‘Cardinal’s sermon on immigration shows his staggering ignorance’

“With dreary predictability, our two leading Christian clerics have each used their Christmas messages this year to mouth fashionable political orthodoxies…. In his sermon yesterday the Archbishop of Canterbury, like an earnest Left-wing activist, prattled on about the threat to the environment from ‘humanity’s selfishness’, warning how our ‘greed’ could ‘distort the balance of things’. His opposite number in the Catholic Church, the Archbishop of Westminster Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor, was even more politically correct. In his address at midnight mass he attacked Britain’s supposed failure to embrace immigration. Urging that we do more to welcome migrants, he moaned that too many arrivals ‘feel excluded simply because they are outsiders’….

“For a leading figure in the Christian Church, this is a bizarre stance because mass immigration represents the greatest threat to the foundations of our Christian civilisation. Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor might blather about Christian compassion to newcomers but our national religion will lose all influence if Britain is turned into nothing more than a landmass of disparate global cultures….

“The consequences of multiculturalism and mass immigration can be seen at their most graphic in the creeping Islamification of Britain. This makes a nonsense of the Cardinal’s bleat about ‘outsiders’ feeling ‘excluded’. There is no community more assertive about its rights or more confident in its beliefs than the British followers of Islam. In contrast to the cultural cringe of the Christian Church, Muslims have no hesitation in demanding acceptance of their customs. All too often the enfeebled British state is willing to oblige. So the Government takes a hard line about objections from the Catholic Church towards gay adoption, yet does nothing about the vile Muslim practice of forced marriages.

“Throughout the country, church bells are being drowned out by the wailing from the mosque. In Oxford an application has recently been submitted from one of the city’s biggest mosques to broadcast the call to prayers at least three times a day. Perhaps the most telling symbol of this Islamification is the plan from the Muslim group Tablighi Jamaat to build a mosque in Newham, East London, with a capacity for 12,000. Costing £100million, this will be the biggest Muslim centre in Europe and largest religious building in Britain.

“Muslim supporters of the project do not seem imbued with a spirit of tolerance. Alan Craig, a councillor who belongs to the Christian Alliance and objects to the plan, has received death threats, with a sick memorial notice posted on the internet. But his opposition is correct, for this mosque would be a monument to Muslim aggression and the destruction of our Christian heritage. If the Cardinal wants a cause worth supporting, it is his own religion, not the import of yet more alien culture into Britain.”

Leo McKinstry in the Daily Express, 26 December 2007

Study of Islam in West driven by fear, scholar says

Tariq Ramadan 5OTTAWA – A pervasive bias exists in the way Islam is studied in the West, says a prominent Muslim thinker, who is calling for sweeping changes to the way Islamic studies are taught in universities.

Tariq Ramadan, a visiting professor at Oxford University and one of Europe’s leading intellectuals on Islam, argues that despite a growing interest in the field, the scholarly pursuit of Islam is driven not by an interest in theology, but by fear and an obsession with the struggle against terrorism.

In the latest issue of the Canadian journal Academic Matters, Ramadan chastises universities for their “carefully orchestrated infatuation” with Islamic studies. He says the current academic focus on terrorism reduces the richness of Islamic theology into political ideology.

“The study of religious thought proper (of the theology, of its premises, its internal complexities and its development) has been relegated to a subsidiary position,” he writes. “Universities in the West must seek the kind of knowledge of other civilizations and cultures – particularly that of Islam – that is driven neither by ideological agendas nor collective fears.” What’s “cruelly lacking,” Ramadan argues, is an objective study of Islamic law, legal scholars and philosophers as well as a “historical and critical approach to Islamic history and thought.”

He goes on to criticize western scholars for ignoring the body of “fresh, compelling, audacious critical thought” emerging from contemporary Muslim societies, which are often eclipsed by controversies surrounding sharia law or the role of women. “There is a deep-down, deliberate process of evolution under way in every Islamic society in the world,” writes Ramadan. “Far from rushing to conclusions, far from populist, ideological speech, the academic world must take this process seriously, study it, and present its outlines and implications.”

Ottawa Citizen, 22 December 2007

Climate of suspicion

“Perhaps it’s not surprising that someone who describes himself as phobic about the concept of Islamophobia and thinks that the invasion of Iraq is a ‘subject of purely historical interest’ might struggle to grasp why the relentless campaign of hostile media stories about the Muslim community is toxic and dangerous – or recognise that it is driven by a neoconservative agenda about terror and war.”

Seumas Milne replies to Andrew Anthony.

Comment is Free, 24 December 2007

School brainwashing kids into Islam with vocabulary exercises, angry Florida woman says in viral video

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10203566777422544

 

Farmville Central High School in North Carolina is coming under fire for what conservatives believe is an attempt to indoctrinate children into the Muslim faith using Common Core vocabulary exercises.

Fox News commentator Todd Starnes attacked the school on behalf of anonymous parents he spoke to. “What if right after Pearl Harbor our educational system was talking about how great the Japanese emperor was?” one such parent asked. “What if during the Cold War our educational system was telling students how wonderful Russia was?”

The exercises in question are designed to broaden students’ vocabulary while also teaching them about the Islamic faith. For example, the word “mosque” is defined in one sentence, and students are later asked to use the word in a fill-in-the-blank exercise.

