The Price of Hatred
In our time there is no denying
of the enormous influence of the social media employing web- and mobile-based
technologies to support interactive dialogue and communication between
organizations, communities and individuals. Thus, mass communication which was
once a very expensive avenue to propagate one’s views is now almost a free
item. Social media are also unregulated
in most parts of our world, thus, allowing every John or Jane Doe to express and
share his or her views on any matter big or small whether or not he or she is
qualified or knowledgeable on such matters. It is, therefore, possible that
while expressing one’s unfiltered views others can feel abused, demeaned and
hurt. And consequently, those feeling hurt, demeaned or abused can react either
proportionately or disproportionately, which can turn into violence.
Consider, e.g., the latest case involving
the posting of highly inflammatory and offensive pictures in the Facebook by
someone named Uttam Barua, a Buddhist in Bangladesh . Consequently, angry mob
have ransacked some monasteries. There are rumors that Barua may have been a
foreign agent working for the Myanmar
regime to incite such violence.
In repressive and authoritarian
societies where the government controls most outlets of social media, its views
define the narratives on most matters. For years, thus, in places like Egypt , Libya ,
Tunisia and Syria it was
always those governments that had a tight control on what needed to be fed and
consumed for their public. But with the social media like the Internet and
Facebook, which could not be controlled by the governments, the general public
was no longer willing to digest government narratives on any matter of
importance unquestioning. By offering an alternative source of communication,
the social media have triggered something like a revolution of the mind, thus,
freeing hundreds of millions of people around our globe. Thus, one after
another yesterday’s despots were overthrown yielding place to the newly elected
democratic leaders. Probably, one of the days not too far from today, other
despots like Syria ’s
Bashar al-Assad would also be removed.
Social media can, however, as
already hinted above, be abused spreading lies and deceptions, promoting hatred
and intolerance. And we have been witnessing many such abuses of freedom of
expression in many western liberal democracies, especially in its treatment of Islam
and Muslims in the post-9/11 era.
According to the U.S. government
accounts, the tragic event of 9/11 was brought about by terrorists that were linked
with OBL’s al-Qaeda. [Note: there are many credible engineering experts who
doubt the government narrative on this tragedy.] In spite of Bush Jr.’s announcement
that the religion of Islam had nothing to do with this tragedy, it was no less
of a person than his own attorney general who would later go on to say that ‘Islam
is a religion in which God requires you to send your son to die for Him.
Christianity is a faith in which God sends His son to die for you.’ John
Ashcroft is an evangelical Christian and his bias is understandable, although
he later indicated that his remarks to Christian columnist Cal Thomas did not
“accurately reflect what I believe I said."
Sadly, Ashcroft was not the lone
Republican politician in this media campaign against Islam and its adherents.
Others like Giuliani, Gingrich, Palin, King and Bachmann joined the hate
campaign. Many of these promoters of hatred are individuals with very flawed moral
fiber and their views on Islam revealed far more about their own evil selves
than anything else. And then there were others -- intimately tied up with the Zionists
on the contentious Palestine-Israel debate -- who for their own religious or
political beliefs or inclinations jumped on the wagon of intolerance. They
became the mouthpieces for the land-grabbing Zionists in Israel . Nine-Eleven
for them was a Reichstag Fire moment to launch an all out war against the
Muslim world so that not only could Israel’s illegal annexation of Palestine with
settlements and dehumanization of the Palestinian people be sanctified the
entire Muslim world would be brought down to their knees as a subjugated people.
They even planned for redrawing the map of the Muslim world. However, with the
wars in both Afghanistan and
Iraq
going wrong, dragging valuable American resources and killing thousands of
soldiers, their evil plan had to be shelved.
The intellectual leadership for
Islamophobia and intolerance of anything Islamic was provided by some pen-pushing
frauds and charlatans who mastered the art of cherry-picking Qur’anic verses
out of context to suit their ludicrous theories about Islam. Thus, came disingenuous
and greedy guys like Ibn Warraq and others, who basically repackaged the
centuries-old missionary polemical writings against Islam to justify
Islamophobia and bigotry against Islam. With material support provided by
powerful pro-Israeli Americans and Europeans, virtually anyone (or so it
seemed) who could ridicule Islam soon became a media celebrity. In the
post-9/11 era of Islamophobia, they were to become the new faces of ‘experts’
on Islam. Interestingly, many of these ‘experts’ (including some with Arabic
sounding names like Irshad Manji and Ibn Warraq, and other Christian and Jewish
zealots like Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller, respectively) hardly know the
language of the Qur’an. But who dare question their expertise on Qur’an and
Islam or the Muslim world when they are promoted as experts in media mogul
Rupert Murdoch’s TV channels, tabloids, newspapers and magazines, and have
powerful advocates like Daniel Pipes and Ann Coulter!
