EFTA02026085.pdf
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To: jeevacationtbgmail.com[jeevacation@gmail.corn]
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent: Mon 10/1/2012 6:17:53 PM
Subject: October 1 update
1 October, 2012
Article 1.
The Wall Street Journal
A New Course for the Middle East
Mitt Romney
Article 2.
NYT
Waiting for an Arab Spring of Ideas
Tariq Ramadan
Article 3.
The Daily Beast
Muslim Rage Is About Politics, Not
Religion
Husain Haggani
The Daily Star
Hamas corruption weighs heavily on Gaza
Tamir Haddad
TIME
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Why India's `Muslim Rage' Is Different from
the Middle East
Krista Mahr
Project Syndicate
The Vagina Chronicles
Naomi Wolf
Atli°lo I
The Wall Street Journal
A New Course for the Middle East
Mitt Romney
September 30, 2012 -- Disturbing developments are sweeping
across the greater Middle East. In Syria, tens of thousands of
innocent people have been slaughtered. In Egypt, the Muslim
Brotherhood has come to power, and the country's peace treaty
with Israel hangs in the balance. In Libya, our ambassador was
murdered in a terrorist attack. U.S. embassies throughout the
region have been stormed in violent protests. And in Iran, the
ayatollahs continue to move full tilt toward nuclear-weapons
capability, all the while promising to annihilate Israel.
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These developments are not, as President Obama says, mere
"bumps in the road." They are major issues that put our security
at risk.
Yet amid this upheaval, our country seems to be at the mercy of
events rather than shaping them. We're not moving them in a
direction that protects our people or our allies.
And that's dangerous. If the Middle East descends into chaos, if
Iran moves toward nuclear breakout, or if Israel's security is
compromised, America could be pulled into the maelstrom.
We still have time to address these threats, but it will require a
new strategy toward the Middle East.
The first step is to understand how we got here. Since World
War II, America has been the leader of the Free World. We're
unique in having earned that role not through conquest but
through promoting human rights, free markets and the rule of
law. We ally ourselves with like-minded countries, expand
prosperity through trade and keep the peace by maintaining a
military second to none.
But in recent years, President Obama has allowed our leadership
to atrophy. Our economy is stuck in a "recovery" that barely
deserves the name. Our national debt has risen to record levels.
Our military, tested by a decade of war, is facing devastating
cuts thanks to the budgetary games played by the White House.
Finally, our values have been misapplied—and
misunderstood—by a president who thinks that weakness will
win favor with our adversaries.
By failing to maintain the elements of our influence and by
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stepping away from our allies, President Obama has heightened
the prospect of conflict and instability. He does not understand
that an American policy that lacks resolve can provoke
aggression and encourage disorder.
The Middle East is a case in point. The Arab Spring presented
an opportunity to help move millions of people from oppression
to freedom. But it also presented grave risks. We needed a
strategy for success, but the president offered none. And now he
seeks to downplay the significance of the calamities of the past
few weeks.
The same incomprehension afflicts the president's policy toward
Israel. The president began his term with the explicit policy of
creating "daylight" between our two countries. He recently
downgraded Israel from being our "closest ally" in the Middle
East to being only "one of our closest allies." It's a diplomatic
message that will be received clearly by Israel and its adversaries
alike. He dismissed Israel's concerns about Iran as mere "noise"
that he prefers to "block out." And at a time when Israel needs
America to stand with it, he declined to meet with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
In this period of uncertainty, we need to apply a coherent
strategy of supporting our partners in the Middle East—that is,
both governments and individuals who share our values.
This means restoring our credibility with Iran. When we say an
Iranian nuclear-weapons capability—and the regional instability
that comes with it-is unacceptable, the ayatollahs must be
made to believe us.
It means placing no daylight between the United States and
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Israel. And it means using the full spectrum of our soft power to
encourage liberty and opportunity for those who have for too
long known only corruption and oppression. The dignity of
work and the ability to steer the course of their lives are the best
alternatives to extremism.
But this Middle East policy will be undermined unless we
restore the three sinews of our influence: our economic strength,
our military strength and the strength of our values. That will
require a very different set of policies from those President
Obama is pursuing.
The 20th century became an American Century because we were
steadfast in defense of freedom. We made the painful sacrifices
necessary to defeat totalitarianism in all of its guises. To defend
ourselves and our allies, we paid the price in treasure and in
soldiers who never came home.
Our challenges are different now, but if the 21st century is to be
another American Century, we need leaders who understand that
keeping the peace requires American strength in all of its
dimensions.
Mr. Romney is the Republican Party candidatefor president.
Ankle 2.
