ISLAMOPHOBIA: Anti Muslim Racism

Entries from December 23, 2007 - December 29, 2007

Giuliani is the guy to chase 'the Muslims' back 'to their caves'

John%20Deady.jpg"The Guardian of London is conducting video documentaries up in New Hampshire. And they did a segment on Rudy in which they got a very off-kilter quote about Muslims from a Rudy campaign official in the state. The Guardian identifies him as John Deady, the co-chair of state Veterans for Rudy. Deady – and the key here is that he is a Rudy campaign official – says that Rudy should be our President because he has what it takes to tackle one of our 'most difficult problems', which he identifies as the 'rise of the Muslims'. Deady adds that we need to 'chase them back to their caves' or otherwise 'get rid of them'."

TPM Election Central, 28 December 2007

See also the follow-up article in which Deady defends his comments and goes on to state: "We're not dealing with a rational mindset here. We're dealing with madmen." Asked if this is a reference to all Muslims, he replies: "I am talking about Muslims in general." Asked to elaborate on his call to "get rid" of Muslims, Deady explained: "When I say get rid of them, I wasn't necessarily [sic – emphasis added] referring to genocide."

Update:  Deady has now resigned, according to Fox News. See also Ali Eteraz on the GOP's Muslim problem.

Posted on Friday, December 28, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

'Mamma li Turchi!!', Italy and the Saladin Syndrome

"Today in Italy, the traditional fascist hatred of the Jew is increasingly substituted by a hatred of Muslims, all of them, children, women and men. Today Muslims in Italy are not so differently represented as their Semitic brothers were during the time of the Fascio and the Eia Eia alala."

Gabriele Marranci examines the rise of Islamophobia in Italy.

Islam, Muslims, and an Anthropologist, 25 December 2007

Posted on Friday, December 28, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

Anti-Islamic outsider is top Dutch politician

geert%20wilders.jpgGeert Wilders, who compares the Koran to Mein Kampf, has been named the Netherlands' politician of the year in a poll run by public broadcaster NOS.

Mr Wilders' pithy and shocking soundbites – he warned of a "tsunami of Islamisation" – have dominated headlines, while his parliamentary outbursts have brought an adversarial style of politics to the muted consensus to which the Dutch are attuned.

Mr Wilders' proposed solutions are deeply radical: stop all Muslim immigration, ban the building of mosques and ask the 1m Muslims among the Dutch population of 16m to "go to their own countries" or give up their religion.

He remains a highly controversial outsider and many Dutch Muslims and non-Muslims alike would rather not discuss him. But his Party for Freedom, the PVV, won nine of 150 seats in parliament in the last election and it regularly polls above that level.

The NOS poll naming him politician of the year combined votes from the public and those of the parliamentary press corps.

Financial Times, 27 December 2007

Posted on Thursday, December 27, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

'Mosque call outrages Oxford'

Central%20Mosque%20Oxford.jpg"Muslim leaders have sparked outrage with plans to broadcast the Islamic call to prayer over the roof-tops of one of Britain's most historic cities. Elders at Oxford Central Mosque want to blast it out three times a day. They have already discussed the controversial idea with council chiefs and are set to submit a formal application in the New Year.

"But the move has been met with fury by people living near the mosque in Oxford – known as the city of dreaming spires. They claim the two-minute call – to be broadcast over three large speakers – is noise pollution and offensive to other faiths."

The Sun – rather belatedly – joins in the Oxford mosque hysteria.

Posted on Thursday, December 27, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

'Cardinal's sermon on immigration shows his staggering ignorance'

Taking issue with the Christmas message from Cardinal Cormac Murphy O'Connor that Britain should be more welcoming to migrants, Leo McKinstry writes: "The consequences of multiculturalism and mass immigration can be seen at their most graphic in the creeping Islamification of Britain.... Throughout the country, church bells are being drowned out by the wailing from the mosque.... If the Cardinal wants a cause worth supporting, it is his own religion, not the import of yet more alien culture into Britain."

Click to read more ...

Posted on Wednesday, December 26, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , |

Whose liberation?

