Good Night and Good Luck should have won an Oscar a few years ago for David Strathairn's powerfully controlled portrayal of Ed Murrow, the reporter who stood up to McCarthy. It was nominated for six. In the 1950's the bogeyman was Communism. Today, it's Islam and an insignificant little pastor in Florida is proposing to burn copies of the Qu'ran, presumably believing that the First Amendment offers him protection under the law.
I am not sure that it does, but I don’t suppose he cares very much.
'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.' In other words, Islam, along with worship of trees is permitted under the Constitution, but Congress offers no protection to those whose actions can be attributed to cause a breach of the peace. The prevailing media mood is one where it seeks to marginalise, distance itself and ridicule this man - who, it is clear - lacks, shall we say, political judgement. I wonder if this will be enough. The president has gone on record as saying that this destructive act will act as a 'recruitment bonanza for Al-Qaeda', which may be perfectly true, but it fails to address the morality of the bookburning.
The demonstrations are beginning. In the central Pakistani city of Multan, the protesters’ invariable "Down with America.” seemed to be the mantra du jour.
“If Koran is burned, it would be beginning of destruction of America," read one English-language banner held up by the protesters. Promethean hubris, perhaps, but abroad, the US shooting itself in the foot would be received jubilantly in the markets of Karachi.
"This is a plan by Zionists to put the entire world into trouble, so it should be foiled," said Tari Naeemullah, the head of the Joint Civic Front, a coalition of non-governmental organisations in Multan.
Later..it seems that Jones has 'backed down' and will no longer burn the books, as long as the Ground Zero Mosque is relocated. An apparent promise that this would happen, extracted from the Floridian imam Muhammad Musri, was contradicted by the imam in charge of the NYC project Feisal Abdul Aruf and the saga will run on at least until tomorrow. I wonder if that was the pastor's real agenda in the first place. The images are of street art after 9/11.
This morning, the Goutte d'Or, historical arab district of Paris was feverish with people carrying food and unusually full of young men wearing short beards and immaculate white djellabas (the dishdasha has a Mao collar when the North African djellaba has a lower neckline, the gandurah is often decorated with embroidered arabesques and can include a hood, in the northern tribes of High Atlas, it is made of wool but the sheppards prefer to wear a burnous, shaped as a cape).
ReplyDeleteWhere was I?
I shared a coffee by the "zinc" (Paris bistrot counters used to be lmade of zinc) with two old Algerians, really happy to be allowed to drink at 10 am at last...
I told them I was born "là-bas" (over there)and we talked about the time when Arabs, Jews and Christians lived in peace. They sadly shook their heads about those who distort the Coran, they said they hoped for peace, I shrugged with empathy and went to work...
Inch'Allah
HG
Salaam aleikum, HG. It contrasts the difference between the man on the street who has no interest in the destruction of all things Western and those taught in fanatical madrassas who do.
ReplyDeleteIt is fascinating (though the circumstances are unfortunate) that the whole world is 'trending' in the same direction - and the gulf between the "man on the street" and the fanatical fringe has never been more apparent. As always, it is a truth that the smallest cog has the potential to immobilize the entire machine. (The squeaky wheel gets the grease?)
ReplyDeleteOops. Hit precipitously.
ReplyDeleteI meant to add that given the overall world population of Muslims, there are demonstrably far more moderates than extremists. Just as there are far more moderately minded Christians than the world wide exposure of Terry Jones might indicate.