Saturday, April 28, 2007

The Thinking Blogger Award




I came down from the mountain and found that Raden Galoh had tagged me for this Thinking Blogger Award.What a pleasant surprise! It's really an honour, since I've only just started blogging a few months ago, to be considered worthy of this award.

Now the thing is, now that I've got this award, I'm supposed to tag another five bloggers who also make people think. I guess this is to prove that bloggers are responsible intelligent people, dedicated to making people reflect on issues which affect us all today. Doesn't really matter what side of the fence they may be on, the point is that they are using the blogosphere to present fresh takes on issues and sharing those thoughts with others.

It's really not easy to tag another five bloggers. For one thing, there are so many bloggers out there and I only have so much time to read them in a day. Life is more than the Internet and blogging after all ;-). But after much consideration, below are bloggers who make ME think at least:

1.My Asylum- Walski is one of those rare people who combines a really articulate take on many issues with a sense of humour. We share the same views about religion in particular though he's much more willing to take it head-on than me. He's got one of the most sophisticated blogsites I've seen but my favourite part of it is his line-up of the best postings in the bloggerhood each day which really makes life for busy people like me very easy.

2. The Malaysian - I like this one because it has a very sober approach to issues, but without sacrificing criticism when it's due. Also one of the few who will present health issues including AIDS, which many people don't consider important enough to talk about.

3.Ktemoc Konsiders - I spend a lot of time wondering who Ktemoc is, which is a good sign, because it means his blog has personality (I'm pretty sure it's a guy.). It's quite something to be able to present Malaysian issues and keep people uncertain as to what race he is. In our race-based scenario, I think that's an achievement.

4.Susan Loone - I've never met Susan and actually never heard of her before I started blogging. But she became a sister when we did the International Women's Day blogging project together and got more than 30 bloggers to participate.She writes from Bangkok and is more in tune with what's going on here than I am.I'll be in Bangkok this week so hope to connect face-to-face with her for the first time.

5.Haris Ibrahim -The People's Parliament . This is very new but it is really an attempt at making us realise that 'the people' means us, and 'Parliament' means us. That politicians work for us, and not the way round.It's hoping, I think, to make us elect people based on their personal beliefs and strengths and not their party affiliation. Might be a tall order but it's worth a try.

I have to say that there are other people I'd like to nominate like Daphne Ling, Pi Bani, Malik Imtiaz Sarwar and Howsy. But other people have nominated them and although there's no rule against re-nominating people,I thought I'll try and widen the pool. (I've just realised that Nuraina Samad already nominated Haris Ibrahim...ah well, never mind!).

Anyway, to those I've nominated, now you have to nominate five other people each, all of whom must merit being considered thinking bloggers.That's the downside of being memetagged.This award was started here by someone called Ilker Yoldas.

There are rules attached to this, should you get tagged. Just to reiterate:

Should you choose to participate, please make sure you pass this list of rules to the blogs you are tagging. The participation rules are simple:


1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think


2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme


3. Optional: Proudly display the 'Thinking Blogger Award' with a link to the post that you wrote.


Please, remember to tag blogs with real merits, i.e. relative content, and above all - blogs that really get you thinking!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

I Did It...!


It was tough, cold and windy but at 7am on Sun April 22, I reached the summit of Kinabalu! Never mind that I was the second last person to reach it that day (hubby was last) and I missed sunrise by an hour, I still couldn't quite believe that there I was sitting on what seemed like the top of the world. The day before we had walked 10 hours from the Mesilau Gate to the Laban Rata base camp, 6.2 km through some very scenic hill country. Great views and lots of pitcher plants but oh, those endless rocks to climb. After some food and a wash in very cold water, we went to bed only to get up again five hours later at 1am to get ready for the final ascent at 2am.

Off we went, and soon got left behind again. But my mountain guide Joe was terrific, encouraging me and taking my hand as we slowly moved in a zigzag route up the rocky surface. And then there was Low's Peak (4095m above sea level) teeming with people. Everyone was so encouraging -- "sikit saja lagi!", even as I slowly put one foot before the other up those last rocks while trying to ignore the cold cold wind. Then suddenly I was there! Beautiful views of the mountain ranges in front of me, and the northern coast of Sabah behind.Terrific!



(My guide Joe and me at the edge of the world...)

Then it was time to go down again. This was the part we forgot about, that once we're up there we have to come down.And if climbing in the dark was scary, nothing beats having to hang off a cliff, clinging to the rope trying not to panic at the sheer drop next to you. "Relek, relek", said Joe, who has seen amateurs like me a thousand times over. Then we were down and back at Laban Rata. A short break, a steaming bowl of mushroom soup and toast, and then the walk down to the Timpohon Gate where we would be picked up to go back to KK.

I don't care to see any more boulders and steps in my life again. They were endless, going down. You descend one steep set, get some relief with a few metres of flattish land and then more steps and more steps.You start counting the distance by the signs the park conveniently puts up - 4.5km, 4km,3km, down, down, down and then you come to the last 50 metres to Timpohon Gate and what do you get? Steps going up!!! How cruel is that? But a hot shower and a nice bed lay on the other side of that so what could I do but climb with my weary legs up and into the waiting van. At last!

So I did it and it was awesome. I would recommend it to anyone although you have to be prepared for it. I still can't believe I climbed all those steps up and then down again but then I did want a physical challenge and get out of my usual comfort zone. But that's enough mountain for me, thanks very much.

I just want to thank a few people for helping me make it to the top:my hubby Tara who suggested the trip in the first place; Azmi, my trainer who 'tortured' me for six months and who was supposed to go along with me but had to drop out on the eve of our departure because his sister passed away; our friend Ah Leong who inspired us by going up last year and agreeing to go again this year and organised it all for us;my brother Mirzan, cousin Zahari and friends Tantyo, Reyhan, Randell and Grace who came along and helped make the whole expedition fun, and my three magic guides, Joe, Roi and Matt who made sure we all made it to the top safely.



(The team looking slightly nervous after we saw the mountain for the first time. All photos taken by Tantyo Bangun.)

Thursday, April 19, 2007

A (Very Brief) Hiatus





Folks, just to let you know that I probably can't post any of your comments from tomorrow til at least Monday. So, thank you in advance for your patience.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

One Tough Woman...well done!


I have to hand to Sharifah Mazlina...that is some feat! Now just hope those Mat Rempits jumping out of the plane don't land on top of her!


Sharifah Mazlina makes it to top of North Pole

By Manjit Kaur
manjit@thestar.com.my

SVALBARD (Norway): Polar explorer Datin Paduka Sharifah Mazlina Syed Abdul Kadir has made it to the “top of the world.”

She reached her destination at 90 degrees North at 2.45pm (8.25pm Malaysian time) in a day of clear sunny skies, according to a report posted on her website last night.

“I am here. Thank you everyone for your prayers and support; this is for all of us Malaysians. Greetings from the North Pole!'' she said in remarks carried on her website.

It was the culmination of the 42-year-old lecturer's one-and-a-half years of preparation and hard work to reach the top of the North Pole.

Despite enduring bad weather over the last 10 days and having to cross difficult terrain, Sharifah Mazlina surmounted the odds to put the country on the polar map.

Several of her fans posted congratulatory messages on her website.

Sharifah Mazlina, who is the first Asian woman to complete the Pole-to-Pole mission, left for Norway on April 3.

In April 2004, she was the first Asian woman to reach the South Pole.


Earlier reports on her website yesterday stated that good weather and a smooth surface provided her with an easy trek.

“I plan to start early and hope to reach the finishing line during midday so that I can proceed to go back to the Borneo Base camp,” she had said earlier.

“Today’s (yesterday's) journey was full of ice cracks but I managed to pull it through by walking 13km without any drifting and not pressurising both my feet,” she added.

Sharifah Mazlina had been using a Global Positioning System device to record her movement and location, and carried a revolver for safety reasons.

The explorer's achievement also caps a proud moment for Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, who is the patron of the North Pole Expedition Pole-to-Pole Mission 2006/07.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Two Sides to the Same Story?

I found the first story in The Star today, and the second in the New York Times. Funny, are we talking about the same Sudanese leader?

Pak Lah: We will back any solution to Darfur problem

By LEONG SHEN-LI,The Star

KHARTOUM: The Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) will support Sudan in any move that will solve the Darfur problem, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said.

The Prime Minister, who chairs the OIC, said any suggestion of sanctions on Sudan would only aggravate the sufferings of the people.

“The OIC’s stand is that it will support any move that will solve the problems in Darfur,” he told the Malaysian media during his three-day official visit to Sudan.




Warm greeting: Abdullah greeting Sudanese Vice-President Ali Osman Mohammad Taha who called on Abdullah at his hotel in Khartoum yesterday. — Bernama

Abdullah was commenting on a request by Sudanese president Omar Hassan Al-Bashir for support from the organisation to ward off pressures from the West for foreign troops to be placed in Darfur.

Al-Bashir made the request in his opening remarks during the Malaysian-Sudanese delegation talks earlier.

He also asked the OIC to apply pressure on movements opposing the peace agreement for Darfur and OIC’s assistance in the rehabilitation and reconstruction of Darfur.