NYT
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Waiting for an Arab Spring of Ideas
Tariq Ramadan
September 30, 2012 -- DURING a recent visit to the United
States, I was asked by intellectuals and journalists: Were we
misled, during the Arab awakening, into thinking that Muslims
could actually embrace democratic ideals?
The short answer is no. Participants in the recent violent
demonstrations over an Islamophobic video were a tiny
minority. Their violence was unacceptable. They do not
represent the millions of Muslims who have taken to the streets
since 2010 in a disciplined, nonviolent manner to bring down
dictatorships.
Many Americans were nonetheless shocked by the chaos and
bloodshed across Muslim countries, believing that they had
come generously to the aid of the Arab peoples during the
uprisings. But Arabs, and Muslims in general, have a longer
memory and a broader view. Their mistrust is fueled by
America's decades-long support for dictators who
accommodated its economic and security interests; by the
invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan; by the humiliating treatment
of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay; and by
America's seemingly permanent and unconditional support for
Israel.
The United States and its European allies would be well advised
to examine why Muslims are seething. Withdrawing from
Afghanistan, respecting United Nations resolutions and treaty
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obligations with regard to Palestine, calling back the killer
drones and winding up the "war on terror" would be excellent
places to start.
However, the time has come to stop blaming the West for the
colonialism and imperialism of the past. Muslim-majority
societies must jettison their historic posture as victims and
accept that they are empowered actors, as millions of Arabs
demonstrated last year by coming out into the streets and
changing the course of history.
The timeworn dichotomy of "Islam versus the West" is giving
way to an era of multipolar relations. The world's economic
center of gravity is shifting eastward. But the growing
prominence of China, India and Russia, and of emerging powers
like Brazil, South Africa and Turkey, does not automatically
guarantee more justice and more democracy. Some Muslims are
too quick to rejoice at the decline of American power. They
seem unaware that what might replace it could well lead to a
regression in social and human rights and to new forms of
international dependency.
The Arab peoples, like those throughout Latin America, Africa
and Asia, cannot, and do not want to, disregard the cultural and
religious traditions that have long defined and nurtured them. As
they pursue values like freedom, justice, equality, autonomy and
pluralism, and new models of democracy and of international
relations, they need to draw on Islamic traditions. Islam can be a
fertile ground for political creativity — and not an obstacle to
progress, as Orientalist thinkers in the West have so often
claimed.
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The Arab world, and Muslim-majority societies, need not only
political uprisings, but also a thoroughgoing intellectual
revolution from within that will open the door to economic
change; to spiritual, religious, cultural and artistic liberation;
and to the empowerment of women. The task is not an easy one.
A struggle for political and religious authority is taking place in
these societies. There are deep divisions among Sunnis —
traditionalists, secularists, reformers, Sufi mystics — and also
between Sunnis and Shiites.
At the moment, Arab thought has been hindered by a barren
ideological construct that pits secularists against Islamists,
making it impossible for either to indulge in in-depth reflection
about the intellectual limitations that afflict both of them.
Westernized secular elites, for all their talk of democracy and
human rights, often are carrying over former colonial agendas
and are deeply disconnected from the people they claim to
represent. Or if they aren't — like some grass-roots movements
on the left — their influence is marginal at best. Some have
collaborated with dictators, accepted cronyism or benefited from
official corruption. Others have remained close to the inner
circles of the military (as in Egypt, Tunisia, Syria and Iraq). By
standing against any overlapping of religion and politics, they
have put forward a vision of democratization that is incoherent
and disconnected from Islamic memories and traditions.
The Islamists have legitimacy, having paid a heavy price in
opposing dictatorships for decades. They have made electoral
gains in Morocco, Egypt and Tunisia by adapting to the shifts in
power brought about by the protesters and cyberactivists. Yet
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they are facing contradictory expectations: they must remain
faithful to their Islamic credentials while facing foreign pressure
with regard to democratic processes, economic policies and
relations with Israel. No figure embodies these contradictions
more than Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's new president, who tried
last week to forcefully rebut President Obama's absolute defense
of free speech at the United Nations. But calling for limits on
offensive speech is no solution. We don't need more laws. We
need courageous scholars and intellectuals who are willing to
discuss topics their fellow Muslims don't want to hear: their
failings, their tendency to play the victim, the need to take
responsibility for their actions. Only that sort of leadership will
halt the tide of religious populism and emotionally driven
blindness of the masses.
While the example of Turkey's ruling Justice and Development
Party, known as the A.K.P., is interesting, it cannot be a
reference for the entire Middle East. Turkey has a unique
history; its challenges are not the same as those of the Arab
world. The Arab Islamists, even as they celebrate their electoral
successes, may well be entering a far more sensitive period of
their history. They may lose the Islamic credibility they had as
opposition forces, or be obliged to change and adapt so much
that their political program is abandoned. Winning might be the
beginning of losing.
