3.4.11

Dhimmitude: «a submissão da alma»

Voltamos ao texto de Andrew Bostom que ontem citámos. Nele, Bostom apresenta o mais recente livro do professor Bruce Thornton, no qual o seu autor passa em revista diversas instâncias da catastrófica política de apaziguamento.
Lições da História para hoje e para o futuro:

Amplify’d from pajamasmedia.com

Classics professor Bruce Thornton is a courageous rarity within the academy — an unabashed conservative public intellectual. Rarer still, even when one considers the full universe of conservatives overall, is Thornton’s willingness to expound upon Islam in a scholarly but uncompromised manner.

In The Wages of Appeasement, Thornton combines his training as a classicist with singular intellectual honesty to interweave three historical case studies of appeasement: Athens (primarily) and the other Greek city-states that Philip II of Macedon sought to conquer in the 4th century B.C.; England confronted by Nazi aggression in the 1930s; and the contemporary United States and broader West, subjected to the global hegemonic aspirations of resurgent Islam and particularly its most aggressive jihadist state sponsor, Iran.

Thornton’s three case studies, beginning with ancient Greece, build upon one another seamlessly. He introduces the reader to eternal “verities of the human experience” as seen through the prism of Greek historian Thucydides’ analysis of the major causes of conflict — fear, honor, and interest — and how these factors also influence appeasement. What Thornton finds most intriguing: “The fear of an enemy to whom a state is militarily superior or at least equal, an enemy intent upon significantly reducing his state’s power and autonomy or destroying it outright.” He then highlights the dire consequences of not overcoming the inertia induced by this fear as a unifying thread across his three case examples:

Athens and the other Greek city-states had many opportunities to stop Philip before Cheronea in 338 B.C. [a decisive victory for Philip’s Macedonian army over the Greek city-state forces, especially Athens and Thebes], and even then the battle was a “close-run thing,” as Wellington said of Waterloo. England and France, the latter possessing the largest army in Europe, could have destroyed the miniscule force with which Hitler had re-occupied the Rhineland in 1936. And today, the military might of the United States dwarfs the combined power of Middle Eastern states such as Iran and Syria that support and harbor Islamist terrorists.

Thornton’s second case study — the appeasement of Nazi aggression in the decade before World War II — demonstrates how modern “utopianism” and the accompanying malaise of cultural self-loathing exacerbate the timeless, siren temptation of appeasement firmly rooted in the human psyche. Case study three — the contemporary West’s largely supine response to resurgent global jihadism — reveals the grotesque persistence of post-World War I era delusive utopianism and destructive self-flagellation despite the still tangible horrors inflicted by 20th century Nazi and Communist totalitarianism.

The first and second case studies feature two orator-statesmen: the ancient Greek Demosthenes, and Winston Churchill. These men recognized what was (and remains) at risk, as described by Thornton:

[T]he continuation of political freedom and autonomy, with all their attendant goods — human rights, rule by law, consensual government, equality, personal freedom, and a political system that benefits all citizens rather than the interests of a tyrant or an illiberal regime.

Demosthenes argued that the corrosion of political virtue, evident, Thornton observes:

… in the reluctance of citizens to serve in the army, their unwillingness to forgo the public dole, and the corruption of some politicians by bribery — stands out as the premier cause of the Greeks’ failure to resist Philip and defend their freedom.

Although tarnished by modern “revisionist mania,” which Thornton dismisses, Demosthenes remains for the author (consistent with an earlier continuum of appraisals “from Cicero to French statesman Clemenceau”) the paragon of resistance to tyranny and the defense of freedom.” Demosthenes warned his fellow citizens of Athens:

[Philip did] not want to have the Athenian tradition of liberty watching to seize every chance against himself.

He implored them to resist Philip’s aggression:

[Philip is] the inveterate enemy of constitutional government and democracy, for unless you are heartily persuaded of this, you will not consent to take your politics seriously.

Over two millennia later, in defense of the same foundational Western freedoms articulated by Demosthenes, Winston Churchill had to grapple additionally with what Thornton aptly refers to as “all of the interwar cultural pathologies” which enervated England in the 1920s and 1930s:

Pacifism, “war guilt,” internationalist idealism, hostility to the military, all the delusions that made a policy of appeasement seem not just expedient, but a moral imperative.

Churchill decried this mentality as suicidal when confronting the “bands of sturdy Teutonic youths marching through the streets and roads of Germany, with the light of desire in their eyes to suffer for their Fatherland.”

He reiterated the existential threat posed by such “utopian” cultural self-hatred during a 1933 address to the Royal Society of St. George:

Our difficulties come from the mood of unwarrantable self-abasement into which we have been cast by a powerful section of our own intellectuals. They come from defeatist doctrines by a large proportion of our politicians. But what have they to offer but a vague internationalism, a squalid materialism, and the promise of impossible Utopias?

Churchill concluded the same speech with this moral lesson:

Nothing can save England if she will not save herself. If we lose faith in ourselves, in our capacity to guide and govern, if we lose our will to live, then indeed our story is told. If, while on all sides foreign nations are every day asserting a more aggressive and militant nationalism by arms and trade, we remain paralyzed by our own theoretical doctrines or plunged into the stupor of after-war exhaustion, then indeed all that the croakers predict will come true, and our ruin will be swift and final.

The West, in large part due to Churchill’s courageous and clear-eyed leadership, belatedly rallied to overcome the Nazi menace. Soviet Communist totalitarianism — a threat Churchill also identified with prescience — was subsequently thwarted. But as Thornton points out:

A new threat has arisen to challenge the free West, one that has been nurtured by the same “spirit of Munich” that at times had put in doubt the eventual victory over communist totalitarianism. This new challenge is in fact an old one, a descendant of the West’s most powerful historical enemy, Islam, which in the seventh century burst forth from the Arabian peninsula to challenge and eventually destroy the Christian Byzantine empire, and to repeatedly attack Europe for another millennium until the Ottoman army was turned back at Vienna in September 1683. After that defeat, the world’s greatest Islamic empire faced serial retreat and piecemeal reduction from a resurgent West and a newly expansionist Russia. For the next three centuries, the European powers that once trembled at the approach of Allah’s warriors increasingly dominated the Ottomans and the Middle east until the final “humiliation and disgrace,” as Osama bin Laden called it, came after World War I, when Kemal Ataturk’s abolishing of the caliphate in 1924 ended thirteen hundred years of Islamic imperial domination.

Writing in 1916, C. Snouck Hurgronje, the great Dutch Orientalist, underscored how the jihad doctrine of world conquest and the re-creation of a supranational Islamic caliphate remained a potent force among the Muslim masses:

It would be a gross mistake to imagine that the idea of universal conquest may be considered as obliterated … the canonists and the vulgar still live in the illusion of the days of Islam’s greatness. The legists continue to ground their appreciation of every actual political condition on the law of the holy war, which war ought never be allowed to cease entirely until all mankind is reduced to the authority of Islam — the heathen by conversion, the adherents of acknowledged Scripture [i.e., Jews and Christians] by submission.

Hurgronje further noted that although the Muslim rank and file might acknowledge the improbability of that goal “at present” (circa 1916), they were:

… comforted and encouraged by the recollection of the lengthy period of humiliation that the Prophet himself had to suffer before Allah bestowed victory upon his arms.

Thus even at the nadir of Islam’s political power, during the World War I era final disintegration of the Ottoman Empire, Hurgronje observed:

The common people are willingly taught by the canonists and feed their hope of better days upon the innumerable legends of the olden time and the equally innumerable apocalyptic prophecies about the future. The political blows that fall upon Islam make less impression … than the senseless stories about the power of the Sultan of Stambul [Istanbul], that would instantly be revealed if he were not surrounded by treacherous servants, and the fantastic tidings of the miracles that Allah works in the Holy Cities of Arabia which are inaccessible to the unfaithful. The conception of the Khalifate [Caliphate] still exercises a fascinating influence, regarded in the light of a central point of union against the unfaithful (i.e., non-Muslims).

