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  • AdilAlKufaishi
    عضو رسمي
    • May 2006
    • 107

    CSID bulletin

    Dear Colleagues
    The following articles do not represent my personal opinion. They are posted on our homepage to stimulate debate and exchange of viewpoints with the aim of arriving at better understanding of issues related to our future and of facilitating communication between scholars from the East and the West.
    Adil Al-Kufaishi

    The articles in this bulletin do NOT necessarily reflect the opinions of CSID, or its board of directors. They are included in the CSID bulletin to encourage and facilitate diversity of opinions, discussions, and debates about democracy in the Arab/Muslim world, and how best to strengthen and promote it.

    For questions or comments about the information in this bulletin, contact
    Sami Bawalsa at sami@islam-democracy.org.
    The Network of Democrats in the Arab World (NDAW):
    Democracy has eluded many Arab and Muslim countries and left many of their citizens frustrated and disillusioned. The Network of Democrats in the Arab World (NDAW) was established in 16-17 December 2005 in Casablanca, Morocco by 63 leading democrats from 14 countries throughout the Middle East and North Africa, to help move democracy forward in the Arab world.
    The Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy (CSID) in coordination with Partners for Democratic Change (PDC), and cooperation with members of the civil society from the Arab world is carrying out key activities in order to promote democracy and help strengthen and sustain a Network of Arab Democrats in The Middle East and North Africa.

    The Goals set out for this project are as follow:
    Build a unified platform for democrats to provide a moderate, progressive, and hopeful vision for the future and to defeat the voices of extremism and radicalism,
    Establish communication links and regular meetings between democrats in the various Arab countries so that they may share knowledge, experience, and expertise among each other and with democrats from other countries,
    Hone the members abilities and skills in communications, leadership, and coalition building and provide them with the skills set required to spread the message of democracy, tolerance, and peaceful coexistence,
    Create a support network to the members in case of harassment and/or persecution,
    Develop a strategy to sustain and expand the network over many years through membership fees, grants, donations, services, and publications.

    The project was set out on December 2005 and is proceeding on schedule. The Network adopted a charter and a list serve is established to facilitate the communication between the members of the Network and the coordination by CSID of the Network's Steering Committee. CSID is strengthening its contacts with leading international human rights NGOs and Arab embassies to help provide a support network to NDAW members in case of
    harassment.
    The workshops aimed to develop the new members in communication, effective meeting facilitation, leadership, and project development skills. The trainings also looked at the interplay between Islam and democracy. This report gives a brief summary of these training events. It also includes a summary of the evaluation feedback received by Participants and a lessons learned section.
    During May and June, 2006, CSID and PDC organized four regional workshops in Morocco, Algeria, Egypt and Jordan for NDAW members as well as potential network members. Trainers from CSID and Partners split the training time with each organization focusing on its area of expertise.
    For a detailed list of participants in the training program, please refer to appendixes at the end of this report.
    For more information about the Network of Democrats in the Arab World, please contact Abderrahim Sabir, Network Coordinator, at sabir@islam-democracy.org or 202-265-1200.

    Islamist Networks: The Case of Tablighi Jamaat
    Tuesday, August 8, 2006
    10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
    Location
    U.S. Institute of Peace
    2nd Floor Conference Room
    1200 17th St, NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Dr. Eva Borreguero will discuss the Tablighi Jammat, a global Islamic proselytizing movement with one of the largest numbers of followers in the world.Tablighi Jammat's annual meetings in Raiwind (Pakistan) and Dhaka (Bangladesh) are the most attended congregations of Muslims in the world, outnumbered only by the Hajj. Its unique modus operandi, which eschews political activism and use of violence, has allowed the group to spread discreetly and peacefully all over the world, finding minimal resistance from local governments. Dr. Borreguero will discuss this little-understood organization, detailing its ideology and values and their approach to Islam as well as its ever-expanding transnational presence.
    Dr. Eva Borreguero is a professor of Political Science at the University Complutense of Madrid (Spain). Currently, she is a visiting Fulbright Scholar at the Center for Muslim and Christian Understanding at Georgetown University. She authored Hindu: religious nationalism and politics in contemporary India (Spanish). She is a frequent opinion contributor to several Spanish newspapers including El Pais and El Correo, as well as an analyst at the Spanish think-tank Real Instituto Elcano.

    Speakers
    Dr. Eva Borreguero
    Fulbright Scholar, Center for Muslim and Christian Understanding,
    Georgetown University and Professor of Political Science, University Complutense of Madrid (Spain)
    Christine Fair, Discussant and Moderator U.S. Institute of Peace
    RSVP
    To RSVP, please send your name, affiliation, daytime phone number, and name of the event to Nicholas Howenstein at nhowenstein@usip.org.
    Analysis: U.S. policy and Islamic renewal

    By Claude Salhani
    UPI International Editor
    http://license.icopyright.net/user/viewFreeUse.act?fuid=NjYwMTk=

    Ever since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the United States has found itself in a war against an enemy it had very little intelligence on -- Islamist extremists. In the aftermath of the attacks and as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq dragged on, the United States struggled with the consequence of its inability to fully understand how to go about winning the hearts and minds of the majority of the world's 1.4 billion Muslims.
    "The United States still lacks an integrated and sustainable strategy to confront religious extremism in the Muslim world," writes Abdeslam M. Maghraoui, director of the Muslim World Initiative at the U.S. Institute of Peace. The USIP scholar goes on to say: "Policymakers have failed to recognize that the challenge is not only a conflict with the West but also involves ideological shifts within the Muslim world. These shifts have precipitated a major battle for the future of Islam as a faith and a civilization."

    The invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan -- the first filled with challenges and the second with uncertainties -- "are raising doubts about the current thrust of the "global war on terrorism."
    Maghraoui believes that the single most important initiative the United States can take to combat Islamist extremism is to support "Islamic renewal, a diffuse but growing social, political, and intellectual movement whose goal is profound reform of Muslim societies and polities."
    A distinction must be made between moderates and radicals in Islam, and Maghraoui advises the United States to "engage moderate Islam because core aspects of the religion have an enormous moderating and modernizing potential that policymakers have overlooked."

    Maghraoui says that there is a "visible misunderstanding of the region's political culture, particularly regarding the questions of terrorism, extremism, and political reform." Efforts in the past to address the issue "have often contradicted one another and worked at cross-purposes."
    Indeed, the United States has over the years frequently cooperated with "authoritarian regimes" in order to deal with the terrorist threat.
    Unfortunately that only reinforces "negative attitudes about the United States and its policies."
    Promoting democracy -- particularly in the developing world -- is "likely to empower fundamentalists in many Muslim states," believes the author of the report titled "American foreign policy and Islamic Renewal." While everyone is calling for free and democratic elections, Maghraoui disagrees. "Free elections may not be the best mechanisms to negotiate substantive political issues, and deep suspicion toward formal authority structures persists in Muslim societies," says Maghraoui.

    Electoral victories by hard-line Islamists are dimming hope that promoting democracy will produce moderate regimes and good relations with the United States, says the author of the report. "Attempts to win 'hearts and minds' through public diplomacy have not yielded significant results. A June 2006 Pew Global Attitudes survey shows that unfavorable opinions of the United States are still widespread in five traditionally moderate Muslim countries (Indonesia, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, and Turkey)."
    Still, the vast majority of the world's Muslims are peaceful people who want to get on with their lives, much like most people anywhere in the world. "The Islamic renewal seeks to reclaim the religion's heritage from extremist, traditionalist, and fundamentalist groups," says Maghraoui.

