Skip to content or view screen version

An open letter to the British media

Yakoub Islam | 22.08.2005 19:22

A response to post 7/7 media coverage of Muslims.

I am writing in response to a number of issues raised by Martin Bright's recent articles in The Observer (14 August 2005), and the BBC Panorama programme on British Muslims(21 August 2005). At this juncture, I would like to clarify my own views on some of these issues, for the record.

1. Suicide bombers.
“He who has killed an innocent soul, it is as if he had killed all humanity” Al-Qur’an, Surah 5:32.

I am aware that otherwise moderate Islamic scholars such as Yusuf al-Qaradawi are sympathetic to what have been described euphemistically as ‘martyrdom operations’. I suspect that a significant number of British Muslims are broadly supportive of or sympathetic with such views. However, it would be a mistake to think holding such views means that Muslims are 'extremists' or support political violence outside of Palestine.

I am committed to contesting the belief that suicide bombings are a morally legitimate and effective response to Palestinian oppression. But blanket condemnation and vilification of support for Palestinian violence will only further demonize those Muslims who hold such views, and risks entrenching their opinions as reactionary to a perceived anti-Muslim bias. For similar reasons, I oppose legislation that would effectively drive such views underground.

As the late Edward Said stated, Palestinian violence is frequently represented “stripped of its context and the terrible suffering from which it arises” (Cockburn and St. Clair, 2003, p. 152). The most effective means of challenging political violence in Palestine, and those who condone it, is to make the political and historical context of the conflict the starting point for analysis. To ensure balanced coverage, journalists must pose questions which are not just difficult for the supporters of such violence, but for those who either tacitly or directly lend support to the State terrorism perpetrated by the Israeli government.

2. Holocaust Memorial Day.
I support those Muslim organisations who currently boycott this event, without intending any offence whatsoever to those who survived the Shoa. I am cognisant of the suffering which took place, as much as is possible, having studied the history of Judaism at undergraduate level. I am also aware that this genocide targetted not just Jews, but other groups, including the learning disabled.

Although the genocide perpetuated by the Nazi regime of Adolf Hitler is arguably the greatest planned and systematic atrocity ever committed by humanity against itself, it is not unique in history or recent times.

Historically, the genocide of the Native Americans, and the wholesale conquest of their lands, stands as comparable to Hitler’s crimes. Since Word War II, crimes against humanity have been committed by the Indonesian government against the people of East Timor and by the Russians against the people of Chechnya. Others, such as the Bosnian Muslims, deserved to be remembered as victims of ethnic hatred on this day.

As with Palestine, these crimes should similarly not be contemplated without considering the facilitative role played by imperialism, nationalism and bogus sciences such as eugenics – ideologies which continue today, often unabated.

I am concerned that the narrow focus on this event is politically expedient, and the presence of Putin at one of the key Holocaust Memorial services this years was deeply offensive to those who believe Putin's own human rights record is irredeemable. To stage this event with such a butcher in attendance, under the proclamative, “Never Again!” is sickening in the extreme. It raises suspicions that the Holocaust has become an ‘industry’ which exists primarily to aid justification of a terrorist state, where racially motivated murder is an almost daily occurance.

3. Mawdudi and Other Folk Devils.
Like most educated Muslims, I have read and reflected on some of the works authored by the revivalist scholar Mawdudi. He was clearly an inspired thinker, although many of his views – including his alleged admiration for European fascist dictators - are certainly not mine.

Like other educated Muslims, I see Mawdudi, like the other greater revivalist, Qutb, as a product of his time, part of a Muslim reactionary movement against European colonialism and racism. Equally, I am aware that views held by both Mawdudi and Qutb which are out of kilter with contemporary British mores are too often trawled up with the purpose of deriding Muslims and the Islamic faith.

It would seem the British media is intent on creating Muslim folk demons, whether it be using historical figures, such as Mawdudi and Qutb, or contemporary figures such as Omar Bakri and Yusuf al-Qaradawi. The substantial differences between these figures is often never highlighted, only the views which are said to clash with the values of 'British people'. The Pope can be anti-gay, but if a Muslim scholar expresses similar views, he is a monster. Few in the Muslim community doubt the Islamophobic nature of such representations.

