Secularist Stupidity and Religious Wars
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
That demagogues
and agitators are exploiting those cartoons of Mohammed to advance
a war of civilizations and expel Europeans from the Middle East
seems undeniable.
But that
does not excuse the paralyzing stupidity of that Danish paper in
running those cartoons or the arrogant irresponsibility of European
newspapers in plastering those cartoons all over their front pages.
The storm
first broke last September, when Jyllands-Posten published 12 caricatures
of Mohammed, including a lampoon of the Prophet with a terrorist
bomb as a turban. In the Islamic faith, any depiction of the face
of Mohammed is forbidden.
The Danish
paper knew this. It published the cartoons to protest "the rejection
of modern, secular society" by Muslims. The cartoons were thus a
defiant provocation. And they succeeded.
The Middle
East responded with a boycott of Danish foods and goods. But when,
in the name of press solidarity, Le Soir and Le Monde in Paris,
El Pais in Madrid and Die Welt in Berlin republished the cartoons
on page one, Islam exploded. For this was an in-your-face declaration
by the secularist media of the European Union that it will exercise
its right to insult any God, any Prophet, any faith, whenever it
so chooses.
"Enough
lessons from these reactionary bigots," said Serge Faubert, editor
of Le Soir. "Just because the Quran bans images of Mohammed doesn't
mean non-Muslims have to submit to this."
Faubert,
however, is not a Danish soldier in the Shi'ite sector of Iraq.
Innocents will pay the price of his heroism.
The U.S.
State Department seemed to empathize with Muslim rage, stating that
"inciting religious or ethnic hatred in this manner is unacceptable."
But, within hours, State had retreated to neutral ground: "While
we share the offense that Muslims have taken at these images, we
at the same time vigorously defend the right of individuals to express
points of view."
As of today
the Danish consulate in Beirut has been burned, Danish embassies
have been stormed, and Danes are fleeing the Middle East. Europeans
are getting out of the West Bank, Gaza and Beirut, where mobs are
attacking embassies and Christian churches.
Islamic
countries have recalled ambassadors from Copenhagen. People have
been injured and property destroyed in mob assaults as far away
as Indonesia. Relations between the West and the Islamic world have
been dealt another rupturing blow.
And for
what? What was the purpose of this juvenile idiocy by the Europress?
Is this what freedom of the press is all about the freedom to
insult the faith of a billion people and start a religious war?
Can Europeans
be that ignorant of the power of the press to inflame when Bismarck's
editing of just a few words in the Ems telegram ignited the Franco-Prussian
war? Did Europeans learn nothing from the Salman Rushdie episode?
Or the firestorm that gripped the Islamic world when Christian ministers
in the United States called Mohammed a "terrorist"?
European
governments are wringing their hands over the rage and violence
unleashed, but they seem paralyzed. What is the matter? Why cannot
they denounce press irresponsibility while defending press freedom?
Even friends of the West like Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan, President
Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey have denounced
these cartoons as insults to Islamic values and deeply damaging
to Western interests.
British
Foreign Minister Jack Straw deplored republication of the cartoons
as "insensitive ... disrespectful ... wrong." But German Interior
Minister Wolfgang Shauble haughtily dissented, "Here, in Europe,
governments have nothing to say about which publisher publishes
what."
What hypocrisy.
When it comes to what Germans are most sensitive about, Hitler and
the Holocaust, they are ruthless censors. British historian David
Irving has spent three months in a Viennese prison awaiting trial
on Feb. 20 for speeches he made 15 years ago in Austria. Skeptics
and deniers of the Holocaust are prosecuted, fined and imprisoned
in Europe with the enthusiastic endorsement of the European press.
Nor are
we all that different. Sen. Trent Lott was ousted as majority leader
for a birthday-party compliment to 100-year-old Strom Thurmond.
Atlanta Braves pitcher John Rocker was almost lynched for saying
he considers New York a social pigsty. There were demands that Rocker
undergo psychiatric counseling.
We have
"speech codes" in colleges and "hate crimes" laws to protect minorities
from abusive remarks. But newspapers that hail these codes throw
a blanket of "artistic freedom" over scatological art that degrades
religious symbols from putting a figure of Christ in a jar of
urine to a "painting" of the Virgin Mary surrounded by female genitalia
and elephant dung that hung in a Brooklyn museum.
What
has happened in Europe is that the secular press, which loves to
mock the beliefs and symbols of religious faith, has now insulted
a deadly serious religion that answers insults with action.
February
7, 2006
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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