    U.S. foreign policy could "tip the balance between extremist and modernist interpretations of Islam and seize a great opportunity for constructive engagement," says the report, which calls on the United States to support the renewal movement to reform Islam and mobilize Muslim constituencies against religious extremism.
    How to go about this? Maghraoui believes the United States should "promote Muslim modernist works and ideas, engage the rising moderate Islamist parties on normative grounds, and put more emphasis on substantive social, educational, and religious reforms."
    The current conflict is not purely one pitting the West against radical Islamists, rather it is a conflict also between two different ideologies within Islam -- this is a battle that finds its roots in the early pages of Islam's history books.

    Maghraoui explains that in the aftermath of the 1979 Iranian Islamic revolution, conservative Sunnis, not wanting to let Iran's Shiites dominate the political/religious scene "unleashed their own brand of puritanical Islam to counter the growing ideological influence and political dynamism of the Shiite revolution.
    "Saudi financial largesse and Wahhabism, a doctrine that advocates a literal, legalistic, and purist interpretation of the Koran, have influenced the Sunni response to the Shiite challenge," says Maghraoui.
    Poor social and economic performance and the repressive nature of Muslim political regimes acted as fertile breeding grounds for extremist, giving Sunni radicals the edge on the Shiites. "The three Arab Human Development Reports published by the United Nations between 2002 and 2004 show the Arab part of the Muslim world lagging behind other regions in social opportunity, knowledge, and good governance," his report notes. Reforms called for by the West in the Muslim world's political and economic policies have been "often touted as the solution to the Muslim world's problems." Although much in need, those are "no longer sufficient to address a crisis of this magnitude," says Maghraoui, who calls for a "freer political environment and social and economic incentives." But, he adds, those "should have been implemented decades ago."

    The single most important step the United States can take to combat Islamist extremism is to support "Islamic renewal," he says.
    The United States is well positioned to support this movement and engage "moderate" Islam. Contrary to common perceptions in the West, the word "moderate" accurately describes the vast majority of Muslims, who reject violence, yearn for justice and accountable governance, and value Muslim traditions of family, knowledge, and prosperity.
    The author then puts forward six recommendations in which he asks the United States to:
    1. Support the establishment of a "Muslim World Foundation" to foster the development of peaceful, prosperous, and open Muslim societies and polities. The Foundation would draw on local and international experts, donors, and partners, and collaborate with government and nongovernmental associates.
    2. Provide special grants to American universities to promote Muslim modernist works and ideas and translate them into concrete policies. Identify specific reform policies to be addressed to people and governments in the Muslim world, as well as to the international community -- including Western powers, the United Nations, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, the International Court of Justice, and the World Bank.
    3. Engage Islamist parties on normative grounds.
    4. Put more emphasis on substantive social, educational, and religious reforms. The cornerstone of these reforms is the effort to expand the conceptual boundaries and foundations of Sharia beyond the Koran and Sunna.
    5. Refocus and coordinate public diplomacy, democracy promotion, and aid programs to reinforce Islamic religious reforms and renewal. Public diplomacy should link American values and Islam's humanist traditions.

    6. Consider supporting religious charities. Many Muslim governments' social safety nets are weak or nonexistent, religious organizations provide many services to the needy, including clinics, childcare, and disaster relief.
    This report deserves serious consideration. (Comments may be sent to Claude@upi.com.)
    PROSPECT MAGAZINE
    د/ عادل الكفيشي
  • AdilAlKufaishi
    عضو رسمي
    • May 2006
    • 107

    #2
    _MD_RE: CSID bulletin

    INTERVIEW WITH TARIQ RAMADAN
    A confident, modern Islam must challenge the victim mentality of western Muslims and a crisis of authority across the faith, says Tariq
    Ramadan. But can you be a gay Muslim?

    24 July 2006
    par Ehsan Masood, David Goodhart , Adair Turner
    http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=7571

    Question : Why do you think that after more than 40 years of significant Muslim immigration to Europe, no Islamic reform movement has emerged here?

    Answer : Well, there is nothing very visible yet. In a way that is not surprising, these things take time. But I believe a silent revolution is taking place-things are evolving very fast. Muslims are now talking about national citizenship in a more confident way. Women are much more involved in the process. There are pockets of resistance to change, especially among the elder generation, but this is not the only reality: there are new leaders, new understandings, new trends.
    Q : You often say in your lectures that liberal democracies like Britain are more Islamic than many undemocratic Islamic countries. What do you mean by that-that concepts like the rule of law and equal citizenship and democracy are strongly endorsed by Islam?

    A : Protection of religion, life, intellect, family, goods and dignity is much more a reality in the west than under the Arab Islamic countries. Nothing is ideal, but we have to acknowledge these facts.
    Q : You always stress to Muslim audiences the importance of feeling at home here. But there are many organisations, including the Muslim Council of Britain, that benefit from stressing a distinctive Islamic identity and pursue goals such as state funding for Muslim schools that can contribute to ghettoisation. Is that wrong?

    A : I would prefer social mixing and mutual contribution. I’m not against Islamic schools in principle, and I have seen some good ones here in Britain. I am also aware that even in the mainstream system you often get a lot of plain old segregation, with 80 to 95 per cent of pupils coming from one group, and this we have to fight against too. Muslims should, of course, have the same right to faith schools as Christians and Jews. But there is a danger that self-segregation could be the result. So, its legally right, but Muslims should not necessarily take up the right.

    Q : What about the role of the Muslim councils that now exist all over Europe? Do they reinforce a sense of separateness? Should Muslim citizens take their political and social problems to councillors and MPs, rather than the local representative of the MCB?
    A : There is a contradiction here. European governments want to see the emergence of leaders who can speak in the name of Muslims. In France, they have even set up Muslim bodies. But at the same time, they do not want to encourage too much identity politics.

    Q: So you hope that in the future there will be less of a role for Europe’s Muslim councils?
    A : Yes, it should just be a religious role. The state should deal with citizens.
    Q : In terms of representation you are calling for a recognition of the separation of religion and politics-something which most Muslims, perhaps even in Europe, see as fused together.

    A : Im just saying that we must follow the rules in the countries in which we live. We should not confuse everything and Islamise social problems. Social problems are social problems and we have to deal with them as citizens claiming our rights, not as Muslims defending their religion. It is true that there are some special problems that Muslims face, certain kinds of discrimination or prejudice based on faith, that we call Islamophobia. But most problems that Muslims face are faced by other citizens too.
    Q : There is no agreed definition of Islamophobia. What does this word mean to you?

    A : At first I was cautious about using it. But we have to distinguish between two things. To criticise the religion and Muslims is not
    Islamophobia; a critical attitude towards religion must be accepted. But to criticise someone or discriminate against them only because they are Muslim-this is what we can call Islamophobia, this is a kind of racism.
    Q : You may accept the idea of criticism of religions but many devout Muslims will not (the film The Da Vinci Code has even been banned in many Muslim countries). Your distinction between legitimate criticism of a religion and condemnation of discrimination might put you in a minority among Muslims.

