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An Open Letter to Oriana Fallaci
Anti-Islamism does not justify
racism!
Azar Majedi
Dear Oriana Fallaci
As a veteran activist of women’s
rights, for liberty and equality, as a first hand victim of political Islam, and
a veteran fighter against it, as an atheist who is a staunch believer in a
secular state and secular education system, as a woman who has fought against
hejab in any form and shape, as a secularist who has defended the latest French
secular law to ban bearing of any conspicuous religious symbols in public
schools, as a campaigner for banning the veil for underage girls and banning
religious schools, as a campaigner against honour killings, Sharia courts in
Canada, against Islamism and Islamic terrorism, as a staunch defender of
unconditional freedom of expression and criticism who defended the right of
those who ridiculed Mohammad in the row over the caricatures, I share some of
your beliefs and find some very offensive, and let me make it clear, not to
Islam, but to human values, egalitarian and libertarian values which are also
part of “European culture”.
When you came to Iran to interview
Khomeini, I was fighting against him and Islamic regime for women’s rights,
against the hejab, and for freedom. I knew you first and foremost for your
interview with the Shah. I admired your courage and frankness then. I feel
indignant now when I read some of your comments and your latest interview with
Margaret Talbot in New Yorker. Your justified hatred against Islam and Islamism
has been extended to all Moslems and everyone living under Islam. I am sure you
do not need anyone to remind you that this is racism. I am bewildered when I
read your comments against immigrants and immigration from countries under the
rule of Islam, and find this in contrast with the justified pride you take in
your history for fighting against Nazi-Fascism.
It seems to me that the hate
against Islam has pushed you towards Christianity. You have even visited the
Pope asking him to take a stronger stance against Islamism. This I find
puzzling. How does an atheist in hate of one religion take refuge in another?
Your hate against Islamism and political Islam finds expression in Euro
centrism. Your disapproval for multiculturalism and cultural relativism has led
you to defend “western culture”, instead of universal rights and secular,
humanitarian and libertarian values.
As a young girl growing in Iran,
under the rule of Islam, I read western philosophers and writers to educate
myself with enlightened principles and values regarding equality, freedom and
women’s rights. I chose the libertarian and egalitarian side of Western culture,
and I am bewildered why, you an atheist, a fighter against fascism, had to
resort to Euro centrism and racism in order to defend Western culture.
Your defence of a superior culture
goes as far as expressing more concern about the beheading of Buddha’s statue
than murdered, maimed women and men in Afghanistan whose rights are violated
daily, who are victims of political Islam and American militarism. This
perplexes me. I found it offensive that a human being who enjoys a freedom
fighter stature in the eyes of many, cares more about the cultural and physical
ambiance of her native country than all those men, women and children who are
killed, maimed and violated daily in Iraq. It seems that in defence of “your
culture” you, a self-professed atheist, in attacking mosques end up defending
the church. As a staunch campaigner against terrorism, I feel indignant when I
see our “Western” anti Islamist can only voice condemnation of terrorism taken
place in the West. All terrorist acts which take place daily in countries under
Islam are mentioned at best only in passing. Are people who have by draw of a
lottery been born under the rule of Islam not worthy of your attention, passion
and rage?
All these become so ironic when one
looks deeply into the root of political Islam. When one remembers how the
Western governments unleashed this monster on the people of the region, how they
created the Mojahedin in Afghanistan in the cold war era, and then helped the
Taliban, how in the fear of a leftist revolution in Iran dumped Khomeini on us
and helped bring about an Islamic state, when one remembers these recent
historical facts, one cannot help but discern a profound sense of hypocrisy and
double standard. Sadly the saga of helping political Islam and Islamic terrorism
by the Western governments is an ongoing effort. Just look at Iraq! The US and
Britain, by invading Iraq, helped Islamists grow monstrously therein. Have you
forgotten who the friend of Bin laden was? The tragedy is that as long as this
monster was strangling the “native” people, our rage could stay under control,
our passion not moved. Those people were not worthy of our passion and
compassion!
The Western academia and
journalists invented and nurtured the concept of cultural relativism, so that on
its basis they could justify compulsory veiling, stoning, maiming and torturing
of the people under the rule of Islam. That gave justification for turning one’s
head while one’s government made deals with those Islamic states. This concept
was invented so under the guise of “respect for other cultures” the brutal
crimes and violation of human rights will be brushed aside “respectfully”. We
have witnessed how European courts have resorted to cultural relativism in
defending deportation of immigrants fleeing the rule of Islam. They have gone as
far as stating that the prison conditions in those countries are suitable for
those people.
I must state that these arrogant,
hypocritical and racist attitudes and policies are an important tool to foster
political Islam. If one does not distinguish between the Islamic movement, a
reactionary and brutal political movement, and ordinary Moslems who are the
first hand victims of this, if one does not distinguish between the oppressor
and the oppressed, one becomes an accessory to Islamic brutality.
We must try and understand the
root causes of Islamic recruitment among the so-called Moslem communities in the
West. The dominant racism in state policies and attitude and systematic
marginalization of these communities plus the aggression and militarism of the
Western governments led by the US against the people in the Middle East, namely,
Palestine and Iraq, have directed the youth in these communities to despair and
frustration. The revolt of the “suburb” in France is a vivid and sad example of
such policies. By rejecting these communities as part of ”us” we leave them at
the mercy of the “leaders of the community”, who foster traditionalism,
Islamism, sexism, and glorification of the “home land”. These are poisonous
brain washings. And I must say that your stance is aiding this process.
I find it so hard to understand
that in despising the oppressor and oppressing ideology you come to despise the
victims just as much. No sympathy, no compassion for the victims. No rage and
passion provoked for these people who live under these inhumane and brutal
conditions. It is amazing that in Mexico witnessing the brutal crushing of a
student demonstration, and becoming a victim of it, you came to hate the
sufferers just as much as the oppressors. So flippantly, you state you hate
“Mexicans” and as a result despise the most impressive show of power and
solidarity in the US for the rights of immigrants in recent months.
I was enraged by reading your
racist comments. I was indignant by sensing your Euro centrism, by your lack of
human compassion for millions who fled the rule of Islam and took refuge in the
West in the hope of a better life. I share your despise and indignation for the
Islamic movement. But I denounce categorically the racism that is openly
expressed by you. And last but not least I must state that I defend the
unconditional freedom of expression, and condemn the court which is to try you
for what you have expressed in your books. One must be free to express any
opinions. This is the pillar of a free society.
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