Contradiction is balance. [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
Axver

[ website | U2gigs.com: for all your U2 setlist needs! (Got a question, suggestion, or addition? Feel free to leave me a comment! I co-maintain the site.) ]
[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

Insanity from Sudan [3 December 2007|05:40 pm]
[Tags|, , , ]
[Current Music |'Shattered Sky' by Psychotic Waltz]

I thought I'd share my thoughts on one of the stories currently achieving prominence in the media.

I'm sure the majority of you will have heard of the Sudanese teddy bear blasphemy case. For those of you who haven't, here's a brief summary. A British teacher working in Sudan let her young students vote on the name of a class teddy bear. The winning name was that of a popular 7 year old, Muhammad, one of the world's most popular names and that of the Islamic prophet. This poor teacher suddenly found herself on the receiving end of a charge of insulting religion (!) and was sentenced to fifteen days' jail. Meanwhile, groups of Sudanese have protested this verdict as too lenient - yes, lenient, and they are demanding her execution. Yes, there are people in this world stupid enough to want somebody executed simply because of the name they permitted to be given to a teddy bear. Suddenly, the Danish cartoon controversy seems thoroughly sensible in comparison to this absolute lunacy.

Look, if you're so sensitive about your religion that you perceive an insult in a teddy bear's name, then maybe your personal faith is a flimsy piece of junk without a leg to stand on. I don't mean to say that the Islamic religion in general is a "flimsy piece of junk" (though I would contend it doesn't have a leg to stand on, like most institutionalised religion), but that the individuals who have a problem with this teddy bear's name have such a poor faith that they cannot defend it with logic, reason, or even subjective arguments/experiences, but have to employ the weight of legal institutions and the threat of death to maintain its power.

I must admit, I wonder how many of these people sincerely believe this women should die, and how many have just fallen victim to the propaganda of religious leaders who want to keep their population focused on everything but the real issues, or have been prompted to protest at the behest of a government they dare not disobey. This is Sudan, after all. In the west, Darfur is still in the throes of conflict, repression, and genocide with state support. In the south, tensions between Christians and Muslims have caused considerable bloodshed since the 1980s and currently have a shaky truce. Living conditions in general are horrible. There is so much wrong with this country, and the first thing they could do to fix things would be to overthrow the political and religious elite who have a vested interest in keeping it this way. But the elite aren't stupid, so a manufactured controversy like this conveniently keeps people occupied. Redirect their anger about poor living conditions, substandard education, and a miserable economy towards something that doesn't threaten the status quo but reinforces it.

This really is so incomprehensibly ridiculous. I am a typical leftie, I advocate respect for foreign cultures, and I will vigorously defend minorities in Australia who are accused of being insular, unassimilated and "un-Australian". But this isn't a matter of respecting culture. This is sheer stupidity, encouraged and manufactured by an elite because it suits them. It has precious little to do with religion as it should be practiced. I'm sure all intelligent Muslims with common sense do not think somebody should be prosecuted, let alone executed, for naming a teddy bear Muhammad (which, I repeat, was after a boy in the class, not the prophet, and why is the teacher being sentenced when the Sudanese children themselves - likely Muslims - chose the name?). In any case, an umbrella body representing British Muslim organisations has come out vehemently against the prosecution. And reports that get beyond what the Khartoum regime wants the media to see state that most of Sudan is quiet, free from protests, and not in favour of execution. But of course, those aspects aren't getting much air time. It's far easier for the media to focus on minorities: terrorist organisations, protestors burning embassies over cartoons, and people demanding execution because of a teddy bear's name. Islam's image really has taken a horrible hammering. I can't say I understand why somebody would grant intellectual assent to the claims of Islam, but they are fully entitled to have their beliefs and they should be able to practice them without an idiotic minority making them look like intolerant extremists, and certainly not a minority sponsored by a government.
Link10 comments|Leave a comment

Regarding profiling to identify terrorists. [19 August 2006|10:08 pm]
[Tags|, , , , ]
[Current Music |'Burn The Sun' by Ark]

I've been involved in a few discussions lately about security measures against terrorism, specifically with regards to profiling and identifying security threats at airports, and I thought I'd note down my thoughts here.