A Sunni Islamic revival was already underway when Hurgronje made his prescient observations. This movement began in the late 19th century under the tutelage of al-Afghani (d. 1897) and his successor Muhammad Abduh (d. 1905) — both of whom were deemed, appropriately, “cultural Wahhabis” by Ignaz Goldziher, another great scholar of Islam who studied their work as a contemporary during the late 19th and early 20th century. Indeed Abduh’s pupil Rashid Rida, who co-published with his mentor the influential political journal Al-Manar (The Beacon or Lighthouse), would go on to write (in 1922-23) a “modern” blueprint for the formal restoration of the Caliphate while championing the Wahhabi leader Ibn Saud as the most worthy Caliph in 1926. Rida’s torch was passed to Muslim Brotherhood founder Hasan al-Banna, who several years after Rida died in 1935 proudly began republishing Al-Manar.

Comparable trends within Shiite Islam produced the great ideologue and eventual religio-political leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, following the retrograde “Islamic revolution” of 1978-79 which simply reestablished the pre-Pahlavi era norms of the Iranian Safavid and Qajar dynasty Shiite theocracies (of 1502-1724, and 1795-1925, respectively). Khomeini, as Thornton notes, was remarkably forthright and consistent in his calls for jihad to subjugate the infidel, dating back to at least this 1942 statement:

Those who study jihad will understand why Islam wants to conquer the whole world. All the countries conquered by Islam or to be conquered in the future will be marked for everlasting salvation. For they shall live under Allah’s law (Sharia). … Islam says: “Kill [the non-Muslims], put them to the sword and scatter their armies.” Islam says: “Whatever good there is exists thanks to the sword and in the shadow of the sword! People cannot be made obedient except with the sword! The sword is the key to paradise, which can be opened only for holy warriors (jihadists)!” There are hundreds of other Koranic psalms and hadiths (sayings of the prophet) urging Muslims to value war and to fight. Does all that mean that Islam is a religion that prevents men from waging war? I spit upon those foolish souls who make such a claim. … Those who know nothing of Islam pretend that Islam counsels against war. Those [who say this] are witless.

Khomeini, Thornton emphasizes, reiterated these views upon assuming power:

The great prophet of Islam carried in one hand the Koran and in the other a sword; the sword for crushing the traitors and the Koran for guidance. … Islam is a religion of blood for the infidels but a religion of guidance for other people. … We shall export our revolution to the whole world. Until the cry “There is no God but God” resounds over the whole world, there will be struggle.

Historian Robert Conquest identified a salient feature of the delusive mindset of apologists for Soviet-era Communist totalitarianism shared by useful idiots for totalitarian Islam since 1979 — willful blindness:

[A] con job needs a con man and a sucker. In their case many suckers even managed not to take in what they saw with their own eyes, or rather somehow to process unpleasantness mentally into something acceptable. … Mind-set seems too strong a word: these were minds like jelly, ready for the master’s imprint. … [T]his was an intellectual and moral disgrace on a massive scale.

An eternal written testament to this triumphal idiocy was published in the New York Times February 16, 1979. The very title of Princeton University international law professor Richard Falk’s op-ed, “Trusting Khomeini,” is pathognomonic of two devastating Western maladies — cultural self-loathing and jihad denial. Indeed these trends have worsened over the intervening three decades, as the civilizational war waged by Shiite and Sunni jihadists — consistent with Islam’s classical jihad theory — has intensified. Falk’s February 1979 “conclusions” — 180 degrees from the ensuing and eminently predictable reality — were as follows:

Despite the turbulence, many non-religious Iranians talk of this period as “Islam’s finest hour.” Having created a new model of popular revolution based, for the most part, on non-violent tactics. Iran may yet provide us with a desperately needed model of humane governance for a third-world country. If this is true, then indeed the exotic Ayatollah may yet convince the world that “politics is the opiate of the people.”

Tragically, President Jimmy Carter was influenced by such dangerous academic nonsense. Thus as Thornton points out:

Carter’s belief that rational negotiations and compromise could establish peaceful relations with the infant Islamic Republic was as delusional as Chamberlain’s notion that Hitler’s grand aims for a German empire based on racial purity would be satisfied by the negotiated sacrifice of Czechoslovakia.

Thornton concludes that deliberate, stubborn “downplaying of the religious roots” of jihad — analogous to ignoring Hitler’s openly avowed goals in his Nazi manifesto, Mein Kampf — have characterized failed American and broader Western policies to counter Shiite and Sunni jihadists, from Khomeini’s seizure of power in 1979, to al-Qaeda’s attacks on September 11, 2001, through the present:

Just as British indifference to Hitler’s plans outlined in his memoir Mein Kampf paved the way for the debacle of Munich, so too a failure to take seriously Khomeini’s religious motivations and publicized jihadist doctrines facilitated the wave of terrorist assaults against Americans in the 1980s, 1990s, and beyond. … [T]he damage to American prestige that followed the failure to punish attacks on American interests, the continuing force of a foreign policy based on American self-doubt and moralizing internationalism, and gutting of the CIA had all set the stage for the sequence of jihadist attacks in the 1990s and the rise to prominence of al-Qaeda. The trajectory of appeasement that had begun in Saigon in 1975 and then proceeded through Tehran in 1979 and Beirut in 1983 was now pointing to New York in 2001.

While President Obama certainly represents the apotheosis of jihad appeasement for Thornton, the author excoriates all recent presidents — Carter, Reagan, Bush 1, Clinton, and Bush 2 — for their individual and collective failures to address the jihadist threat by similar appeasing policies and actions.

Ominously, the preponderance of contemporary mainstream Muslims from Morocco to Indonesia apparently share with their murderous, jihad terror waging co-religionists from al-Qaeda the goal (if not necessarily supporting the gruesome means) of reestablishing an Islamic Caliphate. Polling data released April 24, 2007 — from a rigorously conducted face-to-face University of Maryland/WorldPublicOpinion.org interview survey of 4384 Muslims conducted between December 9, 2006 and February 15, 2007, of 1000 Moroccans, 1000 Egyptians, 1243 Pakistanis, and 1141 Indonesians — reveal that 65.2% of those interviewed desired this outcome (i.e., “To unify all Islamic countries into a single Islamic state or Caliphate”). This included 49% of “moderate” Indonesian Muslims. The internal validity of these data about the present longing for a Caliphate is strongly suggested by a concordant result: 65.5% of this Muslim sample approved a proposition: “To require a strict application of Shari’a law in every Islamic country.”

Viewed with objectivity, the present much ballyhooed “Arab Spring” expresses these longstanding Islamic sentiments, not some sui generis movement for true Western-style Jeffersonian democracy — the antithesis of jihad-imposed Sharia governance. As Thornton warns, we must not continue to act as self-flagellating “volunteer dhimmis” — afraid to speak plainly about living Islamic doctrine and history — discretely ignoring how the “Arab Spring” ferment is rooted in jihad.

If these self-abasing behaviors vis a vis Islam are not quickly reversed, America and the West will implode along exactly the lines described in a remarkably candid assessment by the 18th century Moroccan Sufi “master” Ibn Ajibah from his Koranic commentary (a work I was made aware of by my colleague, Dr. Mark Durie).