Meanwhile, Salafi and Wahhabi groups with literalist
interpretations of Islam have become more visible and
politicized over the last five years. Having for decades refused
political participation — equating democracy with kufr
(rejection of Islam) — they are now slowly engaging in politics.
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Some of these groups (known as salafi jihadists) have turned to
violent radicalism. Others, financed by Islamic institutions in
Saudi Arabia and Persian Gulf oil monarchies like Qatar and
Bahrain — supposed allies of the United States — have entered
mainstream politics, where they promote a religious, anti-
democratic populism that plays on emotions, demonizes the
West (especially America) and actively undermines the struggle
for democratic reform. There is a danger that the model of
Afghanistan — where in the 1980s the Taliban, supported by the
Saudi and American governments, became the main force of
resistance to Russian domination — may be repeating itself.
There can be no true democracy in the Middle East without a
profound restructuring of economic priorities, which in turn can
come about only by combating corruption, limiting the
prerogatives of the military, and, above all, reconsidering
economic relations with other countries and the gross
inequalities of wealth and income within Muslim countries. The
emergence of a dynamic civil society is a precondition of
success. Concern for free and critical thought must take the form
of educational policies to build schools and universities, revise
outdated curriculums and enable women to study, work and
become financially independent.
The Arab world has shaken itself out of its lethargy after
decades of apparent resignation and silence. But the uprisings do
not yet amount to a revolution. The Arab world must confront
its historical demons and tackle its infirmities and its
contradictions: when it turns to the task, the awakening will
truly have begun.
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Tariq Ramadan, professor of contemporary Islamic studies at
Oxford University, is the author, most recently, of "Islam and
the Arab Awakening."
Article 3,
The Daily Beast
Muslim Rage Is About Politics, Not
Religion
Husain Haqqan i
October 1, 2012 - Thousands of cellphone subscribers in
Pakistan received an anonymous text message recently
announcing a miracle: an earthquake on Tuesday, Sept. 18, had
destroyed the Washington, D.C. movie theater that was
exhibiting Innocence of Muslims, the controversial film that has
triggered violent protests in several Muslim countries. An email
version of the text message even included a picture of a mangled
structure. Allah, the texter claimed, had shown His anger against
the movie's insult to Islam and Prophet Muhammad, and with
Him on their side the faithful should not be afraid to vent their
anger against the West, which belittles Islam and abuses Islam's
prophet.
There was, of course, no earthquake in Washington, and no
movie theater had been destroyed. In fact, the movie has never
made its way beyond YouTube. But for several days, the
fabricated text message and email made the rounds, forwarded
and reforwarded around Pakistan and in some cases to
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Pakistanis living in the diaspora. It was part of a campaign to
arouse Muslim passions by what author Salman Rushdie has
termed "the outrage industry." Similar false mass messaging
convinced millions after 9/11 that Jews had been warned to stay
away from the Twin Towers, implying a conspiracy that many
still believe without a shred of evidence. Last year, after U.S.
special forces killed Osama bin Laden, anonymous messages
suggested that the raid in Abbottabad was a staged event and bin
Laden had been killed months earlier.
Such well-organized manipulation of sentiment belies the notion
that orchestrated protests are spontaneous expressions of
Muslim rage. Like followers of any other religion, Muslims do
not like insults to their faith or to their prophet. But the protests
that make the headlines are the function of politics, not religion.
Hoping to avoid being accused of siding with blasphemers, the
Pakistani government tried to align itself with the protesters'
cause by declaring a public holiday and calling it "Love of the
Prophet Day." Although 95 percent of Pakistan's 190 million
people are Muslim, only an estimated 45,000 actually took part
in that Friday's demonstrations around the country against
Innocence of Muslims. The protests mattered largely because of
their violence: as many as 17 people were killed and scores
injured.
Men of religion have often slandered each other's faiths. Islam
has endured its share of criticism and abuse over the centuries,
especially from Christians, against whom they fought for control
of the Levant and the southern corners of Europe during the
Crusades and the Ottoman wars. The 14th-century Byzantine
emperor Manuel II Palaeologus hurled the ultimate insult at
Muslims when he declared that everything Muhammad brought
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was evil, "such as his command to spread by the sword the faith
he preached." Historically, Muslims returned the favor by
pointing out the flaws in other religions and outlining their own
perfect faith. Muslim emperors ruled over large non-Muslim
populations while Muslim preachers and Sufi mystics worked to
proselytize and win converts to Islam. But there is no record in
those days of mob violence against foreign envoys or traders in
retaliation for blasphemy against Muhammad or Islam allegedly
committed by Islam's enemies in distant lands.
The phenomenon of outrage over insults to Islam and its final
prophet is a function of modern-era politics. It started during
Western colonial rule, with Muslim politicians seeking issues to
mobilize their constituents. Secular leaders focused on opposing
foreign domination, and Islamists emerged to claim that Islam is
not merely a religion but also a political ideology. Threats to the
faith became a rallying cry for the Islamists, who sought wedge
issues to define their political agenda. To this day, Islamists are
often the ones who draw attention to otherwise obscure attacks
on Islam and then use those attacks to muster popular support.
The effort is often aided by Islamophobes hoping to create their
own wedges by portraying Islam as a threat to Western
civilization. Conservative and practicing Muslims who are not
Islamists are caught in the middle, along with scholarly
commentators on Islamic history and tradition who are not
Islamophobes.
The past two decades have seen periodic outbreaks of protest
over insults to Prophet Muhammad and Islam. In each case, the
protesters were not reacting to something they had seen or read
in the ordinary course of life. With the exception of The Satanic
Verses, none of the objects of complaint were even widely
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accessible until the public was whipped into a fury. The
Islamists first introduced the objectionable material to their
audience and then instigated the outrage by characterizing it as
part of a supposed worldwide conspiracy to denigrate Islam. The
emergence of social media and the swiftness of international
communications have made it easier to choreograph global
campaigns, and in Muslim-majority countries, Islamists tend to
be among those who are most effectively organized to take
advantage of technology for political ends.
An early prototype of these mass-mobilization campaigns
centered on Rangeela Rasool (Playboy Prophet), a salacious
version of Muhammad's life. Published in British India in 1927,
the controversial book was hardly a bestseller. In fact it went
mostly unnoticed until Muslim politicians encountered it two
years later and complained. The British authorities arrested and
tried the book's publisher, Rajpal, only to acquit him. Agitation
by Muslim groups encouraged a young illiterate carpenter by the
single name Ilmuddin to stab the publisher to death in Lahore.
Ilmuddin was given the title of ghazi ("warrior for the faith") by
Islamist political groups and was defended in court, albeit on
technical grounds (and unsuccessfully), by Muhammad Ali
Jinnah, who would later become the founder of Pakistan. The
British amended the Indian penal code to add punishment for
blasphemy and incitement of religious hatred.
The Rangeela Rasool controversy polarized Hindus and
Muslims, particularly in the Punjab. The region eventually had
to be parceled out between the two religions in the 1947
Partition, and the two Punjabs suffered the most brutal
communal violence of that horrific time. Pakistani leaders
sometimes cite the book's publication as an example of how the
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Islamic faith would have been threatened under non-Muslim
rule had the British left the subcontinent undivided. It does not
matter in that political argument that there are roughly as many
Muslims today in India as there are in Pakistan.
"Defending the honor of the prophet" is widely regarded as a
worthy cause, not to be opposed or criticized even by secular
Muslims. If a secular politician dares to point out that the faith
of 1.6 billion people can scarcely be threatened by a book with a
print run of only 1,000 copies, he can easily be targeted as a
defender of blasphemers. The governor of Pakistan's Punjab
province, Salmaan Taseer, was murdered last year by his own
bodyguard for questioning the reasonableness of Pakistan's
blasphemy laws. The country's Islamist media described
Taseer's killer as a latter day Ilmuddin, and lawyers showered
him with rose petals.
Like all modern political tactics, religious protests tend to be
timed for best effect. The Egyptian Nobel laureate Naguib
Mahfouz first published Children of Gabalawi—an allegorical
novel in Arabic that allegedly belittled Islam—in 1959. And yet
the book didn't become the target of significant protests until 30
years later, after Mahfouz won the Nobel Prize for literature, and
Omar Abdel-Rahman, the "Blind Sheik," currently in U.S.
prison for instigating terrorism, condemned the 1959 book. The
publicity surrounding the 1988 Nobel Prize provided an ideal
opportunity for Sheik Omar to rally his base and advance the
cause of polarizing Egyptian society. His fatwa finally caught up
with Mahfouz in 1994, when a knife-wielding Islamist stabbed
the novelist in the neck, leaving him hospitalized for several
weeks and suffering from permanent nerve damage.
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Obscure books and writers can be just as useful. Pakistan's
Jamaat-e-Islami ("Islamic Party") has never done well in
elections, but it has a long record of seeking, publicizing, and
capitalizing on perceived insults to Islam in hope of flexing its
political muscle. Its activists are trained in street protests and
choreographed demonstrations, and the party was one of the
main organizers of the protests against Innocence of Muslims in
Pakistan. Back in 1971, in the midst of the civil war that led to
the creation of Bangladesh (and soon after Jamaat-e-Islami had
suffered a humiliating defeat at the polls), the party discovered
and loudly denounced The Turkish Art of Love, a sex manual
containing derogatory references to Prophet Muhammad that
was published in 1933. During the ensuing riots, Christian
churches were attacked, and liquor shops (which were legal at
the time) were looted. The British Council building in Lahore
was also attacked.
