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Mark Steyn - A fatwa of one's own
National Post (Toronto) ^ | December 5, 2002 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 12/06/2002 4:57:28 AM PST by Clive

To be honest, I felt mildly envious when I saw Zulf M. Khalfan's letter on Tuesday.

Mr. Khalfan, of Nepean, Ontario, was responding to David Frum's defence of Isioma Daniel, the Nigerian journalist now in hiding after remarking that the Prophet Muhammad would have been happy to take the winner of Miss World for his wife. Mr. Khalfan replied that, as Muhammad's wives are accorded "an honourable status," it was obviously grossly objectionable to suggest that a woman who "exposed herself" -- by wearing make-up and a bikini -- would be an appropriate spouse for the Prophet.

Fair comment. But then: "Mr. Frum has to understand that it is Muslims who determine what is objectionable to their religion, not he dictating it to them," added Mr. Khalfan. "And since he cites Salman Rushdie, he should know by now the fatal consequences resulting from ignoring this fact."

Can you believe it? For most of the last 15 months, while I've been here playing the National Post's Mister Islamophobe, that milquetoast Frum has been sitting in the White House, presumably cranking out all the President's dopey "Islam is peace" speeches. He's back in the Post for barely a fortnight and already he's got his own fatwa? Thanks a bunch, you ungrateful Nepean Islamists! Where did I go right?

Well, Mr. Khalfan has now "clarified" his original letter on the page opposite. He doesn't want to kill David Frum. He just wants David to be aware of how easy it is to provoke other people into killing him.

When Isioma Daniel remarked that Muhammad would have taken Miss World as his wife, she was correct to the extent that the Prophet seems to have had an eye for the ladies. But that wasn't really her point. Her point was more basic, and it was this: Hey, lighten up, Muslims! Muslims responded by going nuts, rampaging through the streets, pulling Christian women and children from cars and burning them to the cheers of the mob. By the end of it all, the dead numbered 500. So no, Miss Daniel, Muslims won't lighten up, but they'll light you up, if they ever catch up with you. (I'm in favour of Izzy offering the poor gal a job at the Post, by the way.)

These days, we're all citing Salman Rushdie but at the time -- February 14th 1989 -- most of us didn't appreciate the significance of the event. It marked the first time the Ayatollah Khomeini had claimed explicitly extra-territorial authority. Why he chose an obscure and for most of us unreadable English novel for his expeditionary foray is unclear, but the results must have heartened him tremendously.

Rushdie had not set out to offend Muslims: None of the London reviewers found anything controversial in the book. When British Muslims and their co- religionists around the world burnt copies of The Satanic Verses in the streets, BBC arts bores -- including our own Michael Ignatieff -- held innumerable discussions on the awful "symbolism" of this assault on "ideas." But it wasn't symbolic at all: they burned the book because nothing else was to hand. If his wife or kid had swung by, they'd have gladly burned them instead. Overseas, they made do with translators and publishers. Rushdie's precious lit. crit. crowd mostly opposed the fatwa on the grounds of artistic freedom rather than as a broader defence of western pluralism. That was a mistake.

In the Fifties and Sixties, Nasserism attempted to import Soviet socialism to the Middle East: it never really took. A generation later, the Ayatollah came up with a better wheeze: export Islamism to a culturally defeatist West. Everything that has become pathetically familiar to us since September 11th was present in the Rushdie affair:

First, the silence of the "moderate Muslims": a few Islamic scholars pointed out that the Ayatollah had no authority to issue the fatwa; they quickly shut up when the consequences of not doing so became apparent.

Second, the squeamishness of the establishment: Rushdie was infuriated when the Archbishop of Canterbury lapsed into root-cause mode. "I well understand the devout Muslims' reaction, wounded by what they hold most dear and would themselves die for," said His Grace. Rushdie replied tersely: "There is only one person around here who is in any danger of dying."

Roy Hattersley, the Labour Party's deputy leader, attempted to split the difference by arguing that, while he of course supported freedom of speech, perhaps "in the interests of race relations" it would be better not to bring out a paperback edition. He was in favour of artistic freedom, but only in hard covers -- and certainly, when it comes to soft spines, Lord Hattersley knows whereof he speaks.