Describing unabashedly the purpose of the Koranic poll tax (as per Koran 9:29) of submission for non-Muslims brought under Islamic hegemony by jihad, Ibn Ajibah makes clear the ultimate goal of its imposition was to achieve what he called the death of the “soul” through the dhimmi’s execution of their own humanity:

[The dhimmi] is commanded to put his soul, good fortune and desires to death. Above all he should kill the love of life, leadership and honor. [The dhimmi] is to invert the longings of his soul, he is to load it down more heavily than it can bear until it is completely submissive. Thereafter nothing will be unbearable for him. He will be indifferent to subjugation or might. Poverty and wealth will be the same to him; praise and insult will be the same; preventing and yielding will be the same; lost and found will be the same. Then, when all things are the same, it [the soul] will be submissive and yield willingly what it should give. [Tafsir ibn ‘Ajibah.  Commentary on Q9:29. Ahmad ibn Muhammad Ibn `Ajibah]

At stake is nothing less than our nation’s survival, in body and soul.

Andrew Bostom (http://www.andrewbostom.org/blog/) is the author of The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non-Muslims (2005/2008) and The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism: From Sacred Texts to Solemn History (2008).
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2.4.11

As «fronteiras sangrentas» do islão

Andrew Bostom [http://www.andrewbostom.org/blog/], em introdução à crítica a um livro ao qual havemos de fazer referência oportunamente, resume a argumentação e conclusão de Samuel Huntington [http://nadadistoenovo.blogspot.com/2010/01/menos-blogues-e-mais-livros-2.html] sobre o choque entre a civilização islâmica e todas as outras:

Amplify’d from pajamasmedia.com

Huntington’s mid-1990s paradigm of Islam’s “bloody borders” adduces convincing hard data in support of his contention: “Wherever one looks along the perimeter of Islam, Muslims have problems living peaceably with their neighbors.” These germane observations by Huntington were confirmed — one could argue even amplified — subsequently in the wake of the cataclysmic acts of jihad terrorism against the U.S. on September 11, 2001, and their aftermath, punctuated by almost 17,000 additional jihadist attacks worldwide since 9/11:

The overwhelming majority of fault line conflicts … have taken place along the boundary looping across Eurasia and Africa that separates Muslims from non-Muslims.

Intense antagonisms and violent conflicts are pervasive between local Muslim and non-Muslim peoples.

Muslims make up about one-fifth of the world’s population, but in the 1990s they have been far more involved in inter-group violence than the people of any other civilization. The evidence is overwhelming. There were, in short, three times as many inter-civilizational conflicts involving Muslims as there were between non-Muslim civilizations.

Muslim states also have had a high propensity to resort to violence in international crises, employing it to resolve 76 crises out of a total of 142 in which they were involved between 1928 and 1979. … When they did use violence, Muslim states used high-intensity violence, resorting to full-scale war in 41 percent of the cases where violence was used and engaging in major clashes in another 39 percent of the cases. While Muslim states resorted to violence in 53.5 percent, violence was used the United Kingdom in only 1.5 percent, by the United States in 17.9 percent, and by the Soviet Union in 28.5 percent of the crises in which they were involved….

Muslim bellicosity and violence are late-twentieth-century facts which neither Muslims nor non-Muslims can deny.

Thus 15 years ago Samuel Huntington concluded appositely, and with a candor which, like Bruce Thornton’s, is now almost absent:

The underlying problem for the West is not Islamic fundamentalism. It is Islam, a different civilization whose people are convinced of the superiority of their culture.

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1.4.11

«Treat them as they would treat you»

Mais um excelente texto de Daniel Greenfield.
Nele propõe, entre outras coisas, a adopção de uma variante do princípio da reciprocidade: «trata-os como eles te tratariam a ti» em lugar de «exige que eles te tratem de acordo com os teus próprios princípios» ou, se preferir, «apaparica-os como gostarias que eles te apaparicassem».

Alguns destaques:

«If the Muslim world has raised up a wall of sand against freedom, tolerance and the recognition of our common humanity-- then it is best for their sake and ours that they remain on their side of that wall of sand. If they refuse to coexist with us, either locally or globally, then that is their choice. (...) When they breach that wall, then we have the right to treat them as they would treat us, not according to our laws, but according to theirs-- as they do to us, so shall be done to them. It is not a pretty doctrine, but it is a just one. And it is an overwhelmingly fair code that men should live by the laws they make for others. There can be no hypocrisy or misunderstanding in such a code. And it teaches more finely than any other the consequences of evil.»

«Governments reflect their peoples, not perfectly, but as broken mirrors. No tyrant who does not reflect what his subjects prize in this world can long endure upon his throne. If 1 billion Muslims wanted to be free, they would be. The tyrants are expressions of their condition, not repressions of their moral will. »

Amplify’d from sultanknish.blogspot.com
The West is almost as in love with improving the world, as the Muslim world is with conquering it. These two contradictory impulses, the missionary and the warrior, intersect in the Clash of Civilizations. The Muslim world has two approaches to the West, underhanded deceit and outright terror. The former are considered moderates and the latter extremists. The West has two approaches to the Muslim world, regime change and love bombing. With regime change we bomb their cities to save them from their rulers and with love bombing we shamelessly flatter and appease them in our own cities.
Westerners worry a great deal over who runs the Muslim world. Muslims do not care very much who runs Western countries. They prefer weak liberal leaders to strong ones, but they do not overall think there is a difference between them. Even the emplacement of a Hussein in the White House has not improved America's ratings in the Muslim world. That is because Muslims are religiously and culturally antagonistic to the West. Whether John McCain or Barack Hussein Obama are in the White House-- America is still a non-Muslim country. It is and will the subjective of xenophobia no matter how much it flatters the Muslim world.
Westerners focus their animus on Muslim leaders, on a Saddam, a Gaddafi or an Arafat-- not recognizing that the hostility toward us comes not from the leaders, but from the people. We can remove all the leaders of the Muslim world and replace them with muppets, and it won't noticeably change the underlying sentiments on the Arab street. And very soon the muppets will also start chanting, "Death to America" because it's the popular thing to do.

Take the Neo-conservative's favorite Egyptian democracy activist Sandmonkey who has rediscovered that the best way to campaign is by accusing the other guy of being a Yankee-Zionist stooge. That's politics as usual in a country where everyone accuses everyone else of being a pawn of the Great and Little Satans. By linking the Muslim Brotherhood to Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia to Israel, he can accuse the Brotherhood of being stooges of Israel. Senseless but it's the default position. It's easier to campaign on who hates America and Israel more, than who has a workable reform program.

This is a snapshot of why regime change, whether by armed force or supporting democratic revolutions, won't save the Muslim world. You can't save people from themselves. Not without drastically changing who they are at the same time. But we can save ourselves from them.

The Muslim world is not backward by their standards, it is backward by our standards. It refuses to make the 250 year leap that the West did, but that is because it does not like the trade-offs that come with it. And that is its choice to make. Individualism, freedom and tolerance are not acceptable values in the Muslim world. And totalitarianism, theocracy and repression are not acceptable values in ours. The Muslim world has no obligation to accede to our cultural standards or tolerate us, but we accordingly have no obligation to accede to theirs or to tolerate them.

There is always a gap between civilizations, but rarely has the moral gap yawned so starkly as it does now. We are as eager to bring the Muslim world into the light, as they are to drag us into the darkness. And the momentum is on their side. We don't have the answers that we think we do. Democracy is not the solution. Neither is embracing Muslim culture with open arms. They don't have the answers either, but they have something better. Unrestrained violence and the desperation of a failed culture struggling against the tidal pull of that failure. Like a drowning man, if we try to save them, then they will pull us down with them.

