Author: Ophelia Benson

  • Blair to Talk About His ‘Faith Foundation’

    Murphy-O’Connor adds that ‘the role of faith in our society cannot be ignored.’

  • Grayling on Murphy-O’Connor

    ‘Judaeo-Christian’ ethics were taken over from Stoicism and Cicero.

  • ‘Faith’ Schools Kick Up Fuss

    ‘There is an anti-faith-schools agenda at the moment’ says head of Finchley Catholic High School.

  • Postcard from Kuala Lumpur

    Thinking of moving to Malaysia?

    Malaysia runs parallel sharia and civil legal systems, with sharia courts dealing only with Muslims and mainly in family disputes or in matters such as khalwat or apostasy. It employs religious police to ensure Muslim compliance with Koranic laws. They sometimes patrol parks looking for young unwed couples holding hands, raid nightclubs to catch Muslims drinking alcohol and ensure Muslims observe the fasting month of Ramadan.

    Ah does it. But…how do the religious police know who is Muslim? When they go into a park to try to find some evil couples holding hands, how do they know which couples contain Muslims and which don’t? Does everybody in Malaysia wear a large sign or label or a star coloured variously yellow, green, pink, and blue for Other? Do the Muslims have big arrows suspended in the air picking them out for the religious police? Does Allah go with the religious police and tell them who is which? Do all Muslims wear their hair a certain way? Do the religious police just find someone in a hijab and go on from there? Who knows. But at any rate it is interesting to contemplate life in a place where the police can tell you to stop holding hands with someone in a public park, and raid nightclubs to tell you to stop drinking alcohol, and ensure that you follow Ramadan. What do they do, wander around all day and when they find a Muslim (how do they know?) eating a falafel sandwich, snatch it away and fling it into the mud?

    Some Muslims feel it is not fair to be punished for moral crimes that non-Muslims can freely commit. But non-Muslims, who make up around 40 percent of Malaysia’s population of 26 million, strongly resist attempts to impose standards of Muslim morality on them, even if these attempts are sometimes mistaken.

    In other words some Muslims don’t want to be subject to sharia. No I should think they wouldn’t. But apparently the implication is not that sharia sucks, but that non-Muslims should be subject to the same stupid tyrannical intrusive none of your fucking business laws. Nice thought. We have idiotic clerical laws that make our lives miserable, therefore everyone should have laws like that. (And then there’s that absurd last clause – as if mistaken attempts to impose standards of Muslim morality on non-Muslims are no problem if they’re ‘mistaken.’ Of course they’re mistaken, they’re all mistaken, and that’s why people resist them! Der.)

  • NCSE on California Creationism Case

    The University has a legitimate interest in evaluating the adequacy of high school courses to prepare students for study.

  • No Evidence for Benefit of Drinking Lots of Water

    There are lots of claims, but they all seem to be made up.

  • Ali Eteraz on Difficulties With Sharia

    Sharia is not codified. It can be anything based on the whim of the arbitrator. For law to be law, it needs standardization.

  • Imam Calls Jews ‘Brothers of Apes and Pigs’

    ‘If you take a sample on Friday, you’re bound to hear incitement against the Jews in the imam’s sermon.’

  • Distorted Outlook on the Archbishop’s Speech

    On 12 February 2008 the BBC World Service “Outlook”
    news magazine programme devoted some fifteen minutes to a report on the reactions in Britain to the Archbishop of Canterbury’s speech the previous week in which he had advocated incorporating certain aspects of less contentious Sharia law (relating to civil matters such as marriage and divorce) into the British legal system. Notoriously, quite what he was advocating was by no means clear – Dr Rowan Williams himself later acknowledged elements of “unclarity” in his speech, and of “clumsily deployed” words.

    Now there is no doubt that much of the response to the Archbishop’s speech was based on a knee-jerk reaction to the more unpleasant aspects of Sharia law advocated by extreme Muslim groups (and practised in countries governed under Islamic law), which Dr Williams was of course careful to make clear he found abhorrent. However, among the clamour could be found cooler voices that pointed out that there were serious objections to the Archbishop’s suggestions even in their least contentious interpretation. These were rooted in the realities of most Muslim organisations, specifically that they are almost entirely male dominated, and the fact that Sharia, as a generality, tends to favour men’s preferences over women’s. This negative side to the proposals floated by the Archbishop was highlighted by several people, including Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and
    Johann Hari in The Independent. These concerns were summed up by the Government advisor on Muslim women, Shaista Gohir, who stated:

    Although Islam gives women numerous Islamic rights, many Muslim women would fear discrimination due to patriarchal and cultural reasons. Muslims, particularly women, may be pressurised by families and communities into using Sharia courts.