His colleague, Gerald Kaufman, attacked critics of British Muslims: "What I cannot accept is the implication that it is somehow anti-democratic and un- British for Mr. Rushdie's writings to be the object of criticism on religious, as distinct from literary, grounds." Mr. Kaufman said this a few days after large numbers of British Muslims had marched through English cities openly calling for Rushdie to be killed. In the last few months, several readers have e-mailed me with their memories of those marches. One man in Bradford remembers asking a West Yorkshire police officer why the "Muslim community leaders" weren't being arrested for incitement to murder. The officer said they'd been told to play it cool. The cries for blood got more raucous. My correspondent asked his question again. The police officer told him to "F--- off, or I'll arrest you."

And, most important of all, the Rushdie affair should have taught us that there's nothing to negotiate. Mohammed Siddiqui wrote to The Independent from a Yorkshire mosque to endorse the fatwa by citing Sura 5 verses 33-34: "The punishment of those who wage war against God and His Apostle, and strive with might and main for mischief through the land, is execution, or crucifixion, or the cutting off of hands and feet from opposite sides, or exile from the land. That is their disgrace in this world, and a heavy punishment is theirs in the hereafter. Except for those who repent before they fall into your power. In that case know that God is oft-forgiving, most merciful."

Rushdie seems to have got the wrong end of the stick on this. He suddenly turned up on a Muslim radio station in West London one night and told his interviewer he'd converted to Islam. Marvelous religion, couldn't be happier, praise be to Allah and all that. The Ayatollah said terrific, now you won't suffer such heavy punishment in the hereafter. But we're still gonna kill you.

Some of us drew from the Rushdie affair a different lesson than Mr. Khalfan: As bad as the fatwa was, the inability of the establishment to defend coherently Western values was worse. All those British Muslims who called openly for Rushdie's death are still around, more powerful and with more followers.

Mr. Khalfan is being disingenuous. When was the last time a mob of Jews or Christians or Buddhists tore children from cars and burned them to death? A while back, I saw Terrence McNally's ghastly Broadway jerk-off, Corpus Christi, in which a gay Jesus rhapsodizes about the joys of anal intercourse with Judas. The play was an abomination, and deserves all the abuse discriminating theatre-goers can heap upon it. But oddly enough, I didn't feel an urge to slaughter perfect strangers, to ram a schoolbus, drag the little moppets from it, douse them in gasoline, and get my matchbook out.

When Mr. Khalfan says that irresponsible journalists "risk provoking individuals who cannot control their spiritual emotions and cause the death of innocent people," he's being far more objectionable about Muslims than me, Frum and that Nigerian woman rolled into one; he's being more imperialist than any old-school Colonial Officer: He's saying Muslims are wogs, savages, they know no better, what do you expect? You've gotta be careful around them, the slightest thing could set 'em off. Might be a novel, might be a beauty contest.

Sorry, it's not a good enough answer. If that Nigerian mob are really no more than "pious Muslims," then pious Muslims should be ashamed. Pious Muslims can follow the murder-inciters of Bradford, the suicide-bombers of the West Bank and the depraved killers of northern Nigeria on their descent into barbarism. Or they can wake up and save their religion. Mr. Khalfan's sophistry won't cut it.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: steyn
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1 posted on 12/06/2002 4:57:28 AM PST by Clive
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To: Pokey78
ping
2 posted on 12/06/2002 4:58:39 AM PST by Clive
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To: Clive
"He's saying Muslims are wogs, savages, they know no better, what do you expect?"

An apt description of their dead, so-called prophet too.....

3 posted on 12/06/2002 5:01:57 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Clive
Roy Hattersley, the Labour Party's deputy leader, attempted to split the difference by arguing that, while he of course supported freedom of speech, perhaps "in the interests of race relations" it would be better not to bring out a paperback edition. He was in favour of artistic freedom, but only in hard covers -- and certainly, when it comes to soft spines, Lord Hattersley knows whereof he speaks.

Mark Steyn rules. Full stop.

