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What is the
Cartoon controversy?
By Chandra Muzaffar [Dr.Chandra Muzaffar is the President of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST), Malaysia] The cartoons controversy is not about freedom of expression.
It is about how a segment of European society views religion in general
and Islam in particular. Double Standards Isn't it because of elite interests that in a democracy like Italy
where the majority of the people were opposed to the invasion of Iraq
very few anti-war intellectuals were interviewed in the mainstream print
and electronic media? Isn't it because of a worldview that is skeptical
of Islam that almost every newspaper editorial in France --- the nation
that gave birth to the 'Rights of Man' --- bemoaned the electoral
victory of the Islamic Salvation Front in Algeria in 1992 and endorsed
obliquely the usurpation of power by the military junta? Isn't it
because of a specific circumstance Ð a deep seated collective guilt
arising from the holocaust --- that the European media hounds and
harasses anyone who dares to raise even the slightest doubt about that
terrible tragedy? Secularism in the West It so happens that religion is one of those subjects that is at odds
with the worldview of a lot of Western media practitioners. Often
vehemently secular in outlook, sometimes contemptuous of matters of
faith, they have no qualms about deriding the Sacred and the
Transcendent. It is not surprising therefore that Christianity has been
lambasted at some time or other in almost every major European newspaper
and, on numerous occasions, Jesus Christ has been lampooned in films,
cartoons and articles. This has caused grievous hurt to practicing
Christians in the continent. Stereotyping of Islam & Muslims There is perhaps a more important reason for the demonization of the religion. It is the baneful impact of 911 and the war on terror upon Muslims and their subtle stereotyping in the media as a people prone to violence. Though most Western political leaders are careful to distinguish the Muslim fringe that resorts to violence in pursuit of its political objectives from the rest of the community, television images and media commentaries have often reinforced the erroneous equation of the religion with terror. It explains why some of the offensive cartoons of the Prophet published in the Jyllands-Posten made that link. Equating Islam and Muslims with violence and terror is not new. It has been going on for a thousand years. It began with distorted and perverted biographies of the Prophet in Latin in France and Germany in the tenth and eleventh centuries and has continued into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries through the writings of men like Bernard Lewis and Daniel Pipes. Historical Anger When the Prophet was hurled with abuse and taunted with insults --- even when he was physically attacked --- he displayed tremendous restraint. Surely, the least that those who are protesting in his name can do is to try to emulate.is example In the past, Islam was equated with violence partly because of the anger and antagonism generated by both the Muslim conquest of large parts of Europe and the defeat of Christendom at the hands of Muslim defenders of Jerusalem at the end of the crusades. The power and glory of Islamic civilization between the eighth and fourteenth centuries --- especially its pioneering role as the founder of modern science --- when much of Europe was shrouded in the darkness of the middle ages also caused a great deal of envy and resentment which European folk literature expressed through negative stereotyping of Islam and Muslims. This stereotyping with the emphasis upon 'Islamic violence' reached its zenith during the colonial epoch when Western powers ruled the roost. Oil & Zionism It is not just the residue of this huge historical baggage that colors Western perceptions of the Muslim world today. It is significant that it was when certain Muslim states began to exercise control over their oil from the early seventies onwards, thus challenging the Western grip over this vital commodity, that pejorative portrayals of Arabs and Muslims became rife in the mainstream Western media. Similarly, as Zionist influence over the critical sectors of American society increased and the Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation intensified in the sixties, the American media accelerated its imaging of 'Muslim terror.' It is undeniably true that the politics of Israel and oil has been at the root of much of the stereotyping of the religion and its adherents in recent times. Role of Media Since the politics of Israel and oil is entrenched within a global hegemonic structure of power, it is doubtful that the mainstream Western media will cease to equate Islam with violence in the near future. For the media themselves are part of this hegemony. This is why one has to depend upon the alternative media and dissident civil society actors to present a balanced perspective on how the religion views violence and what the historical record has been on this score. Bridge-Building It is encouraging that there have always been non-Muslim writers in the past as in the present, from Wolfgang Goethe to Karen Armstrong, who have attempted to provide an honest picture of Islam to the public. It is bridge-builders of their kind who are crucial for inter-civilizational harmony between Islam and the West. Unfortunately, most Muslims are not aware of the work of these bridge-builders. What they have been witnessing especially in the last few years are the stark consequences of global hegemony reflected in the slaughter of innocent Muslims in Palestine and Iraq; in the humiliation of occupation and subjugation; in the treachery of double standards; in the machinations of exclusion and marginalization. It explains to a great extent the explosion of violent fury in different parts of the Muslim world over the abusive caricaturing of the Prophet. It is anger that is driven by more than their boundless love for Muhammad. Violent protest is not the way However, what the cartoon protesters do not realize is that by resorting to violence they have unwittingly reinforced the worst prejudices of those detractors of Islam who are only too willing to link the religion to terror. Peaceful protest would have served the cause of Islam better. Such protest calls for a certain degree of restraint. It is true that in some of the protests Muslims have shown remarkable control over their emotions. But it should have been the norm. After all, when the Prophet was hurled with abuse and taunted with insults --- even when he was physically attacked --- he displayed tremendous restraint. Surely, the least that those who are protesting in his name can do is to try to emulate his example.
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