Abdullah said the Sudanese president had told him that the situation in Darfur was not as bad as it had been reported by the media.

“I told him that any success towards solving the Darfur problem should be highlighted prominently.

“If not, even if there is success, there will always be a negative perception of the situation there,” he said.

Abdullah added that many countries wanted Al-Bashir to play a greater role in the Darfur problem.

On Malaysian investments in Sudan, Abdullah said the Government would not be placing any limit on the amount Petronas invested in Africa’s largest country.

“I leave it to Petronas to decide on all its opportunities in the country,” he said.

Addressing the Malaysia-Sudan business forum, Abdullah called for greater trade liberalisation among OIC members so that there would be an expansion and diversification of trade.

He said Sudan should ratify the organisation’s Protocol on the Preferential Tariff Scheme.

==================================================================================

Sudan Drops Objections to U.N. Aid in Darfur


By WARREN HOGE, New York Times
Published: April 17, 2007

UNITED NATIONS, April 16 — Sudan said Monday that it had dropped its objections to large-scale United Nations assistance to the overwhelmed African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur, setting the stage for the possible assignment there of United Nations peacekeepers.

President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan has repeatedly defied United Nations requests and pressure from governments elsewhere in Africa and around the world to permit international intervention in Darfur, saying such action would violate his country’s sovereignty.

But on Monday, Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad, Sudan’s ambassador to the United Nations, sent a letter to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the 15 member states of the Security Council saying that Sudan would accept what is known as the “heavy support package” and that it hoped that it would “proceed expeditiously.”

The package calls for sending 3,000 well-equipped military police officers along with six attack helicopters and other aviation and logistics support to Darfur. The steps are the second stage of a much delayed three-stage proposal whose ultimate aim is to create a 21,000-member joint African Union-United Nations force to replace the 7,000-member African Union force there now.

It is this force that most observers believe is necessary to curb the continuing violence in Darfur, but whether the agreement on Monday will lead to its creation is far from assured because of Mr. Bashir’s record of resistance.

More than 200,000 people have died in the Darfur region of western Sudan and 2.3 million have been uprooted from their land and subjected to repeated attacks from Arab janjaweed militias supported and equipped by the Khartoum government.

The Security Council passed a resolution creating the force on Aug. 31, but it specified that the force could only be deployed with the consent of the Sudanese government. That has given Mr. Bashir the power to bar the force from Darfur, despite growing international demand for it.

Mr. Bashir has been resisting significant United Nations assistance for months, at some points seeming to accept proposals in talks with Mr. Ban and other officials, only to back away and seek to renegotiate them.

As international pressure mounted in recent weeks and agreement on the second phase appeared close, Mr. Bashir raised a new barrier, saying he would not allow the assignment of the helicopter gunships. In response, Mr. Ban gave assurances that they would not be used in any offensive operations. Monday’s letter notified the United Nations of “Sudan’s approval of the helicopter component.”

During a Middle East trip last month, Mr. Ban directed his own authority at Mr. Bashir in two meetings that lasted a total of three and a half hours during the Arab League summit meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

At the conclusion, Mr. Ban said he thought he had ended the impasse over the heavy support stage, but rights groups and others with experience in dealing with Mr. Bashir expressed doubts, suggesting the Sudanese leader was simply using the dispute to continue keeping peacekeepers out of Darfur.

The announcement on Monday seemed to bear out Mr. Ban’s assertion. “This is a very positive sign, and I and the African Union intend to move quickly to prepare for the deployment,” he said.

Pressure had been applied by Mr. Ban, the African Union and members of the Arab League who, according to one of Mr. Ban’s aides, had also lost patience with Mr. Bashir and offered him none of the “solace” in Riyadh that he was accustomed to from that group.

John D. Negroponte, the deputy secretary of state, brought United States influence to bear in a weekend visit to Sudan.

At a news conference in Khartoum on Monday, Mr. Negroponte said, “We must move quickly to a larger hybrid United Nations-African Union peacekeeping force with a single unified chain of command that conforms to U.N. standards and practices.”

He added, “The humanitarian situation in Darfur calls urgently for dispatching such a force.”

Mr. Negroponte noted that the agreement called for the preponderance of the forces and the commanders to be from Africa. This is seen at the United Nations as the best way to get around Mr. Bashir’s claim that outsiders would threaten his country’s security.

But it has still not brought the Sudanese leader around to agreeing on deployment of the full hybrid force, the only step that most observers of the Darfur crisis believe will curb the continuing violence there.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

For anyone who wants to know the background to the Darfur situation, read this.

Whatever anyone thinks is the reason for the Darfur conflict, what is a fact is that there is an immense humanitarian crisis there. According to the World Food Programme, nearly three million people in the region depend on international aid for food, shelter and medical treatment.But the ongoing conflict makes it difficult for any aid to get to them.

In January this year, the WFP and other UN agencies providing aid to refugees in Darfur released this statement.

Another example of politics getting in the way of helping human beings? Nicholas Kristof of the NYT thinks so.

Driving Up the Price of Blood

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: April 17, 2007, NYT

Perhaps the most surprising thing about President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan isn’t that he has presided over the systematic slaughter of hundreds of thousands of men, women and children who are members of black African tribes.

It is that President Bashir’s own family appears to come from an African tribe. Yes, Mr. Bashir has led a genocide against people like himself.

As best I can establish from my contacts in Sudan, Mr. Bashir’s grandfather was from the Falata tribe and grew up in Nigeria. He migrated to Sudan to work on the Gezira irrigation project and settled in a village called Um Audam.

Then the grandfather was killed in a dispute, and Mr. Bashir’s father and grandmother moved to Hash Banaga in the Arab north. Mr. Bashir grew up speaking Arabic, so in that sense he is Arab — but by heritage he is Falata and a black African.

Americans often misunderstand genocide, assuming it is impossible to stop because it is driven by millenniums of racial or ethnic hatreds. But historically genocide has mostly been rooted in cool, calculated decisions by national leaders that the most convenient way to solve a problem or stay in power is to scapegoat and destroy a particular group. So it has been in most past genocides, and so it is again in Darfur.

Nor is Mr. Bashir the only person in such a position. The on-and-off leader of the janjaweed militias, Musa Hilal, has unleashed his soldiers with particular brutality on another black African tribe, the Zaghawa. You can drive for hours through Zaghawa regions of Darfur where every single village has been burned; only corpses are left, and some of those have been stuffed into wells to poison them.

Yet, according to people from Musa Hilal’s hometown, his own mother is Zaghawa.

Likewise, the rebels of Darfur have sometimes turned on their own tribes — raping and murdering their own people, or those of allied tribes.

So what motivates these people? Not ancient hatreds, but greed. They are not Taliban-style extremists, but rather amoral, ruthless, calculating opportunists.

Mr. Bashir and others in his government faced a genuine problem back in 2003: African tribes (including the Zaghawa) were staging a rebellion in Darfur. Calling in the army to fight the rebels was problematic because many soldiers in the regular army are from African tribes in Darfur and might not be reliable in combat against their brethren.

So Mr. Bashir adopted an approach he had already used against rebels in southern Sudan. He armed irregular militias and gave them license to wipe out civilians and depopulate large areas. This would deprive the rebels of their base of support and send a warning to any other tribe in Sudan that might contemplate a rebellion.

Presumably Mr. Bashir guessed that foreigners might not like the idea of mass murder. But he could deny visas to prying journalists, and he had Chinese diplomatic protection at the United Nations.

So after weighing the pros and cons, Mr. Bashir decided that genocide was the simplest counterinsurgency method. Some of the marauders were driven by prejudice, and Arab attackers routinely shouted racial epithets against blacks. But the leaders —— they were just cynics. Musa Hilal and some of the rebel commanders seemed to view murder and rape simply as paths to accumulate power and livestock.

All this makes genocide easier to stop than people imagine. Where it arises from a weighing of costs and benefits, then it is possible for outsiders to impose additional costs and change the outcome. That’s what we need to do. The U.S. should lead other countries in pushing hard on all sides for a negotiated peace agreement among the warring factions, for that is ultimately the best hope to end the slaughter in Darfur and in neighboring areas in Chad and the Central African Republic.

I find President Bashir’s ruthlessness pretty easy to understand. What is harder to fathom is President Bush’s refusal to stand up to the genocide for four years. Why not impose a no-fly zone, why not hold an international conference on Darfur, why not invite survivors to the White House for a photo-op, why not give a prime-time speech about Darfur?

Perhaps the explanation for Mr. Bush’s passivity is the same as the explanation for Mr. Bashir’s brutality. Maybe Mr. Bush has made his calculations, looked at the number of calls and letters he gets about Darfur, weighed the pros and cons, and decided that Americans really don’t care enough about genocide to make him pay a major price for allowing it to continue.

*********************************************************************************

Or maybe Bush thinks that allowing Sudan to deteriorate into chaos would be a good excuse to march in and check out the oil reserves? After all if Petronas is there, why not the Americans?

Meantime, what does all this mean to three million starving people?