    A : I dont know if I am in a minority or a majority. But I think you are right that there is a great deal of confusion and some very emotional reactions in these difficult times. We need some intellectual critical distance.

    Q : How much of a problem is Islamophobia in Britain? Is there much evidence for it? Clearly after events like 7/7 there will be some backlash, but Britain has been reasonably calm.
    A : I agree its not too bad, especially compared to some other European countries. The BNP has been doing well and they are overtly anti-Muslim, but mainstream politics is relatively immune. I think that British Muslims have a sense that they are quite privileged compared to Muslims in Europe.
    Q : It is often said that Muslims are more troubled about living in western societies than other religious minorities-Hindus, Sikhs and so on. People say that there is something in the history of Islam as a great world civilisation, and a proselytising religion, that makes it harder for Muslims to adapt, or perhaps gives them greater expectations about the degree of adaptation of the host society. Is that true?

    A : I think its a fact. Things are harder for Muslims in secular societies. The whole intellectual and religious apparatus of Islam perceived itself as not of the west, and tended to see the west as a monolithic entity. Also, the experience of colonisation is something we cannot forget. In north Africa, India and Pakistan, it runs deep. Then on the western side there is the feeling that Muslims are especially difficult to integrate because of the indivisibility of religion and politics; that Islam is monolithic. We have to try to deconstruct these perceptions on both sides, perceptions that can be self-segregating. It’s not easy.
    Q : The French banned headscarves in schools. But they also banned crucifixes. The ban is on overt religious symbols of all kinds. Surely Muslims should respect Frances tradition of laicite, according to which all religious beliefs should be put aside in public places. Do you have any sympathy with that sort of strong French left-wing secular tradition?

    A : In theory you are right. But the practice of laicite dates back to a law of 1905. If a law already exists, why a new law in 2004? This is because crucifixes were accepted under the old law. The new law was passed because of Frances Muslim presence. The reality is that Frances secular tradition is being adapted to target a specific group. French society is going through something of an identity crisis. I have told all French girls that, if they have to make a choice between going to school and wearing the headscarf, they must choose school. Just go. This is the law. But at the same time, being a democrat means that you continue to discuss the merits of the law and call for change.
    Q : Would you say that what is happening in France with the headscarf ban is Islamophobia?

    A : No, I would say it is a kind of discrimination.
    Q : Strictly speaking, Islamophobia means fear of Islam, but in common parlance it is taken to mean animus against Muslims, which is slightly different. Many leading British Muslims do believe that we live in an Islamophobic world. You would disagree?
    A : It is dangerous to nurture this feeling. Very dangerous. It is nurturing a victim-mentality, the idea that everyone is against us.
    Q : You say that any woman ought to be able to wear a headscarf if she wants to. Would you also agree that a country such as Iran ought to allow any woman not to wear a headscarf?

    A : To force a woman to wear a headscarf is against Islamic principles and human rights. That’s it.
    Q : A key theme in your writings and talks is that the practice of Islam must become less literalist. So, for example, whereas the majority of Muslims are taught that every word in the Koran has to be obeyed, you argue differently. You say that the Koran should be read in its historical context.

    A : What I say is firmly rooted in the Islamic tradition. Islam is constructed on a number of principles that cannot change. They are: belief in God, in the Prophet, the books of revelation, and so on. These are immutable. Then there is the practice of Islam: praying, fasting, and so on. Here also there is agreement, among both Shia and Sunni traditions. But there is a third level that deals with Islamic ethics. In this field there are immutable principles and there are implementations that have to take history and societies into account. The answers here come from intellectual creativity, from ijtihad. And this idea is also firmly rooted in the Islamic tradition. But we do need a shift in the sources of authority. People who have power to make Islamic rulings are what I would call "ulama [scholars] of the text." What we now need is more of what I would call "ulama of the context." These are people who are aware of modern knowledge and who can help the scholars of the text to be more creative in their answers. This requires is an acknowledgement that there is a role for modern knowledge in Islamic law and jurisprudence, but that this need not betray the ethic of Islamic teachings.
    Q : Can you give an example of such an ethic-an example of something that is subject to changing interpretations?

    A : The need for such a new applied ethic is quite clear when we deal with medical sciences: Muslim scholars must work together with medical doctors when they tackle the issues of cloning or euthanasia. It must be exactly the same when we deal with economics or any human sciences.
    Q : Are you saying that it is possible to treat the Koran as being something which was actually written by a particular person, at a particular time, in a particular historical context, and that you need to understand that context to understand the Korans place in the modern world? Or are you saying that the book is the uncreated word of God?

    A : For me, the Koran is the very word of God. It is a revelation and this belief is a fundamental pillar of Islam (arkn al-imn). It was revealed over 23 years, but often as a kind of answer to a specific situation. Whether it is created or uncreated had in fact nothing to do with the question of how to read the Koran. It is the very word of God, revealed in a specific period of time: the great majority of the scholars agree that there are immutable principles and teachings and other lessons that we have to contextualise. Even the eternal teachings require human intellect to be rightly enforced in a new environment.
    Q : How would you say the Koran should be read? For many Muslims, for example, the verses that call on the wives of the Prophet to cover up are seen as a commandment for Muslim women to wear the headscarf. But would it also be possible to read these verses as general guidance to dress modestly; or to respect women and not see them in a sexualised way?

    A : There are two things here. First, all Islamic schools interpret these verses as being an Islamic prescription for women to cover their hair. But at the same time, what we are seeing in most Islamic-majority countries is that this interpretation is contributing to the seclusion and segregation of women. So, the headscarf is an Islamic prescription and I agree that modesty needs to be protected. That’s fine. But some scholars of Islam go on to conclude that women do not have the right to work. For me this is wrong and is against women’s rights. And we can actually go back to the scriptural sources in order to promote the struggle
    for women’s rights. We have two main problems at the present time. The literalist reading, which is: there is no history, there is no contextualisation. The other is when we read the Koran through our own cultures. This is also a problem.
    Q : Parts of the Koran are clear about accepting other people of the book, the Jews and Christians. But other parts are pretty intolerant of anybody who is, say a polytheist, and by implication anybody who is an atheist. You have said that the acceptance of Jews and Christians should now be extended to others too.

    A : In the Koran we have very strong verses against polytheists and, in some situations against Jews or Christians. But, again, we have to put things into context. We have to ask: why was it so in this particular situation? Was it because the Prophet was resisting oppression? Remember that the Prophet himself had connections with polytheists all his life. When he had to flee Mecca for Medina, he was guided by a polytheist. The emissary of peace he sent from Medina back to Mecca was a polytheist. His close uncle, [Abu Talib who had raised him as a child] chose not to become a Muslim, but the Prophet never said: "Im going to kill you because you are a polytheist." So here we have freedom of speech and freedom of conscience for a close member of his family who decided that he
    did not want to become a Muslim.
    Q : What about apostasy? What happens if you are born and educated a Muslim but then say: I have now decided that Islam is not for me. Would you accept that someone born into a Muslim family has a right to say that they no longer believe, and that families and communities must respect that?

