Posted on 8/16/2002, 4:37:30 PM by xsysmgr
The charges by the Reverend Franklin Graham are not only justified, they are unanswerable. Time magazine reports that the bowdlerizers at the University of North Carolina have got out a special edition of the Koran (political correctness: the Qur'an). The book, handed out to incoming freshmen, is designed to communicate the teachings of the Prophet. This edition is exorcised of any sentiments such as might have impelled the knights of 9/11 to plunge themselves and their steeds into live Americans, innocent of any infidelity to Islam, this side of not adhering to it. By the law of averages, there were certainly some Islamic victims in the Twin Towers. Abiders of the faith were not blocked at the door that morning.
Dr. Graham, like his father, Billy, takes his religion seriously. Doing that is an effrontery in a Comstockean age. Religions are acceptable only when shorn of anything that pricks, like hellfire. It is Dr. Graham's point that if we assume, for the sake of ecumenical bonhomie, that the terrorists were not really representing Islam, that they were extremists torturing the word of the Prophet. Okay. Then that is exactly what we should be told by men of Islam in authority. And that should be easy to do, inasmuch as the high priests of the Islamic world are also its secular leaders: The Muslim religion does not condone the separation of church and state.
What Dr. Graham is being so widely criticized for saying is that the people in charge in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, and other Muslim countries, should handle the al-Qaeda problem less detachedly than they have done. There were expressions of regret, on September 12, from the leaders of the Islamic world, but none of them repentant. The Pope, a couple of years ago, apologized for 500-year-old distortions of Christianity at the expense of the Jews, and his words were heeded and appreciated. There weren't any Christians around, when Pope John Paul spoke, who in the name of the Christian faith were out there killing non-Christians. Permissible limits of evangelization had long since been coalesced, in a fast-moving world. The 19th century — yesterday! — was when slaves were bought and sold, women were without suffrage, and Catholics and Jews were forbidden in Great Britain, the august mother of democracy, to vote. But all that is viewed today as a very long time ago, moral ice ages past.
But are such evolutions in moral thought universal? The trouble Dr. Graham is pointing to is the awesomely wide acceptance of the September 11 actors as martyrs. Their names are hallowed because they professed themselves engaged in acts of faith. If theirs is held to be the true faith by 19-year-old zealots, then to whom do we turn to discredit the religious credentials the killers invoked?
If a band of Americans, proclaiming their devotion to the faith, assaulted a Muslim center, we would not need to wait very long for disavowals — by Christian leaders. When John Brown carried his faith to unreasonable lengths, we hanged him. What we are waiting for, says Dr. Graham, is an apology from Muslim leaders. Why shouldn't we have that? An explicit disavowal, as contrary to acceptable teachings of the Koran — of the acts of the terrorists.
What we have got is denunciations of Dr. Graham for admitting the hypothetical possibility that the September 11 actors were credible Muslims. Dr. Faiz Rehman, who is communications director for the American Muslim Council, says that Dr. Graham "is sounding like a broken record." But the silence of the sovereign Muslim community is sounding like unbroken muteness. If the position of the American Muslim Council is that it is humiliating even to speculate that the killers had a root in Islam, they should tell us what it is they plan to do about those in the Muslim world who applaud the terorrists' acts and their mission.
You and I — because we are so intelligent (!), and so balanced morally (!) — know that what happened on September 11 can only be dismissed as a perversion. A perversion of something. But our concern is that our blissful sophistication in such matters isn't shared as widely as it ought to be. When we conquered Hitler, we denied the Germans the right to buy a copy of Mein Kampf. Should we ask the Muslim leaders to circulate only the University of North Carolina edition of the Qur'an?
The only blessing to flow from 9/11.
Huh? Dr. Graham's assements of Islam would be accurate even if he were an atheist.
I suppose you could make the argument that individual Muslims, including Muslim leaders, are no more obligated to apologize for the acts of the 9/11 terrorists than individual Christians are obliged to apologize when the KKK misuses the cross, Christianity's holiest symbol, or the "Church of Jesus Christ/Aryan Nations" perverts Christianity with their own particular form of hatred.
Nonetheless, it would be very much in the interest of American Muslims to do everything they can to convince the rest of us that they are not sympathetic to the "Islamists" who seek to destroy all of civilization that is not Muslim.
Trying to straddle the fence is not an option. Failure on the part of Muslims to outspokenly condemn the acts of 9/11 will simply be taken as tacit approval. President Bush meant it quite literally when he stated "in this war on terror, you are either with us or you are against us", and the vast majority of Americans back that 100%.
The Al Quaeda terrorists attacked us IN THE NAME OF ISLAM. The Muslims who danced in the streets at the destruction gave praise to Allah for the carnage IN THE NAME OF ISLAM.
If we Americans therefore tend to view Muslims as our mortal enemies, you have only yourselves to blame. The responsibility is yours to show us that you are not our enemy, or you WILL bear the consequences if another 9/11 type terror act occurs.
(I have a Muslim mosque at the end of my street. I noticed a small American flag hanging from the aerial on one of the cars that was in the parking lot during worship services Friday. Not all Muslims, apparently, are blind to reality.)
Moslems want to open a mosque on every corner, and proselyte their faith to others in the US and Europe, yet the same Moslems would refuse construction of churches or allowing Christians to proselyte to Moslems. Freedom is a one way street for them. Their conscious is effectively dead, hence, we cannot expect apology or human feelings from them.
Was he hanged or did he die in that shoot out? I don't remember. In any case, he wasn't killed for carrying his faith to far, but for raiding an Army armoury, stealing weapons and for killing people in that action.
Do the Amish or Quakers carry their faith too far? I'd say yes, but no one's out killing them, because they aren't violating the law.
Well, sure; but in that case, they'd be baseless, uncompelling, and irrelevant.
Well, sure; but in that case, they'd be baseless, uncompelling, and irrelevant.
Certainly. Atheism is irrelevant to the true believer -- but so is science and factual evidence.
Did it?
Dan
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