Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: The Problem of Muslim Leadership

The comments below the article are pertinent and correct…but Ayaan Hirsi Ali is courageous for standing against the terrorists and pointing out the hypocrisy of Muslim leadership.

 

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http://www.newenglishreview.org/blog_direct_link.cfm/blog_id/49277

 

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: The Problem of Muslim Leadership

Julie Siddiqi and Omar Bakri

Source: Islamic Society of Britain/Reuters

Ayaan Hirsi i Ali writes in The Wall Street Journal: "Another Islamist terror attack, another round of assurances that it had nothing to do with the religion of peace."

I've seen this before. A Muslim terrorist slays a non-Muslim citizen in the West, and representatives of the Muslim community rush to dissociate themselves and their faith from the horror. After British soldier Lee Rigby was hacked to death last week in Woolwich in south London, Julie Siddiqi, representing the Islamic Society of Britain, quickly stepped before the microphones to attest that all good Muslims were "sickened" by the attack, "just like everyone else."

This happens every time. Muslim men wearing suits and ties, or women wearing stylish headscarves, are sent out to reassure the world that these attacks have no place in real Islam, that they are aberrations and corruptions of the true faith.

But then what to make of Omar Bakri? He too claims to speak for the true faith, though he was unavailable for cameras in England last week because the Islamist group he founded, Al-Muhajiroun, was banned in Britain in 2010. Instead, he talked to the media from Tripoli in northern Lebanon, where he now lives. Michael Adebolajo—the accused Woolwich killer who was seen on a video at the scene of the murder, talking to the camera while displaying his bloody hands and a meat cleaver—was Bakri's student a decade ago, before his group was banned. "A quiet man, very shy, asking lots of questions about Islam," Bakri recalled last week. The teacher was impressed to see in the grisly video how far his shy disciple had come, "standing firm, courageous, brave. Not running away."

Bakri also told the press: "The Prophet said an infidel and his killer will not meet in Hell. That's a beautiful saying. May God reward [Adebolajo] for his actions . . . I don't see it as a crime as far as Islam is concerned."

The question requiring an answer at this moment in history is clear: Which group of leaders really speaks for Islam? The officially approved spokesmen for the "Muslim community"? Or the manic street preachers of political Islam, who indoctrinate, encourage and train the killers—and then bless their bloodshed?

Julie Siddiqi, executive director of the Islamic Society of Britain; Omar Bakri, a radical Muslim cleric barred from Britain.

In America, too, the question is pressing. Who speaks for Islam? The Council on American-Islamic Relations, America's largest Muslim civil-liberties advocacy organization? Or one of the many Web-based jihadists who have stepped in to take the place of the late Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born al Qaeda recruiter

Some refuse even to admit that this is the question on everyone's mind. Amazingly, given the litany of Islamist attacks—from the 9/11 nightmare in America and the London bombings of July 7, 2005, to the slayings at Fort Hood in Texas in 2009, at the Boston Marathon last month and now Woolwich—some continue to deny any link between Islam and terrorism. This week, BBC political editor Nick Robinson had to apologize for saying on the air, as the news in Woolwich broke, that the men who murdered Lee Rigby were "of Muslim appearance."

Memo to the BBC: The killers were shouting "Allahu akbar" as they struck. Yet when complaints rained down on the BBC about Mr. Robinson's word choice, he felt obliged to atone. One can only wonder at people who can be so exquisitely sensitive in protecting Islam's reputation yet so utterly desensitized to a hideous murder explicitly committed in the name of Islam.

In the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing and the Woolwich murder, it was good to hear expressions of horror and sympathy from Islamic spokesmen, but something more is desperately required: genuine recognition of the problem with Islam.

Muslim leaders should ask themselves what exactly their relationship is to a political movement that encourages young men to kill and maim on religious grounds. Think of the Tsarnaev brothers and the way they justified the mayhem they caused in Boston. Ponder carefully the words last week of Michael Adebolajo, his hands splashed with blood: "We swear by almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you. The only reason we have done this is because Muslims are dying every day."

My friend, the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh, was murdered in 2004 for having been insufficiently reverent toward Islam. In the courtroom, the killer looked at Theo's mother and said to her: "I must confess honestly that I do not empathize with you. I do not feel your pain. . . . I cannot empathize with you because you are an unbeliever."