Some of the comments I have heard lately have amazed me, and not in a good way. It seems as if racism and discrimination against Arabs, Middle Easterners, and Muslims is the permissible discrimination of today. If anyone dared to suggest that airports should have separate lines for Aborigines, African-Americans, or Jews, they would be slammed ten ways from Sunday, but a suggestion of a "Muslim/Arab only" line doesn't inspire the same across-the-board condemnation. For sure, some such as myself have condemned it as a completely disgusting and discriminatory idea based upon dangerous and misguided logic, but it seems to also have its supporters. Especially from the xenophobic lunatics on the right wing.

Now, there is a wide spectrum of suggestions, from merely taking adherence to Islam into greater consideration when profiling passengers all the way through to lines for Arabs and/or Muslims (it seems some clueless people think Arab=Muslim). Let's dismantle these suggestions and reveal their illogic once and for all, shall we?

I would like to focus specifically on the idea of increased profiling of Muslims. The discrimination against Arabs and Middle Easterners is especially ridiculous given how blurry racial boundaries can be and that some people don't have the stereotypical appearance of their race; furthermore, there are considerable non-Muslim Arabic and Middle Eastern communities (I mainly know of Christian groups myself). And most importantly, some people recently arrested as or under suspicion of being terrorists have been Westerners, so any profiling of Arabs and Middle Easterners would have been thoroughly useless. Nonetheless, some maintain, as these Westerners were converts to Islam, profiling of Muslims would be effective and acceptable. Rubbish, and let me explain why.

Firstly, consider the ratio of Muslims who are terrorists to the ratio of Muslims who are not. So few Muslims are terrorists that they are a considerably statistically insignificant minority of all Muslims. Thousands upon thousands of Muslims fly between places all around the world every single day. Did any planes fall out of the sky yesterday as a result of a Muslim terrorist attack? How about last week? Last month? You get my point. Muslims are not bombing planes en masse; a terrorist attack by a Muslim is an incredibly rare event and you are more likely to die from falling down the stairs, and far, far more likely to die in a car crash, and I'm sure that right now, most of you are thinking something akin to "of course I won't die walking down the stairs or driving to work next week". So why fear dying at the hands of Islamic terrorists? They are not particularly commonplace, and profiling of Muslims to any extent will just inconvenience and discriminate against the thousands of peaceful Muslims travelling on aeroplanes daily without the faintest clue of how to construct a bomb.

Secondly, terrorism isn't confined to Muslims. I have often encountered a text, generally sent as an e-mail forward, that lists a number of terrorist attacks and observes that in all cases, the perpetrators were male Muslims aged 17-40. It seems to have gone down quite well in some right wing, conservative Christian circles that have anti-Muslim sentiments. However, it suffers from one huge flaw; it is based on a selective view of history that does not accurately reflect the reality. If you live in Ireland, you have a whole lot more to fear from Christians. The sole terrorist attack to ever take place on New Zealand soil was undertaken by the French government of François Mitterrand (unless you consider trying to chop down One Tree Hill's tree to be symbolic terrorism!). And need I even mention Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City bombing? So placing scrutiny specifically and sternly on Muslims is based on fears arising from a selective understanding of history.

Thirdly, any system of profiling Muslims is inherently flawed as your typical Muslim terrorist launching an attack in the West isn't going to advertise himself by waving around a Koran and conforming to any kind of stereotypical swarthy, unshaven, turban-wearing appearance. If Muslims are increasingly analysed, suspected, and profiled, any Islamic terrorist worth their salt will profess any religion other than Islam, most likely Christianity. Any Muslim crazy enough to believe they have religious justification to slaughter innocent civilians would also believe Allah has no problem with them taking on disguise in order to accomplish this "divine mission". I'm sure they would see drinking some pinot noir and exclaiming "praise Jesus, hallelujah!" as a small price to pay for blowing a few hundred "infidels" to Allah in ten minutes' time. In other words, any Muslim honest enough to affirm Islam is almost certainly not going to bomb you. By the logic of the "let's profile Muslims" people, it would probably be more beneficial to profile Christians to see who's fraudulently affirming the faith!