Sunday, April 15, 2007

We're Getting Together....May 19 2007!!




Hi all, hope to finally put faces to nicks on May 19. For full details, please see the official Bloggers United Malaysia blogsite.

Um..Howsy's made me speak, along with Jeff Ooi and Tony Pua. There will be others too so there'll be something for everybody. But mostly I can't wait to talk to all the blogbros and blogsis whom I've only seen online. All dressed smartly casual too ;-)

See ya there!

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Another Update on Siti Aisya Shahidan -UPDATED

UPDATE: Daphne speaks! I am pleased to post here Daphne's response to everyone on this issue and give her side of the story:


When I first saw Melayu Jati’s message, it slapped me across the face,
I wondered if he was stupid to still be talking about race,
But then I saw he thought me stealing from Aisya, of all deeds done,
Disembowel him I would, if I had butcher knife, stake and gun.

Really, hello, have you actually been following the story?
How to steal money when I’ve not touched or smelled any.
As for diapers, milk and nestum, I’m sure you all agree,
Why would I want that, unless Duh! I have a baby.

I could have come here to swear and spit and curse,
But why should I sink so low, for I’ll be none the worse,
MJ, in case you haven’t heard, we live in the Land-of-Boleh,
Frogs like you (into your tempurung!), are just not worth our day!

*Ribbit*

Dear all,

The donations today stand at RM 12, 840 and I am pleased to inform you all that we have pledges of a year’s supply of nestum, milk, diapers, and glucose. This is of course in addition to pledges from two sponsors to pay for Aisya’s suction machine…

I think it is time everyone hears my side of the story too:-

I know many are thinking that I am merajuk-ing which is why I am backing out, but I want you all to understand that I think I need to draw a line too.
Melayu Jati’s (Oh, MJ will do) message was not the first. I have received a few emails from people of various races (yes, “my” own people too) questioning my intentions, but from very wise advise from MarinaM, I ignored them.

MJ however, I believe has gone a little too far. And I think there comes a time when I need to put my foot down too.

The power of suggestion is unfortunately, a very strong tool. If there are people going around saying things like what MJ has said, sooner or later, seeds of suspicion will begin to flourish.

And I refuse to let that happen. I refuse for something which is inherently, a selfless act of the community, to be turned into a lame excuse for a spit-fire. I refuse to let this campaign be tarnished by evil and snide comments.

I am not asking for people to worship the ground I walk on, but yes, I do ask those with nothing constructive or helpful, to please shut up, lock the mouth, and throw away the key.

***

When we started, quite a few readers asked suggested we go to the press. The reason why I was adamant not to (and Kak Pi and MarinaM agree) was because I felt that:-

1) The family is not in need of money for something desperate like an impending do-or-die surgery for Aisya. We are merely helping them back on their feet, and in the course of it, let them know that we have not forgotten them.

2) Aisya is desperately terrified of strangers, and by highlighting her story in the press, we are opening doors for politicians/corporate organizations/members of the public to bunny-hop to her home, complete with curious by-standers and story-hungry press.

3) We should strive to protect the pride of the family, and of Aisya. Curiousity is something which rides the pinnacle in society today, and with Aisya’s very rare condition, people will be prone to go ogle her like some exhibition, and I was adamant about not opening doors for people to do so.

***

To be completely honest, I never, in my wildest dreams, expected that bloggers and their readers would be so receptive, and so generous, in so short a time. That I believe, is a landmark for all of us today, because it shows that while there are people like MJ, there are a lot of us who are not like that.

I think we have done a lot together, and this is one milestone (small, yes, but substantial) for our Golden Jubilee celebration. There are many Aisya’s in today’s society, and I am proud to know that we all stood up for one. After all, the best societies are the caring ones, no?

I’ll update all of you about Aisya in a year’s time, or if needed, in six months. I want to take this opportunity to thank all the donors on behalf of Aisya’s family, and to thank all the people who placed enough faith in me (MJ, stay in your tempurung!) to give with their hearts.

Also I think we all need to please thank all the bloggers who highlighted (directly and indirectly) Aisya’s plight: MarinaM, Pi Bani, Jeff Ooi, Rocky, Nuraina Samad, Zorro, Susan Loone, June Tan, Azmi Ahmad, Ionbuck, Jenn (from USA) and Moola.

Let’s just all give ourselves a pat on the back ok =) and not get stressed up by people like MJ. Why raise the statistics of Malaysians with high blood pressure just because of some frogs?

Will keep in touch.

Cheers,
Daphne ‘In-need-of-rest’ Ling

********************************************************************************



Here's the good news. Thanks to all you generous folk, RM11,400 has been sent to Siti Aisya's parents to help them care for her.There are also pledges for sponsorship of her milk, diapers and Nestum for a year .In addition,there have also been pledges to donate the entire cost of the suction machine which is needed to manage Siti Aisya's phlegm problem. All of these has been due to the effort of Daphne Ling , the young woman and blogger who first highlighted the plight of the little girl with Fraser Syndrome.Please do visit Daphne's blog to get a more detailed update.

Now here's the bad news. Daphne wants to quit this effort. This is because there have been some people who have emailed her to tell her to mind her own business. One of them, who calls himself Melayu Jati, posted a comment on her blog and on mine accusing her of taking the money for herself, even though she has taken care to publish En. Shahidan's address and phone numbers which anyone can call and verify the story with,and has insisted that everyone sends their money and other donations directly to the Shahidans and NOT to her.Daphne is understandably hurt by these unwarranted accusations.

This is exactly what Melayu Jati said:

apa yang aku tak fahem memang satu. siapa dia ni adik daphne ini? kenapa semua percaya sangat kak dia nak bagi duit nak bagi siti aisya ini? tak pernah ke dengar yang banyak orang yang tipu duit orang? mana bukti yang Siti aisya ni wujud? mana bukti dan buku akaun yang daphne ni tak ambil duit tu untuk dirinya sendiri? tak hairan ke semua orang yang budak cina yang tak kena mengena dengan keluarga si aisya ni nak tolong dia? pandailah sikit. mana ade orang yang nak tolong kalau dia tak dapat ape sendiri terutama kes macam ni. bUdak cina tolong orang melayu konon. pleese pak, bagi lah orang melayu jaga diri sendiri. kalau betul nak tolong aisya, ambil duit sendiri bagi. menyampah nak sibuk jaga kain orang. memang ku menyampah. takdak orang sebaik ni. tipu!
dari, melayu jati


I am very ashamed to read this message which Melayu Jati is not even embarrassed to post.Initially I had not wanted to post this because I didn't want Daphne to feel hurt. But it seems that she has received the same message from this person as well as from others saying pretty much the same thing.I think it is a very sad commentary on our society that people have become so cynical that they cannot even imagine caring people exist.No wonder we are in the state we're in, where greed, ambition and power rules and kindness and generosity is looked down upon.

So this is my message to Melayu Jati:

Kalau 'melayu jati' ertinya menuduh orang yang baik hati mencuri, saya bukan melayu jati. Kalau melayu jati ertinya tidak percaya ada orang yang boleh membantu orang yang memerlui tanpa mengira bangsa dan ugama, saya tidak ingin menjadi melayu jati. Kerana sikap inilah, penderitaan berterusan, kerana ada orang yang sentiasa mencari alasan supaya tidak membantu sambil mengkritik orang lain. Saya kasihan kepada Melayu Jati kerana hidup dalam dunia dimana tidak ada 'orang sebaik ni'. Agaknya kalau kita tidak buat baik kepada orang lain, mereka pun tidak buat baik kepada kita. Alangkah gelap dunia kamu.

If 'melayu jati' (pure Malay) means accusing people who are goodhearted of stealing, then I am not a pure Malay. If 'pure Malay' means not believing that people can help those who need it without considering race and religion, then I don't want to be pure Malay. It is because of attitudes like these that human suffering continues, because there are people who find every excuse not to help while criticising those who do. I feel pity for Melayu Jati because he lives in a world where there are no people 'as good as this'. I guess if you are never good to people, people will never be good to you. What a dark world you live in.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Queening the Pawns

This article originally came out in The Nation, an American publication, on June 19, 2006. It is long but a very erudite repudiation of two women often touted by the West as fine examples of 'liberated' Muslim women. This article makes very clear the trap that both Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Irshad Manji have fallen in, which is to confirm and perpetuate stereotypes about Muslim women by the West by promoting themselves as the exceptions. The sad thing is that the truly credible progressive Muslim women rarely get as much an airing as these two when in fact those are the ones really doing good work in the cause of justice for Muslim women everywhere. (BTW since there are some people impatient for me to post this, and who are making incorrect assumptions about what this post will say, please could you re-post your comments under the right post please?)

The Missionary Position

by Laila Lalami, the author of Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits, a novel, is the editor of Moorishgirl.com, a blog about books and culture.

These days, being a Muslim woman means being saddled with what can only be referred to as the "burden of pity." The feelings of compassion that we Muslim women seem to inspire emanate from very distinct and radically opposed currents: religious extremists of our own faith, and evangelical and secular supporters of empire in the West.