Ironically, all the books that have been targeted for protests over
the years remain available to this day. Rangeela Rasool can be
downloaded from the Internet. Children of Gabalawi continues
to be read in many languages. Even The Turkish Art of Love can
be easily bought almost anywhere in the world. The Satanic
Verses protests of 1989, culminating in Ayatollah Khomeini's
fatwa against author Salman Rushdie, only increased the book's
sales.
If the protests were really supposed to silence insults against
Islam and the Prophet Muhammad, their failure should by now
be obvious. Instead of being shut down, objectionable books and
movies have gained publicity. Obscure publications—and, in the
latest case, Internet posts—have become internationally known.
Rather than ending dissemination of material offensive to
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Muslim sensibilities, the protests have almost always had the
opposite effect. In the case of Innocence of Muslims, the video
was posted on YouTube in June, but hardly anyone paid
attention to it until Egyptian Islamists broadcast it in early
September.
There is nothing in Islamic tradition that requires Muslims to
come out in the streets and throw rocks or set things on fire
every time they hear of someone insulting their faith. Like
Jewish and Christian scriptures, Islam's sacred texts speak of
divine retribution as well as of God's mercy. References to holy
war are interspersed with exhortations to charity, kindness
toward others, and respect for life. Every chapter of the Quran
begins with the words "In the name of Allah (God), the most
compassionate, the most merciful," encouraging believers to
practice mercy over retribution.
In fact, the Quran refers to Prophet Muhammad as "Rehmatul-lil-
Alameen" or "the one bringing compassion for all worlds." After
announcing his prophethood, Muhammad prayed for those who
insulted or opposed him. In one famous episode, he once went
to inquire about the health of an old woman in Mecca who had
thrown garbage on him every day. When she failed to show up
to deliver her daily insult, he was concerned. Such compassion
won converts to Islam and contributed to the faith's expansion.
But a religion is what its followers make it, and the demands of
Islamist politics in recent times have helped to stamp Muslims
as being prone to anger and susceptible to violence. Meanwhile,
bigoted nobodies have been made influential when their anti-
Islam provocations have succeeded in unleashing the fury of
tens of thousands around the world. But to the orchestrators of
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the protests, none of this matters. Their target is not the
perpetrators of the insults and abuse. Instead they are only
looking for ways in which to mobilize Muslims against the
West, if only to present themselves subsequently as the
mediators who can bridge that divide.
Since falling under Western colonial rule, the Muslim world has
developed a narrative of grievance. The view is shared by
Islamists, who consider Islam a political ideology, and other
Muslims who don't. Like all national and community narratives,
it has some elements that are true. It is a historical fact that the
Muslim world spent centuries in ascendance before Western
influence rose, and Muslim power declined. And there is no
question that Western imperialism in the 19th and early 20th
centuries was far from benign. It divided Muslims, denigrated
them, and used modern technology—from the printing press to
electronic media and the moving image—to render a caricature
of a once-preeminent civilization and the faith that rests at its
heart.
The current weakness of the Muslim world, however, is not
entirely the fault of Western colonialism and postcolonial
machinations. For a century or more, overcoming that weakness
has been the driving force behind almost every major political
movement in the Muslim world, from pan-Arabism to
contemporary Islamism. Nevertheless, Muslims have made
practically no serious effort to understand the causes and
remedies of their decline over the past 300 years. Outrage and
resentment—and the conspiracy theories that inform them—are
poor substitutes for comprehending why Islam's lost glory has
proved so difficult to resurrect.
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Islamists see the world as polarized between the Ummah (the
community of believers, whom they describe as one nation) and
the rest. The West's rise, rather than the Ummah's decline,
receives far greater attention from Islamist scholars and leaders.
Their worldview is summarized in the Arabic-language title of a
book by the Indian Islamist scholar Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi. Its
English-language version is unremarkable enough—Islam and
the World: The Rise and Decline of Muslims and Its Effect on
Mankind. But the Arabic edition's title translates literally as:
What the World Lost by the Decline of Muslims. The
civilizational narcissism is clear. "Our decline is the world's
loss," it suggests. "We do not need to change anything. The
West needs to fix things for us so that it does not lose the
benefits of our civilization."
The outrage industry ensures that Muslims continue to blame
others for their condition, raging over their impotence instead of
focusing on economic, political, and social issues. At the same
time, successive civilian and military governments in Pakistan
have chosen to appease the dial-a-riot Islamist hardliners rather
than confront them. A multitude of Islamist groups has sprouted,
including jihadi militants battle-hardened in Afghanistan and
Kashmir, and a competition of sorts now takes place among
them over who is the greater champion of the honor of Islam and
its prophet. A similar development is evident in the rivalry
between the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists in Egypt and
in other Arab countries.