    A : I have been criticised about this in many countries. My view is the same as that of Sufyan Al-Thawri, an 8th-century scholar of Islam, who argued that the Koran does not prescribe death for someone because he or she is changing religion. Neither did the Prophet himself ever perform such an act. Many around the Prophet changed religions. But he never did anything against them. There was an early Muslim, Ubaydallah ibn Jahsh, who went with the first emigrants from Mecca to Abyssinia. He converted to Christianity and stayed, but remained close to Muslims. He divorced his wife, but he was not killed. It is different for someone who becomes a Muslim during a war with the purpose of betraying Muslims. They are committing treason. This is why the context is so important because the Prophet never killed anyone because he changed religion. From the very beginning, Muslim scholars understood this. Islam does not prevent someone from changing religion because you feel that this is not right for you, or if you are not happy. There are two records of the Prophet saying that someone changing religion should be killed. But both sources are weak. The most explicit one-"He who changes his religion, kill him"-was not accepted as being authentic by Imam Muslim, [one of the top six biographers of the life of the Prophet].

    Q : But what you say is not accepted in many predominantly Muslim countries.
    A : No, you are right, its not the majority position. It has not been the majority position for centuries. But now in our situation we have scholars and people more and more speaking about that. I wrote 15 years ago saying: this is not the only position we have in Islam.

    Q : Following on from that, who is to decide which Koranic verse should be accepted in its literal sense, and which verse should be read in historical context? Can ordinary Muslims decide? Should it be religious scholars? How are the "scholars of the context" to be chosen, from where do they derive legitimacy?

    A : There is a problem today. In the Sunni tradition we have a crisis of authority. The Muslim scholars are no longer considered as an asset. And you cannot have people just organising themselves, as it will lead to chaos. There is a crisis of authority. We do have some authority figures. But are we happy with them? I dont think so. Do we need a platform of scholars, at least at the national level? We need scholars at different levels. In Britain, we need people who know the country, come from the country, are raised in the country, who know the fabric and the culture, the language and the whole collective psychology. We need people who come from diverse readings of the Koran. We need a platform which will give direction, and this is missing today. This is for national issues and we may think of another platform for international issues.

    Q : Who will construct such a platform? Where and how will it derive legitimacy among Muslims, especially since history tells us that, after Islam’s earliest years, a theological consensus uniting the different strands of Islam was impossible in practice?
    A : Some attempts have already being made with continental bodies (Fiqh Council in the US, the European Council for Fatwa and Research in Europe, and the International Council of Muslim Scholars). These are first steps, but I think that Muslim scholars and leaders in every single European country must take the lead and create pluralistic platforms beyond their respective and closed schools of laws and thought. We need time but I cannot expect the Muslims to remain blind in front of such imperative challenges... for the time being, Muslims are too passive and continue to blame "the others" for their own mismanagement. My own position on many things may well be a minority position among Islamic scholars. But I can tell you that on the great majority of the issues, my position is mainstream among the new generations of Muslims in the west. On being European, on being a citizen, on being part of society, and on dealing with discrimination, this is all mainstream. Go and speak with the new generations. Their questions are being answered in a new way.
    Q : Presumably you would like it to be the mainstream in Egypt, in Saudi Arabia, in Pakistan as well.

    A : I think that this will happen. But it will be a long process. In Islamic-majority countries, religion is instrumentalised by both sides: the government and the opposition. There is no freedom, no democracy.
    Q : But realistically, how far can you go in a non-literalist interpretation of the Koran? Lets take the issue of whether someone can be both gay and Muslim. In Christianity you’ll get a variety of answers. Broadly speaking, in Catholicism homosexuality is a sin. But like all other sins in Catholicism, a little bit of penance can get you out of it before judgement day. In some versions of evangelical Protestantism, homosexuality is a complete sin because evangelicals tend to be literalists. But in the Church of England there are a large number of openly gay Anglican clergy. The argument being that the Old Testament has to be contextualised. Is it possible to have a similar reading of the Koran? Or is it that homosexuality is simply wrong. Could you imagine there ever being a homosexual imam in the same way that the Anglican church in the US has just consecrated a homosexual bishop? Would that be possible?

    A : It could happen if such an imam did not declare that he was homosexual. You cannot expect to see homosexuality being promoted within the Islamic tradition. Homosexuality is not perceived by Islam as the divine project for men and women. It is regarded as bad and wrong. Now, the way we have to deal with a homosexual is to say: "I don’t agree with what you are doing, but I respect who you are. You can be a Muslim. You are a Muslim. Being a Muslim is between you and God." I am not going to promote homosexuality but I will respect the person, even if I don’t agree with what they are doing.
    Q : Can you be a Muslim and not pray ?
    A : The moment you declare the shahada-"I believe there is no god but God and Muhammad is His Messenger"-that makes you a Muslim. Whether or not you pray is your responsibility, but if you believe in God you are a Muslim. This was the logic employed in a debate on this topic that took place in the 9th century between the founders of two of Islams major schools of thought, Ash Shafii and his student Ahmad Ibn Hanbal. Ash Shafii asked Ibn Hanbal whether someone who doesnt pray is outside Islam because this was what ibn Hanbal was preaching. Ash Shafii replied that once you proclaim the shahada you are a Muslim. No one has the right to put you outside the realm of Islam.
    Q : Can an Islamic state define who is Muslim or who is not? Or is it a matter of individual conscience?

    A : There are norms, of course, but it is a question of individual conscience.
    Q : But in Muslim majority countries, it is the state that often defines who is or isn’t a Muslim.
    A : The problem is not that states want to define who is a Muslim. What they want today is to be seen to be protecting the rules of Islam even though everything around is hypocritical. Hypocrisy is the heart of the matter. As long as you say that you are Muslim, this should be respected.

    Q : A striking feature in the long history of Islam is that in its first four or five centuries it was ahead of western Christendom in scientific and philosophical endeavour and in economic development. And then from about the 12th, 13th centuries, long before colonialism, things changed. King Abdullah of Jordan said recently that this is because ijtihad, making decisions based on rational thinking, was disallowed, which led to today’s dominant, literalist form of Koranic interpretation. Is this right?

    A : Yes. Historically it is. If we study the history of Islamic civilisation, around the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries, something happened. Muslims and Muslim scholars perceived that they were at risk from being dominated by the west. Before, they were dominant and creative. Now, they try to protect themselves from being dominated by the other. The first thing that you protect when being under threat of domination is morality, ethics, laws and rules. And this is what happened. So Muslims were less creative, much less confident and more defensive. This is what we have had for centuries now. I have never said that ijtihad was closed, because I think it never happened like that.
    Q : What you are saying is that at no time did a national or juridical authority say: from this day forth, there will be no more rational
    inquiry in Islam?
    A : Yes. By and large, this is the picture. I always tell western Muslims that they should be confident. This is the only way. I tell them that you cannot become creative if lacking in self-confidence. This is important. This is why I always say we have to be cautious about projecting a victim mentality, which is what I see from some of the fatwas of an organisation of imams and scholars called the European Council for Fatwas and Research. They are about fear. They say: you need to protect yourself, be careful, we are being attacked from everywhere, so its all about being defensive.
    Q : Defensiveness and a lack of creativity is understandable among marginalised communities from the developing world, for example. But among British-born Muslims. Among professionals? Academics?
    A : You have to understand that even for people in their late thirties,
    early forties, there is a fear that we are working under an oppressive state with an oppressive foreign policy. There is the view that the principal function for a Muslim academic or a Muslim in this society should be to just rail against this and to deconstruct it endlessly. I think there are three reasons for this. The first is because of the experience of growing up in Muslim homes. You are told by the first generation of migrants that there is "you" and there is the "west," which is the "other," and that the two cannot be the same. The second has to do with international policies: Iraq, Palestine, and so on. The third reason is the socioeconomic reality that the great majority of Muslims living in this country are not in the mainstream.
    Q : But what about those who are in the elite? What about those who have been to public schools, to top universities?