    Now you might have thought that a BBC programme purportedly reporting to the world the reactions to the Archbishop’s speech would have noted the reasoned concern about his proposals, as well as highlighting the less rational reactions that proliferated in the press. If so, you would have been wrong.

    There were essentially three sections in the programme. The BBC religious affairs correspondent, Frances Harrison, was first asked by the presenter to report the reactions to the Archbishop’s proposals (and was later asked to add concluding words). This was followed by a Muslim woman, Aisha Begum, who the presenter told us was “grateful for the existence of British Sharia councils”, and recounted her satisfactory experience of obtaining an Islamic divorce, after which Dr Suhaib Hasan, secretary of the UK’s Islamic Sharia Council, answered questions from the presenter on the workings of such councils in Britain.

    The introductory report by Frances Harrison is reproduced here, so readers can see for themselves its one-sidedness:

    Presenter: So why the huge reaction? Here’s our religious affairs correspondent, Frances Harrison:

    Harrison:

    I think it has played into all the current fears about Islam. When people talk about Sharia law here they think of women being stoned to death, people being beheaded, and hands chopped off, although Dr Rowan Williams was very careful in his speech to say that these sort of inhumane extreme punishments were obviously not something he was propagating in any sense at all. His speech is very cautious, very careful to define exactly what he means, and he says that just because there’s this fear of Sharia law you shouldn’t assume that Islamic law, or parts of it, are not compatible with democracy or democratic values and human rights. But it has played into this sort of media frenzy, which I think really comes after the July bombings, the 7/7 bombings, and the 9/11 bombings, this fear of the ‘Other’, this fear of Muslims, it’s played into that, and people have seized on the some of the more out of context remarks and made a lot of them and not really looked at his remarks in context.

    Note that, in addition to her complete failure to so much as hint at the more considered responses to the Archbishop’s speech, so anxious was Harrison to present as negative a view of the reactions as possible that she even stated that he was “very careful to define exactly what he means”, which, while true in relation to the aspects of Sharia to which he was referring, was certainly not the case as far as his proposals were concerned, as commentators of all views (including the Archbishop himself!) almost unanimously observed.

    The account of the workings of the Sharia courts in Britain provided by Dr Suhaib Hasan, not unexpectedly, gave an impression of non-contentious application of Sharia in relation to marriage and divorce. Not once did the presenter raise with him the concerns expressed by Muslims less enamoured of the system such as those cited above, and by other less prominent individuals. Nor would listeners have the least idea of the kind of views held by Dr Hasan, of which here are some less palatable ones:

    Even though cutting off the hands and feet, or flogging the drunkard and fornicator, seem to be very abhorrent, once they are implemented, they become a deterrent for the whole society. This is why in Saudi Arabia, for example, where these measures are implemented, the crime rate is very, very, low.

    And:

    If sharia law is implemented, then you can turn this country into a haven of peace because once a thief’s hand is cut off nobody is going to steal. Once, just only once, if an adulterer is stoned nobody is going to commit this crime at all. We want to offer it to the British society. If they accept it, it is for their good and if they don’t accept it they’ll need more and more prisons.

    The significance of the above words is not that they indicate that Dr Hasan currently advocates that such measures should be incorporated into British law (he doesn’t), but that the entirely positive account of British Sharia councils from someone who holds such primitive views should have been meekly accepted by the presenter of “Outlook” without the slightest attempt to suggest there might be any negative aspects to their workings.

    A similar criticism may be made in relation to the contribution of Aisha Begum. No doubt many women who wish to adhere to Islamic codes do obtain what they regard as an entirely satisfactory resolution of their problems by Sharia courts. But not once on the programme was there the least indication that this is by no means always the case, that in the words of the Government’s advisor on Muslim women already cited, there may be “discrimination due to patriarchal and cultural reasons”, and that “particularly women may be pressurised by families and communities into using Sharia courts”.

