Archive for November, 2006

Blogger: Baha’i Faith in Egypt
Article: Religion On ID Cards In Egypt: To Be Or Not To Be?…
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-16 21:53:00

Egypt: USCIRF Calls for New Policy on National Identity Cards

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 16, 2006

Contact: Angela Stephens, Assistant Communications Director,
(202) 523-3240, ext. 114

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) is closely monitoring the outcome of a court case in Cairo that will consider whether an Egyptian Baha’i couple will be able to obtain national identity documents without having to deny or falsify their faith.

On November 20, the Supreme Administrative Court in Cairo will convene a hearing on the Egyptian government’s appeal of a lower court decision that would have allowed members of the Baha’i faith in Egypt to obtain a national identity card and to list their religious affiliation. The Commission urges the U.S. government to encourage the Egyptian government to reverse its discriminatory policy of requiring Egyptian citizens to list their religious affiliation, restricting the choice to one of the three state recognized religions – Judaism, Christianity, or Islam – on national identity documents.

“Current Egyptian policy essentially turns Baha’is into non-citizens because without an identity card they cannot gain access to government services like education and employment, or engage in basic financial transactions, such as opening a bank account or obtaining a driver’s license. It is even illegal to be in public without a card,” said Commission chair Felice D. Gaer. “This policy is highly discriminatory and is incompatible with international standards. The current court case provides the Egyptian government with an opportunity to change its policy and omit mention of religious affiliation from identity documents or to make optional any mention of religious affiliation,” said Gaer.

Egypt requires all citizens to obtain and carry a national identity card, including listing one’s religious affiliation, and only permits one of three choices. This policy: Read more….

Turks remember 2003 synagogue attacks

Wednesday, November 15th, 2006

Blogger: Point of no return
Article: Turks remember 2003 synagogue attacks
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-15 21:29:09

Dozens of Turkish Jews and Muslims cried and recited prayers of mourning Wednesday outside two synagogues to commemorate the third anniversary of two suicide bomb attacks blamed on a Turkish al-Qaida cell, The Jerusalem Post reports (with thanks: Albert).

Local officials, religious leaders and family and friends, holding framed photos of victims and the shattered synagogues after the explosions, laid red carnations on the streets outside the rebuilt Neve Shalom and Beth Israel synagogues in solemn ceremonies in Istanbul.

The synagogues were targeted on Nov. 15, 2003 and similar attacks on the British Consulate and the local headquarters of HSBC bank followed just five days later. A total of 58 people died, along with four suicide bombers.

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Blogger: Unpopular Arab Thoughts That All Arabs Have Thought
Article: ‘Boomers’ — the New Wave of Volunteer Missionaries
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-15 01:23:08

ORLANDO, Nov. 14 /Christian Newswire/ — On average, one “baby boomer” retires every seven seconds in the United States, and Wycliffe Associates is tailoring its programs with this in mind, Martin Huyett, vice president of volunteer services for the worldwide organization announced today.
“Wycliffe Associates, which supports Bible translators in practical ways, is building a […]
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Blogger: Unpopular Arab Thoughts That All Arabs Have Thought
Article: Purpose Driven Terror? Rick Warren’s Syrian Trip an Outrage
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-15 01:21:09

MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin, Nov. 14 /Christian Newswire/ — The Syrian News Agency today is featuring glowing reports of American evangelical celebrity pastor Rick Warren’s junket to Syria. After reporting yesterday on Rick Warren’s meeting on Syrian-American relations with President Bashar al-Assad, the news agency SANA reports the following about Mr. Warren’s meeting with a Syrian Mufti […]
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Save Iraq’s Persecuted Christians

Wednesday, November 15th, 2006

Blogger: Unpopular Arab Thoughts That All Arabs Have Thought
Article: Save Iraq’s Persecuted Christians
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-15 01:20:26

FRONT ROYAL, Va., Nov. 14 /Christian Newswire/ — The growing collapse of law and order in Iraq is a tragedy. All Iraqis are affected, but the country’s Christian minority is bearing the heaviest burden. Explains Jim Jacobson, president of Christian Freedom International: “what began as liberation for Iraqi Christians has turned into a wave of […]

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006

Blogger: Virtually Islamic
Article:
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-14 16:19:25

AKI, Islamist Hackers to target airline site, 13 Nov 06 “Islamic hackers are targeting the internet website of Morocco’s aircarrier Royal Air Maroc (RAM), after it reportedly prohibited workers from praying within the company’s premises during working hours and banned the veil for its female employees.”

