Showing posts with label Vatican. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vatican. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Political Correctness, Belarus-Style? Three Years Hard Labor for Journalist Aleksandr Klaskovsky

I don't know whether a Belarusian journalist sitting in prison because he decided to publish some cartoons is political correctness run amok, old-school suppression of a free press, a kind of islamophobia, or maybe all three.

Whatever it is, it's bad news.

Back in September of 2005, the Danish paper, Jyllands-Posten, published 12 cartoons, depicting the Prophet Mohammed.

They weren't exactly flattering. In fact, I think some were in bad taste.

As a Catholic living in America, I'm accustomed to seeing cartoons that are impolite toward, and often wildly inaccurate about, my faith. It's one of the unpleasant side-effects of living in a free society.

That may be why, even if an unflattering - or blasphemous - cartoon about Catholicism showed up in the local paper, it's hard to imagine my fellow-parishioners rioting in the streets.

Living in a country where putting a crucifix in urine1 is considered "art," I've gotten used to living among people who don't necessarily share my values or beliefs.

As the cartoons were republished around the world, Muslims got upset. The Norwegian embassy in Damscus was "torched," and followers of Islam made a bonfire of furniture from the Danish embassy. Protests a few days later were "peaceful," with chants of "At your service, oh Mohammed, at your service, oh Prophet of God," and the ever-popular "Death to America, Death to Israel."

"Peaceful?"

The protesters had signs, too, including: "No dignity to a nation whose prophet is insulted;" and "What comes after insulting sacred values?" That second sign raises a good question, actually.

The death toll seems to have been remarkably low:
  • At least 10, according to a socialist website
  • 24 or more in Nigeria alone, as reported in the International Herald Tribune"
  • 139, according Wikipedia, citing a website that is now heavily commercial - and is for sale - (cartoonbodycount.com)
My guess is that 139 is closer to the actual body count than the 10 reported early in the process.

I think it's odd, even considering the global scope of the events, that even an estimate of the actual number of people killed as a result of Islamic "protests" against the cartoons. But that's a matter for another time: and probably another blogger.

Back to that Belarusian journalist.

Belarus isn't an "Islamic" country. About 80% of the people are Eastern Orthodox, about 3% Muslim, and the rest are Roman Catholic, Protestant, or Jewish.

As the Danish cartoons were spreading around the world, Aleksandr Sdvizhkov decided to publish them in the Zgoda (Consensus) newspaper. Then, in March, 2006, the Belarusian boss, President Aleksandr Lukashenko, shut Zgoda down.

Belarusian Secret Service agents arrested Sdvizhkov on November 18, 2007, charging him with inciting religious hatred. They'd probably have picked him up earlier, but Sdvizhkov had been abroad. He came back to Belarus for 10th anniversary of his father's death.

From "Freedom Remains Elusive for Journalist in Belarus Jailed For Printing Islamic Cartoons" FOXNews (February 19, 2008):
Vitaly Taras, a member of the Union of Belarusian Writers, said in an interview that Sdvizhkov's punishment was excessive. "The case demonstrates to the whole world that European values, including the freedom of speech, have little value in Belarus," Taras said.

The population of Belarus, formerly a Soviet republic, is overwhelmingly Orthodox Christian; only about 3 percent of the 9 million residents are Muslim. Lukashenko's oppressive, Soviet-style government has a history of quashing independent media, and it has close ties to Iran.

"The authorities suddenly became very worried about the feelings of Belarusian Muslims," said Aleksandr Klaskovsky, a Minsk-based independent political analyst with Belarusian News. "Prior to the scandal, Belarusian authorities told everyone who would listen that Belarus was a Slavic, Russian Orthodox country, ignoring the country's true multicultural and religious reality."

Taras said the government's crackdown on Zgoda sent a message to Muslims worldwide: "The Sdvizhkov case in Belarus can only please extremists from Hamas, and other Muslim radicals, who will be happy our authorities turned out to be on their side."
Something bad is going on in Belarus:
  • Political correctness run amok?
    This could be the sort of sensitive response we'd see, if rabid fans of hate crime legislation had their way. There's something in nearly everyone that would like to see those who disagree with them silenced.
  • Old-school suppression of a free press?
    I don't know that anyone, other than hard-line defenders of former Soviet republics, wouldn't agree that what's going on in Belarus is old-school, heavy-handed censorship.
  • A kind of islamophobia?
    I know it sounds odd: but I think that's what we're looking at here. Muslims, some of them, have earned Islam a reputation for being a religion that beheads, blows up, or burns people who are judged unworthy by the local imam. It may be understandable that some governments see placating Islamic partialities at any cost as a reasonable policy.
In the short run, punishing "anti-Islamic" people and publications seems to be good news for Islam. In the long run, I think that Islam, and Muslims, will suffer loss of respect as a result of that sort of 'help.'