    Finally we come to Frances Harrison’s summing up:

    I think it makes it very difficult in a way to have a reasoned rational discussion about Sharia law. I think, you know, one of the things that the Archbishop quoted was renowned scholar Tariq Ramadan, who said that the idea of Sharia calls up the darkest images of Islam, and it’s reached an extent where even many Muslim intellectuals don’t dare to refer to it for the fear of frightening people. So, you know, this may actually close off rational debate about this issue, it may lead to greater alienation of Muslims, who say, when we raise these issues you won’t listen to us, but there’s the head of the Church of England, and look what reaction he gets, what’s going to happen to us if we start discussing these sorts of problems. And I think there’s a real fear among Muslims in Britain that this will lead to more Islamophobia not less, and of course that was not the intention of the Archbishop, he basically wrote a speech which showed great respect for all religions, amongst them Islam, and for people who want to live a religious life within a secular legal code.

    Presenter: So a positive message may have in the long run negative implications for the various Muslim communities in this country.

    Harrison:

    I think already the Muslim communities in Britain, the Muslims I’ve talked to, feel a great sense of alienation, socially, yes, there are pockets of extreme deprivation for Muslims, they do academically worse in many areas, in terms of employment, in terms of housing, so there are real problems there that need to be addressed, a staggering number of the prison population is Muslim in this country already. So those are problems, but I think just in terms of their perception, this idea that if you’re a Muslim, if you wear a headscarf, you’re a terrorist, this is what people talk about, that they don’t feel they have that kind of freedom here that they used to have and that things have become much more difficult for them, and they point to the media, and I think, you know, this is a case in point, that they will say, the media is anti-Muslim, it stirs up frenzy, it takes things out of context, it suggests that all Muslims are extreme and I think they would look at this controversy that we are experiencing now as part of that anti-Muslim media bias that certainly British Muslims talk about a great deal.

    The best way one can sum up the contributions of Frances Harrison is that she played the role of an advocate on behalf of disgruntled Muslims. Certainly a representative of the Muslim Council of Britain could hardly
    have done a better job from their point of view – except that even they
    would probably not gone as far as the more extreme assertions here. Note that in the course of her tendentiously simplistic account of the tribulations that beset Muslims in the UK she treats alleged perceptions as if they constituted facts – and even conveys to her worldwide listeners the absurd impression that if a Muslim in Britain wears a headscarf she is regarded as a terrorist. If we take her account of Muslim “perceptions” as reasonably accurate in relation to some sections of the population (she gives no idea which “Muslims” she has “talked to”, giving the impression that these are the views of virtually all Muslims), presumably we should also take seriously the evident perception of nearly half of British Muslims that Jews “are in league with the Freemasons to control the media and politics”. But given that we don’t, why should the perceptions cited by Harrison be taken, as she would have her listeners believe, as accurately representing the reality of Muslim experience in Britain?

    On hearing this resolutely one-sidedly negative view of Britain conveyed by the BBC to a world audience, I felt impelled to write a letter of complaint to the Editor of “Outlook”, Gavin Poncia, outlining my concerns indicated above. In his response Mr Poncia first briefly outlined what was in the programme. He then told me that it was not the intention to debate the rights and wrongs of Sharia as practised around the world, and followed this by assuring me that “we at Outlook” take impartiality very seriously, and that, on the question of balance, they have in the past included many less positive experiences of Sharia law. (The latter obviously outside the UK.)

    Now of course none of this actually addressed my specific complaints, so I responded by reiterating that the programme gave a completely one-sided account of the responses to the Archbishop’s speech, failed to provide alternative views such as I had cited of the workings of Sharia currently in Britain, and that the complacent account of Sharia councils by someone with a background like that of Dr Suhaib Hasan was allowed to stand without the slightest questioning.

    In his second response Mr Poncia again irrelevantly stated that Outlook was not the arena for a detailed discussion of Sharia law, and that the choice of speakers indicated that it was the place for personal stories and testimonies. Although he cited my complaint that Frances Harrison’s account was one-sided, he failed to address it, writing instead about the fact that she had alluded to “inhuman extreme punishments” of Sharia. This, of course, was again a straw man, since my complaint was about the one-sided treatment of the responses to the Archbishop’s speech, and (in relation to the rest of the programme), of the workings of Sharia currently in Britain. He continued in the same vein, noting that Outlook had in the past provided negative reports on the unjust treatment of women in parts of the world under fundamentalist Islamic law. He then commented on the choice of Muslim speakers, once again completely evading my point about the exclusively one-sided viewpoints provided and the failure of the presenter to ask probing questions. The only concession Mr Poncia made was that they failed to challenge Dr Hasan on the more extreme punishments of Sharia, something yet again irrelevant to my complaint. (My citing Dr Hasan’s views on this was solely in the context of the presenter’s unquestioning acceptance of Dr Hasan’s report of the workings of Sharia in Britain.)