Radical Islamist parties claim that the family is the cornerstone of society and that women, by virtue of their reproductive powers, are its builders. An overhaul of society must therefore begin with reforming the status of women, and in particular with distinguishing clearly their roles from those of men. Guided by their "true" interpretations of the faith, these radicals want women to resume their traditional roles of nurturers and men to be empowered to lead the family. If we protect women's rights in Islam, they assure us, the umma, the community of believers, will be lifted from its general state of poverty and backwardness.

Sayyid Qutb (1906-66), the Egyptian writer and activist who has exerted such a powerful influence over the radical Islamist movement, fervently
believed that Muslim women belonged in the home. In his 1964 book Ma'alim fi al-Tariq (Milestones), Qutb wrote that "if woman is freed from her basic responsibility of bringing up children" and, whether on her own or by pressure from society, seeks to work in jobs such as "a hostess or a stewardess in a hotel or ship or air company," she will be "using her ability for material productivity rather than the training of
human beings." This, he claimed, would make the entire civilization "backward."


The misogynistic philosophy has proved enticing, finding advocates among Muslims throughout the world. Between 1989 and 1991,
for instance, Abbassi Madani, the red-bearded founder of the Algerian Islamic Salvation Front Party (FIS), often referred to women who
refused to cover themselves with a hijab as "sparrow hawks of neocolonialism." His co-founder, Ali Belhadj, claimed that there was a simple solution
to the country's high unemployment rate: turn over the jobs of working women to idle men. Madani summarized his program: "The system is sick; the doctor is FIS; and the medicine has existed for fourteen centuries. It is Islam." Reducing Algerian women to birds of prey, and their faith to a pill: These are good indicators of the depth of intellect within the leadership of the FIS.

Meanwhile, the abundant pity that Muslim women inspire in the West largely takes the form of impassioned declarations about "our plight"--reserved, it would seem, for us, as Christian and Jewish women living in similarly constricting fundamentalist settings never seem to attract the same concern. The veil, illiteracy, domestic violence,gender apartheid and genital mutilation have become so many hot-button issues that symbolize our status as second-class citizens in our societies. These expressions of compassion are often met with cynical responses in the Muslim world, which further enrages the missionaries of women's liberation. Why, they wonder, do Muslim women not seek out the West's help in freeing themselves from their societies' retrograde thinking? The poor things, they are so oppressed they do not even know they are oppressed.

The sympathy extended to us by Western supporters of empire is nothing new. In 1908 Lord Cromer, the British consul general in Egypt, declared that "the fatal obstacle" to the country's "attainment of that elevation of thought and character which should accompany the introduction of Western civilization" was Islam's degradation of women. The fact that Cromer raised school fees and discouraged the training of women doctors in Egypt, and in England founded an organization that opposed the right of British women to suffrage, should give us a hint of what his views on gender roles were really like. Little seems to have changed in the past century, for now we have George W. Bush, leader of the free world, telling us, before invading Afghanistan in 2001, that he was doing it as much to free the country's women as to hunt down Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar. Five years later, the Taliban is making a serious comeback, and the country's new Constitution prohibits any laws that are contrary to an austere interpretation of Sharia.

Furthermore, among the twenty-odd reasons that were foisted on the American public to justify the invasion of Iraq in 2003 was, of course, the subjugation of women; this, despite the fact that the majority of Iraqi women were educated and active in nearly all sectors of a secular public life. Three years into the occupation, the only enlightened aspect of Saddam's despotic rule has been dismantled: Facing threats from a resurgent fundamentalism, both Sunni and Shiite, many women have been forced to quit their jobs and to cover because not to do so puts them in harm's
way. Why Mr. Bush does not advocate for the women of Thailand, the women of Botswana or the women of Nepal is anyone's guess.

This context--competing yet hypocritical sympathies for Muslim women--helps to explain the strong popularity, particularly in the post-September 11 era, of Muslim women activists like Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Irshad Manji and the equally strong skepticism with which they are met within the broad Muslim community. These activists are passionate and no doubt sincere in their criticism of Islam. But are their claims unique and innovative, or are they mostly unremarkable? Are their conclusions borne out by empirical evidence, or do they fail to meet basic levels of scholarship? The casual reader would find it hard to answer these questions, because there is very little critical examination of their work. For the most part, the loudest responses have been either hagiographic profiles of these "brave" and "heroic" women, on the one hand, or absurd and completely abhorrent threats to the safety of these "apostates" and "enemies of God," on the other.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali was born in Mogadishu, Somalia. Her father, Hirsi Magan Isse, was a prominent critic of the Siyad Barre regime, and the family
had to flee the country, first to Saudi Arabia and then to Ethiopia and Kenya. When Hirsi Ali was 22, her father arranged a marriage for her
with a distant relation. On a layover in Germany en route to Canada, where the man lived, Hirsi Ali escaped to the Netherlands, where she applied for and received asylum. She worked as an interpreter for Somali refugees and studied political science at the University of Leiden.

Hirsi Ali first came into the public eye in 2002, with the publication of De Zoontjesfabriek (The Son Factory), whose vehement criticisms of Islam made her the subject of death threats. She joined a think tank affiliated with the social-democratic Labor Party but a year later switched membership to the right-wing VVD Party, which had invited her to run for a seat in Parliament. She won, and became a member of Parliament in January 2003. Hirsi Ali explained her shifting allegiance by saying that the VVD granted her greater ability to advocate for the rights of Muslim women. Then in 2004, she wrote the script to the short film Submission, which was directed by Theo van Gogh, a man who was known for his virulently anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim statements. That fall, van Gogh was slaughtered in Amsterdam, in broad daylight, by a Dutch man named Mohammed Bouyeri, whose parents had emigrated from Morocco. A letter left on van Gogh's body made it clear that Hirsi Ali was the next target. She immediately went into hiding and has needed heavy protection ever since.

A few years ago, Hirsi Ali admitted to lying on her asylum application, but a Dutch TV documentary challenged her on other details of her life, including whether or not she was forced into marriage. The revelations sparked a row that culminated when Rita Verdonk, the Minister of Integration and a member of Hirsi Ali's own party, informed her that she could no longer consider herself a Dutch citizen. Although there has been no specific move to strip her of citizenship, Hirsi Ali has already announced that she is resigning from Parliament and moving to the United States, where she will take up a position at the right-wing American Enterprise Institute.

Irshad Manji was born near Kampala, Uganda, into a Pakistani family. When the country's dictator, Idi Amin Dada, announced that the national
economy was to be placed in the hands of black people, he forced the large and thriving South Asian minority out of the country. In 1972, when Manji was 4 years old, her family fled to Canada and settled there. She grew up in Vancouver, where she went to public school. In her free time, she attended Rose of Sharon Baptist Church, and later a conservative Islamic madrassa, from which she was expelled for asking too many pointed questions. She graduated from the University of British Columbia with a degree in intellectual history, and later worked as a speechwriter and broadcaster.

Manji rose to prominence in 2004, when her controversial book The Trouble With Islam was published. She received death threats and lived under police protection for some time before deciding to forgo the bodyguards. "[If] I'm going to have legitimacy conveying to Muslims that we can dissent with the establishment and live, I can't have a big, burly fellow looking over my shoulder. I must lead by example," she wrote. She is currently a visiting fellow with the International Security Studies Program at Yale University.

There are some striking parallels between the experiences of Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Irshad Manji. They were both born, only a year apart, in East Africa--Hirsi Ali in 1969, and Manji in 1968. Both were forced by politically repressive regimes into exile from their homelands at an early age. Both can trace their "emancipation" to a single, significant, life-changing event. Both credit the West for giving them not just freedom of speech but the very ability to think for themselves. Hirsi Ali states that she is "the living proof" that Western culture enabled her to come fully into her own, while Manji declares, "I owe the West my willingness to help reform Islam."

Both women express an unabashed disdain for multiculturalism, which they accuse of fostering a climate of political correctness that prevents dialogue and useful criticism.Both supported the American invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq in the "war on terror." Finally, both women have recently published books in the United States. For Manji, it is The Trouble With Islam Today, a slightly expanded edition of her 2004 bestseller. (Manji explains in an afterword why the temporal specification was added to the title.) For
Hirsi Ali it is The Caged Virgin: An Emancipation Proclamation for Women and Islam.

The Caged Virgin is a collection of seventeen short essays and articles on the question of Islam, translated by Jane Brown. Hirsi Ali discusses the rights of individuals in Muslim countries and in Muslim communities in the West, she disagrees vehemently with the ways sacred texts invade secular space and she criticizes what she sees as the lax policies of Western European states toward their Muslim minorities. "I have taken an enormous risk by answering the call for self-reflection," she declares. "And what do the cultural experts say? 'You should have said it in a different way.' But since Theo van Gogh's death, I have been convinced more than ever that I must say it in my way only and have my criticism." Let us then follow Hirsi Ali's example, and look critically at her words.