Even strategically pro-Western rulers find it convenient to
perpetuate the Ummah's narrative of Islam being under siege
and Muslims being the targets of an insidious global conspiracy.
Morale is kept up by bogus stories of miracles, such as the
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destruction of the theater that showed a blasphemous movie, or
the one claiming that Neil Armstrong converted to Islam after
hearing the call to prayer while he was on the moon. (He didn't.)
It is rare to find mention of hard negative facts in the general
discourse within the 57 member states of the Organisation of
Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which collectively account for
approximately one fifth of the world's population but only 7
percent of global output.
The economic dysfunction in the 22 Arab countries, several of
them blessed with oil reserves, highlights how Muslim scholars
and politicians have failed to understand and explain the waning
power of the Ummah to their people. The Arab countries had a
combined GDP of $1.9 trillion in 2010, compared with the
European Union's GDP of $17.5 trillion. Spain alone produced
$1.43 trillion in GDP, without the benefit of natural resources
such as oil and gas. The wealth of Western nations comes from
manufacturing and innovation, neither of which has found much
favor in Muslim-majority countries.
A real debate among Muslims about their decline might identify
why the Ottoman and Mughal empires refused to accept the
printing press for more than two and a half centuries after
Johannes Guttenberg invented movable type. It might also
explain why Muslims failed to embrace the Industrial
Revolution, modern banking, insurance, and the joint stock
company, even after these had emerged in Europe. Instead, most
of the discussion focuses on real or perceived historic injustice.
"We are weak because we were colonized," Muslims tend to
say, instead of recognizing that Muslim lands were colonized
because they had become weak.
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The "knowledge deficit" mentioned in the Arab Development
Report of 2002 continues to worsen. Roughly half the world's
illiterate adults are found among Muslims, and two thirds of that
number are women. Greece, with a population of 11 million,
translates more books from other languages than the entire Arab
world, which has a cumulative population of 360 million. Since
the 9th century, when the Abbasid rulers of Baghdad patronized
learning and built a huge library for its time, only 100,000 books
have been translated from other languages into Arabic. The same
number of books are translated from other languages into
Spanish every year.
A thousand years ago, Muslims led the world in the field of
science and mathematics. Today they are noticeably absent from
any list of recent inventors and innovators in science and
technology. Since 1901, only two Muslims have won a Nobel
Prize in the sciences, and one of them (Pakistan's Dr. Abdus
Salam, Physics, 1979) is not deemed a Muslim in his home
country because of his association with the Ahmadiyya sect. Not
coincidentally, only a handful of Muslim-majority countries
fulfill the criteria for freedom set by the independent group
Freedom House. Even the "Arab Spring" seems unlikely to
change that harsh reality.
Decline, weakness, impotence, and helplessness are the words
repeated most frequently in the speeches and writings of today's
Muslim leaders. All four are conditions that feed outrage—the
response of people lacking real power to change their
circumstances. Ironically that response is cultivated by leaders
who could channel their people's energy toward real solutions.
Instead of orchestrating hate on the pretext of even the most
insignificant provocation, Muslim leaders could extend literacy,
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expand education, and make their nations' economies more
competitive. But as in Western democracies, the politics of
wedge issues is always easier to pursue. Rising Islamophobia in
Europe and North America helps Islamists keep things on the
boil. "Us versus them" is always a useful distraction from "us
versus our problems."
Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to Washington from
2008 to 2011, is a professor of international relations at Boston
University and a seniorfellow at the Hudson Institute.
Article 4.
The Daily Star
Llamas corruption weighs heavily on
Gaza
Tamir Haddad
October 01, 2012 -- Recently, an official of the Finance Ministry
in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip announced that since 2006
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the office had not received a single report of corruption.
Whether or not this is true, the fact is that Hamas corruption is
not only pervasive in Gaza, it has also been detrimental to the
greater social and economic good. The principal vehicle of
Hamas corruption is excessive taxation. One of Gaza's biggest
revenue cows, tunnel smuggling into Egypt's Sinai Peninsula,
has borne the brunt of this graft. For the over 1,200 tunnels,
tariffs of up to 15 percent are imposed on the thousands of tons
of goods being brought in daily. Yet most are collected off the
books, and of the 2,400 near-millionaires in Gaza, most are
Hamas affiliates responsible for monitoring tunnels, according
to Palestinian Authority officials. This is why when private
tunnels began drawing business away from tunnels run by those
close to Hamas, the movement declared them illegal, and
implemented a mandatory $3,000 license to continue operation.