Since I'm a Catholic and an American, here's what the American government, and the Vatican, had to say about those Danish cartoons and how some Muslims reacted to them.
In a strongly worded statement, a U.S. State Department spokesman said Friday that the U.S. respects freedom of expression, but the publication of cartoons that incite religious or ethnic hatred is unacceptable.

The Vatican also weighed in Saturday, saying freedom "cannot imply the right to offend" religious faiths, but emphasized also that "violent actions of protest are deplorable."

The Vatican said a government should not be held responsible for actions of a newspaper. However, authorities "could and must, eventually, intervene according to the principals of the national legislation," the Vatican added.
Freedom of expression is a good idea, but there's a distinction between expressing an idea, and peeing on the wall. I think it's time that more publishers learn the difference.

Finally:
  • Freedom "cannot imply the right to offend" religious faiths
  • Even when offended, "violent actions of protest are deplorable"

1 I'm not making that up. An "artistic" photograph, "Piss Christ," won the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) "Awards in the Visual Arts" competition (ca. 1989). Federal funding of the award was discussed in congress. (Transcript posted by the California State University, Long Beach)

Saturday, October 13, 2007

"Pope attacks Iran at Jewish Congress"

That's the TimesOnline's headline: attention-getting; calculated to raise fears.

Good heavens! The Pope attacking Iran?! What, oh what, is this world coming to? Maybe, just maybe, to a more reasoned, and reasonable, approach to world affairs in general, and the war on terror in particular.

Pope Benedict XVI got together with the World Jewish Congress, at the Vatican: this week, I think. While there, the Pope said Iran was "an issue of big concern" to him.

This is an attack?

Actually, it did get worse. The Pope said he was concerned about an increase in anti-Semitism in Iran. He apparently outlined a campaign using educational tools to work against the hatred shown by Iranian leadership towards Israel, and the Jews in general.

Educational tools? Shocking!

From a certain point of view, 'the Jews' are in with the Pope in this 'plot.' After an audience with the Pope, the secretary general of the World Jewish Congress, Maram Stern, had this to say: "We thanked the Holy Father for everything he did for the Jewish people, and more importantly what he will do."

Ominous?

I don't think so, but then I don't think that there's some sort of Jewish conspiracy either running the world, or striving for total world domination.

In fact, I think that breaking into parts of the Islamic world with facts would be like getting oxygen to trapped miners.

The World Jewish Congress also discussed rising anti-Semitism in Europe, but I'd say that the big problems are in the Islamic world. Mostly because I tend to believe what people say, particularly when they're making speeches. Iran's president has made his attitude toward Israel, and those who support Israel, quite clear.

President Ahmadinejad may have good reason for his beliefs. Iran has the largest concentration of Jews in the Middle East, aside from Israel. About 20,000 Jews live in the country of the ayatollahs.

I suppose saying that means that I'm with the Pope on the "confrontation road with Moslems and Islam" that a Jordanian wrote of, commenting on the TimesOnline.com article. I can live with that. I do believe that a reasoned approach to sorting out the war on terror is not to find out what the most unreasonable people in Islam want, and then give it to them.

As to what President Ahmadinejad of Iran has said about Israel and the Jews, someone over in the United Kingdom collected statements made by Iran's President Ahmadinejad made about Israel.

