by Dror Eydar
"Islamism steals from Islam for its own totalitarian ambition," says Dr. Qanta Ahmed, a physician and Muslim intellectual who defends Israel to the world • U.S. officials can't distinguish between IDF volunteer and Muslim joining Islamic State, she says.
Dr. Qanta Ahmed
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Photo credit: Yonatan Shaul |
These last few years, I have been toying with
the idea of gathering an assembly of intellectuals, political leaders
and public opinion leaders to discuss the perils and prospects of
Western civilization. Men and women who understand Israel's role as a
dam protecting the Western world from flooding and ultimate drowning.
People of truth who would be decent enough to explore the complexity of
the Israeli story, who would be prepared to stand courageously by Israel
and defend its just cause.
One woman I would invite to this fantasy
assembly is Dr. Qanta Ahmed, a scientist, intellectual, journalist,
physician who specializes in sleep disorders, and a practicing Muslim.
Ahmed is an expert on, and ardent opponent of, Muslim radicalization,
and a great supporter of the State of Israel.
Ahmed was born in Britain to immigrants from
Pakistan. She studied medicine and went to the United States to
specialize. She spent time in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere as a physician
and lecturer. She now lives in the United States, publishes articles in
several journals and is a sought-after commentator in American and world
media.
Ahmed arrived in Israel to receive an award
from the Technion, the Israel Institute of Technology, "in esteem of her
courageous and relentless fight for human rights in the Muslim world,
and for her active and uncompromising opposition to radical Islam and
anti-Semitism; and with a sense of gratitude for her friendship toward
Israel and the Technion."
I met with her in Jerusalem, at the Begin
Heritage Center, where the ancient city walls, seen from the balcony,
served as a backdrop and subject for a fascinating conversation.
***
Q: You describe yourself as a religious
person. You have a positive attitude toward religion and spirituality.
In Jewish society there is a spectrum of attitudes toward religion.
However, if we look at the Muslim world today, we see a kind of a
reverse Renaissance, back to the seventh century, to the beginning of
Islam.
"I would absolutely agree that there is a
revivalism of really extreme practices, but to a degree that never
existed in documented history. These are extreme manifestations
purported to be a reconstruction of Islam. They were propagated right
after the Iranian Revolution [in 1979] and have spread like a huge
ripple from Iran to Saudi Arabia and elsewhere, including to Pakistan,
which underwent Islamization, and on to extreme brands of radical
Islamism in al-Qaida and now in ISIS [Islamic State]. Its advocates love
to claim that this is a revival of the original and authentic Islam but
it is really a fictional construct.
"Even having lived in Saudi Arabia, a state
that follows Shariah [Muslim law] without innovation, without
modulation, still the kind of barbarity we see now passing in some of
these Islamic groups exceeds even the harshest manifestations of Shariah
law. So you are right that there is a reverse revivalism."
Q: So what is the difference that you see between the revival of Islam and the Islam in which you believe?
"Well, one example is that nowadays it is not
unusual for women to be stoned to death in Iran or in other remote
areas, as one can see in recruitment videos indoctrinating Pakistani or
Afghani children into the service of radical Islam. This in contrast to
the five centuries of documentation of Ottoman history in which there is
only one stoning recorded. So even though there are passages in the
Quran which might suggest that these kinds of punitive actions can be
taken, even in the case of adultery, they did not occur at the level of
ferocity and frequency which now we can record.
"That is a deliberate revival which was
introduced by the nascent ayatollahs of Iran. They use a special
directive called Tazir, which gives jurists the authority by Islamic law
to pass a ruling not based on precedent, but rather gives them the
freedom to manipulate laws. In the past, this freedom was given only in
situations of dire instability, yet they now use this power to the
disadvantage of innocent people and punish them in any way they see fit.