4 posted on 12/06/2002 5:05:13 AM PST by wideawake
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To: Clive
The question is: Who wins in a fa[r]t-wa[r]?
5 posted on 12/06/2002 5:07:10 AM PST by TomGuy
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To: anniegetyourgun
If they can't control themselves they should all move to Seventh Heaven. Since they're enamored of mass suicide perhaps the Muslims could all save us the trouble of blowing us infidels up and join their 72 virgins in Paradise all on their lonesome. Then they can finally get out of the nettlesome fatwa business and the rest of the planet can live then happily ever after.
6 posted on 12/06/2002 5:09:02 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop
Next to a beauty a fatwa's a groaning burden.
7 posted on 12/06/2002 5:10:16 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: Clive
Steyn is brilliant as usual.

Death to jihadi: give the people what they want

8 posted on 12/06/2002 5:10:30 AM PST by Petronski
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To: goldstategop
The only problem with that logic is that I don't think everyone of them drinking Kool-aide will net them their 'martyr' status. That Allah devil demands converts and/or scalps, remember?
9 posted on 12/06/2002 5:12:21 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: anniegetyourgun
Yup. Its too bad they never heard of Jim Jones and Guayana.
10 posted on 12/06/2002 5:15:02 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: anniegetyourgun
I don't think everyone of them drinking Kool-aide will net them their 'martyr' status.

Yes, I believe they have to take others with them in order to be rewarded by their moon-god. Others who didn't want to go, that is, such as people eating in pizza parlors, riding busses, etc.

11 posted on 12/06/2002 5:42:41 AM PST by livius
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To: livius
Here's an idea - "virtual infidels(TM)". We could set up all the Jihadists with some 3-d glasses in a bombproof room. They can blow themselves up whilst a virtual bus station, or church or other public place is projected around them. Heck, they can even choose the surroundings.

We get rid of the Jihadists, and they get to think they're taking hundreds of people with them. Its the thought that counts, isn't it?
12 posted on 12/06/2002 5:45:32 AM PST by babyface00
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To: livius
And, poor dears, their god is so capricious that even THAT doesn't necessarily guarantee them a place in heaven.
13 posted on 12/06/2002 5:46:50 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Clive
Deroy Murdock has proposed that we bury all terrorists, or whatever bits of them we can find, wrapped in pigskin and soaked in lard. As the punchline of a raunchy joke goes, I believe I'd pity the poor pig. However, as an antidote to Islamist violence, it has a lot going for it. Remember: these people are so mentally primitive that they follow a religion that says that the actions of another person can deprive you of your ticket to Heaven.

Steyn, as usual, rocks. How he can be so consistently incisive and wildly funny at the same time is beyond me.

Freedom, Wealth, and Peace,
Francis W. Porretto
Visit The Palace Of Reason: http://palaceofreason.com

14 posted on 12/06/2002 5:49:57 AM PST by fporretto
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To: Clive
Rushdie... suddenly turned up on a Muslim radio station in West London one night and told his interviewer he'd converted to Islam.

can you say LOOOOH-SER?
15 posted on 12/06/2002 6:06:56 AM PST by GirlShortstop
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To: fporretto
Good idea and the sooner we start the better. The vileness of the 'fatwa' and other acts in Isalm defies any logic. The sooner we start giving them what they want (martyrdom) the sooner it's over and resolved.
16 posted on 12/06/2002 6:25:51 AM PST by Rummyfan
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To: Clive; Pokey78
Time for a ping!
17 posted on 12/06/2002 6:29:16 AM PST by xp38
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To: Clive
I only have one quibble with this. I don't think David came up with the Islam is peace stuff while writing for President Bush.
18 posted on 12/06/2002 6:34:24 AM PST by xp38
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To: Clive
the silence of the "moderate Muslims"

One might expect silence if indeed their are no "moderate Muslims." r maybe they're just lazy Muslims.

19 posted on 12/06/2002 7:42:38 AM PST by sam_paine
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To: Clive
Maybe it's time we play Cowboys and Muslims...
20 posted on 12/06/2002 7:43:43 AM PST by rudypoot
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