But probably nothing was more
sinister in this scheme of things Islamophobic than the Jerusalem Summit, a
think tank that was sponsored by Michael Cherney Foundation, which provided the
first venue for anti-Muslim zealots (including Hindu and other extremists from countries
with records of deep intolerance against their Muslim minorities) around the
world to unite on a common agenda in Jerusalem in 2003. The ideology of the Summit was summed up by its four-point declaration:
radical Islam is a threat to civilization, the United Nations is a failure, Israel is in
need of defense and the war on terrorism is a righteous cause.
Lost in that mendacious campaign are
the facts that it is Israel which with its racist Likudnik Zionist leaders is a
threat to every Arab neighbor and the entire region, and it is the Palestinians,
Iranians and other Arabs who live in the Middle East that need protection
against Israeli terrorism, and that when it comes to extremism – no religion
has a monopoly there. All the extremists – religious and non-religious alike –
are a threat to civilization, and they are the ones who need to be defeated. That
is, secular fundamentalists in France and other parts of Europe and the Americas
are no better than the Muslim Talibans of Afghanistan and Pakistan, or the Hindu
extremists in India, or the Buddhist extremists in Myanmar and Cambodia, or the
Christian extremists in the Philippines, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya and Serbia, or
the Christian/Jewish Zionist extremists in much of the western world. As a
matter of fact because of the support that many of these non-Muslim extremists
(e.g., the likes of Narendra Modi and L.K. Advani of India; Gingrich and Bachmann
in the USA, and so on and so forth) enjoy from the government apparatus in
their respective countries they are seemingly more dangerous than most Muslim
extremists who don’t enjoy such support.
In essence, the neoconservative
organizers and participants of the Jerusalem Summit wanted nothing short of a
civilization war with the world of Islam. Fear of Islam and its people was
exploited as one of the most surreptitious and invisible powers to denigrate
the religion of nearly a quarter of humanity and encourage open promotion of
intolerance and hatred against Muslims.
It is because of such a common
agenda that the limit of freedom of expression to insult Islam is ever pushed
to its newer heights where anything and everything to do with Islam is a fair
game. Thus, the Danish Cartoons and the recently filmed ‘Innocence of Muslim’
are only part of this long list of hatred and intolerances hurled against the
Muslim world. These are meant to provoke Muslims and ultimately bring about a
clash of civilizations. They also have powerful backers with links to the
citadels of power from Jerusalem/Tel Aviv to Washington D.C.
Many of these provocateurs are also criminals who should have been locked up in
the prison for the good of the society.
Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, the
producer, who initially went by the pseudonym “Sam Bacile,” is a
California-based Coptic Christian who spent two days in jail and received three
years of probation after being arrested for “intent to manufacture
methamphetamine” in 1997, and was convicted on federal
bank fraud charges in 2010. In recent days he has been arrested for
parole violations. He is affiliated with Joseph Nassralla Abdelmasih, another
Egyptian American Coptic Christian. Abdelmasih owns the Media for Christ,
a Christian nonprofit organization, based in Duarte, California, which took out
a film permit for the production of Desert Warriors that was to later
become the highly offensive video/movie ‘Innocence of Muslim.’ Abdelmasih also
own The Way TV, a TV network established in 2005 that includes a talk show
hosted by Steve Klein, who has said he was one of the consultants
on Innocence of Muslims.
Klein is also allied with
the National American Coptic Assembly, a radical Islamophobic group that
is headed by Morris Sadek, an American Egyptian Copt. Sadek maintains
links with Terry Jones (of the Burn the Qur’an controversy) who also
promoted the film. Sadek is a supporter of Brigitte
Gabriel’s (an extremist Maronite Christian) ACT! for America .
Abdelmasih
is no stranger to controversy and has spoken at anti-Muslim rallies organized
by Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer’s hate group SIOA and has partnered in
projects with Steve Klein and Gary Cass. He participated in the 2010
anti-mosque rally at Ground Zero, Manhattan ,
NY , that was sponsored by anti-Muslim
bigots Geller and Spencer, and received media coverage at the event. He is
described as a devout Christian who attends a Jews for Jesus worship service on
weekdays and a regular church service on Sundays. He is also an active
supporter of Israel and
travels to Washington each July to work with a
group led by evangelist John Hagee of CUFI to lobby Congress for support of Israel .
The published reports also show that Klein, Abdelmasih, and Gary Cass are partners in an anti-Muslim student outreach effort titled 911 Defend Our Students, which has included handing out fliers to students as they leave their schools.