"A good example would be the outrageous
punishment of Raif Badari, a Saudi blogger who received the punishment
of 1,000 lashes for publishing something on the Internet. There could be
no precedent for this. Where did they get the number 1,000? This is
particularly problematic when a fundamental value of Islam is that you
cannot be a real believer if you do not have free will to choose not to
believe. What kind of maker would choose compulsion in belief? That
would be a weak maker. So Tazir as a phenomenon has been intensely
pursued since the 1970s, in a way that really has become a distortion of
Shariah.
"I have difficulty with the generalization of
'the Muslim world.' Muslims exist on every inhabited continent. They
number 1.62 billion people. In the United States alone there are 69
different nationalities of Muslims. Every year in Mecca, over 183
different nationalities participate in the Hajj. So to talk about the
'Muslim world' is almost like talking about one-fifth of the world's
population."
Q: How do you distinguish between Islam and Islamization?
"Islamization is a good word, too, which has
been used opportunistically by Muslim democracies as a means to show
power and political expediency. But Saudi Arabia is a big patron of
Islamism, which seeks to co-opt the public space, using a fictional
imposition of Islam to their political advantage. Islamists acted this
way in a Saudi theocracy, in an Iranian revolutionary democracy (as they
call it), in a Pakistani republic.
"If I were not Muslim, I would look at the
world's Muslim-majority countries and ask myself, 'What is Islam?'
Because when you travel to these Muslim countries where I have traveled,
the basic fundamentals of Islam are not these.
"First of all, there is freedom not to
believe. Second, there is recognition of other religions, which are
mentioned in the Quran.
"My family has practiced the freedom not to
believe for over a century. And we are not unusual. We are from a
British-Indian background, like millions of others."
Distortion of Islam
Q: You are speaking of a cultural
retreat regarding Islam, a rejection of the universal values attained in
the last few centuries.
"I expropriate my family visits to Pakistan to
learn about the country. But if you look at what Pakistan has done in
the name of democracy! Pakistan was created by a Muslim secular
democrat, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who studied law at a prestigious London
institute. In a speech he gave before the first day of the establishment
of Pakistan at the Constitution Club in Karachi, he said, 'In the new
state your creed will not be the business of state. All will be free to
go to their temples, churches, mosques.'
"Unfortunately he died soon after, within the
first year of Pakistan's founding as a state. Immediately after his
death, appeasement steps were made toward extreme Muslim clerics who
first wanted to agitate against the Hindus, and then later decided to
agitate against minorities. The ideal of a secular democracy was that
there was a space for Islam but also for everybody else. Pakistan was
founded to create a space for Islam out of the fear that it would be a
persecuted minority in India. In fact, Pakistan was created with the
idea of a Muslim 'Zion' without the religious history, really for a
political safeguarding of what was a minority in the huge India. But now
there has been an absolute perversion of these ideals.
"When Pakistan was founded, one year before
Israel, 24% of its population was non-Muslim. Today it is 3%. Pakistan
sits on the U.N. Human Rights Council, overseeing people's human rights,
including that of Israel's, when at the same time, as a state, it has
legally enshrined the persecution of minorities by denying their
electoral representation. This goes unchallenged in the West and
Pakistan is still called a Muslim democracy.
"The modern Muslim world has achieved
something remarkable. It has countries with constitutions, with
positions in institutions like the United Nations, but has not a single
institution that you could point out that even purports to be truly
democratic. The Islamists -- different to the Islam as I know it -- are
boldly exploitative. Islamists love elections. [Turkish President] Recep
Erdogan himself said that democracy is a one-way train. They will use
elections and parliament in order to get to their destination and then
they will increase the Muslim commitment of their country.
"What we see in the public space in Saudi
Arabia, Pakistan and other countries often does not reflect the
sentiments and desires of the ordinary people. Even though I am visibly
critical of both those countries, people are absolutely in agreement
with my arguments because if you know Islam you cannot justify what
happens in the name of Islam.
"You do not need to go to the extreme of ISIS,
a new organization, one or two years old. You just look at Pakistan,
Jordan, some parts of Egypt, and see how they enable violence against
women. How come women are not given the freedom to pursue a divorce?
