Politic?

This is a blog dedicated to a personal interpretation of political news of the day. I attempt to be as knowledgeable as possible before commenting and committing my thoughts to a day's communication.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Fatwas and Global Responsibilities

Finally, a breath of sanity from Islamic leaders in Canada. After the attempted Christmas Day bombing, some 19 Canadian (and one U.S.) Islamic leader got their heads together and decided to release a religious edict, a fatwa, to express their anger, annoyance and disgust at attacks taking place on North American soil by um, disaffected young Muslims. Stating, unequivocally that in their enlightened collective opinion any attack by extremists within Canada and the United States would clearly constitute an attack upon the ten million Muslims resident in those countries.

Interesting, welcome, and somewhat limited. What about Islamist attacks say in Spain, in the Middle East, in Britain, in Indonesia? Don't they count? Don't law-abiding, faithful Muslims live there too, along with Christians, Jews, Sikhs and Hindus, and perhaps members of other religions. Isn't an attack by fanatical Islamists anywhere at all in the world an attack against freedom, liberty and human rights? Don't all people have the basic right to live as they will, without being terrorized by fundamentalists who consider them human scum?

Perhaps the 20 Islamic leaders would have done well to consult an expert on anti-jihadist activities, another Muslim, for example, whom these attacks pains for many reasons, not the least of which the fact that they are enacted by those who express their devotion to Islam. One cannot doubt that someone of the ilk of Tarek Fatah or Irshad Manji would have been helpful in formulating the declaration, and making it eminently more geographically inclusive.

The intellectual and moral spearhead of the fatwa which honourably states: "In our view, these attacks are evil and Islam requires Muslims to stand up against this evil", was none other than Calgary-based Imam, Syed Soharwardy, founder of the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada. Who has said, "We are part of this society. This is my home, and if anybody attacks on Canada, in fact, attacks on my home."

Nice, very nice, Very much appreciated the declaration that it is a duty incumbent upon every Muslim in Canada and the U.S. to safeguard the two countries. Hey, what about all those other countries of the world, don't they need protection from demented, overheated Islamist jihadis? How about extending that fatwa to China, India, the Middle East, Europe, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Yemen, for starters? Isn't a jihadist-missionizing entity a blot on humanity?

And isn't Mr. Soharwardy the very individual who sponsored a Calgary Human Rights tangle with Ezra Levant for his temerity in posting the world-of-Islam-offending Danish Mohammad cartoon and pointing out his personal opinion of Muslim hypocrisy? And what about the postings in the past on his ISCC website equating Israeli-Palestinian relations with a Holocaust perpetrated by Jews upon Arabs?

And his slandering of Christians who had undertaken humanitarian relief in the wake of the Indonesian tsunami disaster, claiming that Christian missionariers were interested only in absconding with Muslim children, and using humanitarian work to rescue the tsunami-afflicted as a ruse for their true purpose? A slander that was responsible in part, for the murder of three Christian schoolchildren by an enraged Muslim in Indonesia?

Imam Sowarhardy was also an enthusiastic proponent of Sharia to become part of the Canadian legal system, a move that would have led to Muslim women becoming victim to sharia law, unprotected under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Gee whiz, is this the best we can do? Really?

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2 Comments:

Blogger M. Levant said...

Article rank
7 Jan 2009
Calgary Herald
Made in Canada








Friday, I attended a rally in front of Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s constituency office to protest Israel’s attacks on Gaza. After the rally ended, I saw many people walking toward their vehicles with Palestinian flags and placards condemning Israel for killing innocent children and women in Gaza.
Some of them had parked in the Jewish centre’s parking lot, across from the Glenmore Landing shopping area. Some of them had to walk a little farther in the residential area, which is a very strong Jewish neighbourhood. They had parked in front of houses. I saw many onlookers, most probably Jewish, watching protesters walking through their neighbourhood. Some of them even smiled.
I enjoyed this scene more than the protest rally. I said to myself, I wish the Israeli government and Hamas officials could see this scene — Palestinians and Muslims walking through a Jewish neighbourhood condemning Israel openly while the people in the Jewish neighbourhood with very strong support for Israel remained peaceful. Pro-Palestine demonstrators walked through a pro-Israel neighbourhood in peace and without fear. I asked myself, why people cannot behave the same way in the Holy Land? My heart replied, this is Calgary. This is Canada. There is no place like Calgary and Canada. May God bring peace for every human being on Earth. Amen.
Syed Soharwardy, Calgary Syed Soharwardy is an imam and founder of the Islamic Supreme
Council of Canada

6:58 AM  
Blogger M. Levant said...