Things look different when the boot is on the other foot. No one suggests that the anti-Semitism which pervaded Catholic biblical commentaries prior to World War II is evidence of British Catholic doctrine today. Few have considered how the offending sections of these commentaries were quietly erased in post-war editions, to disguise the Catholic Church’s crucial role in manufacturing the anti-Semitism which ultimately informed Hitler’s final solution.

In the history of this continent, Muslims have too long been a projection of Europeans' fears and insecurities, a way of deflecting focus away from their own ills. This Orientalism, which scholars have clearly identified and which still pervades the public spaces of Europe, has to be acknowledged and put to sleep. Now non-Muslims in Europe live side by side with Muslims, there is no longer room for such dark prejudices.

I welcome legitimate criticism of British Muslim organisations, and informed criticism of my faith. But intelligent and balanced coverage of Muslims in the British media is the exception rather than the rule. I regret the largely decontextualised and derisory attacks against Muslims with have recently found their way into the public domain. They appear to co-opt Tony Blair's attempt to exploit fears surrounding Muslims as a strategy for deflectling attention away from his own nefarious foreign policies and the neoconservative political agenda of his New Labour administration. This is regretable.

If you are looking for a community to attack and vilify, then might I suggest you focus on the one surrounding 10 Downing Street, and not one which has for too long been impoverished and marginalised.

Yakoub Islam
- e-mail: plimfix@btinternet.com
- Homepage: http://www.bayyinat.org.uk/index.htm

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Muslims and the Media

22.08.2005 22:27

It is time to deny the propogandists the tools they use to spread their disgusting lies about world violence, and those responsible for it!

We already have metrics to measure the nature of human suffering since World War 2- namely death through violence, and poverty and suffering through war and allied acts.

WHO HAS DIED VIOLENTLY IN SIGNIFICANT NUMBERS SINCE WORLD WAR 2??? Western Europeans? NO! Citizens of the US? NO! Jews? NO!

Africans? YES! Asians? YES! Muslims? YES!

Who has suffered poverty since WW2- again certainly NOT the Western Europeans, Americans, or Jews.

So, tell me again, why is it the Muslims are on the defensive??? Why are the victims being told to apologise for having someone elses boot on their face, someone elses bulldozer in their living room, someone elses cruise missile in their medicine factory, or someone elses bullet in their child's head???

The American's claim that the death of small numbers of US citizens (usually in disputed circumstances) gives them the right to murder ANY number of other humans, with possible use of ANY weapon system (remember that Bush and Blair PROMISED to use nuclear weapons in Iraq if Iraqis tried to protect themselves with non-existant chemical weapons). Somehow, however, other people are NOT supposed to have the same right to revenge or justice. The BBC repeats this message over and over- telling its audience that ONLY the US and Israel can 'strike back'. Strangely, the BBC makes it clear that the 'sub-human' victims of the US and Israel are NEVER justified in doing the same, regardless of circumstance, or loss of life and property. The BBC even cheered the Israelis when they butcher people merely to reclaim dead military killers. The BBC accepts without question that recovering a dead israeli is worth the death of ANY number of non-jews, regardless of sex or age.

The organised attacks on Muslims in France, UK, Germany, US etc., are designed to show the general public weak and apologetic Muslim leaders, always on the defensive. Then if any of these stooge leaders grow balls, and fight back, or if non-approved Muslims make coherent statements powerfully explaining the truth about Iraq, Palestine or whatever, the Western press can label them as extremists or anti-western.

The role of the BBC is exactly the same as any of the NAZI controlled news organisations in 30's Germany. The semi-regular spates the BBC appears to have with Israel are entirely phoney, and are merely careful constructs of the the BBC working with the UK and Israeli governments. The BBC is, was, and always will be an arm of the British government, and is its major propoganda outlet. Propoganda in the UK (as with Nazi German) is as sophisticated as the people it serves, and therefore does not fall into the mold of idiot Stalinist dribble. Of course, as EVERY media monitoring organisation has found, as soon as one examines the output of the BBC carefully, its propoganda techniques become painfully obvious- which isn't a problem so long as the tricks fall outside the perception of its target audience.