Islam says that a man cannot forcibly remain married or deny his wife a
fair divorce and means of support."
***
Q: You lived in Saudi Arabia and even
published a book on the subject ("In the Land of Invisible Women"). How
did you find that experience?
"I lived there for two years and later
traveled back and forth for about 10 years. When I moved there I was
very naive. I had not read anything about the country beforehand. I was a
doctor finishing her training. My work visa in America was ending and I
needed to continue working. I worked at the time in an intensive care
unit and was managing trauma ICU and I heard they were looking for that
position in Saudi Arabia. So I thought, how hard could it be?
"Well, it was very hard. First of all, it was
15 years ago. I was younger, less diplomatic, fresh out of training,
with great confidence and not much patience with other people.
Everything was so different. The only thing that was familiar was my
reflection in a white coat in the hospital windows. But as soon as I
would leave the hospital environment, the scenario of patient and
doctor, everything was changed. As a doctor I was initiating life
support, doing dialysis, preparing families for the worst regarding
their loved ones. Outside that space I could not even bring my car to
Saudi Arabia as I was not allowed to drive. I had to relinquish my
passport as soon as I entered the country to my employment
representative. The objectification! I was invisible because of my
gender, even though I was used to leading medical teams for years."
Q: Did your "invisibility" protect you from sexual harassment at least?
"This is a point which I never thought of. But
no, you can be simultaneously rendered invisible and objectified. So,
in one sense, when I was in my arena, as an expert, with as many
credentials if not better than the men, I really had to assert myself
aggressively. And then outside work hours, as soon as I left the
boundaries of the hospital compound I had to wear a scarf on my head and
risk being accosted by the religious police if it was not sitting
correctly on my head."
'Anti-Semitic and religionized fiction'
"One month ago, when the Vatican recognized a
Palestinian state, I wrote an open letter to the pope, in which I stated
that I see this as an attempt to continue to crucify the Jewish people
as had occurred in the last two millennia. There is a false assumption
that if they sacrifice the State of Israel, the Jewish people, peace
will come. This is a false assumption because look at what is happening
around us. Today's Christians are like past-day Jews.
"The only surviving Christian community in the
entire Middle East is in Israel, and this is the irony of history: The
Jew is now protecting the Christian."
Q: I learn from your writings that as a Muslim
you see a kind of naivete by Western civilization in terms of how it
treats the danger ahead of it.
"I agree. However, I don't know if it is
naivete. The last few years in the United States have been very
disturbing. There is the denial of ISIS: You cannot get American
politicians to talk about Islamism. Many will refuse to talk about
radical Islam and claim that those jihadists have nothing to do with
Islam.
"Islamism is a very sophisticated 21st century
ideology; like Marxism, but even more noxious because it is
religionized. That is why Islamist anti-Semitism is more dangerous even
than the Nazi anti-Semitism, even though it would be hard to imagine a
diabolical phenomenon as the Holocaust and God forbid anything equal
that or even approaching it.
"I think the Nazis did not have the religious
legitimacy that Islamists claim for their anti-Semitic claims. What do
Islamists say to an illiterate Muslim or to a Jew or Christian? 'It is
in our religion to see Jews as our enemy. It is a religious jihad and
that is why we do martyrdom operations.' This is a religionized fiction.
"We have a problem, as the United States
claims that these people have nothing to do with Islam, but that is not
true. Islamism borrows and steals the images, metaphors and language of
Islam for its own totalitarian ambition. It did not come from a vacuum.
Islamism was invented in Egyptian prisons and was influenced by Marxist
writings. Then they created a man-made movement that looked like a
religion.
"There is a phrase in Farsi, 'the viper in
your bosom.' You nurture the viper, you feed it, and one day it bites
you. So Islamism is the viper in Islam's bosom and Muslims willingly, or
unwillingly, enable this.
"Simultaneously, the United States'
administrations deny Islamism. They disallowed the use of the term
Islamism by federal agencies. It might be called naive but it might also
be called a willing collusion to promote misinformation."