We are not so wise and so perfect that we can claim to know how to save 1 billion people from themselves. Right now we are experiencing a good deal of trouble saving us from ourselves. We cannot be expected to shoulder the burden of reforming the Muslim world as well. Whatever spiritual or cultural redemption waits for them, must come from themselves. It will not come through a change of government or lavish praise. Only through a growing moral awareness that they need not subjugate others to feel pride and honor in themselves and their culture. There is no telling when or if such an awareness will come. There are animal rights campaigns in China and anti-rape campaigns in Africa-- but no progress on human rights in the Muslim world. It is likely that China will be vegetarian before non-Muslims are treated as equals in the Muslim world.
It has been made manifestly clear that Muslim violence against us, both individual and collective, will not cease any time soon. That further such violence is informed by the scriptures of their faith and a basic xenophobia toward people who are different from them. And that while some Muslim countries and individuals claim to harbor no violent intentions toward us-- such claims often prove false under the pressure of domestic unrest or growing religiosity.

If the Muslim world has raised up a wall of sand against freedom, tolerance and the recognition of our common humanity-- then it is best for their sake and ours that they remain on their side of that wall of sand. If they refuse to coexist with us, either locally or globally, then that is their choice. They may have their paradise of hefty-bagged women, towering mosques and cowering infidels-- so long as their bigotry and oppression remains on their side of the wall of sand. When they breach that wall, then we have the right to treat them as they would treat us, not according to our laws, but according to theirs-- as they do to us, so shall be done to them. It is not a pretty doctrine, but it is a just one. And it is an overwhelmingly fair code that men should live by the laws they make for others. There can be no hypocrisy or misunderstanding in such a code. And it teaches more finely than any other the consequences of evil.

But as we write and read, talk goes on of how to save 1 billion Muslims from themselves. Removing their tyrannies, some cry. But what will they replace them with? More tyrannies. Governments reflect their peoples, not perfectly, but as broken mirrors. No tyrant who does not reflect what his subjects prize in this world can long endure upon his throne. If 1 billion Muslims wanted to be free, they would be. The tyrants are expressions of their condition, not repressions of their moral will. The Muslim world does not differ on whether there should be tyranny, but on what manner of tyranny it should be.

Of course no generalization applies to every person in a country or a culture. But they do apply to groups that self-identify that way, proclaiming that the Koran is our Constitution, where popular will represses women and spews hate at religious minorities. How does one protect them from the damage that they do to their own character? And how does one save people from their own hate?

The most fundamental error of the West toward the Muslim world is that of condescension. Western governments may see Muslims as minorities, but they see themselves as majorities. And throughout the world they are majorities. Muslims in America, Europe, Israel, Canada or Australia do not see themselves as minorities, but as natural majorities who have the right to impose their will and their way of life. Unlike refugees who come from cultures where they are minorities, Muslims come expecting to have things done their way. And when the West accedes, that only affirms the Muslim sense of privilege.

The West condescends to Muslims, and Muslims condescend to the West. Both reassure the other that everything is fine. But the West's condescension is based on wishful co-existence, that of the Muslim world on progressive conquest. If diplomacy is the art of saying, 'Nice Doggie' while looking for a stick, then the West isn't looking for the stick, and the Muslim is. Therein lies the problem.

The West's missionary impulse toward the Muslim world is not only misplaced, it is positively dangerous. How can the West convince the Muslim world to believe as it does, when it no longer knows what it believes? The Muslim world lacks such weaknesses. It cannot be crippled by moral quandaries, ideological contradictions, philosophical crises or doubts about the future. Its members do not recognize contradiction, rather they embrace it, until those contradictions explode in violence. Western codes are black and white, Muslim codes combine all shades into one. When the Muslim world is confused or in doubt, it resolves these feelings with violence. The West does not resolve them at all. While the West broods, the Muslim world slits throats. The problems of the Clash of Civilization cannot be postponed much longer. They are our problem. We cannot save 1 billion people from themselves, but we can save ourselves from them.
Read more at sultanknish.blogspot.com
 

31.3.11

Lei anti-blasfémia adiada

Uma história dos avanços e recuos dos países muçulmanos, representados pela Organização da Conferência Islâmica, na sua tentativa de proibir o discurso crítico do islão:

Amplify’d from www.nationalreview.com
An Anti-Blasphemy Measure Laid to Rest
An essential battle for freedom is won at the U.N.

A long-term campaign by the U.N.’s large Muslim bloc to impose worldwide blasphemy strictures — like those in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Iran — was given a quiet burial last week in the Human Rights Council, the U.N.’s main human-rights body. At the session that ended in Geneva on March 25, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), sensing defeat, decided not to introduce a resolution calling for criminal penalties for the “defamation of religions” — a resolution that had passed every year for more than a decade. This is a small but essential victory for freedom.

The lessons in how this campaign rose and fell will be important in protecting the international human rights of freedom of expression and religion against other threats, particularly as the U.S. engages with the new order in Egypt and other Arab states.

The OIC’s anti-defamation effort was inspired by Ayatollah Khomeini’s infamous 1989 fatwa, directing “all zealous Muslims to execute quickly” the British author Salman Rushdie and others involved with his book TheSatanic Verses. While not explicitly embracing vigilantism, the Saudi Arabia–based OIC, an organization of 56 member states, quickly endorsed Khomeini’s novel principle: that Western law should be subject to Muslim measures against apostasy and blasphemy.

The OIC worked to institutionalize this principle within the United Nations. By 1999, it began introducing resolutions annually in the Council’s predecessor (the now-discredited Human Rights Commission) to condemn any expression that could be construed, however broadly, as “defamation of religions” — but meaning, specifically, criticism of Islam.

These resolutions turned the liberal, half-century-old international human-rights regime on its head. “It deviates sharply from the historically rooted object of international human rights protections by addressing the interests of religious institutions and interpretations, rather than the rights of individuals,” as Leonard Leo, chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), explained to Congress in 2009.

That the term “defamation of religions” was undefined and based on an amorphous concept, with a U.N. survey showing no common practice among member states, made it all the more threatening. Though the resolutions were non-binding, they gained stature as a U.N. agenda perennial. Former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Jeane Kirkpatrick once observed that such resolutions tend to seep like “groundwater” into international court and commission decisions.

In 1999 and 2000, the anti-blasphemy resolutions were adopted by consensus, with, inexplicably, the U.S. joining in. In 2001, the West began to vote against them, but, as a “public” appointee to the U.S. delegation in Geneva in 2001, I was told by the State Department to stop debating the issue with my Egyptian counterpart, who led the drafting committee — it was just too sensitive. Without Western support, each year, until now, OIC resolutions to this effect have passed in what purports to be the premiere global human-rights forum.

The resolution’s popularity peaked with the 2005–06 Danish cartoon crisis. Speaking for the OIC, Pakistan typically introduced these resolutions, arguing in words calculated to appeal to Western liberals: “Unrestricted and disrespectful freedom of opinion creates hatred and is contrary to the spirit of peaceful dialogue and promotion of multiculturalism.” Non–OIC members, even democracies, voted for the resolution. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour signaled their support. Emboldened, the OIC began introducing the concept in other U.N.-sponsored fora, such as the General Assembly itself, where “defamation against religions” resolutions have easily passed.

However, in 2007, support within the Council declined, and the “yes” votes steadily eroded thereafter. By the spring 2010 Council session, the resolution was a mere four votes short of defeat. This year, the OIC did not have the confidence to introduce it.

This sudden shift came about because, in 2006, the Bush administration took the lead in defending free speech, energetically pressing Council members to oppose the resolution. The EU also became engaged, emphasizing the need to protect individuals, who “should not be viewed as mere particles of homogeneous and monolithic entities.” Until then, the West member states had been unfocussed and unwilling to push back on a controversial, religiously framed issue.

The Western bloc’s support gave traction to the persistent lobbying efforts against the resolution by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, members of Congress — notably Representatives Chris Smith (R., N.J.), Frank Wolf (R., Va.), Trent Franks (R., Ariz.), and Eliot Engel (D., N.Y.) — and a broad array of non-governmental organizations, from the Becket Fund to Human Rights First.