    A : Regardless of this, there is a reality; there is a perception among students that in this society, we are not liked; and that there is pressure against Islam. The whole discourse on Islam is not positive in Europe today. Educated people feel this too. This is why it is really
    important to have an Islamic discourse rooted in the tradition, which says: be confident in your identity, your multiple identities, your responsibilities to society. It is good to show concerns towards Palestine but what about here? The real political involvement of Muslims, not just as a minority, will be a long process but it is already becoming a reality.
    Q : The British establishment seems to have fallen in love with you.
    But in France they think you are quite extreme. One criticism is that you engage in what is called "double discourse." That is, you talk about how Islam should change when you address non-Muslim audiences, but you are more conservative and gradualist when appealing to Muslim audiences. Is this true?
    A : For years I have heard people saying: "Be careful with Tariq Ramadan because he has one message in French; and a different one for when he speaks Arabic in the suburbs." Go and try to speak Arabic in the suburbs of France and you wont have an audience because they dont know Arabic.
    My problem in France is not one of double-talk, but one of double-hearing. When I talk with non-Muslims, I use different levels of language, different words, references, and so on. When I speak to Muslims, however, my references are mainly coming from within the Islamic tradition.
    But if you are telling me the content is different, I would say that is not true. If this was the case, I ought to have few problems with Muslims, or with Muslim countries. But I am not allowed to enter countries such as Tunisia, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

    Q : Why cant you go to Tunisia, Egypt or Saudi Arabia?

    A : Why? Because they know exactly what I am saying. I criticise the fact that they are dictatorships and that the Saudi government is betraying Islamic teachings. When I called for a moratorium on Islamic punishments (death penalty, corporal punishment and stoning) I said it on French television when 6m people were watching, as well as in Islamic majority countries.
    Q : Why do you want this moratorium? Why not simply say that stoning to death is just plain wrong?
    A : I have said that I am against the implementation of stoning, death penalties and corporal punishments. In Islamic-majority countries, this is a minority position. What we cannot deny is that these punishments are in the texts. What I am saying to Muslim scholars is that today’s conditions are different, so in this context you cannot implement these punishments. So we have to stop. This is the moratorium. Let Muslim scholars come together and well have three main questions that need clear answers: what is in the texts, what conditions should apply to these punishments and what about the context in which these would be implemented.
    Q : How flexible can broader aspects of Sharia be? Should women, for example, be able to inherit the same as men?
    A : The Koranic texts are quite clear as to inheritance and once again it is related to a global understanding of family and the respective roles of women and men. To implement these rules literally today without taking into account social realities is plain injustice. Some mothers find themselves alone with five or six kids to look after, the husbands have left, and nobody is helping them get the inheritance they should be entitled to. We need a holistic approach and the state must think of financial support and compensation for the women. Without such procedures it means that we are betraying the teachings of Islam through a literalist implementation. It is plain injustice and has nothing to do with the objectives of the Sharia I have mentioned.
    Q : You are popular among younger Muslims in Europe. But what sort of reception awaits you when you speak in Muslim-majority countries?
    A : It is very good, positive and open in north Africa, Turkey and Asia and many Arab countries.
    Q : Is that because you are addressing what is essentially a hand-picked audience? Or is it because people can come off the street and listen to you?
    A : It is both. It is clear to me that people, from students to scholars, are closely following what is happening with regards to Muslims in the west. The Arabic translations of my books, such as Western Muslims and the Future of Islam, have been read by many people in Islamic-majority countries. They know about my work: I am criticised but this is good as well.
    Q : Since your arrival in Britain you have become very engaged with the government, which relies on you for advice on Islamic affairs. You were asked to join a task force set up in the aftermath of the 7th July bombings. You are also part of a government-approved "roadshow" of scholars being sent to speak to audiences of young people. Dont you think that by being so closely allied to the government, your reform project might be in danger of being seen as an extension of British foreign policy?
    A : I believe that I am involved in something which is important: a task force to act against terrorism is important. I will sit with everyone, any government, even the American government, to talk and discuss, but there are conditions. I must be free to speak my mind, and this is what I am doing everywhere. I said from the very beginning that the British have great responsibilities as to the domestic situation of Muslims, when dealing with violence and exclusion. I strongly criticised the new British security policies. I continue to say that the Iraq war was a mistake, or that the British army shouldn’t have been involved, or that it was wrong for Tony Blair to deny any link between Iraq and the 7th July bombings. But let me tell you something: if we constantly worry about misperceptions within the Muslim communities, we will never do anything. When my US visa was revoked, I became a hero to some Muslims, and then, when I called for a moratorium, I was criticised and accused of
    working for the US administration. Muslims are too emotional, unfortunately. I don’t work for the British or any other government. I am open to any kind of dialogue as long as the rules are clear: free to speak out, free to criticise, free to resist and free to support when it is right. Muslims should stop thinking that to talk is to compromise, but the black and white approach is often the reality of Muslims today.

    Q : As an adviser to the British government, what will you suggest if asked for your views on the Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir? The government is still deciding whether to ban this group. Should it go ahead?
    A : Let us be clear. I am not an adviser to the British government. As to Hizb ut-Tahrir, I disagree with them but I think that as long as they are not speaking illegally, they must be free to speak and the society and Muslims should be free to respond. Hizb ut-Tahrir is not calling Muslims to kill or to act illegally, so it must be heard and challenged. To ban is the wrong way.
    Q : How confident are you about the future for Muslims in the long term, say, the next three decades? Not just in western Europe, but in Pakistan, in Iran and in Saudi Arabia? What sort of Islamic society do you think we will see? A more open one; or one that is more closed to outside influences?
    A : I dont know about 30 years, but I am quite optimistic about the long run, about one or two generations from now. I believe that the change taking place at the periphery of the Islamic world, in countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia and the west, is going to make an impact elsewhere. The European and American experiences are also going to have tremendous impact on Islamic majority countries in the near future. What is happening is not on the margins of Muslim communities in the west. It is much more mainstream.
    Source : Prospect Magazine
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    • AdilAlKufaishi
      عضو رسمي
      • May 2006
      • 107

      #3
      _MD_RE: CSID bulletin

      Money Cant Buy Us Democracy
      By AKBAR GANJI
      Tehran, Iran
      http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/01/opinion/01ganji.html
      August 1, 2006

      IN February, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asked Congress for $75 million to help Irans democratic opposition. In Iran, her request was widely discussed in the news media and in opposition circles. It became particularly controversial after an article in The New Yorker on March 6 suggested that this money might be used in an attempt to change the regime in Tehran with the help of Iranian democrats, particularly those living abroad.

