A Clash of Fundamentalisms

The threat of burning the Koran on the anniversary of 9-11, although withdrawn, has conjured the spectre of a war between fundamentalisms.

Pastor Terry Jones

Pastor Terry Jones's Koran book-burning, scheduled for the 9-11 anniversary, was cancelled yesterday.

This war of fundamentalisms is always a product of politics and history, rather than a natural attribute of human cultures which have often co-existed and intermingled.

The threat to burn any book (especially if considered sacred) is despicable in the same way as it was despicable when the Taliban used explosives to demolish the Bamyan Bhuddas. 

This act is different from, say the cartoons of the Prophet depicted by Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, which unleashed a fundamentalist, unacceptable and illiberal reaction from a large segment of the Muslim world, which revealed an inherent weakness of societies crippled by regimes who let their people let off steam against the west while holding an iron grip on their own people.

While the greatest atrocities are perpetrated by Islamic regimes on their equally Islamic subjects, it is always the great Satan of western culture which is blamed, rather than these governments or western political imperialism, which has for decades connived with a number of these regimes. Ironically in many instances fundamentalist regimes or movements were co-opted to fight their jihads against secular Arab socialists or nationalists.

Although the act of burning a Koran is an act of greater gravity than, say the depiction of the Prophet in a newspaper cartoon, even in this case, the counter-threat of terrorism and violence represents a weakness of societies, whose repressive institutions have prevented the emergence of a liberal and open minded Islam that is able to condemn such acts without threatening hell on earth.

One major weakness of a large segment of Islamic societies is that of expecting western governments to behave in the same way as the illiberal regimes which rule over them. For many in the Islamic world who are brought up under totalitarian regimes, they are unable to distinguish between acts of crazy individuals and the acts of governments.

Still, we should be wary of associating anti liberalism exclusively with Islam.

I suspect that even a repressed western society like Malta many would call on the state to intervene if someone threatens to burn the Holy Bible in a public square. Let's not forget that the Catholic lobby at the university had the power to bring an artist to court, simply for publishing a short story which offended their sick morality. In my opinion, expecting the state to repress individual opinions is always despicable as long as the individual is not openly calling for violence against others. 

But we should not forget that there is another side in this story. There is also a growing number of islamophobes who openly challenge western liberal values by advocating the curtailment of civil, cultural and religious rights of Muslims. 

Dangerously Islamophobia is a sentiment shared by a wide range of people, from liberals who fear their way of life threatened by Islamic conservatism, to arch-traditionalists whose values are not that different from those of Muslim traditionalists. 

In whatever form, Islamophobia is irrational and undermines the very western values it sometimes promotes.

But ultimately the only way to confront Islamophobia is too consistently advocate  and apply secular liberal values in our decisions, be they allowing mosques in New York or defending the rights of cartoonists to portray Mohammed.  

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Clayton Saliba
James thanks and whilst I identify with your quandry , that today human life in some countries seems of less value, I particularly agree with your " But the zeal to defend a sacred text rather than human life is very revealing of oppressed societies manipulated by criminal regimes." , however this manipulation happens in what bwe call democractic countries and in both East & West. Fortunetly, communties like the EU have taken the firts step to do away with Capital punishment. In the US, the President and its constitution would rather defend the right of experssion of some Zealot (knowing lives would be lost) rather than protect all western people from risk being killed. This is the dillema for the US President and they have to do something about their home grown zealots. The poor woman in Iran is a sad story, one must remember that she is convicted of killing her husband - and whilst no-one should be stoned, our dear friends the US would murder a woman found guilty of 1st degree homicide, by lethal injection or electric shock. Makes one wonder what the world is comming too really - China too has killed more convicts than previous year - thousands every year. I for one thank God we have a bit more sense within the EU - whilst ther ought to be healthy deterrents for criminal action, it should always be seen as proportional justice and never revenge justice - that is why the EU woiuld not return even guilty people back to countries if they risk capital punishment.
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Peter Cassar
well i think human life like that of the Iranian women threatened by death by stoning and the thousands of Afghan women and men brutalised by the Taliban are more sacred than any Koran. That does not mean that I do not condemn the threats of this mad preacher of hate in search of his 15 min of fame, a bankrupt one at that as he was disowned by his own church. But the zeal to defend a sacred text rather than human life is very revealing of oppressed societies manipulated by criminal regimes.
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Clayton Saliba
The Bible or Bamyan Bhuddas for followers of the respective religion are not the same as the Koran is for the Muslim. If they were, than after the demolishing of the 5000 year old Bhuddas the billions of Bhuddists followers would have risen up and destroyed all Asian Muslims like a tsunami – the fact is these comparisons are not like for like. For a Catholic, the Virgin Mother is Holy and certainly way above the Bible. (incidentally the Bible hardly mentions the Holy Mother ) Fact is that the Koran is Holy to the Muslim and deserves the same respect from non believers as from believers, likewise with regard to say the Virgin Mary, and you know what, the Koran dedicates a whole chapter to Mary mother of Jesus. The chapter does not refer to the Holy Mother as the Virgin, but than neither do most Christians in UK! The Holy Koran is meant to be stored higher than other books, never left open and so on. We too have our respect towards the images of which we hold Holy and even the purest would be upset should they hear of public demonstrations to mistreat with disrespect whatever it is we hold as Holy. Terrorists are those trying to break up societies and create hatred and not those that defend their right to believe or non believe.
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Peter Cassar
agree with Censinu 100%....My point is that secularism must be applied consistently and while the rights of all religions should be respected this must never be at the cost of the freedoms secured by the french revolution!
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Jean-Claude Pace
i think this is a multi-faceted conflict, mainly one between those who believe in a society built on civic values and the rule of law and those who believe in a society centred around a religious belief. Than there is also the conflict between different groups, such as christian and muslim fundamentalists, who both fall within the second group, i.e. those who want a society and a state based on religion, but who of course disagree on which religion society and state should be based. I'd rather live in a secularist state than in one in which policy is dictated by religious leaders. While all culture should be respected, the people of Europe should never give up the liberty they have struggled for in the past in order to accomodate and appease any religious community, including those amongst the muslims who dream of a world built on the Iranian or the Saudi models....
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Martin Micallef
Liberty and Islam are uncompatible. Islam is for submission. liberty is not! I cannot understand Maltese" leftist' who are anti-PL and I can.t understand Labourites who condone Islam (-a reactionary religion-) after the long battles against local bigots who ran the local Catholic Church in the 60's! Islam is worse than the local reactionary Church of the 60's ! Of course I have a phobia against Islam; I can.t be agnostic, I can,t eat during ramadan, I can.t drink alcohol, I can.t be an Atheist, I cannot practice Christianity, Hinduism or any other religion in public in a Muslim country. If my daughters have an affair they get stoned, women have no rights: first comes the male, then the slave, then women! Yes, women are nowhere to be seen in a Muslim country; they are .to stay at home watching TV Gays are invisible in Muslim countries and if they go public they will be stoned. Yes I am afraid of the desert religion just as I used to be afraid of the local Gonzi One religion!
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Alfred Galea
[Let's not forget that the Catholic lobby at the university had the power to bring an artist to court]....... James, do you have proof of WHO this catholic lobby is and whether it was they who "brought"the artist to court?? Or is this just an assumption??