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Jihad Comes to Harvard
Objectivist Center ^ | June 12, 2002 | Tal Ben-Shahar

Posted on 06/19/2002 4:11:37 PM PDT by RJCogburn

In my Harvard University apartment, overlooking the serene Charles River, I grieve for the Israelis who were murdered last week by the Islamic Jihad, and I grieve for students at Harvard whose final lesson before graduating was about the noble meaning of Jihad.

Zayed Yasin, a graduating senior, was selected to address thousands of students and their families about the virtue of Jihad as a moral struggle. While the word Jihad, in some contexts, could mean an internal struggle, the focus on this meaning at the commencement speech diverts attention from Sudanese Muslims who murder and enslave Christians in Southern Sudan, from the indiscriminate murder of shoppers and dancers, and from those who fly planes into buildings--all in the name of Jihad.

The commencement speech at Harvard should have helped graduating students to differentiate between right and wrong; instead, they were exposed to ambiguity and doublespeak. They should have left this institution with the kind of moral clarity that leads to resolve; instead, they left confused and uncertain about what or whom to support. Evil triumphs while good men and women are distracted by verbal obfuscation.

Harvard, and Harvard alone, is to blame for the harm that this speech had inflicted. Mr. Yasin, putting aside for a moment allegations that he has raised funds for an organization that supports terrorism, might be trying to promote a more peaceful form of Islam. The problem is that he is being used as a pawn by the same people who send suicide murderers to blow up innocents. Moreover, he is being used by Harvard University to promote its postmodern philosophy of ethical ambiguity and moral relativism.

I have been at Harvard for eight years, first as an undergraduate studying Philosophy and Psychology, and now as a graduate student studying Organizational Behavior. I care deeply about, and am grateful to, this wonderful place of learning; and it is because I value Harvard so much that the choice of commencement speech disheartens and disappoints me. At the same time, the choice does not surprise me.

The most consistent message that I have heard from professors and students is that everything is relative--reality is a personal, cultural construct, and therefore there is no way to distinguish between right and wrong, moral and immoral. I believed that following the attack on America students and professors would recognize that some wrongs are absolutely wrong, that, at least in some cases, there is no moral ambiguity. As is evident by the choice of graduation speech, however, the reality of thousands dying in the hallways of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon has not penetrated the fortified, detached hallways of the ivory towers.

The semantic argument about a word allows Muslim leaders to hide behind the alternative meaning of Jihad rather than to denounce, and act against, the murder of "infidels." The central issue that must be dealt with is not the misappropriation of a word, but the overwhelming support of Muslims around the world for the form of Jihad that is synonymous with murder. And while Muslim leaders plead for understanding that Jihad really does mean an internal struggle, they themselves refuse to categorically condemn suicide murders of civilians--as we saw in this year's Organization of Islamic Conference in Kuala Lumpur.

In a world in which the only superpower supports life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, those who perpetuate death, oppression, and suffering cannot survive without obscuring their message. They must revert to rhetorical ploys if they, and their ideologies, are to survive. They do it with the help of intellectuals who appear on CNN and ABC, and who give commencement speeches at leading universities.

Providing the center stage on graduation day to American Jihad is not, as some have argued, about free speech. Rather, it is about forcing a captive audience to listen to a speech that makes a mockery of the war that the United States is fighting--captive students who want to attend their own graduation ceremony after years of hard work, captive parents who want to see their children take their next step forward.

Harvard's choice of a commencement speech is not only insensitive to those who lost loved ones in the name of Jihad--some of whom are graduating this year--it also undermines the fight against Islamic fundamentalism. It is about time that this university, with so much potential to do good, took its head out of the sand and began to evaluate the kind of causes that it supports. A disproportionate number of the world's leaders come out of this institution--and these leaders must learn that good is good, that evil is evil, and that Jihad is Jihad.

Tal Ben-Shahar is a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard University and a writer for The Objectivist Center (www.objectivistcenter.org). The Objectivist Center is a national not-for-profit think tank promoting the values of reason, individualism, freedom and achievement in American culture.