Times of India/AsiaMedia, Al Qaida threatens to blow up White House, 12 Nov 06

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Blogger: Point of no return
Article: Satloff on Arab anti-Zionism and antisemitism
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-14 07:52:59


Rob Satloff, author of a new book on Arabs and the Holocaust, is Rosner’s guest at Haaretz. Rosner asks Satloff, who spent two years living in Morocco: are the Arabs anti-Zionist, antisemitic, or both? Here is his answer. (With thanks: Lily)


(…) “Of all of the ideas that stand out after a quarter-century studying the Middle East, one of the most important is that “Arab culture” is really many cultures, that “Arab people” are really many peoples, and that “Arab countries” are filled with a combustible mix of ethnicity, religion, nationality and race that produces the range of human passions. The “Arab world,” as such, does not exist - an Omani has very little in common with a Tunisian; a Lebanese Christian has very little in common with a Sudanese Muslim. Of course, various ideologues would like to spread the image of an “Arab world” or a “Muslim world” but we in the West accept this context at our peril; we live and thrive in the world of nation-states and have no interest in advancing the concept of an “Arab world” or a “Muslim world.” Indeed, to view the Middle East this way is to cede the ideological high-ground and lose half the “battle of ideas” even before we start.


“As to the specific question, there is no doubt that the political class in Arab countries is largely anti-Zionist - i.e,. most do not accept the proposition that the Jewish people have a right to exercise sovereignty in part or all of the former mandatory Palestine. At the same time, a large proportion of these people, in my view, have come to reconcile themselves to the fact of Israel’s existence and have no desire to expend lives or fortunes to challenge it. Indeed, for a large proportion, the question of Israel is of intellectual, but not practical, interest. (This could change if many Arabs came to believe that Israel was vulnerable.) At the same time, there are those in the political class of the three regions of the Middle East - Levant, Maghreb and Gulf — who recognize the positive role Israel plays in regional security and who appreciate Israel. They are quiet about this but this feeling is real and something to be nurtured. (I say “political class” because, in my view, the vast majority of people in Arab countries are animated by such more pressing issues as housing, sustenance, education and health care than they are the high politics of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute.)


“In general, my experience is that the urgency of the “Israel/Palestine” issue connects to geography - i.e., the closer to the conflict, the more enduring the practical interest in its outcome. So, for example, Israel’s neighbors care a lot about the conflict and have strong emotions about it that manifest themselves on virtually a daily basis but the interest in the conflict among people in the more distant countries of the Gulf and North Africa is episodic and driven by the news cycle. In other words, Bahrainis and Moroccans do not wake up in the morning worrying about what is going on in Gaza, unless it is the lead item on al-Jazeera. I doubt that a majority of Egyptians do either, but the percentage is higher. It is highest of all in Jordan, both for geographic and demographic reasons.


“To be sure, there are many who do wish to act on their anti-Zionism and try to destroy Israel. This remains, regrettably, a very real objective, especially for radical Islamist extremists and their fellow travelers. Some of them believe this objective needs to be their most urgent priority; others - the more dangerous group - believe they should first try to win influence and power in existing states, often via allegedly “democratic” means, and use that position eventually to carry on their anti-Zionist campaign. Israel and its friends need to be alive to this danger.


“What probably grabbed your attention about my first posting was my observation about the morphing of Arab anti-Semitism and Arab anti-Zionism. Basically, the story is this: the common Arab narrative is to make a distinction between Arab opposition to Israel and traditional Arab friendship toward Jews. According to this narrative, Arab-Jewish relations were wonderful until 1948, when Israel’s founding soured everything. Even so, this narrative goes, Arabs have done everything they could to separate their enmity toward Israel from their relationship toward Jews.


“The reality is much more complex. First, life for Jews in Arab lands may, historically, have been far better than it was for Jews in Christian lands but - given the horrors of the Inquisition, York and the pogroms - that yardstick is pretty low. Apart from the “golden age of Andalusia,” which was defined by both time and space, Jews generally lived as tolerated second-class citizens in most Arab lands, paying special taxes and suffering with special restrictions on residence, occupation, attire, etc. There were also sporadic outbursts of violence against Jewish communities in many Arab countries that dot the history of the modern Middle East.