The overarching argument in The Caged Virgin is that there is insufficient freedom for the individual in Islam. This, Hirsi Ali argues, is because one of the fundamental tenets of the religion is the submission of the individual to God, which creates a strict hierarchy of allegiances. At the top of this hierarchy is God, then His Prophet, then the umma, then the clan or tribe and finally the family. The individual,she insists, is simply not valued. Whatever one thinks of this hierarchy, however, it is hardly unique to Islam; one can make the same argument about other monotheistic religions. Furthermore, many Muslim countries are in fact secular or military dictatorships (Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Syria, Egypt), while others are to one extent or another theocracies (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Sudan). Religious hierarchy does not play the same societal role in Turkmenistan as in Saudi Arabia. On top of this, there are political, national and linguistic considerations to take into account, particularly when one is making claims about fifty-seven nations spread out across Asia and Africa. But Hirsi Ali addresses none of these. In her view, they simply do not matter. Rather, she sees Islam itself as the problem and its fundamental tenet of obstructing individual freedom as the very reason the Muslim world is "falling behind" the West.

Beginning at birth, she maintains, the child is taught that his life must be governed by Islam, hatred for the infidel and the preservation of his honor through the control of women's sexuality. It is as if she were suggesting the existence of some sort of "genetic" encoding of Islam in children, which prevents them from thinking for themselves. "[We] Muslims have religion inculcated into us from birth, and that is one of the very reasons for our falling behind the West in technology,finance, health, and culture." "Every Muslim, from the beginnings of Islam to the present day, is raised in the belief that all knowledge can be found in the Koran."

"For Muslim children the study of biology and history can be very confusing." Reading these lines, one must ask: What sociological evidence is there for this claim that Islam makes people inherently incapable of independent thought and of studying science? The answer is: None. One is merely given Hirsi Ali's assurances that she knows what is going on behind closed doors, based on her own experiences of growing up in Somalia and of working as an interpreter for Muslim immigrants in the Netherlands.

The notion that there is a breach of individualism that is specific to Islam is raised again in Hirsi Ali's discussion of "sexual morality." In the book's opening piece, "Stand Up for Your Rights!" she writes about the continuing obsession with female virginity, which is widespread throughout the Muslim world and which, it must be acknowledged, causes no shortage of heartache. Girls who lose their virginity before marriage can sometimes face serious consequences in Muslim countries,particularly in rural areas. "I am distressed," she writes, "that the vast majority of Muslim women are still enchained by the doctrine of virginity, which requires that women enter marriage as green as grass: experience of love and sexuality before marriage is an absolute taboo. This taboo does not apply to men." Hirsi Ali is correct to say that the burden of virginity weighs disproportionately on females in Muslim cultures, though she fails to point out that the Koran emphasizes virginity and forbids both genders from having premarital sex. In this respect, the Koran is no different from the Bible. It is therefore a matter of cultural practice that the "doctrine of virginity" is still strong in the Muslim world.

This lumping together of various Islams--the geographical region, the Abrahamic religion, the historical civilization and the many individual cultures--is symptomatic of the entire book, and makes it particularly difficult to engage with Hirsi Ali in a useful way. Her discussion of female genital mutilation (FGM) is a case in point. In at least six of the seventeen essays, she cites the horrendous practice of FGM, which involves excising, in whole or in part, young girls' inner or outer labia, and in severe cases even their clitorises. Hirsi Ali is aware that the practice predates Islam, but, she maintains, "these existing local practices were spread by Islam." According to the United Nations Population Fund, FGM is practiced in sub-Saharan Africa by Animists,Christians and Muslims alike, as well as by Ethiopian Jews, sometimes in collusion with individual representatives of the faiths. For instance,the US State Department report on FGM reveals that some Coptic
Christian priests "refuse to baptize girls who have not undergone one of the procedures." And yet Hirsi Ali does not blame Animism, Christianity or Judaism for FGM, or accuse these belief systems of spreading it. With Islam, however, such accusations are acceptable.


A few years ago, Hirsi Ali proposed a bill in the Dutch Parliament that would require young girls from immigrant communities to undergo a vaginal exam once a year as a way to insure that the parents do not practice FGM. The suggestion is all the more interesting when one considers that the vast majority of Muslim immigrants to the Netherlands are from Turkey and Morocco, where FGM is unheard of. But there is a personal reason for this passionate stance: When Hirsi Ali was 5 years old, her grandmother had the procedure performed on her, without her father's knowledge or approval. The experience marked Hirsi Ali profoundly, and the fervor and determination she brings to the fight against this horrifying practice are utterly laudable. By making inaccurate statements like the one quoted above, however, she muddies the issues and alienates the very people who would have the religious standing in the community to make this practice disappear.

On more than a few occasions, Hirsi Ali makes baffling, blanket statements about women in Muslim countries. "[If] defloration occurs outside wedlock, [the girl] has dishonored her family to the tenth degree of kinship." Why not eleven? Or twelve? Where did the number ten come from? We are never told, and no source is adduced to support this claim. Not content with making inaccurate and sweeping claims about various cultures, Hirsi Ali also ventures into the field of literary criticism: "Alongside [religious textbooks] there are novels by Muslims about love, politics, and crime, in which the role of Islam and the Prophet Muhammad are studiously avoided, although the moral undercurrent is that one should observe religious precepts, otherwise things end very badly."

It might come as news to Arab, African and Asian novelists of the Muslim persuasion that their fiction is merely an excuse to proselytize.Is the reader seriously expected to believe that the work of Orhan Pamuk promotes the observance of religion? Or that the texts of Assia Djebbar, Tahar Djaout, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Abdellatif Laabi, Gamal Al-Ghitani, Nawal Al-Saadawi, Ahdaf Soueif, Alifa Rifaat, Abdulrazak
Gurnah
, Ghassan Kanafani, Nuruddin Farah, Tayeb Salih, Kateb Yacine, Mahmoud Darwish, Pramoedya Ananta Toer and Tariq Ali advocate religious morality?

Along the same lines, Hirsi Ali seems to believe that Muslims are deficient in critical thought: "Very few Muslims are actually capable of looking at their faith critically. Critical minds like those of Afshin Ellian in the Netherlands and Salman Rushdie in England are exceptions." The work of Khaled Abou El Fadl, Fatima Mernissi, Leila Ahmed, Reza Aslan, Adonis, Amina Wadud, Nawal Saadawi,Mohja Kahf , Asra Nomani and the thousands of other scholars working in both Muslim countries and the West easily contradicts the notion. In any case, why the comparison with Rushdie? Have fatwas become the yardstick by which we measure criticism?

If so, this suggests that the people who offend Islamists are the only ones worth listening to, which is ridiculous. The most shocking statement, however, comes from the essay "The Need for Self-Reflection Within Islam," in which Hirsi Ali writes: "After the events of 9/11, people who deny this characterization of the
stagnant state of Islam were challenged by critical outsiders to name a single Muslim who had made a discovery in science or technology, or changed the world through artistic achievement. There is none." That a person who has apparently never heard of the algebra of Al-Khawarizmi, the medical prowess of Ibn-Sina and Ibn-Rushd, or the music of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Umm Kulthum is considered an authority on Islam is
proof, if ever one was needed, of the utter lack of intelligent discourse about the civilization and the cultures broadly defined by that word.

And how does the American press reward such stunningly ignorant scholarship? Time magazine picked Hirsi Ali as one of 100 "most influential people" of 2005, people with "the clout and power to change our world." At the other end of the spectrum, the answer is even more spectacularly stupid: Islamic radicals have called for Hirsi Ali's death repeatedly since 2002. Whatever the merits of Hirsi Ali's arguments, one thing is clear: By making threats against her person, right-wing Muslims appear to agree with Western conservatives that Islam as a whole (religion, region, culture) is weak, unable to defend itself by intellectual reasoning. It is also quite ironic that these radical Muslims are guilty of violating the first right their faith grants them: The right to choose their beliefs. "Let there be no compulsion in religion," the Koran insists. And for good reason, too, because without the right to choose (new) beliefs, there would have been no Islam in the first place.

The argument that pervades The Caged Virgin--that Muslim women need
Western advocates--is premised on two assumptions. The first is that Muslim women somehow cannot speak up for themselves--what Edward Said once called "the silence of the native." Hirsi Ali demonstrates this: "The [reason] I am determined to make my voice heard is that Muslim women are scarcely listened to, and they need a woman to speak out on their behalf." If, as the title of this book suggests, the
Muslim woman is a virgin in a cage, then by definition she must be freed from the outside. Someone must break the lock so that the poor woman can finally step out and speak for herself. But Muslim women are not, nor have they ever been, silent. For example, a significant portion of hadith, the Prophet's sayings that form the basis of the Sunna, are attributed to his wife Aisha.

Here is a sample hadith: "Narrated Aisha:The Prophet said, 'All drinks that produce intoxication are haram.'" But how did Aisha narrate this saying? Was it by sitting at home, in a cage, or by actively engaging with her community and teaching the hadith to the congregation? This tradition of engagement has continued, and Muslim women have made their marks in all fields--whether religion or science or medicine or literature. Over the past century, they have organized in groups dedicated to fight for the advancement of their rights. Even under the inhumane Taliban regime, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan remained active, providing literacy courses and medical services to women and girls. That these women are thought to be invisible is a testament to the patriarchal systems--on either side--that want to protect them. But it cannot be a testament to their silence.

