful pulping of all known copies of Alms for Jihad (see Stanley's
<http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/146587/pulp-non-fiction/stanley-kurtz>
2007 post on that). The other kind of burning is done as symbolic
condemnation. That's what I think Terry Jones was doing. He knows he doesn't
have the ability to purge the Koran from the world, and he wasn't trying to.
He was trying to condemn some of the ideas that are in it - or maybe he
really thinks the whole thing is condemnable.

 

This is a particularly aggressive and vivid way to express disdain, but I
don't know that it is much different in principle from orally condemning
some of the Koran's suras and verses. Sura 9 of the Koran, for example,
states the supremacist doctrine that commands Muslims to kill and conquer
non-Muslims (e.g., 9:5: "But when the forbidden months are past, then fight
and slay the pagans wherever ye find them, and seize them, beleaguer them,
and lie in wait for them in every stratagem (of war) . . ."; 9:29: "Fight
those who believe not in Allah nor the last day, nor hold forbidden which
hath been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger, nor acknowledge the Religion
of Truth, from among the people of the Book [i.e., the Jews and Christians],
until they pay the jizya [i.e., the tax paid for the privilege of living as
dhimmis under the protection of the sharia state] with willing submission,
and feel themselves subdued"). I must say, I've got a much bigger problem
with the people trying to comply with those commands than with the guy who
burns them.

 

I think the big problem with what Jones did is the gratuitous insult to all
Muslims, including the millions who do not subscribe to the violent jihadist
or broader Islamist construction of Islamic scripture. They have found some
way to rationalize the incendiary scriptures - and if it works for them, who
the hell am I to say they're wrong? They are our natural allies in this
battle, and as I've often pointed out, without their help, we could not have
done things like infiltrate the Blind Sheikh's terror cell, gather vital
intelligence, thwart terrorist attacks, and refine trial evidence into
compelling proof.

 

These people regard the Koran as the most important of their scriptures.
When someone burns the Koran in an act of indiscriminate, wholesale
condemnation, the message to them is that their belief system is
incorrigible. Freedom of speech means that we have to allow that argument to
be made, and I'm not entirely sure it's wrong. But good Muslim people give
us reason to hope that what ails Islam can be reformed. I don't see the
upside in alienating those people. I think you can condemn the condemnable
aspects of the Koran without condemning everything. But that's just my
opinion, and Mr. Jones is as entitled to his as I am to mine. And for what
it's worth, I doubt my opinion would be much more popular than his in
Mazar-e-Sharif.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributor
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.162/author_detail.asp>
Andrew C. McCarthy is a senior fellow at the  <http://nrinstitute.org/>
National Review Institute, author of
<http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=1594032130> Willful
Blindness: A Memoir of the Jihad and most recently
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1594033773?tag=familysecur08-20&camp=213381&creati
ve=390973&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=1594033773&adid=1521DZ5NZAM7NBNWNE4Y&>
The Grand Jihad: How Islam and the Left Sabotage America. He blogs at
National Review Online's  <http://corner.nationalreview.com/> The Corner.
This article appeared earlier on National Review.

 



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