by Bruce Thornton
As a brave Egyptian critic of Islam, Ahmed Harqan, asked recently, “What has ISIS done that Muhammad did not do?” Thus it’s no coincidence that of the 7 global conflicts costing at least 1000 lives a year, 6 involve Muslims.
Yet progressive orthodoxy dismisses this evidence as Islamophobic bigotry.
The
jihadist murderers are dead, after killing five more Parisians, but
many Westerners, long drugged by bad ideas and received wisdom, continue
to sleepwalk through the war against jihadism. This means that after
all the brave words and feel-good marches, little significant action
will be taken to prevent such atrocities from happening again.
But even right-thinking people slip into this species of apologetics. A writer at Pajamas Media,
in an otherwise perceptive analysis, wrote this as well:
“Unfortunately, this civilizational friction between the west and Islam
has ebbed and flowed across the centuries. It is nothing new. Islam
threatened the gates of Vienna and the Crusades reached the Holy Land.”
This smacks of the “cycle of violence” trope usually used against
Israel. What it ignores is the fact that someone started the
violence by serially invading and conquering the lands of others, and
enslaving and oppressing their people. The siege of Vienna in 1683 was
the last in a long history of Islamic military aggression against Europe
and the centuries-long occupation of Western lands; the Crusades were
an attempt to liberate from oppressive occupiers a land that had been
Christian for centuries before being invaded by the armies of Islam.
Most important, however, is the simple fact that the violence in the Old Testament is, as Raymond Ibrahim points out, descriptive, not prescriptive. It reflects the brutal reality of its times, not a theology binding the faithful for all times. As for the New Testament, the only violent verses apologists can dredge up, as a New York Times article did last week, come from the apocalyptic predictions of Revelations, or these words of Christ from Matthew: “I come not to bring peace, but a sword.” Grade-school catechumens know that this is a metaphor, not a call to jihad, like the Koranic verses instructing Muslims to “slay the idolaters wherever you find them,” or to “fight those who do not believe in Allah,” or to “kill them wherever you find them.”
Our ancestors for centuries
acknowledged the true nature of Islam, a simple fact proven by 1000
years of Muslim aggression. Alexis de Tocqueville, one of our most
brilliant political philosophers, wrote in 1838, “Jihad, Holy
war, is an obligation for all believers. … The state of war is the
natural state with regard to infidels … [T]hese doctrines of which the
practical outcome is obvious are found on every page and in almost every
word of the Koran … The violent tendencies of the Koran are so striking
that I cannot understand how any man with good sense could miss them.”
But that was when our leaders and intellectuals, schooled by history and experience, their minds not blinded by fashionable self-loathing and incoherent cultural relativism, were “men of good sense.” Our leaders today have slipped into delusional dreams, in which people like Tocqueville or Winston Churchill––who in 1897 said, “Civilization is face to face with militant Mohammedanism”––are dismissed as ignorant bigots and racists who lack our superior knowledge and morality. Meanwhile, the bodies of jihadism’s victims continue to pile up, and Iran’s genocidal theocracy closes in on a nuclear weapon. And many in the West continue to sleepwalk through it all.
In the absence
of clear thinking and recognition of fact, responses to this latest
example of Muslim violence reflect ideological fever dreams. “Nothing to
do with the Muslim religion,” as French president François Holland said
of the attacks, is a perennial favorite. Such apologists invoke
shopworn Marxist bromides like colonialism, or postmodern magical
thinking like “Orientalism,” the two-bit Foucauldian invention of
Egyptian-American literary critic and fabulist Edward Said. This was the
tack taken by an American historian of Egypt who told a New York Times
reporter that Islam was “’just a veneer’” for [jihadist] anger at the
dysfunctional Arab states left behind by colonial powers and the
‘Orientalist’ condescension many Arabs still feel from the West.”
For many apologists, though, it’s just easier to
call the jihadists “crazy.” Here’s Vox’s Ezra Klein, long-time purveyor
of progressive orthodoxy, opining on the Paris murders. He fingers “the
madness of the perpetrators, who did something horrible and evil that
almost no human beings anywhere ever do, and the condemnation doesn’t
need to be any more complex than saying unprovoked mass slaughter is
wrong.”
