Some major problems with assumptions in the following article.
There is no such thing as "Islamophobia," for starters  ;   the concept
is a red herring. And honest and informed criticism of homosexuals
is not bigotry.  Moreover, the writer is a  naif   about Koran 
interpretation
and, it seems obvious,  about religious texts generally. However,  these
shortcomings should not obscure the main point of the article, which
is unarguably true :  Religious criticism is necessary is we are to  be
honest about religion at all.  And about this main point the  article
says much that is thoughtful and valuable.
 
Billy
 
---------------------------
 
 
 
Jewish Journal
< 
April 22,  2013 
Criticism is not  Islamophobia
By _David  Suissa_ (http://www.jewishjournal.com/about/author/508) 



Criticism is the oxygen of journalism. Here at the Jewish Journal, we will  
criticize anything that we believe deserves criticism, including religion. 
We  will criticize preachers who use Christianity to express hatred and 
bigotry  toward gays as much as we will criticize religious Jews who use the 
Torah to  humiliate women rabbis wearing prayer shawls at the Western Wall. 
Personally, I’ve shown my revulsion at some of the stuff written in the 
Torah  — like the admonition to stone your son to death if he desecrates the  
Sabbath—and I’ve railed against missionary Christians who twist the Torah in 
 order to convert Jews. 
But I have to confess — like most of the mainstream media in America, I’ve 
 been very reluctant to criticize Islam. 
When, several years ago, virtually every American paper refused to publish  
satirical cartoons of the prophet Muhammad, I should have criticized that  
response. I understood that fear and intimidation probably played a role, 
given  the riots that followed their publication in a Danish paper. 
But it’s not as if the media has ever been afraid to publish cartoons that  
make fun of Jesus or Moses or Buddha — so why should they single out 
Muhammad  for special treatment? 
If you ask me, I think it’s time we stop walking on eggshells with Islam. 
It’s not healthy. This notion that any critique of Islam equates to  
Islamophobia is absurd and patronizing. It says to Muslims: “We criticize  
Judaism 
and Christianity because we think they can handle it, but we don’t think  
you can.” That’s insulting to Islam and to Muslims. 
Every religion needs a good dose of criticism. That’s how they improve and  
become more human. That’s how they shed their outdated and immoral layers, 
like  slavery and oppression of women. Where would Judaism be today without 
the  centuries of relentless self-reflection and self-criticism that goes on 
to this  day? 
How could it be wrong or Islamophobic to criticize a religious text that  
might justify the stoning to death of women or the killing of infidels? 
After terror attacks that appear to have an Islamic connection, such as 
last  week’s Boston massacre, we often hear defensive talk about how Islam is a 
 “religion of peace.” To back this up, Muslim commentators like to quote a 
verse  in the Koran (Surah 5, verse 32) that mentions the Talmudic idea 
that if you  kill one human being, it is as if you have killed an entire world. 
The problem, though, is that commentators usually fail to mention the verse 
 that immediately follows, which is anything but peaceful: “The punishment 
of  those who wage war against Allah and His messenger and strive to make 
mischief  in the land is only this, that they should be murdered or crucified 
or their  hands and their feet should be cut off on opposite sides or they 
should be  imprisoned; this shall be as a disgrace for them in this world, 
and in the  hereafter they shall have a grievous chastisement.” 
Verse 32 works for me. Verse 33 turns my stomach. 
The way I see it, the future of Islam and its reputation in the world will  
hinge on which verse will win out—verse 32 or verse 33. 
So far, it looks like the wrong verse is winning. Since 9/11, close to 
20,000  acts of terrorism have been recorded throughout the world under the 
name 
of  Islam, many of those against Muslims themselves. 
It’s suicidal and counterproductive for the world to pretend that  
violence-prone religious texts like verse 33 do not exist, especially if those  
texts are used to instigate violence against “infidels” and other  
mischief-makers. 
Religions shouldn’t get an automatic pass at respect. They have to earn it. 
 If you’re a member of a religion where some members use the religion as an 
 excuse to kill people, your job is not to convince me that you’re a 
religion of  peace, but to convince your co-religionists who are actually doing 
the  killing. 
It’s ironic that verse 32 borrows from Jewish texts. Muslims who believe in 
 that peaceful verse might want to borrow something else from the Jews: a 
big  mouth. 
These Muslims of verse 32 have been too quiet for too long. If they want 
the  world to show more respect for their cherished religion, they must rise 
up and  make more noise against their violent minority who believe in verse 
33. 
There’s no dishonor in self-criticism. Jews do it all the time. Maybe that’
s  why you don’t see much criticism of Islam in Jewish papers—we’re too 
busy  criticizing ourselves. 
But criticism is not an end in itself-- it must lead to results. The 
Muslims  of verse 32 must win the moral battle against the Muslims of verse 33, 
even if  it takes a century. And they must not recoil at criticism that may 
come from  outsiders who have good intentions. In fact, they must use it to 
shame their  violent cohorts. 
Constructive criticism of violent texts is not Islamophobia. It’s the  
beginning of positive change. Painting all criticism of Islam with the  
Islamophobic brush is just as wrong as painting all Muslims with a violent  
brush. 
It suffocates debate and the very process of evolution. 
To borrow from another Jewish mantra, constructive criticism is good for 
the  Jews, good for the Muslims and good for the  world.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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