      I was freed from prison amid these discussions. For six years, I had been behind bars on account of investigative articles I had written about the assassinations of dissident intellectuals. On numerous occasions, my interrogators accused me, and the entire opposition to clerical rule, of being dependent on the United States. They even claimed that C.I.A. agents with suitcases full of dollars routinely came to Tehran to distribute cash to members of the opposition, including reformists who supported the former president, Mohammad Khatami. Some of the interrogators took these propaganda claims seriously and asked prisoners about the location of these dollar-filled suitcases. While the pledge of American money may have added to the regimes anxieties about its future, it has done nothing to help the democratic movement. The battle between freedom and despotism in Iran remains unresolved for deeply internal reasons. It is, I am convinced, a problem with profound historical and cultural roots.

      We have learned from our history that despotism can be imported, and that despotic rulers can survive with the help of outsiders. But we have also learned that we have to gain our freedom ourselves, and that only we can nourish that freedom and create a political system that can sustain it. Ours is a difficult struggle; it could even be a long one. Anyone who claims to possess a golden formula for bringing freedom to Iran, and claims that all he needs is foreign cash and foreign help to put his plan into effect, is a swindler.

      What we need in our fight for freedom is not foreign aid but conditions that would allow us to focus all of our energies on the domestic struggle and to rest assured that no one is encouraging the regimes oppression. We need to know that no one is providing the regime with new technologies for filtering the Internet, and that no one is making deals with the regime that give it financial support or psychological succor.

      Surely, we need the moral and spiritual support of all the worlds forces for peace and freedom. We hope these forces will be relentless in criticizing any policy that, under the guise of ending the crisis in the region, only fans its flames. The United States could better spend its $75 million on developing centers for Iranian studies in American universities, thus advancing the worlds understanding of Iran and the Middle East, both in the past and in the present. Of course, American universities already have many first-class scholars on Iran, Islam and the Orient. The problem then lies in the vision that impedes the use of this knowledge and instead insists on immediate results.

      That same vision, and the search for immediate results, led the United States to give large sums of money to the Islamic fundamentalists who converged from all over the world in Afghanistan in the 1980s to fight the Soviet Union, Americas chief rival at the time. The rest is history. Freedom-loving Iranians inside and outside the country are against American military intervention in Iran. Such a war would be of no help in our fight for freedom; in fact, it would only contribute to our further enslavement, as the regime would use war as an excuse to suppress any and all voices of opposition.

      The American policy of confronting the Iranian regimes nuclear adventurism is correct. But the rationale for opposing this adventurism should not be that the mullahs oppose the West and the United States. The West’s double standard on non-proliferation is not defensible. The entire Middle East must be declared a nuclear-free zone. Opposition to the dangerous process that has begun in the region a process that the Islamic Republic has helped turn into a crisis must be based on a more general call first for regional, then for global, nuclear disarmament.

      In July I traveled to the United States to offer a view of Iran altogether different from the one presented by the mullahs. Many Iranians want freedom; we fight for it, and we do not fear prison and oppression. Our demand is for a secular, democratic political system in Iran. Many of the Iranian people, who are incidentally deeply devout, support this demand.

      The best help the world can offer us is to listen to the different voices of our society, and when forming a policy toward Iran or an image of its people, do not reduce our country to the regime that rules it most brutally. Akbar Ganji, an investigative journalist, is the author of a forthcoming collection of writings on Irans democratic movement. This article was translated from the Persian.
      "Universal Values and Muslim Democracy" by Anwar Ibrahim

      The July 2006 (Volume 17, no. 3) issue of the Journal of Democracy
      features clusters of articles on reforming intelligence and the Palestinian elections, plus individual studies of Muslim democracy, democracy in Andean nations, corruption, Nigeria, and South Africa. Selected online articles and the tables of contents of all Journal issues are available here.

      "Universal Values and Muslim Democracy" by Anwar Ibrahim
      The desire for freedom and self-government is written in human hearts everywhere; in this there can be no "clash of civilizations." Claims that Islam is inherently hostile to democracy represent an unwarranted surrender to fundamentalist arguments; we should engage with a broad spectrum of Muslim groups, but without compromising our commitment to freedom and democracy.
      To read the Journal of Democracy, click here:
      http://www.journalofdemocracy.org/
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      • AdilAlKufaishi
        عضو رسمي
        • May 2006
        • 107

        #4
        _MD_RE: CSID bulletin

        Stop the Band-Aid Treatment
        We Need Policies for a Real, Lasting Middle East Peace
        By Jimmy Carter
        Tuesday, August 1, 2006; A17
        http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/31/AR2006073100923.html


        The Middle East is a tinderbox, with some key players on all sides waiting for every opportunity to destroy their enemies with bullets, bombs and missiles. One of the special vulnerabilities of Israel, and a repetitive cause of violence, is the holding of prisoners. Militant
        Palestinians and Lebanese know that a captured Israeli soldier or civilian is either a cause of conflict or a valuable bargaining chip for prisoner exchange. This assumption is based on a number of such trades, including 1,150 Arabs, mostly Palestinians, for three Israeli soldiers in 1985;123 Lebanese for the remains of two Israeli soldiers in 1996; and 433 Palestinians and others for an Israeli businessman and the bodies of three soldiers in 2004.

        This stratagem precipitated the renewed violence that erupted in June when Palestinians dug a tunnel under the barrier that surrounds Gaza and assaulted some Israeli soldiers, killing two and capturing one. They offered to exchange the soldier for the release of 95 women and 313 children who are among almost 10,000 Arabs in Israeli prisons, but this time Israel rejected a swap and attacked Gaza in an attempt to free the soldier and stop rocket fire into Israel. The resulting destruction brought reconciliation between warring Palestinian factions and support for them throughout the Arab world. Hezbollah militants then killed three Israeli soldiers and captured two others, and insisted on Israel's withdrawal from disputed territory and an exchange for some of the several thousand incarcerated Lebanese. With American backing, Israeli bombs and missiles rained down on Lebanon. Hezbollah rockets from Syria and Iran struck northern Israel.

        It is inarguable that Israel has a right to defend itself against attacks on its citizens, but it is inhumane and counterproductive to punish civilian populations in the illogical hope that somehow they will blame Hamas and Hezbollah for provoking the devastating response. The result instead has been that broad Arab and worldwide support has been rallied for these groups, while condemnation of both Israel and the United States has intensified.

        Israel belatedly announced, but did not carry out, a two-day cessation in bombing Lebanon, responding to the global condemnation of an air attack on the Lebanese village of Qana, where 57 civilians were killed this past weekend and where 106 died from the same cause 10 years ago. As before there were expressions of "deep regret," a promise of "immediate investigation" and the explanation that dropped leaflets had warned families in the region to leave their homes. The urgent need in Lebanon is that Israeli attacks stop, the nation's regular military forces control the southern region, Hezbollah cease as a separate fighting force, and future attacks against Israel be prevented. Israel should withdraw from all Lebanese territory, including Shebaa Farms, and release the Lebanese prisoners. Yet yesterday, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert rejected a cease-fire.