How can British Muslims fight Blair, and his Media Machine (all the news wires, all the TV news, all the radio news, teletext, and 99% of all newspapers)??? The jews had the same problem in the 30's with Hitler. The easiest answer is to turn the advanced anti-racist teaching of the West against Blair and his people. Muslims should demand that Iraqi's murdered in Iraq by the UK should be compensated at the same level as the victims of the Lockerbie bomb. Muslims should examine every recent act of butchery committed by the West, and expose the level of pay-off to the victims. Then they should compare the money paid to the european, american, and jewish victims of the far more rare attacks against them. This simply fact shows that racism, and racism alone fuels the acts and wars of aggression.

Make people know, each and every day, the price Blair puts on a child's life snuffed out in Iraq or Palestine. Expose this person for the DEMON he really is, and dare people to support him. Remember, we all take it for granted that our rotten politicians pay nothing for the people they murder. Black Americans felt the same way, but then through the 60's and onwards, they learnt to use the supposed anti-racist nature of the US against local and state government, and eventually lived to see KKK headquarters GIVEN as finacial settlement to Black victims, Politicians ONLY pay lip service, but real people don't, so that when real people come to truly believe that racism is wrong, that feeling can be the most powerful weapon against those leaders and countries that use, or seek to take advantage of racism for political ends.

twilight


Interesting Discussion

23.08.2005 14:50

"The genocide by the Nazi regime is not unique in history. The genocide of the Native Americans, and the wholesale conquest of their lands, stands as comparable to Hitler’s crimes."

I understand your point. But I think the Holocaust is unique in human history. The genocide of Native Americans occured at the edge of the world system as a byproduct of colonialism. It was a disgusting example of the murderous brutality of a system undergoing expansion. The Holocaust is different. It occured at the heart of the system, in the most industrialised and educated society in human history at the time, in which a state turned on its own people and undertook the mechanisation of mass murder. I think this is a different phenomenon and not one we have seen before or will hopefully ever see again.

Memory-Hole-Catchers-Mitt


WTF?

23.08.2005 16:03

"The role of the BBC is exactly the same as any of the NAZI controlled news organisations in 30's Germany."

I assume you don't say this because Ariel Sharon keeps accusing the Beeb of being anti-semitic...

FT


It is the method stupid

13.09.2005 13:48

I think one reason many are unsympathetic to the so-called "plight" of the modern day muslim is because of the tactics muslims take to push their political viewpoint. Where as the big bad US of A goes on TV and tells the Taliban, or Iraq they are invading, the suicide bomber sneaks up on the victim with no warning or notice.

Also, where Uncle Sam fights wars, we also rebuild those countries. What country has a muslim nation rebuilt?

I keep hearing all of these arguments about how the western countries only look at their side and never give concessions to the other. However, history does not reflect this. We helped rebuild Germany after WWII. We bombed Serbia to help protect Albanian muslims in Kosovo. We try to mediate the Israel-Palestine conflict. We are rebuilding Afghanistan and Iraq after taking out oppressive muslim regimes who commited genocide on their own people.

This argument about "no one understand muslims" or "everyone hates muslims" is simply untrue. The western world has bent over backward to protect the rights of women and minorities, including muslims and especially muslim women. It is unfortunate that muslim do not hold their own women in such high regards.

The main reason the world appears to be against muslims is because muslims keep killing our women and children. It started in the 70's and is beginning to reach critical mass.

ps - Think of it this way. American soldiers "abused" prisoners in Iraq and we called ourselves on the carpet. A month or two earlier musims in Iraq hung contractors from a bridge after killing them. I read no condemnation of this act, not to mention the beheadings, which I watched to see the true nature of our enemies.

Jim