Excessive levels of taxation and licensing are not unfamiliar to
Gazans. The Peace Research Institute Oslo reports that in the
last six years municipality taxes in Gaza have quadrupled,
reaching up to 60-70 percent. Fees on birth certificates have
been instituted, and vocational licenses have become mandatory
for all small business owners. Water, electricity, and other basic
goods also continue to be taxed. So when Palestinian
parliamentarian Jamal Nasser claimed that of the $540 million in
spending in Hamas' 2010 budget, only $60 million would come
from taxation, analysts raised red flags. Unfortunately, taxation
is only a part of the story of Hamas corruption. Fraud is just as
prevalent in Hamas institutions. One of the main avenues for
financial assistance to Gazans, personal finance programs
offered by banks, is entirely run and regulated by the Palestinian
Monetary Authority in Ramallah. In fact, the authority has
barred these banks from doing business with Hamas.
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Nevertheless, Hamas officially takes full credit and
responsibility for these important services, according to various
intelligence sources. No different is the case of electricity. Since
2007 the Palestinian Authority has footed the bill for creating
and distributing power in Gaza, and yet Hamas collectors
continued to go door-to-door demanding bill payment from
constituents. According to a July 10 U.S. House of
Representatives hearing, titled "Chronic Kleptocracy:
Corruption within the Palestinian Political Establishment," this
practice has existed for some time. However, Hamas continues
to convey the message that electricity is a Hamas-provided
service, and it continues to pocket bill payments that Ramallah
has already footed. Aside from the excessive taxation and
fraud, Hamas is also guilty of large-scale bribery. While more
than a third of the Gaza population remains unemployed and
below the poverty line, sources report that between 40,000 and
77,000 Hamas loyalists are on the party's payroll. According to
the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, these employees
often do not work, but receive paychecks nonetheless.
Meanwhile, Hamas continues to sell land exclusively to Hamas
members, further alienating any prospects of civilian economic
development. So what are the consequences of this rampant
graft? For one, the public sector is deteriorating. Since 2007,
educators have been on strike as their paychecks were cut (1,500
employees have stopped receiving pay altogether). Experienced
and qualified Fatah supporters have been replaced with Hamas
loyalists. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency has
intervened, offering an annual $200 million for education
services that reach one in three Gazans.
Health care is not much better off. In 2007. 50 percent of
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doctors and nurses went on strike, with Palestinian Authority-
bankrolled employees primarily holding down the fort. Despite
exorbitant taxation and a per-capita budget about equal to that of
the Palestinian Authority, Hamas continues to find itself unable
to pay its most important employees. The social services that it
is purported to provide are meanwhile being bankrolled by
outside entities.
Perhaps most importantly, as fraud goes unheeded and Hamas
continues to take credit for any social successes that foreign
parties provide, the party continues to remain in power. Through
bribes, Hamas buys Palestinian support through its 77,000-large
bureaucratic army and fraudulently takes credit for the good that
is provided by outside organizations or the Palestinian
Authority. Many continue to believe that public funds are
actually being used in their favor, while others find no
advantage in speaking otherwise. Hamas has been known to
stifle not only business competitors, but those who speak out
against it. Three months ago, 57 percent of Gazans reported to
the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research that they
perceived widespread corruption in their governing institution.
So when the Finance Ministry announced that it had no recent
corruption reports, maybe it was telling the truth. After all,
despite the corruption that has shattered Gaza, the authoritarian
state does not leave latent whistle-blowers many options. And
Gazans continue to pay the price for it.
Tamir Haddad is a recent graduate of the University of
Michigan. He wrote this commentaryfor The Daily Star.
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Ankle S.
TIME
Why India's `Muslim Rage' Is
Different from the Middle East
Krista Mahr
October 1, 2012 -- On Thursday, thousands of protesters
marched toward the American Centre in Kolkata, demanding a
ban and apology for the "Innocence of Muslims" film trailer that
has sparked anti-American protests around the world. It was one
of the larger spasms of unrest that have erupted in India since
the storming of the U.S. Embassy in Cairo on Sept. 11, with
Muslim protesters taking to the streets in Kashmir and the
southern city of Chennai earlier in the month as well.
And though the American Centre and other U.S. government
facilities have been forced to temporarily shutter — the U.S.
consulate in the southern city of Chennai closed for a week —
the tenor of this month's protests in India has been markedly
different from other parts of the world. Part of that is because a
protest here doesn't capture as much attention as it might in
other parts of the world; at any given moment, somebody is
raising a fist in India over anything from nuclear power to the
price of onions. Last week, for instance, the day before over two
dozen people were killed in anti-American protests in Pakistan,
an India-wide strike was held over a recent diesel price hike and
allowing foreign brands like Tesco and Walmart into in India's
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retail sector. As Mujibur Rehman, a professor at Jamia Millia
Islamia University in New Delhi, told the Global Post last week:
"If you compare the current protests with the protests against
President Bush's visit in 2008, those were far more widespread."