And yet, after nearly a decade of similar rhetoric from Islamists around the world, last week the Guardian newspaper could still run a headline quoting a Muslim Londoner: "These poor idiots have nothing to do with Islam." Really? Nothing?

Of course, the overwhelming majority of Muslims are not terrorists or sympathetic to terrorists. Equating all Muslims with terrorism is stupid and wrong. But acknowledging that there is a link between Islam and terror is appropriate and necessary.

On both sides of the Atlantic, politicians, academics and the media have shown incredible patience as the drumbeat of Islamist terror attacks continues. When President Obama gave his first statement about the Boston bombings, he didn't mention Islam at all. This week, Prime Minister David Cameron and London Mayor Boris Johnson have repeated the reassuring statements of the Muslim leaders to the effect that Lee Rigby's murder has nothing to do with Islam.

But many ordinary people hear such statements and scratch their heads in bewilderment. A murderer kills a young father while yelling "Allahu akbar" and it's got nothing to do with Islam?

I don't blame Western leaders. They are doing their best to keep the lid on what could become a meltdown of trust between majority populations and Muslim minority communities.

But I do blame Muslim leaders. It is time they came up with more credible talking points. Their communities have a serious problem. Young people, some of whom are not born into the faith, are being fired up by preachers using basic Islamic scripture and mobilized to wage jihad by radical imams who represent themselves as legitimate Muslim clergymen.

I wonder what would happen if Muslim leaders like Julie Siddiqi started a public and persistent campaign to discredit these Islamist advocates of mayhem and murder. Not just uttering the usual laments after another horrifying attack, but making a constant, high-profile effort to show the world that the preachers of hate are illegitimate. After the next zealot has killed the next victim of political Islam, claims about the "religion of peace" would ring truer.

Ms. Hirsi Ali is the author of "Nomad: My Journey from Islam to America" (Free Press, 2010). She is a fellow at the Belfer Center of Harvard's Kennedy School and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Tags: Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Islam, slaughter of Lee Rigby, British soldier, Woolwich, Julie Siddiqi, Islamic Society of Britain, Omar Bakri, Al-Muhajiroun, Michael Adebolajo, CAIR, Tsarnaev brfothers, Fort hood massacre, Nick Robinson, BBC, Dutch filmmaker, Theo Van Gogh, President Obama, UK PM David Cameron, London Mayor, Boris Johnson,

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Posted on 05/28/2013 4:21 AM by Jerry Gordon

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Comments

28 May 2013
Enzo

Although the article by Ayaan Hirsi is very well written and to the point, I beg to differ when she writes: "Of course, the overwhelming majority of Muslims are not terrorists or sympathetic to terrorists. Equating all Muslims with terrorism is stupid and wrong. But acknowledging that there is a link between Islam and terror is appropriate and necessary". Everybody knows that Islam is based on the Qur'an and the Hadiths (the sayings and the examples from Mohammed) and the true Muslim has to live according to their principles and to imitate as much as possible the Messenger of Allah. One of the most important tenets of Islam is the killing of the infidels and jihad is just that. If a nominal Muslim does not perform jihad cannot be sure of going to heaven and enjoy the 72 virgins plus the odd boy. In addition such a person is not a true Muslim. There must be for sure many Muslims that disapprove this kind of what we call "terrorism" but in reality they are not true Muslims and thus cannot speak in the name of Islam and for the purpose of intra-religious or political relations they are irrelevant. For that, also the so-called intra-religious discourse is just fiction because for Islam all religions outside Islam are false religions.

Furthermore, I differ from what Ayaan writes about not blaming the Western leaders when they whitewash Islam. These insensitive liers just do that only because they are cowards and in so doing they are instrumental to the condoning and relentless advance of the so-called "political Islam" and the definitive destruction of our civilization and moral principles. Most of the British are pitiful and cannot recognize right and wrong any longer. How can they accept a coward BBC that apologizes for having meekly spoken the truth and a complicit Guardian?

Are we so disgusted and tired of our religion, culture and principles that we need a new cruel political ideology masquerading as a religion such as Islam?

 

28 May 2013
Hugh
The lack of rigor, the failure to follow all the way to the source, that is the texts of Islam, and the figure of Muhammad, the Perfect Man -- disappoints. And the description of CAIR that appears to put it on the side of the "moderate" angels amazes.

 

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