Tehmina Kazi of British Muslims for Secular Democracy looks at nine mistaken assumptions doing the rounds about the murders that took place at the offices of Charlie Hebdo yesterday.
Tehmina Kazi of British Muslims for Secular Democracy looks at nine mistaken assumptions doing the rounds about the murders that took place at the offices of Charlie Hebdo yesterday
False Assumption One
‘Charlie Hebdo magazine was needlessly provocative’
Manufacturers of outrage and assorted agitators do not need any kind of ‘provocation’ for their actions. When Jyllands-Posten published the Danish cartoons in September 2005, protests in Muslim-majority countries did not start until four months later.
Mona Eltahawy’s interview with Jytte Klausen, the Danish-born author of the Yale Press’s forthcoming book, Cartoons That Shook the World, recognised that lag. According to Yale Press’s Web site, she argues that Muslim reaction to the cartoons was not spontaneous but, rather, that it was orchestrated “first by those with vested interests in elections in Denmark and Egypt”, and later by “extremists seeking to destabilize governments in Pakistan, Lebanon, Libya, and Nigeria”.
Further, Quilliam Foundation director and Liberal Democrat prospective parliamentary candidate Maajid Nawaz re-tweeted a ‘Jesus and Mo’ cartoon on 12 January 2014. Most of the people who called for his de-selection – and helped to whip up the resultant furore – conveniently ignored his earlier mention of the cartoons on the BBC’s Big Questions programme. The broadcast itself attracted barely a whisper on social media.
False Assumption Two
‘The Left should defend all expressions of Islam at all costs’
Professor Karima Bennoune said it best in her article, ‘Why Bill Maher and Ben Affleck are both wrong‘:
“We do not need either stereotypical generalizations or minimising responses to fundamentalism, however well-intentioned.
“What we need is a principled, anti-racist critique of Muslim fundamentalism that pulls no punches, but that also distinguishes between Islam (the diverse religious tradition) and Islamism (an extreme right-wing political ideology). We need support, understanding and to have our existence recognised.”
False Assumption Three
‘The French hate Muslims, don’t they?’
From the Pew Global Attitudes survey 2014, which interviewed 7,022 citizens in seven European countries, 72 per cent of French citizens polled said they had a favourable opinion of Muslims in their country. This was higher than Italy, Greece, Poland, Spain, Germany, and even the UK.
False Assumption Four
‘Not in Our Name campaigns are helpful’
As well-intentioned as these undoubtedly are, the ‘Not in my name’ campaigns spearheaded by Muslims send out a problematic subliminal message to non-Muslims: that Muslims are unwilling to sort out the problems in their own back yard.
No-one is expecting us to eradicate all gender segregation in public events overnight, or to change the minds of all homophobic preachers in a few months, or to re-introduce music lessons in all Muslim-majority schools that have cancelled them. No-one is saying that we have to devote several years of our lives and careers doing this (as I have).
However, we are expected to make some effort to condemn obscurantism from all quarters, or as much as we are able to within our own circles of influence. Given that the Qu’ran takes such a strong line on humans challenging injustice wherever we find it, this shouldn’t be too difficult.
False Assumption Five
‘Religious minorities have less to gain from democratic freedoms than the majority’
The same legislation that promotes freedom of expression also protects freedom of religion – and from religion. Article 9 of the European Convention of Human Rights protects freedom of thought, conscience and religion (unless state interference with these is shown to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim).
In a non-legal context, the culture of rights and freedoms we have in the UK leads to strong civil society projects that monitor anti-Muslim attacks, such as Tell MAMA.
False Assumption Six
‘Condemnation is sufficient’
Sombre press releases and widely-shared Facebook updates are better than nothing, but many of their authors have inadvertently contributed to the problem in the past.
How?
By endorsing blasphemy laws, treating the words of Zakir Naik and Junaid Jamshed as gospel, or turning a blind eye when feminist or progressive Muslim activists (like Sara Khan of Inspire) are viciously attacked for their work on Twitter.
False Assumption Seven
‘It is always someone else’s fault’
Then there are those who won’t even condemn acts of violence and terrorism, but automatically paint the attacks as false-flag operations, with a cast of extras to rival ‘Titanic’. In my experience, attempting to reason with these people is a waste of time and energy. Better to leave them to their echo chambers.
False Assumption Eight
‘Beliefs deserve more protection than people’
Under the Equality Act 2010, beliefs are only protected insofar as they apply to the rights of individuals. For instance, it is unlawful for someone to discriminate against you because of your religion or belief (or because you have no religion or belief):
- in any aspect of employment
- when providing goods, facilities and services
- when providing education
- in using or disposing of premises, or
- when exercising public functions.
False Assumption Nine
‘The way forward is to treat each event as a passing accident of horror’
Laissez-faire approaches like these have led us to the predicament we are in. These acts are neither passing nor accidental; they are part of one long atrocity continuum, compounded by mainstream society’s cowardice and unwillingness to champion unpopular causes.
Instead, campaigning groups that happily take on the far-right should challenge the Muslim right-wing with equal ferocity, rather than giving their behaviour a free pass.
Tehmina Kazi has been director of British Muslims for Secular Democracy since May 2009, and has worked on a number of human rights and citizenship projects
88 Responses to “Charlie Hebdo: Dismantling nine mistaken assumptions about the Paris atrocities”
Simon Tucker
Not wrong: Islam has always historically been violent, as has Christianity (the Crusades were not Middle East holidays). The clear catalyst for late 20th century terrorism and its continuance starts with the establishment of the state of Israel and the appalling treatment of the landowners and indigenous people of the area – that is unarguable unless you are American or Israeli (and therefore less likely to be objective or honest about it). That the Grand Mufti was an arsehole who sought to take advantage of Nazi fanaticism is a given but the fact is that Jews were safer in Palestine than they were in Europe throughout the 19th and early part of the 20th century.
Just Visiting
Hi Simon, that’s an illogical statement you’ve started with
> Islam has always historically been violent, as has Christianity (the Crusades were not Middle East holidays)
In debating terms, you’re making the ‘anecdotal evidence’ mistake.
Specifically, you can’t support a claim for an ‘always’ by just pointing to one example of it.
When you write:
> Islam has always historically been violent, as has Christianity
I wonder if what you really meant was that the religions founders (Jesus and Mohammed) were as violent as each other: and hence their followers were?
Or if not that, are you saying that Jesus and Mohammed were not equally violent: just that their followers were?
swat
Je suis Charlie, too.
All papers shpuld publish these cartoons and, make these islamofacists rot in hell.
Simon Tucker
My statement is totally logical. Neither Jesus nor Mohammed were their own religions: religions are their followers and both sets of followers have shown a propensity for violence pretty much from fay one. Whatever, they are all deluded: all religion is BS, used to control the masses by promising jam tomorrow and keeping the riches in this life for the favoured few. It is why religion requires brainwashing from as soon as a child is able to assimilate information. Islam is currently the worst offender in this regard whereas, thankfully, in most western cultures (except the increasingly fundamentalist USA) Christianity is in retreat because this brainwashing (what can you call praying multiple times per day but reinforcement via learned behaviours?) has largely disappeared – although some fundamentalist morons are trying to bring it back.
Just Visiting
> Islam has always historically been violent, as has Christianity
s’funny: the history books i read show that the first few hundred years of Islam was expansion by war.
Whereas Christianity …. not so much.
So your use of ‘always’ was, err wrong.