I'm no expert, but there may be a touch of anti-Semitism here. More than a touch, in fact. See what you think of these samples.
  • "Israel must be wiped off the map … The establishment of a Zionist regime was a move by the world oppressor against the Islamic world . . . The skirmishes in the occupied land are part of the war of destiny. The outcome of hundreds of years of war will be defined in Palestinian land."
    October 26, 2005
    (In an address to 4,000 students at a program titled, 'The World Without Zionism')
    NB The translation of this quote is debated and has also been read as "Israel must disappear from the page of history"
  • "The Zionist regime is an injustice and by its very nature a permanent threat. Whether you like it or not, the Zionist regime is heading toward annihilation. The Zionist regime is a rotten, dried tree that will be eliminated by one storm."
    April 14, 2006
    (In a speech at the opening of the "Support for the Palestinian Intifada" conference on April 14-16 hosted in Tehran)
  • "Today, they [Europeans] have created a myth in the name of Holocaust and consider it to be above God, religion and the prophets … This is our proposal: give a part of your own land in Europe, the United States, Canada or Alaska to them [Jews] so that the Jews can establish their country."
    December 14, 2005
    (Speaking to thousands of people in the Iranian city of Zahedan)
  • "The Zionist regime is the flag bearer of violation and occupation and this regime is the flag of Satan. …It is not unlikely that this regime be on the path to dissolution and deterioration when the philosophy behind its creation and survival is invalid."
    August 18, 2007
    (Address to an international religious conference in Tehran)
  • "In parallel to the official political war there is a hidden war going on and the Islamic states should benefit from their economic potential to cut off the hands of the enemies."
  • "The Zionists are the true manifestation of Satan . . . Many Western governments that claim to be pioneers of democracy and standard bearers of human rights close their eyes over crimes committed by the Zionists and by remaining silent support the Zionists due to their hedonistic and materialistic tendencies."
    February 28, 2007
    (to a meeting of Sudanese Islamic scholars in Khartoum)
  • "Zionists are people without any religion. They are lying about being Jewish because religion means brotherhood, friendship and respecting other divine religions…They are an organized minority who have infiltrated the world. They are not even a 10,000-strong organization."
    August 28, 2007
    (At a news conference in Tehran)
  • "Although the main solution is for the elimination of the Zionist regime, at this stage an immediate cease-fire must be implemented."
    August 2, 2006
    (as quoted by Iranian TV)
  • "[N]o Muslim nation would put up with this entity [i.e. Israel] in Islamic lands, not for one moment … If it's true that the [Europeans] committed a big crime in World War II, then they must take responsibility for it themselves, and not ask the Palestinian people to pay the price … Those countries that support this regime [Israel] were terrified at the suggestion that [Israel] should be relocated to their neighborhood. So why should the Palestinians and the countries in our region accept this entity?"
    (In a speech before an audience in the Iranian city of Qom, aired on television)
  • "They [the United States] think they are the absolute rulers of the world."
    October 29, 2005
    (Marching in a demonstration alongside a crowd of students in Tehran)
  • "Is there a craft more beautiful, more sublime, more divine, than the craft of giving yourself to martyrdom and becoming holy? Do not doubt, Allah will prevail, and Islam will conquer mountain tops of the entire world."
  • "By the grace of Allah, we (will be) a nuclear power."
  • "If you have burned the Jews, why don't you give a piece of Europe, the United States, Canada or Alaska to Israel. Our question is, if you have committed this huge crime, why should the innocent nation of Palestine pay for this crime?"
    April 19, 2006
  • "Are they human beings?... They (Zionists) are a group of blood-thirsty savages putting all other criminals to shame."
    (as quoted by Iranian TV)
All thirty, with reader comments, are at "Ahmadinejad on Israel: 30 jaw-dropping quotes" (TimesOnline, UK, October 2, 2007)

Related posts, on Individuals and the War on Terror.
Related posts, on Islam, Christianity, Religion, Culture and the War on Terror.
Related posts, on tolerance, bigotry, racism, and hatred

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Blogroll

Note! Although I believe that these websites and blogs are useful resources for understanding the War on Terror, I do not necessarily agree with their opinions. 1 1 Given a recent misunderstanding of the phrase "useful resources," a clarification: I do not limit my reading to resources which support my views, or even to those which appear to be accurate. Reading opinions contrary to what I believed has been very useful at times: sometimes verifying my previous assumptions, sometimes encouraging me to change them.

Even resources which, in my opinion, are simply inaccurate are sometimes useful: these can give valuable insights into why some people or groups believe what they do.

In short, It is my opinion that some of the resources in this blogroll are neither accurate, nor unbiased. I do, however, believe that they are useful in understanding the War on Terror, the many versions of Islam, terrorism, and related topics.