Copyright, The Objectivist Center. For more information, please visit www.ObjectivistCenter.org.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: jihadinamerica; taqiyyalist
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1 posted on 06/19/2002 4:11:37 PM PDT by RJCogburn
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To: RJCogburn
"Everything is relative" Yeah, until one of OUR RELATIVES are killed by muslim terrorists! We're FED UP with this relativism crap - it's time to take back our universities and rid the staff professors who promote this vile, evil bilge!
2 posted on 06/19/2002 4:19:05 PM PDT by princess leah
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To: monkeyshine; ipaq2000; Lent; veronica; Sabramerican; beowolf; Nachum; BenF; angelo; ...
Ivy leaguer Jehadi bump.
3 posted on 06/19/2002 4:21:53 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw; All
Jihad! Across the World....

The Web of Terror

4 posted on 06/19/2002 4:28:30 PM PDT by backhoe
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To: RJCogburn
It is about time that this university, with so much potential to do good, took its head out of the sand

No. The sand is not where Harvard must take its head out of. . . .

5 posted on 06/19/2002 4:29:32 PM PDT by PhilDragoo
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To: RJCogburn
Tal Ben-Shahar is a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard University ...

Still? ;-)

6 posted on 06/19/2002 4:31:49 PM PDT by LurkedLongEnough
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To: RJCogburn
Harvard perpetrated an obscenity, insulting the victims of terror and degrading the institution.
7 posted on 06/19/2002 4:42:44 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: RJCogburn
You know the word JIHAD is very similar to the word CRUSADE. These are both words we used when we kicked the crap out of each other in 800 AD and 1200 AD and 1950 AD...the fact of the mater is that of course the word Jihad does not mean blowing up people in an office building, but in our mind it does. Much in the same way that Bush came out and said this was a Crusade against terror, it was retracted because Muslims equate that word to the Saxons’ murder of men, women and children. However, I think we can start equating the word Jihad with a internal moral struggle (as it is referred to in the Qur'an) when Muslims start equating Crusades with church evangelicals.
8 posted on 06/19/2002 4:47:11 PM PDT by Lennon
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To: princess leah
If arrogance alone is the measure of the greatness of an institution, then harvard certainly ranks at the very top. The selection of an islamist to address thousand of very porous minds after 9.11 is an ultimate expression of harvard arrogance. In your face, America, how do YOU like it!
9 posted on 06/19/2002 4:57:31 PM PDT by desertcry
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To: Balkans
bump
10 posted on 06/19/2002 6:25:44 PM PDT by DTA
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To: DTA
Do we now call it JiHarvard?
11 posted on 06/19/2002 6:32:41 PM PDT by adingdangdoo
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To: adingdangdoo
We should ask those who sheltered Osama Bin Laden network and radical islamists in Bosnia and Kosovo. For example :

01Samantha Power, executive director of the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government's Carr Center for Human Rights Policy;

02Susannah Sirkin, deputy director of Physicians for Human Rights

03Anne-Marie Slaughter Professor of International, Foreign and Comparative Law at Harvard Law School.

Please feel free to add more names and URL to expose their support to Jihad.

12 posted on 06/19/2002 6:55:32 PM PDT by DTA
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To: RJCogburn
When a muslim smiles at you, he is thinking about Danny Pearl.
13 posted on 06/19/2002 7:04:09 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Lennon
Yeah, that's it, and when Adolf Hitler wrote Mein Kampf, (or "My Struggle" or "My Jihad"), he was just thinking about inner peace and self improvement, yeah, that's it.... right on brother, pass the bong, it's all the same thing dude.....
14 posted on 06/19/2002 7:07:49 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Lennon
Building a perfect Islamic world,

one bullet at a time.


15 posted on 06/19/2002 7:16:10 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
Some are willfully blind.
16 posted on 06/19/2002 7:32:51 PM PDT by metesky
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To: metesky
Some soft headed liberal idiots would apologize to the terrorists for "causing their suffering and giving them no other alternative" if the terrorists slit their children's throats.
17 posted on 06/19/2002 7:37:33 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: metesky
A new low...watching the educational system self destruct is worse
than 8 years of Clintoon...I guess one was useless without the other...
Piled Higher and Deeper...glad I stopped at Masters...
18 posted on 06/19/2002 7:43:32 PM PDT by sleavelessinseattle
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To: Travis McGee
It is always a pleasure to read one of your responses.
19 posted on 06/19/2002 7:44:17 PM PDT by sport
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To: sport
You made my night! I hope you'll read my book when it's ready.
20 posted on 06/19/2002 7:56:38 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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