In a statement, the Pitt County School District stated that “[t]he course is designed to accompany the world literature text, which emphasizes culture in literature.”

But that was not enough for one friend of a mother of a student at Farmville High, Floridian Dianne Lynn Savage, who posted a video about the assignment on Facebook that went viral over the weekend.

“Can you see my rage?” Savage asked as she read from the vocabulary building exercise. “This is not made up, this isn’t paranoia, this isn’t Islamophobia – this is just fact.”

“You all understand what they’re doing?” she asked. “Bringing in this type of worksheet and this particular lesson, it’s very subliminal. And the fact that you’re using words like, ‘exciting’ and ‘imaginary,’ and that you’re trying to look like it’s a wonderful thing. They’re infiltrating our children’s minds!”

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Leyton: mosque hits back after extremism claim

Masjid al-Tawhid 2A report claiming that extremist literature was being distributed through a mosque in Leyton was based on forged evidence, according to the mosque’s imam and the BBC. Masjid al-Tawhid, in Leyton High Road, was named in The Hijacking of British Islam – published by the rightwing Policy Exchange think-tank in October.

Imam Dr Usama Hasan says the researchers bought the books from Tayba, an unaffiliated book shop next door, then faked a receipt to suggest the shop and the mosque were the same organisation. He said: “We’re furious about this and we’re considering taking legal action against Policy Exchange unless they correct their errors. The shop is nothing to do with us. It is an independent commercial enterprise. We never promoted these books at all. We’re involved in interpreting the Quran and understanding it in a modern British context. The only message this mosque promotes is tolerance and co-existence.”

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In Europe, where’s the hate?

Gary Younge“Over the past year or so the rural Italian idyll of Colle di Val d’Elsa has played host to a bitter battle for Enlightenment values. On one side, the hamlet’s small Muslim community has raised a considerable amount of money to build a large mosque. Having gained the mayor’s approval, the Muslims signed a declaration of cooperation with the town hall and even planted a Christmas tree at the site as a good-will gesture.

“In response, other locals pelted them with sausages and dumped a severed pig’s head at the site. On a wall near the site vandals daubed: ‘No Mosque’, ‘Christian Hill’ and ‘Thanks to the communists the Arabs are in our house!!!’ Such is the central dynamic in European race relations at present.

“… the primary threat to democracy in Europe is not ‘Islamofascism’ – that clunking, thuggish phrase that keeps lashing out in the hope that it will one day strike a meaning – but plain old fascism. The kind whereby mostly white Europeans take to the streets to terrorize minorities in the name of racial, cultural or religious superiority.”

Gary Younge in the Nation, 20 December 2007

‘Muslims are stealing our culture and traditions’

Polly-ToynbeeIt’s not every day that Islamophobia Watch has cause to quote Polly Toynbee favourably, but her piece in today’s Guardian features an effective polemic against right-wing myths about the Muslim attack on “our” Christian culture:

“In a daft parliamentary debate this month on something called Christianophobia, Mark Pritchard MP accused the politically correct of banning religion from Christmas cards and advent calendars: ‘Many shoppers find it increasingly difficult to purchase greetings cards that refer to Jesus.’ … Evangelicals started a new myth this year that postage stamps with the Madonna and child are only sold under the counter: you have to ask for them, for fear of offending Muslims and Jews. Stuff and nonsense, retorted the Post Office. But you can bet this one will run and run – along with last year’s myth that 70% of offices banned Christmas decorations for multicultural reasons….

“All this would just be seasonal silliness if it were not cover for a more sinister drumbeat. The right has taken to flying the ‘Christian’ flag in ways that suggest none too subtly that foreigners – Muslims – are stealing our culture and traditions. ‘They’ are stopping ‘us’ celebrating Christmas and teaching Christian stories to our children. When Terry Sanderson, president of the National Secular Society, appeared on GMTV this week, although as usual he denied any atheist plot against Christmas, the theme in about 3,000 emails afterwards was: ‘We are not Muslims, our culture must not be silenced to avoid offending them.’

“The BNP has been quick to cash in. In the Christianophobia debate in parliament, the reported case of a BNP Christmas card was raised, ‘which portrays the holy family on the cover and inside are the words “Heritage, Tradition and Culture”.’ Pritchard warned television firms: ‘The fear of violence from a particular faith group should not be grounds for hand-selecting or targeting other faith groups who may choose to protest peacefully.’ Fear of Muslim violence is killing off peaceful Christianity, he implies.”

CAIR-NY ‘disappointed’ by DA’s handling of bias attack

The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY) today expressed deep disappointment at the Brooklyn District Attorney’s (DA) office for its failure to secure a hate crimes plea and jail time in a bias motivated gang assault perpetrated against a Muslim man in Brooklyn last October.

Four of the five assailants, one of whom used brass knuckles to beat 24-year-old Shahid Amber, pled guilty to either first degree assault or second degree assault charges with probation and no jail time.

In a letter to Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes, CAIR-NY Civil Rights Director Aliya Latif referenced the Hate Crimes Act 2000, which states: “Crimes motivated by invidious hatred toward particular groups not only harm individual victims but send a powerful message of intolerance and discrimination to all members of the group to which the victim belongs. Hate crimes can and do intimidate and disrupt entire communities and vitiate the civility that is essential to healthy democratic processes.”

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