This repeats Jimmy Carter’s mistake about the
Ayatollah Khomeini, whom he called a “crazy man.” But jihadists are not
insane, and their violence cannot be dismissed so simply. They are
proud Muslims, adherents of a 14-centuries-old faith that conquered its
way to one of history’s largest empires, the warriors before whom a now
dominant, arrogant West once trembled. Their faith preaches that Allah
wills the whole world to be united under the rule of Islam and its
illiberal, totalitarian law code. Those who resist and refuse to convert
are defying Allah; they are the enemies of Islam, the denizens of the
“House of War” who endanger the spiritual wellbeing of the faithful in
the “House of Islam.” As such, the infidels are the legitimate objects
of Muslim violence, conquest, enslavement, and dominance, an aggression
recorded on every page of history. If you want contemporary evidence for
the reality of jihad, look around the world today, where Muslim
violence is endemic, and accompanied by theological arguments drawn
straight from Islamic scripture, theology, and jurisprudence.
So contra Klein, the Paris jihadists didn’t
do something “that almost no human beings anywhere ever do.” As we
speak, plenty of Muslim human beings every day in Nigeria, Libya, Syria,
northern Iraq, Afghanistan, and Yemen, to name a few venues of jihadist
violence, are doing “horrible” things like murder, torture, beheadings,
rape, sex-slavery, crucifixion, and all the other atrocities that are
also copiously documented in the history of Islamic conquest and
occupation. As a brave Egyptian critic of Islam, Ahmed Harqan, asked
recently, “What has ISIS done that Muhammad did not do?” Thus it’s no coincidence that of the 7 global conflicts costing at least 1000 lives a year, 6 involve Muslims.
Yet progressive orthodoxy dismisses this
evidence as Islamophobic bigotry. Unable to deny the reality of
theologically inspired Muslim violence daily filling the international
news, they resort to blaming Western historical crimes, or scapegoating
Israel. Another tack is to invoke the tu quoque fallacy, charging that Hebraism and Christianity are just as violent as Islam.
This argument took off after 9/11 and has
persisted among the jihad deniers. Historian of religion Philip Jenkins
claimed, “The Islamic scriptures [about war] in the Quran were actually
far less bloody and less violent than those in the Bible.” Rabid
anti-Zionist and apologist for terrorists Richard Falk played the moral
equivalence card: “The Great Terror War has so far been conducted as a
collision of absolutes, a meeting ground of opposed fundamentalists.”
Atheist gadfly Richard Dawkins complained about “fundamentalist”
Christians who “fuel their tanks at the same holy gas station” as Muslim
terrorists. Similarly, a few years ago,
Salon ran a headline asking, “What’s the difference between Palin and
Muslim fundamentalists? Lipstick.” This specious moral equivalence
descended into the absurd after the attacks in Paris, when a guest on
MSNBC equated “Islamic extremism,” which murders thousands a week, with
preacher Jerry Falwell’s 1988 unsuccessful libel suit against Hustler magazine.
Most important, however, is the simple fact that the violence in the Old Testament is, as Raymond Ibrahim points out, descriptive, not prescriptive. It reflects the brutal reality of its times, not a theology binding the faithful for all times. As for the New Testament, the only violent verses apologists can dredge up, as a New York Times article did last week, come from the apocalyptic predictions of Revelations, or these words of Christ from Matthew: “I come not to bring peace, but a sword.” Grade-school catechumens know that this is a metaphor, not a call to jihad, like the Koranic verses instructing Muslims to “slay the idolaters wherever you find them,” or to “fight those who do not believe in Allah,” or to “kill them wherever you find them.”
The whitewashing of Islam’s violent
prescriptions serves another fantasy, the idea that there are vast
majorities of “moderate” Muslims whose “religion of peace and tolerance”
has been “highjacked” by a tiny number of “extremists.” Yet most who
make this case just assert it, rather than providing empirical evidence.
Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan, for example, quoted
one of the Danish cartoonists who had to go into hiding after being
attacked at his home for drawing one of the infamous Mohammed cartoons.
He is hoping for “a reaction from the moderate majority of Muslims
against this attack [in Paris].” Noonan then responds, “That majority
actually exists, and should step forward.” This call to moderate Muslims
was also made in the Wall Street Journal by French public
intellectual Bernard-Henri Levy: “Those whose faith is Islam must
proclaim very loudly, very often and in great numbers their rejection of
this corrupt and abject form of theocratic passion.”