***
Q: Perhaps this is the modern version of the
radical "chic," like the attraction of young people to the image of Che
Gevara who became an icon even though he tried, tortured and murdered
innocent political rivals. The same can be said of the use of the term
"human rights." Every human has rights, except the Jews, who do not have
the right to a state of their own.
"The other way I look at it is that human
rights only matter if somehow they have been limited by Israel in
combat. The ongoing operation in Saudi Arabia and Yemen is much bloodier
than the one that took place in Gaza but the international community is
not even reporting on it. No one is interested. At the same time as
Operation Protective Edge [in the Gaza Strip last summer], Pakistan
carried out one of its own huge operations on its northwest frontier.
They displaced 400,000 people and then carpet-bombed the area. Nobody
cares about this. Where are the inquiries on this?
"But this is an absolutely hypocritical assessment."
Q: Because the Jews have no right to defend themselves?
"This is a very important point because that
is what is unique about anti-Semitism. People make anti-Semitism into
racism, but that is inaccurate. Racism is bad, like sexism, like
xenophobia, but anti-Semitism is saying, 'You have no rights as a human
being and your existence is an affront.' Also, anti-Semitism is always
poised as self defense from 'world-dominating Jewry.'"
Q: It is hard to believe that the intellects
in the United States, who won the Cold War, cannot recognise a
totalitarian ideology.
"I often quote Professor Bassam Tibi, an exile
from Syria publishing in Germany. He writes that as soon as the Ottoman
Empire fell, Islamism began to grow. And the biggest boost to Islamism
was the Six-Day War, since it made impotent pan-Arab nationalism."
Q: Because the secular theories collapsed.
"And this drove the Muslims over to the
Islamist option. But we never see any dissection in any serious forum in
the United States. I cannot believe that the Obama administration is so
ignorant of Islamism, since so much is published, even just in academic
political science publications, aside from the media. The
administration has simply made a choice to ally with Iran and to see it
as besieged, victimized and in need of elevation."
Q: How do you see the consequences of such a policy?
"I think it is a disastrous phenomenon as it
will give legitimacy to Iran in a way that no one in the region
currently has, not even Saudi Arabia. A second problem is that this will
give Iran -- a government which has members openly communicating on
Holocaust denial -- the look of a legitimate superpower, which has a
one-on-one relationship with the United States.
"The biggest casualty of the Arab Spring is
the United States. We have supreme military power and huge economic
resources, but what the Arab Spring revealed was the U.S.'s unbelievable
ambivalence. It could not pick sides at the time of the fall of
[deposed Egytpian President Hosni] Mubarak. Now with [current Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah] el-Sissi, only because he is a strong man has
the administration found its footing.
"The United States is impotent also in the
face of Syrian genocide. Its relations with Israel are very curious at
such a critical time when the U.S. needs a strong relationship with
Israel in order to make Jordan feel confident, as well as Lebanon.
"When I heard Obama's speech in Cairo in 2009,
I thought it was a shame that a speech like this was not given by a
Muslim leader in Cairo about the need for engagement with the U.S. Also,
the prominence of the Palestinian issue on Obama's agenda annoys so
many Muslims from other regions, like from Bangladesh. There are over a
billion Muslims who do not live in the Middle East and do not list the
Palestinian issue as their top priority. Yet I do not wish the
Palestinians ill. I am as pro-Palestinian as I am pro-Zionist."
Q: I call the Palestinian issue a scatoma, a blind spot that people cannot see past.
"The United States is as disengaged in this
process as it is disengaged in the rest of the Middle East and the North
African region. The United States has made a conscious decision not to
engage in Syria, and gives aid to Syria to document the genocide, which
we might have been able to exercise our muscle against, as the United
States is the only one who can have 'boots on the ground.'