        These are ambitious hopes, but even if the U.N. Security Council adopts and implements a resolution that would lead to such an eventual solution, it will provide just another band-aid and temporary relief. Tragically, the current conflict is part of the inevitably repetitive cycle of violence that results from the absence of a comprehensive settlement in the Middle East, exacerbated by the almost unprecedented six-year absence of any real effort to achieve such a goal. Leaders on both sides ignore strong majorities that crave peace, allowing extremist-led violence to preempt all opportunities for building a political consensus. Traumatized Israelis cling to the false hope that their lives will be made safer by incremental unilateral withdrawals from occupied areas, while Palestinians see their remnant territories reduced to little more than human dumping grounds surrounded by a provocative "security barrier" that embarrasses Israel's friends and that fails to bring safety or stability.

        The general parameters of a long-term, two-state agreement are well known. There will be no substantive and permanent peace for any peoples in this troubled region as long as Israel is violating key U.N. resolutions, official American policy and the international "road map" for peace by occupying Arab lands and oppressing the Palestinians. Except for mutually agreeable negotiated modifications, Israel's official pre-1967 borders must be honored. As were all previous administrations since the founding of Israel, U.S. government leaders must be in the forefront of achieving this long-delayed goal.

        A major impediment to progress is Washington's strange policy that dialogue on controversial issues will be extended only as a reward for subservient behavior and will be withheld from those who reject U.S. assertions. Direct engagement with the Palestine Liberation Organization or the Palestinian Authority and the government in Damascus will be necessary if secure negotiated settlements are to be achieved. Failure to address the issues and leaders involved risks the creation of an arc of even greater instability running from Jerusalem through Beirut, Damascus, Baghdad and Tehran. The people of the Middle East deserve peace and justice, and we in the international community owe them our strong leadership and support.
        Former president Carter is the founder of the non-profit Carter Center in Atlanta.
        Key Republican breaks with Bush on Mideast Nebraska's Sen. Hagel calls for immediate cease-fire

        http://edition.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/07/31/hagel.mideast

        WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Urging President Bush to turn all U.S. efforts toward "ending this madness," a leading Republican senator Monday broke with the Bush administration and called for an immediate cease-fire in the Mideast. "The sickening slaughter on both sides must end and it must end now," Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel said. "President Bush must call for an immediate cease-fire. This madness must stop."

        The Bush administration has refused to call for Israel to halt its attacks on southern Lebanon, joining Israel in insisting that Hezbollah fighters must be pushed back from the Israeli-Lebanese border. President Bush Monday in a speech in Miami Beach, Florida, reiterated his call for a cease-fire in the Mideast only if it brought a "long-lasting peace" that addressed Iran and Syria's support for Hezbollah, the Islamic militia that Israel is targeting. (Full story)

        Hagel said that refusal threatens to isolate the United States and Israel and harm chances of achieving a long-term peace in the region. "How do we realistically believe that a continuation of the systematic destruction of an American friend -- the country and people of Lebanon -- is going to enhance America's image and give us the trust and credibility to lead a lasting and sustained peace effort in the Middle East?" asked Hagel, the No. 2 Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

        Calls for 'a statesman' He called on Bush to name "a statesman of global stature" as his
        personal envoy to the region. And he urged the administration to open direct talks with Hezbollah's backers, Iran and Syria, both of which Washington also accuses of meddling in Iraq. "Our relationship with Israel is special and historic," he said. "But it need not and cannot be at the expense of our Arab and Muslim relationships. That is an irresponsible and dangerous false choice."

        Bush was headed back to Washington after a fund-raising trip to Florida, and the White House had no immediate reaction to Hagel's comments. Like his frequent ally, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, Hagel is a possible GOP presidential candidate in 2008 and has been critical of the administration's handling of Iraq. But few members of Congress have broken ranks with the president over his handling of the Israel-Hezbollah conflict.

        Calls for an end to the 20-day conflict have increased since Israel's bombing Sunday of the Lebanese town of Qana, which left at least 54 civilians dead. Hagel said the Israeli campaign was "tearing Lebanon apart," and the resulting civilian casualties and economic damage were weakening the country and bolstering support for Hezbollah, which the U.S. State Department considers a terrorist organization. Hagel urged the administration to revive the Beirut Declaration of 2002, authored by Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, under which Arab countries would have recognized Israel's right to exist. Hagel said that declaration was "a starting point" toward a regional settlement, but the United States "squandered" it.

        'Bogged down' in Iraq?
        Meanwhile, the decorated Vietnam veteran said the United States "is bogged down in Iraq," limiting U.S. diplomatic and military options. Last week's announcement that more than 3,000 more American troops were needed to reinforce Baghdad amid rising sectarian violence was "a dramatic setback," he said. He said the 3-year-old war is wearing badly on the U.S. military, and that Iraq's fledgling democracy needs to take over more of its security responsibilities from American troops. "This is not about setting a timeline," Hagel said. "This is about understanding the implications of the forces of reality."
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        • AdilAlKufaishi
          عضو رسمي
          • May 2006
          • 107

          #5
          _MD_RE: CSID bulletin

          The Violence of Impoverished Thought

          By Ali Ettefagh | July 22, 2006; 11:30 AM ET
          http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postglobal/ali_ettefagh
          /2006/07/poverty_of_thought.html

          Tehran, Iran - Recent events in the Middle East seem to justify scholar Samuel Huntington's rough view of racial purity and his resistance to intercultural encounters. He must be thrilled these days. War is a by-product of intellectual bankruptcy which presumes ingrained antagonisms between cultures. Seen through Hungtington's simplified view of religious groupings, it looks like recent events prove his point that one group's fear of another is enough to compel it to blindly dismiss its own national interests in favour of those of an irrational foreign state. It looks like Israel and America have dismissed the universal fact that all groups deserve an even chance to interact with on another.

          In a very American way, Huntington failed to explain why he simplified the Judeo-Christian world into a single entity that stands against Islam. Like Huntington, America forgets that the Islamic world had no antipathy towards Judaism until the 20th century. Such antipathy evolved as a resistance to the doctrine of Zionism -- itself an argument for racial preferences.
          Yet the worst and most prolonged conflicts have taken place between neighbors who were culturally very close. The bloodiest religious wars were fought within Christianity and Islam, not between them.

          Blind support of the last living member of the Apartheid Club with ts bold breaches of the Geneva Conventions and its bombing of civilians is bound to backfire on any financial or moral supporter. A blitz on Palestinians or Lebanese in reaction to kidnappings by admittedly belligerent parties indicts this living member as an accomplice. A plea of Shiite vs. Sunni will not defend the accused. Israel's bombing of Proctor & Gamble's Lebanese baby food factory has already weakened any case. The American government, by proxy, has bombed the interests of its own citizens. America and its allies are needlessly exposing themselves to risks and perils. All wars have risks and intangible by-products. The real war is about sustainable peace, democracy and fair economic opportunities. It is not about eviction of Lebanese people from their own land.

          Any blind support of Israel's absurd war will certainly lead to other clashes and losing the real war. It will damage America and Britain, even if Israel wins the cheap blame games and the battles.
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          • AdilAlKufaishi
            عضو رسمي
            • May 2006
            • 107

            #6
            _MD_RE: CSID bulletin

            A New Era of Realpolitik?
            By Bashir Goth | July 24, 2006; 9:00 AM ET
            http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postglobal/bashir_goth/
            2006/07/a_new_era_of_realpolitik.html

            United Arab Emirates/Somalia - The Israeli-Hezbollah war has polarized Arab opinion in an unprecedented way. It may have a far reaching impact on other volatile parts of the Muslim world and further complicate the already strained relations between the West and Islam, especially if the West fails to accurately read the situation and respond properly to the changing political landscape in the Middle East.