Since 2009, after an initial misstep of co-sponsoring with Egypt a Council resolution endorsing “hate speech” laws — which, in Europe, are often used to prosecute cases of blasphemy against Islam — Obama’s State Department has also taken up the banner for free speech. This year, instead of the “defamation against religions” resolution, the Council adopted a resolution — at America’s urging — denouncing religious discrimination and violence that did not call for curbs on speech. Secretary Clinton explained after the vote that the “antidote” to offensive expression is “more expression and the open public debate of ideas, not laws that restrict expression in the name of tolerance.”

The coup de grâce for the resolution was the murder this month of Pakistan’s renowned minister of minorities, Shahbaz Bhatti, because he opposed his own country’s blasphemy laws. His murder followed that of Punjab governor Salman Taseer and the death sentence given for blasphemy to a Christian mother of five whom Taseer had defended. It was now impossible for even the Human Rights Council to ignore the disgrace of the blasphemy laws of Pakistan — the main sponsor of its blasphemy resolutions all these years. 

The defense of the right to speak freely in the West about Islam, and within Islam, is far from over — last month, an Austrian court convicted Elizabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff of “defaming” the Islamic prophet Mohammad during a political-party briefing. But what happened last week at the Council was not simply a tempest in a teapot. America could not afford to lose this debate — not over a universal human-rights code that reflects our values, and not in an international forum that we disproportionately fund. It showed that America, when it finds its voice, can still exert diplomatic influence in the defense of fundamental ideals concerning human rights and freedoms — even in a notoriously difficult international context.

— Nina Shea is director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom and co-author, with Paul Marshall, of Silenced: How Apostasy and Blasphemy Codes are Choking Freedoms Worldwide(Oxford University Press, November 2011).

Read more at www.nationalreview.com
 

25.3.11

Fatwa: Não é permitido que os cristãos construam ou reparem igrejas

Traduzido de al-fath.net, o site do Shaykh Egípcio Sa'id 'Abd-al-'Athim, 7 Dez 2010 (English here):
Título da fatwa: O julgamento sobre a construição e reparação das igrejas para os cristãos que moram nas terras dos muçulmanos 
Fatwa número: 7 
Data da fatwa: 7 Dez 2010 
Pergunta: Que a paz esteja com o senhor, como também a misericordia e benções de Alá. Nosso eminente shaykh, li numa de suas fatwas em este bom e abençoado site da internet, que não é permitido que os cristãos construam ou reparem igrejas. Qual a evidência por isto? Há evidência no Alcorão ou a Sunnah a qual diz que construir as igrejas é proibida, ou será que isto vem só da jurisprudência? 
Resposta: Em nome de Alá, e para Alá vá todo o louvor. Que a paz esteja sobre o Mensageiro de Alá, como também sobre sua família, companheiros, e todo aquele que o segue. 
Isto se explica detalhadamente no livro, "Os Julgamentos para o Povo da Dhimma [i.e. judeos e cristãos]," por Imam Ibn Qayyim. Também lhe basta revisar o meu livro, "Chamando o Povo do Livro para a Religião do Senhor de Toda a Humanidade," pois por dentro dele há coisas beneficiosas. Já respondi a sua pergunta anteriormente, e expliquei para você aquilo que fazem com os muçulmanos em alguns paises europeus como Itália, com respeito a prevenindo-os de construir as mesquitas ali. A Shariah não trata igualmente as coisas que são diferentes, nem trata de forma diferente as coisas que são iguais. Esta é a justícia pelo qual se remove a opressão. Por exemplo, quando uma Pessoa do Livro me felicita por meu dia santo, ele está felicitando a verdade. Mas por outra maneira, quando eu lhe felicito por seu dia santo, estou felicitando a falsidade. Porquanto os infiéis, ainda que tenham que pagar muito dinheiro, gostariam de que os muçulmanos participassem com eles em seus dias santos. Existe o provérbio: "Quem assemelha-se a um povo é um deles," e também, "Quem tem amado um povo será ajuntado com eles." A semelhança por fora conduz à semelhança por dentro...

24.3.11

Moral islâmica

Para um acto ser moralmente aceitável no islão, é necessário uma de duas condições: ser vantajoso para o islão (cf. taqiyya, matar/escravizar/subjugar «infiéis») ou ser sancionado pelo profeta Mafoma (por palavras ou por actos).
O caso abaixo cumpre pelo menos a segunda condição. O resto é conversa:

Amplify’d from olhonajihad.blogspot.com
"O Profeta escreveu o (contrato de casamento) com 'Aisha quando ela tinha seis anos de idade e consumou o casamento quando ela tinha nove anos de idade e ela permaneceu com ele por nove anos (i.e. até a morte dele)." -- 7.62.88 Bukhari
Apologistas islâmicos frequentemente alegam que Aisha era mais velha na época de seu casamento com Maomé e de sua consumação. Mas, eis a prova de que os muçulmanos entendem o episódio como uma forma de justificar o casamento infantil.
A Fatwa foi publicado no IslamOnline.net, que segundo a wikipedia, é o sexto maior site islâmico do mundo. Como o autor assinala, a relação sexual com crianças é permitida de acordo com o exemplo do profeta.
Pergunta: Qual sua opinião sobre os paises islâmicos que proibem que meninas casem antes dos dezoito anos? É verdade que estudiosos islâmicos concordam que os pais podem casar suas filhas mesmo quando ainda são crianças?
Resposta: Quase todos os estudiosos concordam que é direito do pai casar sua filha, mesmo que seja jovem e imatura. Isso é permitido devido sua autoridade sobre ela, pois como ele é responsável por guiá-la, ele também é responsável em fazer o que é de seu interesse com relação ao casamento.
O muçulmano ainda ensina que baseado no "nobre Corão", mais especificamente na Sura 65:4 que é permitido manter relações sexuais com meninas que ainda não mentruram. E conclui:
É verdade que o Profeta celebrou um contrato de casamento com Aisha quando ela tinha seis anos, contudo, ele não teve relações sexuais com ela até que ela tivesse nove anos, de acordo com a al-Bukhari. [...] [...]
Vemos assim que o Islã institucionaliza a pedofilia.
Obs: Se observarem o link em inglês, pois as versões do Corão em português são cheias de eufemismo, pos isso não iria traduzir o versículo corretamente, tendo em vista que sempre confiro os versículos em inglês com o Corão em portugês. Mas, como a postagem é do Translating Jihad, que agora escreve para o Nada Disto é Novo, basta aguadar-mos que teremos uma tradução precisa, já que o blogueiro traduz diretamente do árabe.
Read more at olhonajihad.blogspot.com
 

Guerra por petróleo na Líbia

A perspectiva de Daniel Greenfield. Não é fácil fazer destaques deste artigo que merece uma leitura integral:

Amplify’d from sultanknish.blogspot.com
 It was Hegel who said that history repeats itself because nations and governments fail to learn from it, but it was Karl Marx who added that history repeats itself a second time as farce. Which makes it all too appropriate that Obama is repeating the Bush era as farce.
For years American liberals accused George W. Bush of being dumb and unserious-- only to elect a man who actually is dumb and unserious. Who announces a war in between his NCAA picks and a trip to Rio. Who has spent more time playing golf, than directing the war effort. Who spends more time in front of the mirror and the camera, than on policy.
They accused Bush of running an imperial presidency-- and that is exactly what they got the second time around. A war without even the thinnest facade of congressional involvement. Without Dick Cheney being anywhere in sight. They accused Bush of having a Nazi collaborating grandfather, and their own grass roots efforts to elect an Un-Bush were funded by a philanthropic Nazi collaborating billionaire.