"Why has he United States not led a coalition
of Arab countries against ISIS? We are a bystander to genocide, as we
were in Bosnia, Rwanda and other places. What is becoming of us as
Americans with this inaction? Action does not necessarily mean sending
air campaigns. At any event, in medicine you have two routes of action:
immediate intervention or using time as a diagnostic tool. Well, the
United States has had four years to diagnose the situation. It is almost
a long as the Second World War, and we have not come up with a
solution. If I was an enemy of the United States I would think of it as
impotent.
"We have no leader, no Churchill. He knew to
recognize the enemy and he knew that words may be even more important
than weapons. No war is won without words, without national political
will. It is boots on the ground that make the United States accountable.
But when it is the Muslim extremists on the ground, radicalizing more
and more children all round the Middle East, then the U.S. is seen as
impotent."
Q: One could say that this is the consequence
of the mechanism of political correctness that took over Western
discourse after the Second World War. You cannot mention that the
terrorists are Muslim, only "radicals."
"In 2012, I was brought in to testify as an
expert for the Department of Homeland Security on Muslim radicalization
in the United states. I opined, as a Muslim, that there was a need to
investigate Muslim radicalization in the United States. My testimony was
reported by the Democrats in the committee as 'dangerous.'
"Thus, Obama's administration has a false
construct of civil rights images, even if only regarding the plight of
Muslims in America. However, this is not a civil rights issue, nor is it
Islamophobic to say that any suspicious groups that may pose a danger
should be investigated. The problem is that the current administration
accepts that it is a civil rights issue and retreats from the
conversation. I call this a militant ideology. These are people who do
not understand the difference between an American Jew volunteering for
the Israeli army and an American Muslim joining ISIS."
The UN bias
Q: Speaking of double standards, this week the
U.N. Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights published a report on
Operation Protective Edge in Gaza last summer. What is your opinion of
it?
"Unfortunately the U.N. cannot be considered
an impartial judge on matters relating to Israel, as indicated by the
disproportionate resolutions concerning Israel in contrast to the U.N.'s
willful and repeated blindness on matters of human rights when it comes
to many other member states, including member states in the Muslim
majority world, foremost in the Middle East. For that reason any report
by this body cannot be considered an unbiased assessment and makes
interpretation problematic.
"Additionally, I recently read of a report
where the U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon relented to pressures not
to list Israel's IDF on a list of notorious entities which deliberately
target children. The U.N. also decided not to list Hamas on the same
category -- shocking that Hamas is made equivalent to the IDF. The IDF
is a military I regard equivalent to the British Army or the U.S. Army.
So that the fact that the U.N. had a dilemma to classify the IDF in the
same status as Boko Haram, the Lords Resistance Army, ISIS and also
Hamas points to a serious lack of perspective which must surely be
subjective and not objective. For these reasons, an impartial assessment
of Israel's engagement in Operation Protective Edge cannot be rendered
by U.N. agencies.
"To be sure, too many Palestinian children and
women lost their lives under Israeli fire in Gaza during Protective
Edge, and Israel expressed regret while pursuing its conflict with
restraint and observing international laws of war. Yet the contribution
of Hamas to enmeshing women and children and innocent men in conflict
remains unaddressed, its use of child and youth soldiers and its clear
responsibility for pursuing guerrilla tactics in violation of
international laws -- storing armaments in hospitals, using schools as
shelter for weapons -- all ensured civilian losses in Gaza would be
unavoidable."
The poverty of boycotts
Q: The reason you are in Israel is that you
were invited to accept an award from the Technion. Over the last few
years, an academic and economic sword has been dangling over Israel. How
do you see this matter?
"I am glad you asked me. I am horrified by
boycotts. When it comes to the United States administration it may be
naivete, but when it comes to the academia I don't think it is naivete
but a willing choice. A willing collusion with Islamism.
"I was in the U.K. in 2012 studying suicide
bombings when the flotilla incident was brought up in the media. Israel
was presented as the only aggressor and all the others as peacemakers.