Another important distinction is who has been behind the
handful of demonstrations that have happened. Or, to put it
another way, who has not been behind them. As Bobby Ghosh
writes in this week's magazine, a worrying development that has
come to the fore in the last month is the emergence of the street
power of radicalized Salafi Muslims who have instigated some
of the fiercest demonstrations in Libya and Tunisia. "In the two
weeks following Sept. 11, Muslims of various sects and political
groupings launched dozens of protests around the Muslim
world," he writes. "But it was the Salafis, at the heart of the
largest and most violent demonstrations, who won the more-
outraged-than-thou contest."
There are between 20 and 30 million Salafis in India, according
to Markazi Jamiat Ahl-e-Hadees Hind, an India-wide Salafi
organization. And while they may have taken center stage in the
violence elsewhere, Salafis played a less pronounced role in
India's protests, with some leaders outright condemning the
action. Near Jamia Millia Islamia University, in a quiet, grassy
compound dominated by a large new mosque, Markazi Jamiat
Ahl-e-Hadees Hind holds a very different view on how to react
to disparaging depictions of their prophet. "When the Koran is
burned, or this kind of film is made, we don't like it, but we
don't support what [the protestors] are doing," says Maulana
Ashgar Ali, the general secretary of the organization. "We are
strict followers of the Prophet's teaching. All the things the
protesters are doing — taking to the streets, destroying things —
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the Prophet has not taught us."
Ali says his group has come under criticism from other Muslim
groups in India for not joining in. The sizeable Salafi
community in the southern state of Kerala also eschewed the
protests, instead calling meetings at which followers could air
their frustration over the infamous film. "If we are able to be
good Muslims, the propaganda will not succeed," says Dr.
Hussain Madavoor, general secretary of Indian Islahi
Movement, a Salafi group in Kerala. "More efforts should be
exerted among intellectuals and media [to disseminate] the true
picture of Islam so that these willful attacks would be staved
off."
Even in Kashmir, where tensions have been brewing between
Salafists' fundamental interpretation of Islam and the beliefs of
Sufi Muslims who have lived in the valley for centuries, it was
not the Salafis who were the first to join the call to protest. A
conglomeration of Sufi organizations says it was the first group
in Kashmir to react to the spreading news of the anti-Islam
trailer, and that the Salafis and other Islamic groups followed.
So can India consider itself immune to the worrying trend of
Salafis growing more assertive — and dangerous — in other
parts of the world? Obviously not. India is as vulnerable to the
perils of extremism as any nation, and large-scale violence gets
sparked here faster and fiercer than in most parts of the world.
But India is also vast, both physically and psychologically, and
the inherent diversity even in one religious minority may be
helping prevent the same kind of tinder box we've seen
elsewhere from forming.
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Whether than can last, particularly in charged places like
Kashmir, is unclear. "We're not anti-U.S., but it is so painful for
us that people [in the U.S.] make fun of our prophet," says
Maulana Gulam Nabi Shah, a senior Salafi leader in Kashmir.
Maulana Shah said his organization called on followers to
protest peacefully this month, but their strike quickly devolved
into thousands of people throwing stones, burning U.S. flags
and shouting anti-U.S. slogans. Police eventually dispersed the
crowds with tear gas. "When it comes to our beloved Prophet we
all are together. We'll sacrifice our lives even to protect the
honor and holiness of Prophet Muhammad's shoe."
Article 6.
Project Syndicate
The Vagina Chronicles
Naomi Wolf
1 October 2012 -- Has there really been a sexual revolution?
One of the themes that I explore in my new book, Vagina: A
New Biography, is that the West's supposedly sexually liberated
societies, in which sexual images and content are available
everywhere, have not really been all that liberating for women.
Many of the reactions to my book tend to confirm that belief.
Many responses were positive: the book is Publishers Weekly's
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top science book of the fall. But the tone of some of the criticism
— from "mystic woo-woo about the froo froo" to "bad news for
everybody who has one" — suggests that even a culture in which
millions of women are devouring a novel about sadomasochism,
Fifty Shades of Grey, still has problems discussing women's
sexuality in a positive, empowering way.
We need to have that conversation. Around the world, many
women are targeted because of their sexuality: they are genitally
mutilated, married off as children, raped with impunity, stoned
for "fornication" and other sexual offenses, and told that their
desire makes them sinful and worthy of abuse. Natasha Walter,
who works with refugee women in London, reports that most of
the persecution they are fleeing is sexual — and that the law does
not
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