They falsely insisted that Bush went to war for oil. And now their Great Hope has actually gone to war for oil. For BP's 900 million dollar Libyan oil deal, which Prime Minister Cameron endangered when he precipitously rushed to back the Libyan rebels who seemed on their way to victory, only to crumble at Gaddafi's pushback. After all those years of calling Blair, Bush's poodle-- Obama turned out to be Cameron's poodle. They're no doubt laughing about it in London.

Back when Gaddafi was securely in power, BP lobbied to free the Lockerbie bomber to avoid Gaddafi's threat to cut all commercial ties with the UK. What a difference a year makes. Now the only thing that will save BP is a good old fashioned war. Gaddafi had already called on Russian and Chinese oil companies to replace Western oil companies. Not to be left out, the Libya rebels quickly created their own oil company reminding everyone of what this is really about.

History repeats itself as farce. But who's laughing now?

There is a reason why Europe yawns at Turkey's use of chemical weapons against Kurdish rebels, while sending in the jets when Gaddafi bombs rebel positions. Why the genocide in Sudan was not interrupted by a No Fly Zone, and top European firms still do business with Iran through proxies in Dubai. It's not about human rights. It's not even about the threat potential. If it were, North Korea or Iran would be in our bomb sights. Right now Syria is massacring protesters, but don't look for military intervention there either. That's not what it's about. It's about the bright boys deciding that Gaddafi stands in the way of the future, just like Slobodan Milosevic once did. Genocide, ethnic cleansing and terrorism are minor crimes, compared to obstructing the emergency of a stable order and the fat profits it will bring.

Obama's justification for the bombing to congress, citing, "Qadhafi's defiance of the Arab League", and the "international community", as well as "the authority of the Security Council" should send chills up anyone's spine. The idea that the US has become the 'Enforcer' for the Arab League is an ugly enough idea, though it is a remarkable moment of honesty about just who's calling the shots in US foreign policy.

But more meaningful still is the end of that sentence which hinges that trail of justifications on, "efforts to preserve stability in the region". Which is another unexpected moment of honesty, as long as you understand that stability has nothing to do with democracy, human rights or preventing bombs from falling on orphans. It's about keeping the trade going and the oil flowing. Keeping the violence down to a dull roar and maintaining predictable economic conditions. No oil price fluctuations, no crazy demands from a lunatic and an advancement of the new order of the January Revolutions.

This wasn't an intervention in response to genocide or WMD's. Gaddafi is fighting a civil war with few blatant atrocities. Two weeks ago the UN death toll was at a mere 1,000. That would have been a slow month in Saddam Hussein's Iraq. But NATO set similarly low standards for declaring genocide in Kosovo. And all the weepy reports and heartstrings tugging was meant to disguise those simple facts. Just as news reports on Libya describe massacres in vague terms and cheer on the bravery of the rebels without telling us who they are.

We're told what we need to know, that Gaddafi is bad and the rebels are good. And while it's hard to argue that a world without him might be a better place, it's unclear what Libya will be like without him. The US and Europe have been encouraged to believe that they will be dealing with former members of the US governments and the Libyan human rights people they have been funding. That may or may not be the case. In Egypt, the Jan 25 twitter activists just got stomped into the ground. With enough members of the old regime around, Libya may experience a more stable transition. Most likely it will trade in one civil war for another. And the African mercenaries will be back hunting down Islamist rebels. If the Libyan air force bombs them, we won't say a thing. So long as the oil keeps flowing on schedule.
When a panicked Gaddafi gave up his nuclear program to avoid going the way of Saddam, European oil companies fared poorly at the bidding, while US companies got the inside track. But last year many of those companies, including the influential ChevronTexaco, pulled out, tired of the corruption and the bribery. BP however remained, holding on to its 900 million dollar deal, even lobbying for the release of one of Gaddafi's mass murderers. The Iraq War had intimidated Gaddafi, but its collapse had him feeling his oats again. Irrational demands followed. And the toadying of the American and British governments to his family only fed the beast.

France's Sarkozy now sees a chance to push his Mediterranean Union, by doing what France routinely does, and yet what President Chirac (now facing trial for embezzlement) lambasted the US for in Iraq-- unilateral intervention. Libya was formerly under French rule, and France is fairly casual about invading its former colonies to restore order. That the new coalition to bomb Gaddafi met in Paris is an ironic concession to its Francocentric nature. This war is a French project, in partnership with the UK, with the US along to provide the brute muscle.

Sarkozy needs to catch fire with French voters, almost as badly as Obama does with US voters. He is polling behind Marie LePen and his UMP party barely outdrew the National Front in local elections. He has failed to rein in domestic Islamism, but bombing Libya is easy by comparison. And gives him the illusion of placing his fingerprint on history's page. Then there's France's Total S.A. oil company which has its own presence in Libya. Between its dirty deals with Saddam Hussein and Iran, Total SA makes BP look good.

Three years ago, Gaddafi was pitching his tent in the heart of Paris, on Sarkozy's lawn. Back then Sarkozy denounced "those who excessively and irresponsibly criticised the Libyan leader’s visit" and his aide explained that Gaddafi's visit was a good thing because it brought billions of euros and tens of thousands of jobs to France. But now Monsieur Gaddafi is Le Monstre.

And what were those jobs and billions of euros coming from? The sale of French fighter jets to Libya, from the country which took the lead in going after the Libyan air force. Considering the poor performance of Libya's air force, Gaddafi would be justified in asking Sarkozy for a refund.

Two years ago, UK PM Gordon Brown was expressing his "admiration and gratitude" for Gaddafi. Now Cameron had to interrupt a Middle Eastern arms sales tour to call for a war on Gaddafi for his suppression of rioting rebels. Pity then that the UK had actually been selling some 350 million dollars worth of military equipment, including a good deal of crowd control gear.

Now France and the UK are stepping in to save the Libyan rebels from the military equipment that they themselves sold to Gaddafi.

Did Gaddafi dramatically change over the past few years? No. The circumstances did. In 2008, Gaddafi was being cooperative and welcoming to Western oil companies and arms dealers in a region ruled by tyrants. By 2011, he was no longer cooperative and it suddenly seemed as if a wave of democratic change was sweeping the region. That made him into an obstacle. Had Gaddafi quickly suppressed the uprising, Sarkozy and Cameron would have kept their mouths shut. But Gaddafi's real crime was to start winning, after the Europeans had decided he was going to lose. Now they intend to make sure he does. It's as cynically simple as that.

Sarkozy and Cameron are committed. The price of oil is also the price of political power. Western economies rise and fall on the price of oil. Falling oil prices after the Cold War helped spur economic development, and rising oil prices will prevent any recovery.

With an election in 2012, Barack Hussein Obama also stands to personally benefit from stabilizing oil prices. But that may be giving him credit for intelligence he doesn't have. What he does have is a need to be the center of attention. And given a choice between backing a fairly safe war, or standing shamefacedly on the sidelines, the choice wasn't surprising. Hillary Clinton needed to end her term as Secretary of State with a bang. It's not her husband's Kosovo, but it's the closest she can come to being Madeleine Albright. Everyone involved has now gotten their war. It's not a very impressive war, but even a small war is better than nothing.
The Libyan rebels range from Gaddafi's own regime cronies to Al Qaeda, to various professional human rights activists and rebels of the sort that all Arab countries collect after a while. And they're all eager for our support, so long as we don't ask any difficult questions. Such as who besides Gaddafi was responsible for human rights abuses and whether they intend to protect equal rights for all peoples regardless of gender and religion. And of course we won't be asking any bothersome questions like that.

Instead we will act as mercenaries for the Arab League, European oil companies and a trio of cynical leaders who embraced Gaddafi one minute and turn him into the world's worst criminal next. Those who wonder why Israel is constantly denounced by Europe while Muslim tyrants are pandered to, need only understand this simple fact. There is neither trust nor honesty in foreign policy.