The interested readers may like
to read articles compiled and posted by Sheila Musaji of The American Muslim who has done an excellent job in identifying major players in the anti-Muslim
film.
Suffice it to say that Justin
Raimondo’s (of the www.antiwar.com) speculation
about an Israeli connection behind at least some of these anti-Muslim hate
films cannot be overlooked.
These hatemongering provocateurs
ought to know that like anything in our world there is always a limit to
freedom. With freedom comes responsibility. When their fists hit someone’s nose
it is an abuse of that freedom to stretch arms. Freedom cannot be a tool to
promote hatred and intolerance against anyone, and much less against a
religious community. Government cannot shy away from its responsibility to
punish the abusers of such freedom that breed hatred and lead to violence,
which can result in the deaths of innocent human beings.
In recent months, we have
witnessed quite a few of such demonstrations of hatred against Muslims in the
Internet, the Facebook and the YouTube. What is interesting is that some of
these social media sites had clear guidelines against promoting intolerance.
However, when it came to insulting Islam and Muslims, none of those guidelines
seemed to matter, and those sites did not feel obligated to remove such offensive
postings. What a double standard!
During the early days of latest
extinction campaign against the Rohingyas of Myanmar, I was simply shocked to
see an overabundance of highly inflammatory and offensive pictures and racist
remarks posted by Rakhine and Burmese Buddhists that were sure to pain most
Muslims. I pondered how could any person live with so much hatred against a
fellow human being? After all, hatred is taught and no one is born hating
anyone. Who have been teaching the Buddhist Rakhines and Burmese to hate
non-Buddhists? As I know better, in societies where such evils are promoted, it
is no longer an individual act but rather a national project in which others
are willing partners in such crimes.
As I hinted earlier, authoritarian
regimes use government controlled media to manufacture and spread their lies.
They can act as the ultimate architect of genocide or crimes against humanity.
For years, within what was Burma ,
and known these days by the name Myanmar , propagation of hatred
against the Rohingyas, who are ethnically and religiously different than the
majority Buddhists, has been part of the government campaign. Falsely depicted
as outsiders, land- and job-stealers, the Rohingyas have been robbed of their
citizenship in the land of their forefathers, and they have been dehumanized to
such an extent that no one dare say anything to restore their legitimate rights
in this Buddhist majority country. An open display of racism and bigotry thus
became a norm rather than an exception.
The rape and grisly murder of a
Buddhist woman was exploited as what had triggered the ‘race riot.’ However, as
Dr. Maung Zarni, an expert on Myanmar ,
has recently mentioned there was no trace of rape on that murdered Rakhine
woman – Thida Htwe; and that one of the so-called perpetrators of the crime
Htet Htet (who was later declared dead in his prison cell) was a Buddhist. And
yet, Myanmar ’s
Ministry of Information which micro-manages all official publications and
broadcasts went on to characterize incorrectly the three perpetrators as
‘Muslims.’
The military regime has often
been the greatest perpetrator of such hateful crimes and then blamed others to
incite race riots. I won’t be surprised if we, one day, learn that the local
government officials and security forces in the Rakhine state were the
architects of this gruesome murder to incite Rakhine violence against unarmed
Rohingya Muslims of Myanmar.
As a result of this targeted pogrom,
thousands of Muslim owned homes, businesses, shops, schools and mosques have
been burned down and destroyed; nearly a hundred thousand of the Rohingyas
continue to live without a shelter. No Muslims are now noticeable in places
like Akyab, the capital city. As I write their historic Jam-e Mosque is torched
by a Rakhine mob; and this, in spite of the government imposition of the
Section 144, which bans all movements of 5 or more people in groups. While the
Rakhines are allowed to roam around and burn Rohingya homes, all the homeless Rohingyas
are caged in camps with no freedom to go out. Denied adequate food, many are
starving to death as a result of this extinction campaign. As to the casualty,
we may never know the number of deaths. Myanmar regime won’t share that information.
None of the perpetrators of the ten Tablighi Muslims has yet been arrested
while it is widely known that some 300 or so of the armed Rakhines attacked
them in front of police and security forces. It is no accident that human
rights activists have called the latest campaign as part of a wider ethnic
cleansing campaign that started since the time of Ne Win in 1962.
Can the provocateurs of hatred
and intolerance be taught to love their targets or objects of hatred? Nelson
Mandela wrote in his autobiography “No
one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his
background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn
to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human
heart than its opposite.” I wish Mandela is right.
Hatred and intolerance are
unacceptable. They are like cancers and need to be routed out one way or
another. If unbridled freedom promotes such cancers, a society is probably
better off controlling its deadly spread through painful radiation therapy
before it is too late.
Well post created here your work is going very good.
ReplyDeletethanks
Qurbani