But we’ve been waiting ever since 9/11 for
moderate Muslims to “step forward” and “proclaim very loudly” that the
jihadists have distorted their faith. A few apologists, brave critics,
and duplicitous spin-doctors have spoken out, but the Muslim masses
globally have been mostly silent. Of course, many Muslims have no desire
to follow Islam’s precepts about waging jihad, and just want to live
their lives in peace. But there have not been mass marches protesting
those who murder in their name and who allegedly “corrupt,” as Eric
Holder said in Paris, Islamic theology. Perhaps last Sunday’s rally of
over a million Parisians will turn out to be an exception, assuming it
included significant numbers of Muslims. But will there be any
follow-through after the emotional high passes? Or will this moment of
multicultural brotherhood dissipate, as it did following France’s 1998
World’s Cup soccer victory, when a million Parisians gathered in
celebration?
This silence of the Muslim masses about
jihadist terror has been the case for over a decade of such attacks. In
2004 after the brutal murder of Theo van Gogh in the streets of
Amsterdam––another attack on free speech––only a handful of Dutch
Muslims attended a public rally and memorial service. In the intervening
years, after similar attacks––like the murder of 7 French Jews and
soldiers in 2012, or the 3 Jews massacred in Brussels in 2014––we have
not seen the kind of public, unequivocal, unqualified, mass
condemnations of the jihadists one would expect if the latter were a
fringe whose beliefs are so alien to traditional Islam.
What we have seen are thousands of
Muslims celebrating in the streets after 9/11. We have seen riots and
murders in response to Westerners exercising the right to free speech.
We have seen rallies against Israel in which nakedly genocidal rhetoric
is indulged––“Hamas, Hamas, Jews to the gas” is a favorite–– and temples
attacked, as happened during Israel’s war against Hamas last summer.
And we have seen polls
consistently demonstrate that significant numbers of Muslims, including
large majorities in the Middle East, continue to support an illiberal,
intolerant shari’a law that codifies the attitudes and beliefs
justifying such violence.
But that was when our leaders and intellectuals, schooled by history and experience, their minds not blinded by fashionable self-loathing and incoherent cultural relativism, were “men of good sense.” Our leaders today have slipped into delusional dreams, in which people like Tocqueville or Winston Churchill––who in 1897 said, “Civilization is face to face with militant Mohammedanism”––are dismissed as ignorant bigots and racists who lack our superior knowledge and morality. Meanwhile, the bodies of jihadism’s victims continue to pile up, and Iran’s genocidal theocracy closes in on a nuclear weapon. And many in the West continue to sleepwalk through it all.
Bruce Thornton
Source: http://www.frontpagemag.com/2015/bruce-thornton/western-sleepwalkers-and-the-paris-massacre/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
Jan. 13, 2015
The martyrs of Paris can only be honoured meaningfully in one way.
Therefore, It has fallen to the hitherto lib-left -neutered Jews in the Americas & Europe [with all their unused talents & skills] to finally redeem themselves in their own localities. By a programme of pro-active direct action against our known enemies & THEIR dhimmi- 'sometimes useful idiots', among the well-greased ranks of junk academe, clergy, local officials, affiliated media & U.N. agencies. Who have, up to now, enjoyed an undeserved luxury of immunity from righteous retribution. Their addresses & paymasters are well known. Such action can only be planned & executed at the most local levels. With due attention to the laws & regulations governing peaceful protest & lawful assembly in public places. Our enemies are blatant in THEIR economic dependency on US, THEIR host societies; THEIR unappetizing behavioural patterns, and the burdens they shamelessly inflict on local welfare agencies, public housing, law enforcement, health-care and penal institutions. All THEY have to do until the dust settles from THEIR recent atrocities, is to bide THEIR time. And then resume their activities. Building on the lessons THEY have gained from their recent SUCCESSES. THEY know full well just how short-lived all the histrionic theatrics in the public places of OUR great cities really are. Unless backed-up by a programme of democratically legislated & humane repatriation of THEIR hostile demographies. And realistically stringent & enforced actions at the most vulnerable points of entry & exit from OUR societies, Which THEY threaten so ungratefully & savagely. The price WE will pay in the near-future, of not acting immediately & in OUR own defence, greatly exceeds the inevitable sacrifices of a well-planned & executed strategy carried out now. That which demands nothing is worth nothing. Let THEM be the ones to scurry-off to the dark places of the soul: Where they can practice without restraint the "values" they would inflict on THEIR betters.
Norman L. Roth, Toronto Canada
Post a Comment