Bush's invasion of Iraq, ill-considered as it was, had a basic germ of idealism in it. That idealism is wholly and completely absent from European foreign affairs, which is precisely why it stirred so much cynicism and rage. Bush genuinely believed that Iraq and the rest of the Muslim world could be made better if we just showed them what was possible. But Bush is gone now, and this is about trade, money and power. That iron triangle whose shape is regional stability and whose name is hypocrisy.

It is why we are now spending billions of dollars on regime change in Libya, while ignoring genocide elsewhere. It's why a man who denounced the overthrow of Saddam, who actually did commit genocide, is now part of a campaign against Gaddafi, who has not. We are ensuring stability. The stable order. The mold of convenience. Get your war on with Obama and see Iraq repeat itself a second time as farce. Marx would have been proud.
Read more at sultanknish.blogspot.com
 

Egipto: cortam orelha a um cristão

Suposto proxeneta de mulheres, algumas das quais muçulmanas. Se aos ladrões cortam as mãos, por que razão aos putativos proxenetas cortam as orelhas?

Los islamistas siguen actuando a placer en Egipto contra los cristianos y un numeroso grupo le ha cortado la oreja a uno.  

Un grupo de supuestos islamistas radicales, ayudados por varios vecinos, cortaron una oreja a un cristiano al que acusaban de dirigir una red de prostitución en la localidad de Qena, en el sur de Egipto, informó hoy el diario Al Shuruq.
Según el periódico independiente, la Fiscalía de Qena, donde ocurrió el incidente el pasado lunes, pidió ayer que un equipo médico examinara a la víctima y que la policía científica analizara el coche y la casa del supuesto proxeneta, que fueron quemados por el grupo de radicales, según recoge Efe.
La Fiscalía ordenó, asimismo, el arresto inmediato de los autores de la agresión, según los cuales la víctima, identificada como Ayman Anwar Mitri, utilizaba su apartamento como centro de operaciones para dirigir una red de prostitutas, entre las que había musulmanas.
Uno de los vecinos del agredido dijo a Al Shuruq que los agresores no habían actuado antes por miedo al cuerpo especial de la policía encargado de los delitos contra la Seguridad del Estado, pero que ahora, tras su disolución, habían decidido irrumpir en la casa.
"Hubiéramos reaccionado de la misma manera si el dueño de la casa hubiera sido musulmán", dijo el vecino, que el periódico no identifica, ni tampoco aclara si participó en el asalto.
Por su parte, "una fuente cristiana" citada por el rotativo afirmó que miembros de su comunidad denunciaron el incidente porque los islamistas aplicaron una versión estricta de la Sharía (ley islámica) antes de probar que la víctima estaba implicada en la dirección de la supuesta red de prostitución.
A través de la red social de Facebook, numerosos cristianos, que representan un diez por ciento de la población egipcia, de unos ochenta millones de habitantes, condenaron el incidente y pidieron que se presenten a la Justicia a los islamistas implicados en el hecho.
Read more at www.libertaddigital.com
 See this Amp at http://amplify.com/u/bwf5w

2M$ pela cabeça de Terry Jones

Terry Jones é o pastor protestante que planeou uma queima massiva de Alcorões e acabou por queimar apenas um. Suponho que o número não faça diferença: há que cortar a cabeça ao «infiél»:

Amplify’d from www.minutodigital.com
En Pakistán, dictan una fatua en la que se ofrece la suma de  2.200.000 dólares para quien dé muerte a Terry Jones por quemar el Corán.

El lunes pasado, el pastor protestante Terry Jones, quemó un ejemplar del Corán en el interior de su iglesia. A diferencia de lo ocurrido en septiembre de 2010, fecha en la que Jones anunció la quema del “Libro Santo”,  lo que produjo una tumultuosa reacción en el mundo, ahora, los pronunciamientos sobre el “acto sacrílego” han sido tibios salvo en Pakistán.

Ibrahim Hooper, portavoz del Consejo Islámico Americano, ha manifestado escuetamente que “Terry Jones, ya ha tenido sus 15 minutos de gloria, y nosotros no vamos a darle ni uno más”.

Sin embargo, en Pakistán la furia se ha desatado. El Presidente Asif Zarzari ha condenado la profanación en el parlamento, y los terroristas musulmanes de Jamaat-ub-Dawad (grupo prohibido) han ofrecido 2.200.000 de dólares al creyente de Alá que asesine a Jones.

Zarzari, ha demostrado su rechazo por la reducción a cenizas de un Corán en una ignota población de la Florida profunda, sin embargo, no ha considerado relevante que ése mismo día fueran abatidos a balazos dos cristianos en la localidad paquistaní de Hyderabad.

El lunes 21 de marzo, unos musulmanes dispararon sobre 4 cristianos, de los que 2 murieron y otros 2 permanecen en estado crítico. Según un familiar  de las víctimas, la policía, que se limitó a detener a dos jóvenes que nada tenían que ver con el crimen, actuó como si el hecho fuera intrascendente.

El doble asesinado se produjo frente a una iglesia  en la que se celebraba el 30 aniversario de su fundación. Una de las víctimas es Younis Nasih de 47 años, que deja viuda y 4 huérfanos. 

Read more at www.minutodigital.com
 

21.3.11

O Conselho Europeu para a Fatwa e Pesquisa: "O Apóstata se Mata para Proteger a Religião e a Comunidade"

Traduzido do árabe do Conselho Europeu para a Fatwa e Pesquisa, o qual está ligado à Irmandade Muçulmana, 16 Ago 2008 (see the English here):
Título: Se entende a matança como limitando a liberdade da consciência?
Dato: 16 Ago 2008 
Pergunta: Alguém que se convertiu ao Islã de Polônia, foi perguntado por um ateu perverso sobre a pena por alguém que se apostata da religão de Alá Todopoderoso. Como deve responder? Ele entende a matança como limitando a liberdade da consciência. 
Resposta: A questão de matando o apostáta é uma função do estado. Seu julgamento pertence ao governo Islámico. Esta não é a preocupação das fundações Islámicas, nem das associações ou dos centros. Um grupo dos Salafis e Imãs são da opinião que nem todo apostáta merece a matança, mas só aqueles que abertamente cometem a apostasia, ou chamam pela fitna, ou pronunciam coisas prejudiciais em contra de Alá e seu Profeta (que a paz esteja com ele) e os crentes. [O apostáta] se mata para proteger a religião e a comunidade de sua corrupção, e não para limitar as liberdades, pois ele por sua ação está infringindo nos direitos dos outros. Os interesses do estado e da sociedade vêm em frente do interesse pessoal dos indivíduos. Em verdade, esta questão é parecida do que se chama na lei contemporária como a "alta traição" por causa do dano que causa.

