The Tragedy of Ignorance
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
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A long time
friend exclaimed: "Of course the war in Iraq is working! If
it wasn’t every street corner would have a mosque and we’d all be
forced to convert at gunpoint!"
It was rather
a sad thing to hear. I couldn’t help but wonder where his shocking
Islamophobia came from. I have to suspect the usual culprits, the
mainstream news, late-night comics, talk radio, the list goes on.
Such is the
era of George W. Bush’s with us or against us mentality.
However it would be unfair to place this Western fear of Islam on
George’s shoulders. His foreign policies have exacerbated the fear
of Islam but as much as I think he is incompetent at best, George
W. Bush is not to blame. The Western fear of Islam goes back centuries
since the days of the Crusades to reclaim the Holy Land and the
defeat of the Crusaders by Salah
al-Din. In America the Iranian Islamic Revolution of 1979 with
the hostage crisis was a turning point towards greater fear of Islam.
My friend’s
fear and ignorance of Islam is staggering. But it’s not uncommon.
The fact is that he, like many are afraid. They are afraid of what
they do not understand.
Most Americans
know nothing about the true nature of Islam. What they do know is
often distorted media presentations governed by agenda driven think
tanks and "opinion leaders." It is what Robert Parry refers
to as "perception management."
In the post-9/11
era, managing the perception of Islam as a violent aggressive religion
has been a simple task, too simple. Hysterical angry "experts"
with little or no real understanding have been more than happy to
drive the campaign of Islamophobia. They write hate-filled books,
rant on TV and radio and fill the Internet with their fear mongering…
often to make a buck.
The desperate
acts of resistance groups Hamas and Hezbollah have not helped their
cause or the perception of Islam in the west. But then their actions
are rarely portrayed in a fair context. The inflammatory rhetoric
of Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has served only to exacerbate
the situation. All too often, his statements have been deliberately
misquoted and out of context in the Western press. Ahmadinejad is
a master propagandist and politician grandstanding to the Iranians
and much of the world. Everything he says should be taken with a
heavy dose of salt.
Is this representation
of Islam as a collective of hysterical fanatics realistic?
There are those
who sincerely believe it to be true. However, is that a rational
view? Not hardly. It is not based on reason or experience but rather
emotion and ignorance.
A
survey conducted between 2001 and 2007 by the Gallup Research
Center of tens of thousands of Muslims around the globe failed to
find a trend of murderous hysteria. The vast majority of Muslims
have the exact same values as most Christians and Jews. Family,
friends leading a good moral life are as important to Muslims as
anyone else.
But what about
terror and the word that sends shivers up the spines of the Western
backs: jihad?
Terror is simply
a tactic most often used by weaker resistance movements and radicals
rather than a unique trait of Islam. One of the most brutal organizations
which employs terror, and has for years, is the secular group the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam in Sri Lanka… not Muslims.
Often terror
is employed on a grand scale by the most powerful states. I find
it hard to view General Tecumseh Sherman’s famed March to the Sea,
a campaign waged on civilians, or the bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki as nothing more than state-sponsored terror.
And what of
jihad?
Often sited
in the mainstream press as a "holy war" implying Muslims
waging war against "infidels." Nothing could be further
from the truth. A more accurate and general description of jihad
is that it is a struggle to live a just and righteous life
as God intends.
However, there
have always been those throughout history who have abused the term
jihad, as a rationalization for aggressive actions be they
empire expansion or the suicide bombing of a night club in Tel Aviv.
Is the use
of religious rationalizations limited to Islam or have Christian
and Jewish leaders been guilty of the same thing? Could it be Islam
is not to blame for the murderous nature of "humanity"?
Returning from
battle to defend his growing community of Islam from extermination
the Prophet Muhammad is said to have told his followers: "We
return from the lesser jihad (battle) to the greater jihad."
The greater jihad Muhammad was speaking of was the daily
struggle of the soul.
Muhammad was
breaking with the tribal social structure of seventh century Arabia
and rattling long-set pagan beliefs. As such, Muhammad and his community
of Islam had to defend themselves against the status quo. Muhammad’s
wars were political decisions not zealous religious campaigns. In
Islam defense is acceptable, aggression is not.
Muhammad considered
Jews and Christians to be "People of the Book."
The Patriarchs, Moses and Jesus are all considered prophets in Islam.
Jews, Christians and Muslims all believe in the same god. There’s
nothing in the Qur’an about killing non-Muslims simply because they’re
non-Muslims. That concept is pure ignorance and should not be tolerated.
Possibly a
good fair history
of Islam, a good biography of the Prophet
Muhammad and a good English interpretation of the Qur’an
might be a better source of information than the ravings of hate-filled
lunatics.
The
fact is that Islam is not a threat to anybody. Ignorance and fanaticism
is a threat to everyone no matter where it originates. It’s a universal
curse that favors no religion over another.
Islamophobia
is a disease eating away at the Western soul and endangering all
of mankind. Now we have our own jihad to eradicate it once
and for always.
April
15, 2008
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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