The second premise of the argument is the critic's supposed authority as a "native informant," which alone, and without scholarly training, qualifies her to speak of the entire religion. Indeed, Hirsi Ali tells us, "By our Western standards Muhammad is a perverse man. A tyrant. He is against freedom of expression. If you don't do as he says, you will end up in hell. That reminds me of those megalomaniacal rulers in the Middle East: Bin Laden, Khomeini, and Saddam. Are you surprised to find a Saddam Hussein? Muhammad is his example; Muhammad is an example to all Muslim men. Why do you think so many Islamic men use violence? You are shocked to hear me say these things, but like the majority of the native Dutch population, you overlook something: you forget where I am from. I used to be a Muslim; I know what I am talking about."

In numerous passages of the book,however, Hirsi Ali demonstrates precisely that she doesn't know what she is talking about. Take her statement on abortion: "According to Islam, an extramarital pregnancy brings great shame on the family, but you can still redeem yourself in the eyes of Allah. Abortion, though, the killing of an innocent baby, is a deadly sin, for which there is no forgiveness." But abortion is not universally disallowed in Islam, simply because there is not a uniform position about the issue. In the Hanbali,Shafii and Hanafi schools in Sunni Islam, for instance, abortion before the fetus has developed into a human being (what is called "ensoulment") is, in fact, permissible. Scholars differ on the lengths of time "ensoulment" takes, with definitions as narrow as forty days and as broad as 120 days (i.e., the first trimester). All schools of thought allow abortion if the pregnancy is liable to cause medical harm to the mother.

The question that must be posed, then, is whether the cause of women's emancipation can be advanced when it is argued in such a sloppy and factually inaccurate manner as it is in The Caged Virgin. One might go a step further and ask about the intended audience for such a book. Given the heavy reliance on the twin premises of "the native is silent" and "the native informant knows best," it seems possible that the book is not so much addressed to Muslims--who, in any case, Hirsi Ali believes to be deficient in individual and critical thinking--as to Western advocates for Muslim women.

To her credit, Irshad Manji appears to be acutely aware of the audience question, and tackles it on the first page of The Trouble With Islam Today. The book is written as an open letter, addressed directly to Muslims, both in and outside the West. And it also helps the critical reader that Manji backs her claims with source notes, which are listed on her website, Muslim-refusenik.com . The Trouble With Islam Today is a chronicle of Manji's personal journey of introspection and discovery about her faith, prompted in part by the constant stream of horrendous news about repression that seems to pour out from (the region of) Islam. "When I consider all the fatwas being hurled by the brain trust of our faith, I feel utter embarrassment," she writes.

Unlike Hirsi Ali, Manji has not openly renounced her faith, although, she says, "Islam is on very thin ice with me." She attributes her skepticism to her childhood experiences at the madrassa she attended in Vancouver. In the orthodox, gender-segregated school, she could not visit the library freely; instead, she had to wait for all the men to clear the area where it was located in order to be able to browse the offerings. The imam was a stern man who discouraged questions and proffered dogma. So woeful was the training Manji received that she did not know that Islam was an Abrahamic religion until after she left the confines of the madrassa. Later, when she purchased an English-language Koran, she finally embarked on her own journey of learning.

Much of what Manji describes will be familiar to those who have read reform-minded books on Islam. For instance, she questions the assumption that the Koran is the inviolate word of God and has remained so for fourteen centuries, without a single diacritic or vowel-length change.She tells the controversial story of the "Satanic verses" (also known as hadith al-gharaniq) to show that this point is debatable. According to some scholars, the Prophet had included verses that referred to Meccan goddesses while reciting lines from the Koran. Later, realizing they were not inspired by revelation, he abrogated them from the sacred text.This, of course, establishes a precedent that the Koran was changed at least once. Why is it so hard to imagine, she asks, that other human beings could have added their own changes? She rightly argues that both the terrorists and the peacekeepers among Muslims find scriptural support for their views in the Koran. (Incidentally, this is no different from the Bible, whose most peaceful and most violent verses have been used at various points in history to back up the institution of slavery as well as abolition and the civil rights movement.) A significant portion of the book consists of calling on Arabs and Muslims to be responsible for their own destinies, and to stop blaming the West or Israel for their problems. The style here may be very blunt, but the proposition is wholly unoriginal. One can read similar statements in commentary and op-ed pieces of many newspapers across the Arab world.

Unfortunately, like Hirsi Ali, Manji consistently gives individual examples of malfeasance and then extrapolates to the entire body of Muslims. In discussing World War II, for instance, she writes, "Let's be straight about what else happened during the Nazi years: Muslim complicity in the Holocaust." Here she trots out the story of Haj Amin al-Husayni, the mufti of Jerusalem who visited Berlin as a guest of Hitler and approved of his genocidal agenda. But how do we move from one cleric with authority in one congregation to "Muslim complicity"? And if it turns out that there are individual Muslims who helped Jews escape the Holocaust, do we then get to talk about "Muslim resistance" to the Holocaust? After all, Abdol-Hossein Sardari, head of
the consular section of the Iranian embassy under the Vichy government,succeeded in convincing the Nazis that Iranian Jews were not Semites, thus saving their lives. He went a step further and issued 500 Iranian passports to non-Iranian Jews in France. Similarly, the Sultan of Morocco flatly refused to hand Moroccan Jews over to the Vichy government that ruled his country. But people such as these do not fit the paradigm of Muslim backwardness and outright evil, and so they go unmentioned.

As with Hirsi Ali, Manji's expertise on her subject is incomplete. Take the following statement: "The Koran appears to be organized by size of verse--from longer to shorter--and not by chronology of revelation. How can anyone isolate the "earlier" passages, let alone read into them the "authentic" message of the Koran? We have to own up to the fact that the Koran's message is all over the bloody map."

This is simply not true.Each sura of the Koran is identified by whether it is "Meccan" or "Medinan," depending on whether it was revealed early in the Prophet's spiritual life or later on, during his hegira in Medina. Some verses are addressed to specific communities of believers. Others refer to specific historical events. All of these details help establish temporal contextualization. The study of the Koran's chronology is a whole field unto itself. In addition, and despite having written a book called The Trouble With Islam Today, Manji has not taken the trouble of learning to speak, read and write Arabic fluently, nor of visiting any Muslim
country. She left Uganda at the age of 4 and has absolutely no experience of what it is like to live in a Muslim country. Would a scholar who has written a book about China without bothering to speak Chinese or visit the country be taken seriously?

Despite its careful sourcing, Manji's book is a narrow polemic, selectively citing events and anecdotes that fit one paradigm only: Muslim savagery, which of course is contrasted with Western enlightenment. Several of Manji's claims about the Arab world are based on articles translated by the nonprofit organization Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), which was founded by Col. Yigal Carmon, a twenty-two-year veteran of military intelligence in Israel with the goal of exploring the Middle East "through the region's media."

MEMRI focuses on the following areas: Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Jordan, Palestine, Persian Gulf, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon and Turkey. There are three general observations that can be made about MEMRI's work. One is that it consistently picks the most violent, hateful rubbish it can find, translates it and distributes it in e-mail newsletters to media and members of Congress in Washington. The second is that MEMRI does not translate comparable articles published in Israel, although the country is not only a part of the Middle East but an active party to some of its most searing conflicts. For instance, when the right-wing Israeli politician Effi Eitam referred to Israel's Palestinian citizens as a "cancer," MEMRI did not pick up this story. The third is that this organization is now the main source of media articles on the region of Islam, a far greater and far more diverse whole than the individual countries it lists. The reliance on MEMRI highlights Manji's lack of direct, unmediated exposure to the news media of the area about which she expresses such fierce convictions.

Equally troubling is Manji's unsubstantiated assertion that there is little dissent in Islam: "We Muslims have a lot of catching up to do in the dissent department." As it happens, earlier this year the Moroccan government took the commendable step of officially acknowledging that approximately 10,000 people had been put in prison, tortured or killed for political reasons between 1956 and 1999. (Human rights organizations caution that the number of victims may in fact have been much larger.) Their "crimes" ranged from wanting to overthrow the monarchy,to questioning official edicts, to simply handing out left-wing leaflets.

The problem isn't the lack of dissent. It is the lack of a context in which dissent is welcomed rather than repressed. This repression, furthermore, is tacitly supported by Western powers. The American government, in particular, is so pleased with Morocco's methods of repression that it allegedly "renders" some of its recalcitrant detainees there. The experience of Morocco with repression is not unique and can be seen in other countries in the region broadly defined as "Islam"--countries such as Syria, Algeria, Indonesia, Egypt and so on. To say that there is no dissent in Islam is simply absurd. The claim must be recognized for what it is: a different manifestation of the "silence of the native," which brings us back to the need for outside advocates and to the nifty excuse for outside interference into the affairs of sovereign states.

Unlike Hirsi Ali, however, Manji takes a much broader view about women in Islam. She places the question in the general context of civil rights in Islam. Here she focuses in particular on the status of minorities.