20.3.11

De Gaza: Os Judeus Não Têm Nenhum Direito ao Jerusalém; Os Israelitas Modernos São Somente "Bandos de Crime Organizado, Matança e Racismo Degenerado"

Não constitui grande surpresa ver antisemitismo vindo de Gaza. Este revisionismo histórico para negar qualquer direito que dos judeus em relação à Palestina parece ser muito comúm no mundo árabe. Recorda-me o excelente livro de Nonie Darwish, intitulado "Now They Call Me Infidel" ("Agora Chamam-me de Infiel") no qual ela explica que, durante a sua infância, no Egipto nunca tinha ouvido falar da antiga história dos judeus na Palestina. Todos os jovens egípcios cresceram aprendendo que os judeus não tinham qualquer direito a Jerusalém, ponto de vista expressado no artigo em apreço. Este modo de pensar prepara o caminho para o terrorismo Islâmico contra dos cidadãos israelitas, assim como contra os judeus em todo o mundo.
Veja o árabe original aqui.
See the English translation here.
Judaismo Não É Uma Nacionalidade Distinta, Mas Sim Uma Adquirida
Said Sabah, Donia al-Watan, 8 Dec 2010
Sionismo é uma combinação colonial, pois todas as suas acções, as quais não contribuíram à estabilidade, nem da Palestina, nem da região, foram apoiadas pelos poderes coloniais desde a sua formação. Desde o mandato britânico sobre Palestina, esta terra sagrada não presenciou nada senão traição, engano, malícia, iniquidade, guerra, destruição, matança, agressão e o expulsão de pessoas das suas casas.
A Britânia colonial, em toda a sua generosidade, deu à Palestina um estado para os sioinistas, os quais não estão ligados à religião da Judeia por nenhum vínculo, uma vez que a religião dos filhos de Israel não merece ser manchada pela culpa daqueles traidores, muito distantes daquela raça Israelita antiga que morou, por um tempo curto, numa parte desta terra abençoada.
Palestina não foi uma nação especial para os judeus em tempos antigos, pois quando formaram sua nação, já habitavam nestas terras as tribos árabes, de quem descendem os palestinos e nações vizinhas. A natureza Árabe de Palestina não é discutida, pois o povo cananito-árabe que habitava esta terra antes que existiram os judeus foi uma extensão das tribos árabes que até agora nunca saíram de Palestina.
Sabe-se, através da história antiga como da moderna, que quando os judeus chegaram  à Palestina, se apoderaram pela força de partes dela. Moraram ali por não mais de 7 décadas, ou 70 anos, antes de serem vencidos e dispersos por toda a terra, antes da queda do seu reino e seus templos. Assim o judaísmo passou só um tempo brevíssimo (em Palestina), e não produziu nada de importância. Foi o cristianismo, que apareceu depois do judaismo, que permaneceu até o advento de islão. [...]
...bandos de crime organizado, matança, e racismo degenerado, de várias raças e etnias, e os quais falam as línguas distintas de seus paises nativos, se chegaram a ser uma nação religiosa e racista, em prejuízo do povo palestino. [...]

Alargamento da equipa

É com grande alegria que escrevo para anunciar e para me regozijar com a entrada de mais um membro para a equipa do Nada Disto É Novo. Trata-se de al-Mutarajjam, autor do precioso Translating Jihad, blogue que põe à disposição dos leitores de língua inglesa traduções de artigos da imprensa de língua árabe. O trabalho de al-Mutarajjam é especialmente importante, porque nos permite ter acesso a forums onde os muçulmanos falam desabridamente, sem as cautelas e os eufemismos, sem a taqiyya que usam para dar uma imagem amistosa do islão. Através do al-Mutarajjam, temos acesso ao islão no seu estado puro, ou seja, em toda a sua perversidade.
O al-Mutarajjam fala português e deu-me o prazer de aceitar o convite para publicar aqui traduções suas para a nossa língua.
Ao al-Mutarajjam as boas-vindas em nome da equipa do blogue e votos de uma colaboração frutuosa.

18.3.11

UE: crucifixos não violam direitos

Amplify’d from spedeus.blogspot.com
O Tribunal Europeu dos Direitos do Homem ratificou a sua sentença de Novembro de 2009, ao sentenciar que a presença de crucifixos nas escolas públicas italianas não viola a educação nem a liberdade de pensamento e religião.


A nova sentença, definitiva e inapelável, que foi aprovada com 15 votos a favor e 2 contra, assinala que a Itália não infringe a Convenção Europeia dos Direitos Humanos e encontra-se dentro dos limites no exercício no que ao ensino diz respeito das suas no que à educação se refere, ao manter os crucifixos nas escolas públicas.

(Fonte: ‘El Mundo’ com tradução de JPR)
Read more at spedeus.blogspot.com
 

Espanha: profanação progressista

Como é bela a ordem social progressista:

Entraron en tropel a la antesala de la capilla. El capellán no logró que desistieran en su empeño. Se puso enmedio pero resultó zarandeado.
un numeroso grupo de chicos y chicas entró en la capilla del campus de Somosaguas y tras leer en voz alta sus críticas hacia la Iglesia Católica y proferir insultos contra el clero, varias de las jóvenes, rodeando el altar, se desnudaron de cintura para arriba entre los aplausos y vítores del resto de los gamberros. Una alumna, esta sí, de Económicas que, en esos momentos, rezaba en la iglesia, cuenta que dos de las gamberras, ya sin ropa, «hicieron alarde de su tendencia homosexual».

Según ha podido saber ABC, los responsables religiosos de este templo universitario tienen intención de interponer una denuncia en la comisaría de Policía de Pozuelo de Alarcón, municipio al que pertenece este campus de la Universidad Complutense (UCM). Los ataques a esta capilla no son nuevos. A principios de esta semana, según fuentes universitarias, la paredes y puertas del recinto aparecieron llenas de pintadas con más improperios hacia la religión católica. También se aludía a los casos de pederastia entre el clero. Ayer, sin ir más lejos, la mayor parte de las pintadas estaban ya tapadas con pintura y, salvo algunas frases o palabras, no se podía leer lo que había debajo.

Esta capilla lo es, en realidad, de toda la Universidad Complutense si bien se encuentra físicamente en uno de los edificios pertenecientes a la facultad de Psicología, en el campus de Somosaguas.

Fotos del Papa
Algunas de las autoridades académicas consultadas por este periódico han confirmado que, en efecto, el grupo de vándalos era numerosos. Se habla, incluso, de entre 60 y 70 jóvenes. Lo que parece claro es que procedían de la facultad de Ciencias Políticas y que iban protestando y dejándose ver por todo el recinto universitario de Somosaguas. «Llevaban fotos del Papa y, algunos de ellos, pañuelos verdes en la cabeza», ha comentado un representante académico.

Según testigos presenciales, los salvajes entraron en tropel a la antesala de la capilla. El capellán se percató del barullo y quiso que desistieran en su empeño. Imposible. El hombre se puso enmedio pero resultó zarandeado. «¡Menos mal que no han destrozado nada!», relataba otra autoridad académica del campus de Somosaguas.

Este capellan responsable de la capilla universitaria declinó ayer hacer cualquier comentario a este periódico. Nos remitió a la Delegación de Pastoral Universitaria donde, durante toda la tarde, nadie atendió al otro lado del teléfono.

Provocación
«Al margen de las creencias religiosas de cada uno de “estos”, no me resisto a alzar la voz ante un hecho tan lamentable como este», asegura S.V.H., alumna de la Complutense. «¿Qué habría pasado —se pregunta— si algo así se hubiera producido en una mezquita? Que “esos” sepan que los católicos nunca responderán a la provocación con provocación para defenderse».

«Pero nadie podrá callarnos —concluye esta universitaria—, ante el más mínimo atropello, burla, intimidación o cualquier otro apremio ilegítimo que ofenda los sentimientos religiosos de nadie. Además, acciones como estas están castigadas por nuestro ordenamiento jurídico. ¡Qué fácil y cobarde es actuar en el anonimato!».

Sin embargo, lo del anonimato es relativo porque, según han asegurado varios cargos universitarios, «si se quiere, se podría reconocer a alguno de los que ayer entró en la capilla».

Boicot en Barcelona
Lo que esta semana ha ocurrido en la capilla del campus de la Complutense en Somosaguas es, para algunos universitarios, «otro ataque laicista» similar al sucedido en la Universidad de Barcelona (UB) entre noviembre de 2010 y enero de 2011.

Y es que a finales de noviembre, los alumnos de la facultad de Económicas de la universidad catalana con encontraban con que cada vez que querían entrar a misa en su capilla, grupos radicales se lo impedían. A finales de enero de este año, la institución de enseñanza superior de Barcelona, ante la magnitud del boicot, cerró temporalmente la capilla y suspendió las misas.

Read more at www.religionenlibertad.com