Where’s the Outrage?
by
John W. Payne
by John W. Payne
One
of controversial cartoonist Ted Rall’s most
recent pieces is captioned "If Terri Schiavo Was Iraqi."
The image is that of a hospital bombed by an American jet moments
earlier, the message being that no one in America cares what happens
to Iraqi citizens, and, sadly, Rall seems to be largely correct.
Over the past few weeks, the media has sustained itself by consuming
nothing but Terri Schiavo, and while her death is tragic, the massive
coverage lavished upon it eclipses the fact that deadly firefights
and car bombs are still fairly common events in Iraq. When the esteemed
British medical journal The Lancet published an
article in late October 2004 finding that at least 100,000
Iraqis have been killed because of the invasion and subsequent occupation
of their country (the study excepted Fallujah because it was impossible
to make any reliable estimate about the deaths in that city, so
obviously the number is actually much higher), the story was on
the news…for one night. So, to recap, the thirteen-day death of
one woman who most doctors ruled brain dead was practically broadcast
minute by minute on twenty-four hour news networks and then usually
loudly argued about by two equally asinine individuals, while the
news that the United States government probably killed well over
100,000 people in a year and a half received a perfunctory two-minute
mention one night and then faded from view.
Why
is this? Certainly nationalism plays a role: from an American nationalist’s
point of view, a foreigner’s life can never be valued as highly
as an American’s, especially in times of war. But this cannot be
the whole story. Suppose for a moment that America invaded and occupied
some Western European nation. Can anyone seriously imagine the American
government, in this day and age, treating its people with such disdain
as to declare "We don’t do body counts" for your dead?
I think the difference is that Western Europe is predominately Christian
whereas Iraq is overwhelmingly Muslim and often perceived by Americans
as monolithically so. In most Americans’ eyes, this adds an additional
layer of otherness to Iraqis that Europeans lack, and although we
may not like to admit it, there is a tremendous hostility to Muslims
in large parts of the American populace.
For
example, when I first returned to my small hometown in Southeast
Missouri after the terrorist attacks of September 11, I was passed
on the main highway through town by a Chevy Silverado bedecked with
two large American flags, and written on the back window was something
to the effect of "Bomb Those Towelheads." I also noticed
that the truck was receiving honks of support and thumbs ups from
a large minority of the other drivers on the road. What is striking
about the driver’s statement, aside from its blatant racism, is
how encompassing it is. While "Bomb Afghanistan" may not
have the same panache, it would have been more specific to the situation,
but instead the term "towelheads" was chosen, which could
include basically every Muslim anywhere. The message presents a
strident us versus them mentality defined by religion. A substantially
moderated version of the same mindset was expressed by religious
right leader Pat Robertson in an August
2004 speech to several hundred evangelicals in honor of a visit
by Israeli ambassador Daniel Ayalon. Robertson described Israel
as a first line of defense against "a fanatical religion intent
on returning to the feudalism of eight-century Arabia." He
continued, "[t]he entire world is being convulsed by a religious
struggle; the struggle is whether…the moon god of Mecca, known as
Allah, is supreme, or whether the Judeo-Christian Jehovah God of
the Bible is supreme." Putting aside the bizarre notion of
Allah as a "moon god" and the near implication of polytheism
in the statement, Robertson, a major leader of the Christian right,
clearly divides the world into two warring religious camps. It is
not surprising that anyone who shares a similar mentality is absolutely
without remorse for the deaths of 100,000 Iraqis…that is, as long
as they regard Iraqis as uniformly Muslim.
But
this is not actually the case. There are 800,000 Christians in Iraq,
3% of the population, far higher in relative terms than the 1% of
Americans who are Muslims. And, as Arnold Beichman recently
noted in the Washington Times, their fortunes have declined
precipitously since Operation Iraqi Freedom began. It seems that
Islamic fanatics in Iraq see the Christians as American collaborators,
which is often true because many Iraqi Christians speak both English
and Arabic, so they have often served as translators, but even when
this is not the case they are seen as American supporters because
America is a predominately Christian nation. Consequently, churches
have been bombed, an Archbishop has been kidnapped (he was subsequently
released), and Christians
are frequently gunned down. Iraqi Christians have responded
by fleeing the country, often
to Syria, which remains a secular, Baathist dictatorship. I
cannot help but think that if more American hawkish Christians knew
the dramatic harm the war has done to the cause of Christianity
in Iraq they would, at the very least, be more incensed over this
war.
Of
course, Iraq is simply the most visible example of Christian decline
in the Middle East. In relative terms, the Christian populations
in Lebanon and among the Palestinians have declined significantly
since the end of World War II, and one of the reasons is American
foreign policy as it has been constituted over the last forty years.
America is seen as a Christian nation, and when it so willingly
supports Israel and attacks predominately Muslim countries, the
image of Christians everywhere is tarnished. American Christians
face a choice: support Christianity or support American foreign
policy, because they cannot do both. Also, it behooves opponents
of the war in Iraq in particular, and current American foreign policy
in general, to learn about the Middle East’s many peoples and educate
others about them. The region is far from monolithic in any area.
There are Arabs, Turks, Assyrians, Persians, Kurds, Pashtuns, and
others, who may be Muslim (Sunni, Shia, and Sufi), Christian, Druze,
Zoroastrian, or Alawi. There are even smatterings of Jewish communities
left in Turkey, Syria, and, yes, even
in the theocratic Iran. The more people understand that the
Middle East is differentiated and complex, the less likely it is
that someone will fearlessly state, "Bomb Them Towelheads."
April
4, 2005
John
Payne [send him mail] is
a senior at Washington University in Saint Louis majoring in history
and a proud native of Poplar Bluff, MO.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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