Manji maintains that as a civilization Islam has never treated minorities with respect, only with contempt. She does mention that during the golden age of Islam, Jews and Christians held significant positions within the empire. But, she says, this cannot cover for the systematic treatment of them as "different." In comparison, she argues, Israel has a far better record of treating its minorities. As evidence of this, she recounts a number of anecdotes from her visit to Israel. An Arab actress headlined a local production of My Fair Lady. Jews and Arabs alike take to the op-ed pages of newspapers like Ha'aretz to debate political issues. Religious literacy is part of military training for the armed forces. Street signs are labeled in Arabic, and Arabic is an official language of Israel. And she calls Israel's systematic discrimination against its Arab citizens a form of "affirmative action" for Jews.

To show how disingenuous this line of argument is, let's turn the situation around. Consider the case of the Jewish minority in Morocco.Jews have lived in the country for more than 2,000 years. Newspapers regularly carry news of the community's cultural and religious events. Jews and Muslims venerate the same saints. Serge Berdugo, a Jew, served as minister of tourism in the 1990s and is now an ambassador at large. André Azoulay, the current adviser to the king, is Jewish. So is
the country's most popular comedian, Gad El Maleh, and one of its most
celebrated novelists, Edmond Amran El Maleh. One could put together a
virtually endless list of these facts, but none of them would detract
from this other truth: Last year, a Pew Research Center poll showed that 88 percent of Moroccans have a negative view of Jews; as shameful as this figure is, any serious discussion of Morocco's Jewish minority would have to include it.

Meanwhile, in Israel, the Haifa-based Center Against Racism found that 68 percent of Jews polled revealed they were unwilling to live next to an Arab neighbor. Acknowledging anti-Semitism in some parts of the Arab world, therefore, should not require us to gloss over anti-Arab and anti-Muslim feelings in Israel. This reductionist way of thinking permeates The Trouble With Islam Today and
gets tiresome very quickly. When Manji argues that Arabs and Muslims must learn to think differently about their present, she writes, "liberal Muslims have to get vocal about this fact: Washington is the unrealized hope, not the lead criminal." For all her advocacy of new modes of thinking, she seems not to have entertained another
possibility: Washington can be both.

The Caged Virgin and The Trouble With Islam Today are billed as profound meditations on faith and searing critiques of Islam's treatment of women and minorities, but they are riddled with inaccuracies and generalizations. In their persistent conflating of religion, civilization, geographical region and very distinct cultures, these
books are more likely to obfuscate than educate.

None of this is to suggest that there are not serious issues facing Muslim women today. Still less does it mean that we should excuse violence and oppression, in some relativist fashion, because they happen to take place in the region broadly defined as "Islam." Those who believe in gender equality have every reason to be concerned about radical Islamist parties that view women as mere vessels, defined by their reproductive powers. These right-wing Islamist parties resist changes in civil codes that grant women more rights or, worse, want to impose antiquated and dangerous forms of Sharia. It is therefore particularly troubling that they have made electoral gains in Palestine, Iraq, Egypt, Morocco and elsewhere.

So now what? Where does this leave feminists of all stripes who genuinely care about the civil rights of their Muslim sisters? A good first step would be to stop treating Muslim women as a silent, helpless mass of undifferentiated beings who think alike and face identical problems, and instead to recognize that each country and each society has its own unique issues. A second would be to question and critically assess the well-intentioned but factually inaccurate books that often serve as the very basis for discussion. We need more dialogue and less polemic. A third would be to acknowledge that women--and men--in Muslim societies face problems of underdevelopment (chief among them illiteracy and poverty) and that tackling them would go a long way toward reducing inequities. As the colonial experience of the past century has proved, aligning with an agenda of war and domination will not result in the advancement of women's rights. On the contrary, such a top-down approach is bound to create a nationalist counterreaction that, as we have witnessed with Islamist parties, can be downright catastrophic. Rather, a bottom-up approach, where the many local, homegrown women's organizations are fully empowered stands a better chance in the long run. After all, isn't this how Western feminists made their own gains toward equality?

Muslim women are used as pawns by Islamist movements that make the control of women's lives a foundation of their retrograde agenda,and by Western governments that use them as an excuse for building empire. These women have become a politicized class, prevented by edicts and bombs from taking charge of their own destinies. The time
has come for the pawns to be queened.

Sunday, April 8, 2007

The World Gone Warped


Burqa-clad students gathered on the roof of a religious school in Islamabad to watch other students burn CDs and DVDs they deemed offensive.



Radical Pakistani Cleric Threatens Suicide Attacks in Capital
Aamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images


By SALMAN MASOOD
Published: April 7, 2007, New York Times

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, April 6 — A hard-line cleric said Friday that he was setting up a religious court here in the country’s capital, and threatened suicide attacks if the government did not enact Islamic law and close down brothels and video stores within a month.

The announcement was made during Friday Prayer by Maulana Mohammad Abdul Aziz, the head cleric of the Lal Mosque who is known for his extremist and anti-American views. Mr. Aziz and his allies have stirred a national debate with their drive to impose Taliban-style rule in the capital, prompting protests by human rights advocates and political parties.

Mr. Aziz’s remarks were the latest in a series of challenges by hard-line clerics to the authority of the president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, who is considered an ally of the United States and who has vowed to put Pakistan on the path to what he has called “enlightened moderation.”

“Pakistan was created for an Islamic system,” Mr. Aziz said. “But the government, instead of implementing an Islamic system, is threatening us with a police operation,” he said, referring to the government’s warnings of a raid if the clerics took the law into their own hands.

“Rulers, listen! Our last option will be suicide attacks,” Mr. Aziz said.

Some critics of the government say it has buckled under pressure from the clerics, emboldening them. Others charge that the government has allowed the clerics a free hand in order to divert attention from the constitutional crisis that has roiled Pakistan since last month, when General Musharraf removed the country’s chief justice, Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, who had taken on cases threatening the president’s authority.

Pakistan officials, who deny such speculation, say they are monitoring the cleric situation closely.

On Thursday, the Lal Mosque’s Web site was blocked. Last week, the government barred the transmission of an FM radio station set up by students at the mosque’s madrassa, or religious school.

“The setting up of such courts is tantamount to questioning the writ of the government,” Tariq Azeem Khan, the deputy state minister for information, said in an interview on Friday evening, referring to the cleric’s announcement. “We believe it is both illegal and un-Islamic. But we want to resolve the issue through dialogue.”

Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao, the country’s interior minister, echoed that sentiment as he spoke at a news conference on Friday. “The law will take its own course,” he said.

“What is the credibility of one man if he says he is going to enforce Shariah,” or Islamic law, Mr. Sherpao said. Most of the ulemas, or religious scholars, have distanced themselves from the Lal Mosque clerics, he said.

Mr. Aziz and his brother Abdul Rashid Ghazi have emerged as vociferous opponents of General Musharraf. Since January, hundreds of female students from Jamia Hafsa, a religious seminary for girls affiliated with the Lal Mosque, have occupied a public children’s library here and staged a sit-in to protest a government campaign to raze mosques built illegally on state-owned land. The government has balked at breaking up the library occupation, saying it fears a violent escalation.

Last week, female students from Jamia Hafsa kidnapped an alleged brothel owner from a neighborhood in Islamabad. The woman was released only after she gave a public confession.

Veiled students have also visited several video stores, urging their owners to close.

On Friday evening, dozens of students gathered in front of the mosque around a smoldering heap of Pakistani, Indian and English CDs and DVDs. “These are all dirty movies,” one said, claiming that they had been handed over to the students voluntarily by a local video store owner.

Owais Dar, 40, a video store owner in a nearby shopping mall, said he had not been approached by the madrassa students to close down his business, but that sales were already faltering. “People don’t feel that there is any law in the country,” he said.

*********************************************************************************

Anyone who thinks that people don't mix up religion with politics in order to achieve certain ends had better look at this story carefully. To threaten suicide attacks which will kill innocent people, totally prohibited in Islam, in order to establish an Islamic state, is the most warped logic I can think of. But it is also an expression of anger against a government that is undemocratic and uses force to suppress opposition. The more you oppress, the more people will react, including through equally oppressive undemocratic forces that think that religion is the only answer. Like Afghanistan, people initially welcomed the Taliban because they were sick and tired of the lack of law and order and solutions to their woes, especially economic ones. It was only later that they realised the true nature of the Taliban.

It is ironic that Pakistan is trying to put down these people within its own borders while at the same time supporting the Taliban in Afghanistan. Just goes to show, it's all politics, folks. Religion has nothing to do with it.

And with these types of stories, we expect the world to have a good impression of Islam?

Updates and Other News from the Road

Hi folks,

Thanks for all the kind tips on climbing Mount Kinabalu! Less than two weeks to go and I am still on the road. Just hoping I won't lose too much fitness and strength before the Big Climbing Day!!!

Being on the road means I miss out on many happenings back home. One of those was the meeting of bloggers to set up the National Alliance of Bloggers. Congrats to the office-bearers and Exco of the Pro-Tem committee! But I will be there on May 19 for the gathering being organised by Howsy and others. So see you there!