            The first new element in Arab politics that the West has to take note of is the clear and concerted message sent by the Arab Sunni states of Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt who accused Hezbollah of adventurism and moving the region into an unnecessary war. This was a surprise wakeup call for the Arab and Muslim masses that grew up blaming Israel for every war and every calamity that beset the Middle East region. It was an hour of confusion for the government controlled Arab media which had to negotiate between playing its traditional role of echoing the official line and reflecting the growing anger of the masses against Israel and the west. By uttering the B-word or blame for the first time against an Arab party fighting against Israel, the governments of Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt have made Arab political analysts and commentators sit back and take notice of the developing new realities.

            With Iran emerging as the only nuclear power in the region, the Shiites taking power in Iraq for the first time in the history of hitherto minority Sunni dominated country, Hezbollah positioning itself as the only power broker in Lebanon, and radical Muslim movements winning elections in Egypt, Palestine and even Kuwait, the Israeli-Hezbollah war seems to have come as an opportunity for Arab moderate states to reclaim their traditional leadership in the region and restore their cozy ties with the U.S. administration which has irked its staunch friends lately by its persistent advocacy for democratic changes and its heavy political investment in the Iranian-backed Shiites of Iraq.

            No matter how the Israeli-Hezbollah war ends, it seems clear now with whom the U.S. State Secretary Condoleezza Rice will be keen to meet when she starts her difficult mission to broker a cease fire in the Middle East. It may also ring a new era of realpolitik for Washington where Secretary Rice will be forced to refrain from any mention of democratic changes in the Middle East and tone down her rhetoric against hardline Islamic groups.

            Apart from the position of the moderate Arab states, it is obvious that radical Muslims may still see the Lebanon war as a continuation of the Arab-Israeli conflict and given to what they envision as an unwavering Western support for Israel's destruction of Lebanon, many of them may regard it as a further escalation of the western war against Islam. Apart from how the extremist groups like Al Qaeda would play into the scenario, the Hezbollah resistance may embolden other Islamist vanguards in Iraq and Afghanistan and as far as Sudan and Somalia.
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            • AdilAlKufaishi
              عضو رسمي
              • May 2006
              • 107

              #7
              _MD_RE: CSID bulletin

              Message from Bishop Riah
              01 August 2006
              Dear Friends:

              When I wrote to you last Friday, I could not have imagined that a second Qana Massacre in a decade would be carried out by the State of Israel on Sunday when they dropped two bombs on a house, crushing at least fifty-six people, including thirty-four children and twelve women. They suffocated under dirt and debris, virtually buried alive in the make-shift bomb shelter where they had had little water and food and no toilet. In 1996, one of the deadliest single events of the whole Arab-Israeli conflict took place there the shelling of a United Nations base where hundreds of people were sheltering. More than one hundred were killed and another one hundred injured, cut down by Israeli anti-personnel shells that explode in the air sending a lethal shower of shrapnel to the ground, reported Martin Asser of BBC News, Beirut.

              With expressions of deep sorrow from Prime Minister Olmert, this tragedy of epic proportions is not enough to stop Israels attacks on the people of Lebanon. Today, the Israeli Security Cabinet approved a widening of the ground offensive in the South. Yesterday, Israel violated their agreement to stop the air offensive over Lebanon for forty-eight hours which would have allowed humanitarian aid to reach victims and residents stranded in the South could have traveled more safely to the North. Olmert announced today that the end to the war is not in sight. While tens of thousands are without food and medical supplies, the U.N. reports that their convoys have been turned away and cancelled by the Israeli government. The short journey from Tyre to Qana is delayed for hours because the roads have been destroyed. Aid trickles in.

              Amid the despair and the grim task of removing the victims, there is deep anger at what many here regard is the callous indifference of the West, reports Ilene Prusher of the Christian Science Monitor in Lebanon. The offering of condolences from President Bush, Secretary Rice, and Prime Minister Blair to the Lebanese people for Israels murder of innocent children seems hollow, with no condemnation of Israels repeated and flagrant disregard for human life and the values of civilized people everywhere.

              I have read the letter sent to The President of the United States signed by my brother in Christ The Most Rev. Frank T. Griswald, Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal church of America and fourteen other Christian leaders in which they say This violent conflict has created a grave humanitarian crisis, and no hoped-for benefit should outweigh the cause of saving innocent lives. The letter continues with a plea, Your presidential leadership and the full weight of the United States, acting in concert with the international community, must be applied now to achieve an immediate cease-fire and to launch an intensive diplomatic initiative for the cessation of hostilities. I regret that the President has ignored this call.

              Last week in Lebanon, Israel bombed and destroyed a U.N. observation post on the border in Southern Lebanon killing four peacekeeping observers. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan expressed indignation that Israel appeared to have struck the well known, established, and clearly identified site deliberately. The bomb made a direct hit on the building and the attack continued even throughout the rescues and recovery mission. The Security Councils statement excludes condemnation of Israel at the insistence of The United States.

              The war rages on into the third week. If fighting does not cease, the homeless count in Lebanon will soon reach one million people. Families and communities continue to be ripped apart. And, the offensive against the Palestinians in Gaza has been relentless. This week when Jan Egeland, the U.N.s Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs visited Jerusalem, he focused much of his attention on the tragedy happening in the Gaza Strip. He does not understand what benefit Israel will gain from punishing 1.4 million people by cutting them off from their sources of electricity and jobs, from running water in their houses and from fresh food. What is the message that the residents of Gaza receive from the sight of mountains of tomatoes tossed out on the side of the road at the border crossings into Israel? That they should be more productive and support peace?

              Saturday, after waiting two and one half hours at the checkpoint, our delegation visited Gaza on a mission of mercy, taking medical and relief supplies to hospitals and shelters. Israel Defense Forces tanks had pushed back before dawn, just one day after ending an unusually deadly incursion that killed thirty Palestinians over three days. According to an Associated Press count, in the past one month period, Israeli troops have killed 159 Palestinians since they started their relentless attacks on the Gaza Strip in response to the capture of soldier Cpl. Gilad Shalit. I have seen the Caterpillar bulldozers and the orchards of oranges uprooted by them. I saw an apartment building where forty families were given forty minutes to leave before it was demolished into a pile of rubble. I have heard the concern of the Director of our Al-Ahli Arab Hospital regarding medical supplies, staffing shortages, and lack of fuel to run the generators essential to critical care. And, I have seen children playing near mountains of garbage which are the breeding ground to rats and the threat of cholera, a disease that I watched devastate India when I lived there.

              We must not become complacent or be desensitized by the images of this human tragedy. Continue to appeal to your government representatives to demand an immediate cease-fire. It is time that The United Nations and the world community see to it that Israel complies with U.N. Resolutions 242, 338, and 194, so that compliance with Resolution 1559 can be enforced. We must find an end to this madness. Killing and the destruction of the environment is not a war against nations, but it is a war against God.

              In, with, and through Christ,
              The Rt. Rev. Riah H. Abu El-Assal
              Bishop
              The Diocese of Jerusalem
              Palestine, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria
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