Calgary Imam Syed Soharwardy’s fairy tale rendition (Letter: Made in Canada, Herald, Jan. 7) of the pro-Hamas rally at Glenmore Landing could not have been the same event I photographed and recorded on Jan. 2.
Muslim Council of Calgary chairman Nagah Hage exhorted his flock of 175, including infants and teens, in both Arabic and English. Between the tirades that demonized Israel, comparing Jews to the Nazis, Hage whipped up the crowd by calling the Jewish state “barbaric, ruthless and arrogant” and led the crowd in a chant that said: “OlmertHitler, you’re the same, the only difference is the name.”
The demonization of Israel was portrayed in venomous placards and banners carried by children and parents. Israel was accused of “ethnic cleansing”, “committing a holocaust”, and of “outright murder”. There were even swastikas on display — ironic, considering.
I am sure this anti-Semitic chorus was loud enough to be heard across the street at the Calgary Jewish Centre. The most egregious placard of all equated Jews with Nazis — a disgusting display anytime, but particularly tasteless, given that the Jewish community’s Holocaust memorial was a block away.
They chanted: “Stephen Harper, hear us say, Jerusalem will be ours one day.” In other words, the rally really wasn’t about Gaza — it was about Hamas’s stated plans to conquer Israel.
The crowd also turned on the lone Israeli supporter standing off to one side. This Christian Zionist’s homemade poster read: “Canada supports Israel’s right to security and self-defence.” He also carried a small Israeli flag. This set the crowd aflame. A few tried to lunge for him but were held back by another protester who told the lone Israeli defender he should be grateful he hadn’t been physically attacked, though he did have a boot thrown at him.
When the crowd approached the Israel supporter a second time, eight police officers had to stand in front of him to protect him. So the crowd went back to chanting “killers of children and women” — and they didn’t mean Hamas, who use civilians as human shields.
For two full hours this disgrace continued — all on the mall’s private property. Parking and business access was blocked, and many customers were clearly repelled by the Nazi symbols on the crowd’s posters, and the chants. When one shop owner asked the police to clear the crowd because customers couldn’t reach her shop, the response was “they would leave it alone and let it play out”, as it was the “lesser of two evils”.
Some of the mob didn’t just go to the mall. They actually had the temerity to park at the Calgary Jewish Centre — adjacent to the Holocaust memorial there — despite the private parking sign. I suppose if conquering Jerusalem is your goal, trespassing on Jewish property in Calgary is no big deal.
In his letter to the Herald, Soharwardy claimed some protesters “parked their cars in front of houses, most probably Jewish” and that “some of the (Jewish) onlookers even smiled”. Back in reality, there are no houses between the Jewish Centre and Glenmore Landing. The closest Jewish home is three blocks away. Perhaps what Soharwardy saw were the grimaces or shocked expressions of other home owners, when faced with posters with swastikas on them.
Soharwardy then gives a back-handed compliment to non-existent Jews for not attacking the verbally and visually violent crowd. “Isn’t Canada wonderful!” he exults. He’s thrilled this kind of bigotry can be proclaimed in Calgary with impunity.
As the crowd was departing, some passed in front of an orthodox rabbi, on his way to the nearby synagogue for the Jewish Sabbath.
The mob unfurled a flag of Hezbollah — a criminal terrorist organization, under Canadian law — and cursed him while making violent gestures and spitting.
Soharwardy’s “fairy tale” is a nightmare. This is the true face of the protest.

6:59 AM  

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