Second, even a cursory look at post-1948 history and popular culture in Arab states shows that anti-Zionism frequently - even consistently - spilled (and continues to spill) over into anti-Semitism. The fact that so many hundreds of thousands of Jews left Arab lands in the years after 1948 - with a large percentage not making aliyah to Israel - is prima facie evidence of this blurring of anti-Jewishness and anti-Zionism. But it has many other manifestations, such as the use of the term Yahud as a common synonym for Israelis — and the appalling frequency with which the adjective “Nazi” is applied for both. In this regard, it is impossible to separate out the phenomenon of anti-Zionism in Arab societies with the phenomenon of anti-Semitism.


“With the decline and disappearance of Jewish communities in Arab lands - the only two Arab countries still to have more than 1000 Jews are Morocco and Tunisia - this process will deepen. Fewer and fewer Arabs will live with Jews and see them as real human beings; instead, Jews will only be known as caricatures. This cannot be a positive trend. But are all Arabs anti-Semitic? Definitely not. And that ray of hope needs to be nurtured, too.”



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Blogger: Jewschool
Article: Free Speech, Israel, and Jewish Illiberalism
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-14 05:10:42

Alan Wolfe writes in The Chronicle of Higher Education:

Give Tony Judt credit: He certainly knows how to start an argument. Actually, he has started two. One, concerning the future of a Jewish state in the Middle East, is, like the Middle East itself, combustible, and it is by no means clear that intellectuals in this country will have much influence on how it is ultimately resolved. That is a shame, for we need in the United States a debate about the future of Israel as robust as the one that routinely takes place within Israel itself. In “Israel: The Alternative,” Judt paid particular attention to right-wing Israelis whose views, in his opinion, come quite close to fascism. But even though there is no denying that Israel, like the United States, has turned sharply to the right, must we conclude, as Judt seemed to suggest, that any state based on religion or ethnicity will ultimately be illiberal? And does it follow that if Israel is illiberal, its aggressive foreign policy will create a “disaster,” as Judt put it, for a United States that allies itself with the country?

Those are questions that Americans need to ask themselves — however they answer them. But it is hard to raise them, at least in any probing way, when prominent Hollywood celebrities like Mel Gibson flirt with anti-Semitism, and when newspapers like The New York Sun, a staunch defender of Israel, routinely accuse those who criticize Zionism of being little different from Gibson. It is difficult to know why honest discussions about Israel have become so difficult to conduct.

Read on…

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Charity for Unpopular Articles

Monday, November 13th, 2006

Blogger: Wa Salaam
Article: Charity for Unpopular Articles
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-13 16:19:04

Below is a list of articles that I have written in the past. These article received little-to-no recognition at all and I just wanted to revisit them and give them one more shot. I re-read them and I could not help but to feel sorry for them as if animated personalities ignored in the midst of our preoccupations. If you are interested in giving these poor articles charity of your time it would be most appreciated, but then again there may be a reason they were overlooked… so I guess its a gamble and the choice is yours:

  • American-Muslim Criticisms of Blair: an article from the “Criticisms” series, if you search “criticisms” you will notice I have written several critical articles of similar title yet independent in thought.
  • The French and Wine; The Muslims and Bread: this post is secretly one of my favorite ever written, its an obscure article that references an unpopular but significant literary critic and an essay that he wrote concerning the French occupation of Algeria.
  • Privacy and Government Snooping: surprisingly this article made little to no noise at all. People were generally uninterested in my advice on how to protect your email and other electronic communications. I was shocked!
  • The Danger of Human Evolution: a production of a completely different scale, sourced from an actual academic paper written while at New York University. I thought it would be interesting to condense it and develop it for blog readership, evidently it was a failed effort…
  • The Heart of Freedom Suffers: an attempt to pen a paper about freedom and its inherent challenges, accompanied by a brief criticism of its corruption.

I certainly hope you find these articles precious jewels lost among the bounty of treasure that is Wa Salaam, however if you do not and deem them plebeian tommyrot, then what can I say. As Albert Camus has said,

“When one indulges in publishing a book or staging a play, one has to accept the criticism it evokes. Whatever one may have to say, one must keep silent.” (A. Camus, Why Spain?)

Therefore, notice; review and critique while I stand idly by as an onlooker, looking. If there is nothing to say, I will assume that the pieces have themselves said nothing and thus have only encountered a tantamount value. Either way, the opportunity to write was value enough for me.