    In short, Mr Poncia’s second response displayed the same failure to address my actual complaints as his first, a point I made in my next message to him. This elicited a short response the gist of which was that he had tried to reply to my criticisms as directly as he could, that he and his team would bear them in mind, and that he was sorry that I found his explanations unsatisfactory.

    I can only explain the dismal failure of this edition of “Outlook” to live up to the “impartiality” that Mr Poncia claims he takes seriously (though in fact the issue here is more precisely that of accuracy in the reporting of events) by assuming that he has a mindset that makes him oblivious to his presuppositions, and the extent to which they influence his editorship of programmes on certain issues such as the one in question. Equally worrying is his evident obliviousness to the fact that the unrelentingly negative portrayal of Muslim experience in Britain by the religious affairs correspondent can only have a detrimental effect on outside perceptions of the UK in a geo-political climate that can be literally incendiary.

    Allen Esterson’s website is here.

    Posted April 4 2008

  • HRW on the UN and Congo and Human Rights

    HRC failed to renew the mandate of the special rapporteur for DR Congo despite mass rapes and killings.

  • Reporters Without Borders on UN HRC

    ‘The change to the mandate of the
    special rapporteur on free expression is dramatic.’

  • Critics Say UN HRC Undermines Rights

    International activist groups accused HRC of acting as a cover for states aiming to restrict free speech.

  • Parents Indicted in Faith-Healing Death

    15-month-old died of bronchial pneumonia and blood infection; antibiotics would have saved her.

  • Saudi Woman Killed for Chatting on Facebook

    She was beaten and shot dead by her father.

  • Leave Allah out

    I re-read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights this morning, to confirm that it’s as secular as I remembered. It is. This is crucial.

    If you look at the preamble of the UDHR, you will see that there is no mention of any religion. All religions and cultures are assumed to be equal…But in the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam (hereafter called the Cairo Declaration), we can detect a completely different tone. Right from the first paragraph of the preamble, the Cairo Declaration confidently asserts the superiority of Islam by referring to the Islamic Ummah as the “best nation”…This is no implication, unlike in the UDHR, that all cultures and religions are equal. Indeed the rest of humanity is supposedly confused and in need of guidance from the “best nation”.

    And the guidance tells it that the only rights it can have are those that ‘the Shariah’ allows. Which is not a generous package.

    Take note the word “men” instead of “human beings” was used. In Islam, men and women are seen to have different obligations and responsibilities. Men of course can have four wives but women cannot have four husbands. In the UDHR, gender-neutral terms such as “everyone” or “human beings” are always used.

    David Littman takes a close look.

    Although traditions, cultures and religious background may be different, human nature is universally the same. The aim of those who drafted and approved the UDHR was precisely to affirm this universal human identity, separating it from particular and religious contexts, which introduce and sanctify differences and discriminations. Any attempt to bring in cultural and religious particularisms would simply remove the specifically universal character of the UDHR. Neither the UIDHR nor the CDHRI is universal, because both are conditional on Islamic law which non-Muslims do not accept. The UDHR places social and political norms in a secular framework, separating the political from the religious. In contrast, both the UIDHR and the CDHRI introduce into the political sphere an Islamic religious criterion, which imposes an absolute decisive and divine primacy over the political and legal spheres.

    To be continued.

  • The Cairo Declaration again

    Let’s take another, closer look at the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam, focusing on certain aspects of it. This is not a selective excerpt, this is one that pulls out certain words and ideas, so it’s not fair in the sense of quoting a fair sample in context. Be sure to look at the Declaration itself – there is plenty of sensible stuff in it. But it’s startling and interesting what a large amount of non-sensible stuff there is in it – what a lot of Allah there is and what an enormous amount of Shari’ah there is.