And finally, if all of the above isn't sufficient justification for you, profiling Muslims fails to truly confront and prevent terrorism itself. It merely targets a perceived symptom rather than effectively removing the cause. It may make a few xenophobes feel a bit safer about hopping aboard a plane, but it doesn't remove the social "breeding grounds" of terrorism, it doesn't stop terrorists recruiting more people to their cause, and it doesn't stop whatever perverse desire motivates one to commit acts of violence in the first place. It unproductively and ineffectively combats a "symptom" that isn't even really a symptom.

(As a totally unrelated footnote, I am naturally delighted that New Zealand defeated Australia 34-27 in the rugby today, thus sealing our much-deserved Tri-Nations victory. Hooray for the mighty All Blacks!!)
Link39 comments|Leave a comment

[12 June 2006|09:57 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , , , , , ]
[Current Mood | contemplative]
[Current Music |'The Silent Man' by Dream Theater]

I haven't made an entry on theology or religion for a while. )
Link44 comments|Leave a comment

[4 February 2006|10:27 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , ]
[Current Music |'Out Of The Ashes' by Symphony X]

Ah, it is very nice to have my own place. I'm settling in nicely, and in general, I'm quite happy with it. My only complaint is that storage space in the kitchen isn't as large as I'd like it to be, but it just means I have to most efficiently use the space rather than plonking stuff down wherever I feel is convenient. I can handle that easily. Tomorrow, as long as the weather is cool enough, I'll probably take a walk and explore the area - see how far I am from ferry and railway stations, and time how long my walk to university is. Goodness, I'm not looking forward to walking to classes on the days when Queensland really turns on the heat. Sometimes I wonder why I haven't applied to the University of Greenland instead.

On a totally different topic, I feel compelled to comment on the "Muhammad cartoons" controversy. Now, I know some people reading this are either Muslims or very close to Muslims, so I'd like to make it clear that I make my comments with the utmost respect. It's not my intention to belittle any side of the debate and I know the entire issue has struck some raw nerves in various quarters. Nonetheless, I think it has spiralled completely out of control and is being blown out of proportion. For those unfamiliar with the controversy, a Danish newspaper last year published a series of cartoons of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in an article about free speech, the relevance being that pictures of Muhammad are forbidden under Islamic law to avoid idolatry. These pictures have been reproduced in other magazines and newspapers in the West, where freedom of speech naturally protects the right of an artist to depict Muhammad, and it has caused considerable outrage from Muslims both in the West and Islamic-majority nations. Now, if you ask me, in the grand scheme of things, a few cartoons, while potentially offensive to adherents of Islam, are not the end of the world. Why not channel all this energy into solving a far more serious issue, such as the insane amount of deaths that occur all too often during the Hajj? I think avoiding 100 needless deaths is more important than burning the Danish flag.

The real issue at play here is the boundaries of freedom of speech. I very much believe in the rights of people to freely make whatever statements they like through all the forms of media (I obviously mean within reasonable bounds, excluding things such as defamation, so don't spring a pedantical point on me). Now, naturally, there is a very real possibility of offending someone, but in a secular society where everyone is allowed to freely choose their religion and all religions are granted equal and fair treatment, I don't believe any single religion should be allowed to dictate any law. In other words, as much as pictures of Muhammad are not permitted by Islam, they ARE permitted by secular law and Islam cannot be allowed to influence those laws for its own gain. If you don't like it, don't live in a secular society, it's as simple as that, and I think it's rather pointless to be outraged over what an independent newspaper printed in a foreign country (within reason - if they're printing slanderous lies about you, I could understand anger!). I'm sure that I could scour the papers worldwide and find statements or images offensive on a religious level to me, but I'm not going to start burning flags or boycotting products from the home country of the paper or make death threats. A prominent example is the infamous "Piss Christ" artwork. I find it tacky and I know many Christians who would consider it offensive, but if that's the work the artist wishes to create, that's his right and I have no legitimate basis upon which to stop him or inflict any kind of punishment on him for doing it.

So, ultimately, I believe the publication of the "Muhammad cartoons" is justified by freedom of expression, a law which should not be at the whim of religious doctrines, as that inherently negates it. I do not believe in deliberately offending people, but I also do not believe in censoring religious discussion and depiction in a secular society. As a matter of fact, I wonder if some dialogue of valuable substance could result from these cartoons if the hysteria over their sheer publication would calm down.

That's about it for now. Have a good one, folks!
Link29 comments|Leave a comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]