There was almost no debate in the media about any position, so I became
curious about the subject of boycotts. I then decided to visit Israel
for the first time in my life and I wanted first thing to visit academic
institutions to see why so many want to boycott them. A few days before
I came, I read an article about Professor Dan Shechtman, a Nobel Prize
laureate, and that is how I connected to the Technion. On my visit I
learned that there were many minority students for whom the Technion set
up a mentoring program, out of a sense of duty to develop the talents
of their students as a national asset irrespective of their background
or origin.
"Following this, I wrote an article called
"The Poverty of Boycotts," stating that if a boycott is enforced it
would harm also the minorities. Thus, in order to ever aspire to side by
side coexistence, this must start with the intelligentsia.
"A year later, during Operation Protective
Edge, an anti-Semitic, anti-Zionist propaganda article was published in
The Lancet, which is the world's premier medical journal, called 'An
Open Letter to the People of Gaza.' The letter held any Israeli academic
or scientist who did not petition the Israeli government to oppose the
Israeli military operation as personally responsible, as if they had
blood on their hands for 'the massacre of the people of Gaza.'
"I was astonished by this letter, as well as
by the fact that it was printed without a counter argument, and without
any editorial comment that this letter did not represent The Lancet. I
ended up leading a counter-letter to combat this argument step by step
together with Israeli leading academics, four Nobel laureates and three
presidents of Israeli universities. At first the responding article was
rejected (without explanation) but it was then published following
intense pressure. The response was beyond our imagination."
Q: How do you explain your defense of the Israeli academia to your colleagues around the world?
"The reasons I defend the Israeli academy are:
1. I know it for what it really is; 2. The Israeli academia is not
homogeneous; 3. My belief that if you permit what has been done to the
Israeli academia, the same can be done to other disputed groups of
physicians -- gay physicians, for example; 4. I also believe that
academia is the last apolitical space which we can all share. As a
doctor you treat all populations with no barriers, with no distinctions.
Physicians hold a very special place in society. Once society loses the
morality of the physician, the morality of the fabric of society is
over (see how Nazi legitimacy was boosted by German physicians'
support).
"If we have the world's premier medical
journal publishing political invective which dehumanizes you, now in the
multimedia age millions of doctors can be influenced. If the Israeli
academia can be dehumanized as responsible for a massacre, then we are
not that different from those physicians who gave license to the Nazi
ideology to conduct its lethal mission.
"The reason I say this is that I really see
the physicians as torch-bearers of ideals. We treat patients
indiscriminately, whether they have means or not, soldier side-by-side
with a terrorist. Medical doctors are still the moral fiber and core of
society, whether you are in a Muslim, secular, or Jewish society.
"What happened in The Lancet was under the
disguise of a public health paper. The conflict was used to push an
official view to dehumanize Israeli academia. That isn't an academic
position; that is a militant Islamist position."
Q: In one of your articles you described yourself as an accidental Zionist. Explain this.
"I never had anything to do with Israel until
late in life. I was never in Israel until 2013, even though I am
well-traveled and lived in three continents. I met Israelis here and
there, and knew something about Judaism. I trained with a lot of Jewish
doctors, and I experienced some Jewish rituals -- a seder, a brit, a
funeral. Little by little you see glimpses of the faith and then you
recognize your own. Then I became interested in radical Islam, and
somehow I found myself here in Israel.
"I found myself on one of my visits at
Hadassah hospital [in Jerusalem]. I have visited many hospitals, but the
most exciting thing was actually when we were in an elevator in
Hadassah. I was with a very busy doctor, and I looked around the small,
packed elevator. What I saw around me was a Muslim lady in an abaya and
hijab, next to her a man who looked like he was from the 18th century
with a striped jacket, white socks and a special hat, next to him was a
man with payot. In front of me was the busy modern-Orthodox doctor, and I
am the one who is the Muslim who looks like she is secular.
"And I realized that all my worlds -- the people I used
to treat in Saudi Arabia, the patients and doctors in New York, my
modern-Orthodox friends, Israelis living in America -- all of my worlds
collided in this elevator. And they don't collide anywhere else. It is
little moments like that in which you can't help but become a Zionist."
Dror Eydar
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=26485
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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