    Keenly aware of the place of mankind in Islam as vicegerent of Allah…Recognizing the importance of issuing a Document on Human Rights in Islam…Reaffirming the civilizing and historical role of the Islamic Ummah which Allah made as the best community…to affirm his freedom and right to a dignified life in accordance with the Islamic Shari’ah…fundamental rights and freedoms according to Islam are an integral part of the Islamic religion…they are binding divine commands, which are contained in the Revealed Books of Allah…

    All human beings form one family whose members are united by their subordination to Allah…All human beings are Allah’s subjects…it is prohibited to take away life except for a shari’ah prescribed reason…Safety from bodily harm is a guaranteed right…it is prohibited to breach it without a Shari’ah-prescribed reason…provided they take into consideration the interest and future of the children in accordance with ethical values and the principles of the Shari’ah…The State shall ensure the availability of ways and means to acquire education…so as to enable man to be acquainted with the religion of Islam…Islam is the religion of true unspoiled nature…Human beings are born free…there can be no subjugation but to Allah the Almighty…Every man shall have the right, within the framework of the Shari’ah, to free movement…unless asylum is motivated by committing an act regarded by the Shari’ah as a crime…Everyone shall have the right to enjoy the fruits of his scientific, literary, artistic or technical labour…provided it is not contrary to the principles of the Shari’ah…There shall be no crime or punishment except as provided for in the Shari’ah…Everyone shall have the right to express his opinion freely in such manner as would not be contrary to the principles of the Shari’ah. Everyone shall have the right to advocate what is right…according to the norms of Islamic Shari’ah. Information…may not be exploited or misused in such a way as may violate sanctities and the dignity of Prophets…Everyone shall have the right to…assume public office in accordance with the provisions of Shari’ah…All the rights and freedoms stipulated in this Declaration are subject to the Islamic Shari’ah…The Islamic Shari’ah is the only source of reference for the explanation or clarification of any of the articles of this Declaration.

    That’s a human rights document. Human rights human rights human rights – provided it is not contrary to the principles of the Shari’ah. And who decides what is contrary to the principles of the Shari’ah? Ah…that would be telling.

  • Because your opponents may become violent

    This is immensely depressing.

    The UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression will now be required to report on the “abuse” of this most cherished freedom by anyone who, for example, dares speak out against Sharia laws that require women to be stoned to death for adultery or young men to be hanged for being gay, or against the marriage of girls as young as nine, as in Iran.

    Good, isn’t it? The Rapporteur was supposed to report on violations of freedom of expression, now she will be required to report on the use of it.

    There can no longer be any pretence that the Human Rights Council can defend human rights. The moral leadership of the UN system has moved from the States who created the UN in the aftermath of the Second World War, committed to the concepts of equality, individual freedom and the rule of law, to the Islamic States, whose allegiance is to a narrow, medieval worldview defined exclusively in terms of man’s duties towards Allah, and to their fellow-travellers, the States who see their future economic and political interests as being best served by their alliances with the Islamic States.

    Well, adios equality, individual freedom and the rule of law, hello duties towards a tyrannical misogynist invented male deity.

    The Sri Lankan delegate explained clearly his reasons for supporting the amendment: “.. if we regulate certain things ‘minimally’ we may be able to prevent them from being enacted violently on the streets of our towns and cities.” In other words: Don’t exercise your right to freedom of expression because your opponents may become violent. For the first time in the 60 year history of UN Human Rights bodies, a fundamental human right has been limited simply because of the possible violent reaction by the enemies of human rights. The violence we have seen played out in reaction to the Danish cartoons is thus excused by the Council – it was the cartoonists whose freedom of expression needed to be regulated. And Theo van Gogh can be deemed responsible for his own death.

    That’s just it. ‘Don’t exercise your right to freedom of expression because your opponents may become violent.’ That may in certain circumstances (a bully has a knife at your throat; the Nazis have taken over) be sane prudential advice, but it is never principled advice. It may be a necessary precaution in times of extreme danger, but it should never ever be treated as the moral high ground. Giving bullies what they demand with menaces is not ever the moral high ground.

  • NSS on the End of Human Rights

    HRC was supposed to be a Council whose members genuinely supported the principles of the UDHR.

  • Carlin Romano Reviews Susan Jacoby

    The Age of American Unreason feeds the notion of American anti-intellectualism as a no-brainer truth.