"One of the most elusive tasks I have faced at conferences has been a definition of 'Muslim women' from which I could lay out the terms of their suffering and, in a true pompous academic fashion, advance some proposals for their liberation. The moment the term 'Muslim women' is deconstructed, my argument reaches an impasse. On the other hand, incorporating it into any diatribe against misogyny, oppression and persecution threatens to reduce my argument to one where Islam is the sole culprit. More importantly, the conflation between women and Islam inadvertently lumps together close to 1 billion women from around the globe, a homogenising equation which overlooks many other contextual variables that have shaped the plight of these women."

Salam Al-Mahadin at Comment is Free, 26 December 2007

Posted on Wednesday, December 26, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in |

Study of Islam in West driven by fear, scholar says

ramadan-speaking.jpgOTTAWA – A pervasive bias exists in the way Islam is studied in the West, says a prominent Muslim thinker, who is calling for sweeping changes to the way Islamic studies are taught in universities.

Tariq Ramadan, a visiting professor at Oxford University and one of Europe's leading intellectuals on Islam, argues that despite a growing interest in the field, the scholarly pursuit of Islam is driven not by an interest in theology, but by fear and an obsession with the struggle against terrorism.

In the latest issue of the Canadian journal Academic Matters, Ramadan chastises universities for their "carefully orchestrated infatuation" with Islamic studies. He says the current academic focus on terrorism reduces the richness of Islamic theology into political ideology.

"The study of religious thought proper (of the theology, of its premises, its internal complexities and its development) has been relegated to a subsidiary position," he writes. "Universities in the West must seek the kind of knowledge of other civilizations and cultures – particularly that of Islam – that is driven neither by ideological agendas nor collective fears." What's "cruelly lacking," Ramadan argues, is an objective study of Islamic law, legal scholars and philosophers as well as a "historical and critical approach to Islamic history and thought."

He goes on to criticize western scholars for ignoring the body of "fresh, compelling, audacious critical thought" emerging from contemporary Muslim societies, which are often eclipsed by controversies surrounding sharia law or the role of women. "There is a deep-down, deliberate process of evolution under way in every Islamic society in the world," writes Ramadan. "Far from rushing to conclusions, far from populist, ideological speech, the academic world must take this process seriously, study it, and present its outlines and implications."

Ottawa Citizen, 22 December 2007

Posted on Tuesday, December 25, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , |

Climate of suspicion

"Perhaps it's not surprising that someone who describes himself as phobic about the concept of Islamophobia and thinks that the invasion of Iraq is a 'subject of purely historical interest' might struggle to grasp why the relentless campaign of hostile media stories about the Muslim community is toxic and dangerous – or recognise that it is driven by a neoconservative agenda about terror and war."

Seumas Milne replies to Andrew Anthony.

Comment is Free, 24 December 2007

Posted on Monday, December 24, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

Anger over plan to broadcast Muslim call to prayer in Oxford

Oxford_Central_Mosque.jpgMuslim plans to broadcast a loudspeaker call to prayer from a city centre mosque have been attacked by local residents who say it would turn the area into a "Muslim ghetto". Dozens of people packed out a council meeting to express their concerns over the plans for a two-minute long call to prayer to be issued three times a day, saying that it could drown out the traditional sound of church bells.

Dr Mark Huckster, who lives in Stanton Road and works at East Oxford hospice Helen House, told the Oxford Mail: "The proposal to issue a prayer call is very un-neighbourly, especially in a crowded urban space such as Oxford. I have lived in the Middle East and a prayer call has a very different feel to church bells and I personally found the noise extremely unpleasant, rather disturbing and very alien to the western mindset."

Daily Mail, 24 December 2007

Over at Dhimmi Watch Robert Spencer endorses Dr Huckster's concerns: "Un-neighborly, yes. In The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Edward Gibbon wrote that if the Muslims had won the Battle of Poitiers, 'the Arabian fleet might have sailed without a naval combat into the mouth of the Thames. Perhaps the interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in the schools of Oxford, and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people the sanctity and truth of the revelation of Mahomet'. Well, this may come to pass after all, before too long."

As paranoid Islamophobic fantasies go, the Muslim conquest of Oxford is hardly original. Spencer could at least have hat-tipped Daniel Pipes.

Update:  Predictably, the fascists of the British National Party have taken up the defence of a trueborn Englishman's right to live his life free from religious practices that are alien to the western mindset.

Posted on Monday, December 24, 2007 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , |