Blasphemy Is Not Racism
May 22, 2016
Preface: I’m an atheist who firmly believes that religion is false and mostly harmful. I escaped from a Christian fundamentalist childhood, and that was my “oppression”. I spent many subsequent years researching, criticizing, and attacking Christianity, including the Bible, the Jesus story, and various doctrines. Does this mean I’m bigoted against Christians? Of course not. I was one myself. Many of my family members and a few friends are Christians, and I love them. Criticizing ideas is not bigotry.
The following article calls out Islamic
terrorism as primarily a product of Islamic religious doctrine. It’s over a
year old, but I’ve been too afraid to publish it. My past public comments on this
topic have resulted in accusations of bigotry and racism – from my feminist and
progressive “allies.” However, recent encouragement
to publish this has come from friends, former Muslims I’ve met, and from
reading articles by other atheists, and reformist and ex-Muslims. Just today,
Armin Navibi, an ex-Muslim and founder of Atheist Republic, gave me further
encouragement, and I thank him.
This piece was originally written for my former
monthly column at Rabble.ca in Jan 2015,
a “progressive” political news site. They rejected it – the only submission from
me they ever rejected. (They did eventually publish a different article
that mostly avoided mentioning Islamic terrorism.) This draft represents a revised
version that tried to answer their objections, which they still rejected. The final paragraph was just added today.
*********
February 2015
In the aftermath of the January 7, 2015
Paris massacre of staff at the magazine Charlie Hebdo, many people on the left slammed the publication
for its "racist cartoons," while few explained how they arrived at
that conclusion. The French magazine's humour was frequently coarse and not necessarily
funny. But that's not a crime, it's just part of free speech.
I absorbed a great deal of media commentary
on the tragedy, and it became clear that the intent and context of many of the
Charlie Hebdo cartoons were lost on people
unfamiliar with French politics. The cartoons usually have multiple layers and
meanings, combining two or three different issues at once. For example, the
magazine frequently skewers the racism and
xenophobia of France's right-wing party, the National Front, often
taking the satire to absurd lengths such as equating the party with Boko Haram.
In fact, Charlie Hedbo is a left-wing,
atheist magazine that often satirizes religion through the lens of French
politics. It frequently targets Christianity and Judaism too, not just Islam.
Its satire of Islam focuses mostly on Mohammed, Islamic clerics, practices such
as the Islamic oppression of women, and Islamic terrorists – not Muslims in general.
It seems the critics of Charlie Hebdo were
confusing satire of religion with racism. But Islam is not a race – it's a
religion. Muslims are not a race either. They are part of a religious community
and belong to every nationality and ethnic group imaginable, including white westerners.
If Muslims are associated with Arabs, that’s a western bias (and probably a
racist one).The majority of Muslims actually
live in South and Southeast Asia, while only 20 per cent live in the Middle
East and North Africa. Silencing critiques of Islam with accusations of racism is
itself racist, because it holds Muslims to a lower standard than the rest of us
– it defines them by their religion as if they can’t help themselves, and it assumes
that all Muslims are the same. It fails to acknowledge their diversity and humanity,
and it abandons oppressed and persecuted groups within the Muslim world, such
as liberals, atheists, gays, and women.
On a feminist listserv, I once critiqued
the Muslim burka (full body cover) and niqab (face cover) as symbols of
religious oppression of women and their sexuality. To my astonishment, I was
roundly attacked as “racist.” But I have always supported the right of all
women to wear whatever they want for whatever reason. Regardless of the various
reasons individual women wear these garments today, their origin is patriarchal
and their justification comes from Islamic doctrine. The
burka and niqab were designed to hide women so that men wouldn’t be tempted by
their sexuality – especially non-Muslim men or
foreign invaders. The intended effect of these garments is not only
to invisibilize women, but also to put the onus on women for controlling both
their own and men’s sexual behavior, and to send the message that women are
valued primarily for their modesty – which means that Islam is defining women
by their sexuality from a male perspective. These are factual observations that
have nothing to do with judging individual Muslim women for their choices,
which are usually not about kowtowing to men.
I see a clear divide between blasphemy and
bigotry. Blasphemy is a type of dissent
or criticism against a god or religious doctrine, practice, or leader. Bigotry
(or hate speech) disparages people
based on an immutable or shared-group characteristic – colour, race, origin,
gender, sexual orientation, disability, age, family or marital status, and religion.
Yet, it seems that many people don't understand the difference, so they equate criticism
of Islam with bigotry against Muslims and call it “Islamophobia”. That’s
alarming, because it’s quickly starting to resemble the right-wing definition of anti-Semitism
– any criticism of Israeli government policies.
Of course, anti-religious satire occurs in
a political and cultural context. But the reality today is that Islam has a
strong radical minority that is engaged in a belligerent campaign that explicitly
uses religious doctrine to justify violence. For example, despite all the
western commentary about how the various sins of the French government and
society were to blame for the Charlie Hebdo shootings, the only reason that the terrorists themselves gave for killing the
cartoonists, as well as Al Qaeda which claimed
responsibility, was to “avenge the Prophet.” If the killers were
angry at the French government for oppressing Muslims for example, they could
have targeted people in the government or even just the innocent public. But
they didn’t – they specifically targeted cartoonists who made fun of their
religion.
We’re in a clash of ideologies. The liberal
western tradition of freedom of speech (however tarnished) is anathema to
fundamentalist Islam. To make matters worse, dissent is impossible within an
Islamic state, since religion and politics are inextricably wed, and blasphemy
and apostasy are punishable by death. Which means the main victims of radical
Islam, by far, are other Muslims. A 2013
Pew Forum poll found
that most Muslims don’t support
terrorism, but that substantial minorities in some countries DO support it,
while significant numbers – majorities in many countries – believe in the
imposition of Sharia law and the death penalty for apostasy.
Christians and Jews have certainly been
guilty of terrible atrocities in the name of their faith too. But in the case
of Judaism, the worst of it occurred over 2000 years ago (or at least was bragged about in an extensive catalogue – read the Old
Testament book of Joshua if you can stomach it), while the Enlightenment put an
end to most Christian violence like the Crusades and the Inquisition. Yes,
modern Israel is guilty of violence against Palestinians on the basis of
religious entitlement, some “pro-life” Christians have been bombing abortion
clinics and assassinating doctors for several decades now, and you can find
recent examples of Buddhist and Hindu terrorism too. But it’s Islamic
fundamentalism that is in global ascendancy right now.
The Institute on Economics and Peace
found that: “Religion as a driving ideology for terrorism has dramatically
increased since 2000.” And almost all of it is perpetrated by Islamic
terrorists. In 2013, over 60% of terrorist incidents occurred in just five
Muslim countries: Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Syria. Those same
countries experienced 82% of global deaths due to terrorism, and four Islamist
groups were responsible for 66% of those deaths in 2013: Al Qaeda and its
affiliates, Boko Haram in Nigeria, the Islamic State, and the Taliban. Another
21% of global terrorism deaths were caused by an assortment of other mostly
Islamic groups. Further, out of nine organizations responsible for the most
suicide attacks from 2000 to 2013, eight are Islamic (the ninth was Tamil
Tigers) and the worst incidents all took place from 2008 onwards.
Religiously-motivated terrorism is only a
subset of all terrorism, and one could argue that the United
States and other western powers are guilty of political, state-sponsored
terrorism. But there's a difference in intent, with western countries generally trying to avoid harming civilians, while Islamic terrorists make a point of it. Terrorism experts consider the phenomenon of “global terrorism”
to be a recent one associated primarily with Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, whose
main goal is existential and religious – to impose Islam on the world through armed conflict.
Those
adhering to radical Islam take literally the scriptural references that glorify
military jihad (as opposed to spiritual jihad). As a result, they commit
extreme, attention-grabbing violence to avenge real or perceived
wrongs. However,
their objective is not primarily to retaliate against political wrongs, but to exploit
those in order to establish a global Islamic Caliphate.
Factors such as the foreign policy and
military imperialism of the U.S. and other western countries, and the social
exclusion and discrimination experienced by immigrant Muslims in many countries,
are no doubt contributing factors to terrorism. But those on the Left tend not
to look past that.
Because even when Islamic terrorists cite political factors
for their deadly deeds, they almost always cite the defense of their religion too,
or the Prophet Mohammed, or
their vision of a global Islam.
Most oppressed people do not “martyr”
themselves in suicide attacks unless they’ve been promised 72 virgins in heaven.
And it’s hard to mobilize terrorist armies without a potent ideology to attract and
hold them. After all, there are many non-violent ways to address
political grievances that the vast majority of citizens in the modern world now
opt for. But that’s often not the case for religious extremists. Radical Muslims
in particular draw inspiration for violence from belief in literal readings of
the Koran and hadith doctrines, as well as religious/political indoctrination
by radical Islamists or
at Al Qaeda camps such as in Pakistan.
Further, terrorists motivated by religion choose to carry out particularly brutal types of retaliation that arise directly from their fervent religious beliefs. This makes religious terrorists much more dangerous than other types of terrorists, according to terrorism expert Bruce Hoffman:
“[R]eligious terrorist violence inevitably assumes a transcendent purpose and therefore becomes a sacramental or divine duty… Religion, moreover, functions as a legitimizing force, sanctioning if not encouraging wide scale violence against an almost open-ended category of opponents. Thus religious terrorist violence becomes…a morally justified, divinely instigated expedient toward the attainment of the terrorists’ ultimate ends. This is a direct reflection of the fact that terrorists motivated by a religious imperative do not seek to appeal to any constituency but themselves and the changes they seek…are only to benefit themselves. The religious terrorist moreover sees himself as an outsider from the society that he both abhors and rejects and this sense of alienation enables him to contemplate - and undertake - far more destructive and bloodier types of terrorist operations than his secular counterpart.”
Journalist Glenn Greenwald wrote this 2013 piece
claiming that Islamic terrorism is motivated by political concerns and not
Islam. I spent several hours researching his claims and found that of the seven
examples he cites, religious reasons were the primary stated motivation in the
first case, and were equal or key underlying motivations in the other six. (I’m
happy to share my research with anyone interested.)
Sam Harris is a philosopher and atheist who
has extensively criticized religion, primarily Christianity and Islam, and the
bad behaviours that dogmatic belief can lead to. Harris has a response to “…liberal
apologists who have been saying that their behavior [of the Islamic State] has
nothing to do with Islam. Rather, we’re told that burning people alive in
cages, crucifying children, and butchering journalists and aid workers is an
ordinary human response to political and economic instability. Even
representatives of our own State Department assert this. I can’t imagine how
comically out of touch with reality we appear from the side of the jihadis.”
Harris has also said: “Religions
differ, and their specific differences matter. And the truth is that Islam has
doctrines regarding jihad, martyrdom, apostasy, etc., that pose a special
problem to the civilized world at this moment in history. We deny this at our
peril.” Unfortunately, Harris has been widely misinterpreted and unjustly
attacked as “racist” (including by Greenwald) for his criticism of Islamic
doctrines and their violent consequences (which, again, are mostly inflicted on
“errant” Muslims). He has voiced his frustration
thusly:
In any conversation on this topic, one must continually deploy a firewall of caveats and concessions to irrelevancy: Of course, U.S. foreign policy has problems. Yes, we really must get off oil. No, I did not support the war in Iraq. Sure, I've read Chomsky. No doubt, the Bible contains equally terrible passages. Yes, I heard about that abortion clinic bombing in 1984. No, I'm sorry to say that Hitler and Stalin were not motivated by atheism. The Tamil Tigers? Of course, I've heard of them. Now can we honestly talk about the link between belief and behavior?
This is a deeply complex issue with no easy
answers. For example, blasphemy and dissent against religion can sometimes be
mixed with bigotry against its adherents, and may be hard to pull apart. Some
religious believers take slights against their faith very personally, so
perhaps one could argue that a devout person's religious faith is a reflection
of their personal identity, and that criticisms of their beliefs cross the line
into personal attacks. But that can't be our legal yardstick. The bad reaction
of some religious believers to critiques of what they hold sacred is actually a
reflection of their own doubts and insecurities.
We are not obligated to treat Islam with
kid gloves to avoid offending Muslims, or out of fear of being labelled
“Islamophobic” (which is a false term, akin to being called “anti-Semitic” for
criticizing the Israeli government). If we stay silent out of fear of
instigating more terrorism, then we’re allowing fundamentalist religion to
destroy our progressive values of free speech and critical inquiry.
To be clear, we must respect the right of
religious believers to believe whatever they want, but we are under no
obligation to respect their actual
beliefs, especially when they inspire violent acts among a subset of
believers. It should be remembered that Christianity and Islam in particular
are proselytizing and conquering religions. When some of its adherents try to
convert others or impose their religion on whole populations, they have placed
their views in a public forum and we have every right – a crucial obligation
even – to examine and critique what they believe.
Western liberals should respond to
religious terrorism by strongly defending our modern secular societies and the
democratic and Enlightenment values they are based on. For example, our
immediate response to the Charlie Hebdo shootings should have been an act of
defiant solidarity – the mass reprinting of the cartoons by media around the
world. Instead, we mostly impugned the cartoons, the victims, and our own
governments.
One of our key freedoms is the ability to
use the tools of reason and science – as well as satire – to question
traditional institutions and ideologies, including religion. It’s essential to
preserving human rights and freedoms, which many fundamentalists and right-wing
people ceaselessly try to destroy. The critique of any religion and its fruits
is not “racist” or “Islamophobic.”
We must defend the right to blasphemy, not criminalize
it, or silence ourselves out of fear or misplaced political correctness. Because
doing so means excusing terrorism, and ignoring injustice in Muslim countries.
It means abandoning women and oppressed minorities who live there, most of whom can’t speak
out for fear of their lives. I’ve personally heard brave people like Armin Navibi,
Ali A. Rizvi, Maryam Namazie, and Taslima Nasrin – former Muslims who used to
live in such countries – ask westerners to please stand up for Muslims and rebut
the “regressive leftists.”
That’s a term coined by liberal Muslim Maajid Nawaz for people on the left who refuse
to call out Islam even though it’s a primary motive for terrorism and
oppression, mostly against people in Muslim countries. So I’m speaking up now. Because it’s not my comfortable life at
stake, it’s theirs.
Labels: Armin Navibi, atheist republic, glenn greenwald, islamic terrorism, islamists, sam harris
3 Comments:
At 5:55 PM, ufo said…
Spot on. Well said.
At 7:18 PM, Unknown said…
Joyce, Have enjoyed your article.
True, we cannot support any structure that oppresses women, children, minorities
It is atrocious when religion controls, minimizes women in any form
At 11:56 AM, Anonymous said…
I think you will need to start an active lobby to governments, especially the federal government, for freedom of speech, even unpopular speech, in order to get anywhere with this. This will also proctect the people you are condemning, but freedom to think should be defended.
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