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Islam - a danger to youth?

Monday, November 13th, 2006

Blogger: Ihsan
Article: Islam - a danger to youth?
Originaly Posted On: 2006-11-13 10:51:07


There is no such thing as heroes, heroines or saints. Reality is more complex than the one in which heroes and heroines reside. Their reality is narrative - story. The Prophet Muhammad (aws) is often portrayed as a saint, or of a false hero and even the villain. But more sophisticated narratives of his life, such as the sirah by Martin Lings, depict him as a human being pursuing a quest in a world slowly awakening to spiritual truth. Hence Lings represents people in terms of their motives, and not as black and white, good and bad.

Being portrayed as a hero perhaps has its upside, or so hero Bob Geldof thought. In his entertaining autobiography written in the wake of the first ‘Band Aid’, Is That It, Geldof describes a clumsy encounter with Mother Theresa, during which she explained to him how she was able do things he could not, but equally he could achieve things beyond her own reach. What did she mean? Geldof observed her unashamedly milk her own reputation with some admiration, pinching the conscience of government ministers into acting on behalf of the poor and even gaining audiences with presidents without appointment. The Nun Geldof met was a street-wise campaigner, a character created by Geldof’s own aspirations.

Northern European saints are less likely to be religious, these days. Heroes arise to suit the times. An example of the modern, secular saint-heroine is Camila Batmanghelidjh, founder of the London-based Kids Company. An Iranian born in Tehran, Camila’s rise to prominence has followed the typical saint-heroine’s path – family tragedy (sister’s suicide), overcoming obstacles (severe dyslexia), self sacrifice (using her own mortgage payments to set up a child therapy service) and resounding achievement (Woman of the Year, 2006). A storybook life!

Narratives of Camila’s children are also presented in heroic terms. Victims of an unjust system (inadequate and often callous child protection services), these children often rise from poverty, dissipation and maladjustment to become equally successful (university educated). Even in death, narratives present these children as heroes, as in the story of Jamail Newton (Observer, 12/11/06), killed in a random shooting at aged 19 as he threw himself in front of his friends.

Interestingly, one of the obstacles to Jamail’s rise from abandoned child to healed role model to dead hero status was Islam. Here is the sub-plot, taken from Amelia Hill’s story of Jamail in The Observer, but quoting Camila Batmanghelidjh:

[Jamail] he was still highly vulnerable. Last July, an incident took place that made Derrick Graham, Jamail’s key worker at Kids Company, realise quite how delicate this aching need had made Jamail.

‘He was desperate for adult love and when a man approached him on the street, and began talking about becoming a Muslim, he listen to that,’ said Graham. ‘He was so desperate for love and a sense of belonging that, when that man promised him those things, he opened up his arms.’

Almost overnight, Jamail adopted Muslim dress and began studying the religion. Alarmed, Graham organised a multi-ethnic group of Jamail’s peers to discuss the matter. ‘We talked it through, and he came to his own decision not to follow it any further,’ said Graham. ‘It was one of the unusual and admirable things about Jamail: from a young age, he could have adult conversations and change his mind.’

Why was Derek ‘alarmed’ by Jamail embracing Islam? This is not made clear. Having lived in South London, I am aware of people living in the Capital who pose as religious teachers and pray on vulnerable young people. I met one, ‘Christian John’, who exploited his thin veneer of religiosity to gain control over people’s lives. The story here mentions one man, but overall, the emphasis appears to be on Islam as a threat to a ‘delicate’ young man.

Saints and their supporters carry great moral authority. They can inspire Geldofs (though some see Bob as being anything but a saint), yet equally, they can demonise without having recourse to fact or reasoned argument. Camila Batmanghelidjh routinely attacks local government agencies, but rarely does she mention her association with the Conservative Party in the same breath. Compared to politicians and media pundits, the folks at Kids Company have the potential to do serious damage to anyone they depict as a menace.

The representation of Islam as inherently dangerous, particularly to young men, is a well-worn Islamophobic trope and I am sad to see it associated here with the laudable work of this charity. It raises issues of the accountability of groups working outside of the welfare system with regards to equal opportunity. At the same time, Muslims themselves need to tread carefully and perhaps avoid targeting people whose desire for faith masks unmet emotional needs.
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