Also I am so sad to hear about the story about Yin. I really pray that they find him soon and hand him back to his parents, safe and sound. I think in the UK or the US, where there are a lot of missing children, the names and photos of the missing children are printed onto milk cartons so that everybody sees their faces every day and are therefore more likely to spot them if they happen to come upon them. We should find some way of doing the same. What the Malay Mail is doing is great, although perhaps all newspapers should do the same to get as much reach as possible. And what would be our equivalent of milk cartons, something we would all buy every day where we could print the information and most importantly the photo of the missing?

I hope the police are on to this search. If they find him, that might redeem them somewhat for the moment.Meantime we can all keep praying...

So There Is a Scientific Explanation for It...!



(Cartoon by Marcellus Hall)

The Rich Are More Oblivious Than You and Me


By RICHARD CONNIFF
Published: April 4, 2007, New York Times

Old Lyme, Conn.


THE other day at a Los Angeles race track, a comedian named Eddie Griffin took a meeting with a concrete barrier and left a borrowed bright-red $1.5 million Ferrari Enzo looking like bad origami. Just to be clear, this was a different bright-red $1.5 million Ferrari Enzo from the one a Swedish businessman crumpled up and threw away last year on the Pacific Coast Highway. I mention this only because it’s easy to get confused by the vast and highly repetitious category “Rich and Famous People Acting Like Total Idiots.” Mr. Griffin walked away uninjured, and everybody offered wise counsel about how this wasn’t really such a bad day after all.

So what exactly constitutes a bad day in this rarefied little world? Did the casino owner Steve Wynn cross the mark when he put his elbow through a Picasso he was about to sell for $139 million? Did Mel (“I Own Malibu”) Gibson sense bad-day emanations when he started on a bigoted tirade while seated drunk in the back of a sheriff’s car? And if dumb stuff like this comes so easy to these people, how is it that they’re the ones with all the money?

Modern science has the answer, with a little help from the poet Hilaire Belloc.

Let’s begin with what I call the “Cookie Monster Experiment,” devised to test the hypothesis that power makes people stupid and insensitive — or, as the scientists at the University of California at Berkeley put it, “disinhibited.”

Researchers led by the psychologist Dacher Keltner took groups of three ordinary volunteers and randomly put one of them in charge. Each trio had a half-hour to work through a boring social survey. Then a researcher came in and left a plateful of precisely five cookies. Care to guess which volunteer typically grabbed an extra cookie? The volunteer who had randomly been assigned the power role was also more likely to eat it with his mouth open, spew crumbs on partners and get cookie detritus on his face and on the table.

It reminded the researchers of powerful people they had known in real life. One of them, for instance, had attended meetings with a magazine mogul who ate raw onions and slugged vodka from the bottle, but failed to share these amuse-bouches with his guests. Another had been through an oral exam for his doctorate at which one faculty member not only picked his ear wax, but held it up to dandle lovingly in the light.

As stupid behaviors go, none of this is in a class with slamming somebody else’s Ferrari into a concrete wall. But science advances by tiny steps.

The researchers went on to theorize that getting power causes people to focus so keenly on the potential rewards, like money, sex, public acclaim or an extra chocolate-chip cookie — not necessarily in that order, or frankly, any order at all, but preferably all at once — that they become oblivious to the people around them.

Indeed, the people around them may abet this process, since they are often subordinates intent on keeping the boss happy. So for the boss, it starts to look like a world in which the traffic lights are always green (and damn the pedestrians). Professor Keltner and his fellow researchers describe it as an instance of “approach/inhibition theory” in action: As power increases, it fires up the behavioral approach system and shuts down behavioral inhibition.

And thus the Fast Forward Personality is born and put on the path to the concrete barrier.

The corollary is that as the rich and powerful increasingly focus on potential rewards, powerless types notice the likely costs and become more inhibited. I happen to know the feeling because I once had my own Los Angeles Ferrari experience. It was a bright-red F355 Spider (and with a mere $150,000 sticker price, not exactly top shelf), which I rented for a television documentary about rich people. It came with a $10,000 deductible, and the first time I drove it into a Bel-Air estate, the low-slung front end hit the apron of the driveway with a horrible grating sound that caused my soul to shrink. I proceeded up the driveway at five miles an hour, and everyone in sight turned away thinking, “Rental.”

The bottom line: Without power, people tend to play it safe. Given power, even you and I would soon end up living large and acting like idiots. So pity the rich — and protect yourself. This is where Hilaire Belloc comes in.

He once wrote a poem about a Lord Finchley, who “tried to mend the Electric Light/Himself. It struck him dead: And serve him right!” Belloc wasn’t tiresomely suggesting that the gentry all deserve a first-hand acquaintance with the third rail, as it were, but merely that they would be smart to depend on hired help. In social psychology terms, disinhibited Fast Forward types need ordinary cautious mortals to remind them that the traffic lights do in fact occasionally turn yellow or even, sometimes, red.

So, Eddie Griffin: next time you borrow a pal’s car, borrow his driver, too. The world will be a safer place for the rest of us.

Richard Conniff is the author of “The Natural History of the Rich.”

********************************************************************************

I thought this was an interesting article although the author doesn't seem to have any place for people's upbringing and values as a reason for their behaviour. Not all rich people are idiots and uncaring. George Soros and Bill Gates have given a lot to charity, health programmes etc. So what makes the difference between rich people who behave like idiots and those who don't? Is it their parents and upbringing? Is it education? Is it religion? Obviously some people have some core values that stay with them throughout their lives no matter what ther circumstances, while others don't. What exactly makes that difference?

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

The Frog and the Blog


Here I am in faraway Sri Lanka and I get to hear this before anyone else. A little bird called me up and told me that Deputy Minister for Energy, Water and Communications, Dato' Shaziman Abu Mansor (pic above), has suggested that all local bloggers be registered with his Ministry before they can be allowed to blog. My Sri Lankan AIDS colleagues thought I was mentally differently-abled when I started to laugh and splutter at the same time. Oh my, oh my, is this why the Ministry website is KTAK.gov.my? Because they are Katak Bawah Tempurung? Do they even understand how blogs work? Any time today, any number of the 11 million Internet users in Malaysia can register with Blogger or Wordpress or any of the blogging websites and there is nothing they can do about it. None of them need to ask permission to blog of anyone. This is why blogs are popular.

But the KTAK tries. Last August, there was this report:


Thursday, August 03, 2006
No censorship of Internet, says Lim

But Bloggers can be charged


By Hamidah Atan
New Straits Times

There will be no censorship of the Internet but bloggers are not above the law for what they publish in cyberspace.

Energy, Water and Communications Minister Datuk Seri Dr Lim Keng Yaik said action would be taken against those who disrupt peace and harmony through their postings.

He said there was no censorship of the Internet as promised in the Bill of Guarantee with the Multimedia Super Corridor "but if any bloggers go against the law of the country, they can be charged, whether under criminal law, sedition or whatever law it is".

He said it would be difficult for the Government to take action against foreign bloggers but it would not be a problem against local bloggers.


"We will also take action against those who spread rumours or malicious materials via the SMS.
(Tho I think they have shied away from doing this when it comes to prominent religious persons...)
"Once registration for mobile pre-paid numbers is completed, we will start monitoring.

"You have to keep to the law of the country.

"Local bloggers must control the contents of their blogs and be responsible. If the contents are seditious, they will have to face the music."

He said the law applied to all bloggers irrespective of their standing in society.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said such activities could affect peace and harmony in the country.

They could also make the people, including investors, lose faith in the economy and development programmes.

Abdullah said the Government could not allow the Internet or Short Messaging Service to become a platform for people to spread rumours or threaten others.

He said the type of liberty found in the blogs and websites had exceeded the freedom given to the Malaysian media.
(well, duh...)
He was responding to Information Minister Datuk Zainuddin Maidin’s call for control over the Internet.

Dr Lim said he explained to the Cabinet on the types of action that could be taken against local bloggers.

"The explanation was detailed and the PM left it to me to handle the matter with other ministries."

*******************************************************************************

It's now almost exactly eight months since that report and the best they can come up with is that bloggers must register with the Ministry?

Americans are NOT stupid (subtitled)

A friend sent me this little video. I found it very funny, until I suddenly thought: what if we asked the same questions of Malaysians? How different would their answers be?

Monday, April 2, 2007

On the Road again...

Hi folks, I am dashing this off just before I catch a flight to Sri Lanka again. Was in Bali and Jakarta last week, this week in Colombo and next week in Australia. Phew! So may be a little slow in posting and also in moderating your comments. Also the reason why I could not turn up at Denmark House today to support Rocky but am sure those who can be there will be there.

When I get back from Australia mid-April, I am then off on my big adventure this year which is to climb Mt Kinabalu! Not unique or original I know but it's my one small contribution to our Golden Jubilee/Visit Malaysia Year 2007. Ten of us are going up over the weekend of April 21-22, some with experience and most with not. I'm the second oldest in the group, next to hubby, but hopefully can keep up with the rest. Been training like mad but people tell me it's a cinch. I sure hope so but wish me luck anyway!

But will try and check out what's been happening back home and if possible, will post comments from afar.

Cheers!