Islam's Hijackers and Hijackees

· Friday, January 7, 2011

For years we've been hearing about how the peaceful religion of Islam has been hijacked by extremists.

What if it's the other way around? Worse, what if the peaceful hijackers are losing their bid to take over the religion?

That certainly seems to be the case in Pakistan.

Salman Taseer, a popular Pakistani governor, was assassinated this week because he was critical of Pakistan's blasphemy law.

Specifically, Taseer was supportive of a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, who has been sentenced to death for "insulting Muhammad."

Bibi had offered some fellow farm laborers some water. They refused to drink it because Christian hands apparently make water unclean. An argument followed. She defended her faith, which they took as synonymous with attacking theirs. Later, she says, a mob of her accusers raped her.

Naturally, a Pakistani judge sentenced her to hang for blasphemy.

And Governor Taseer, who bravely visited her and sympathized with her plight, had 40 bullets pumped into him by one of his own bodyguards.

"Salmaan Taseer is a blasphemer and this is the punishment for a blasphemer," Malik Mumtaz Hussain Qadri said to the television cameras even as he was being arrested.

Now, so far, it's hard to say who is the hijacker and who is the hijackee. After all, Taseer the moderate was a prominent politician, Qadri a mere bodyguard.

A reasonable person might look at this tragic situation and say it is indeed proof of extremists trying to hijack the religion and the country.

Except, it was Taseer who wanted to change the status quo and Qadri who wanted to protect it. Pakistan's blasphemy laws have been on the books for decades, and while judicial death sentences for blasphemy are rare, the police and security forces have been enforcing it unilaterally for years.

And what of the reaction to the assassination?

Many columnists and commentators denounced the murder, but the public's reaction was often celebratory. A Facebook fan page for Qadri had to be taken down even as it was drawing thousands of followers.

And what of the country's official guardians of the faith?

A group of more than 500 leading Muslim scholars, representing what the Associated Press describes a "moderate school of Islam" and the British Guardian calls the "mainstream religious organizations" in Pakistan not only celebrated the murder, but warned that no Muslim should mourn Taseer's murder or pray for him.

They even went so far as to warn government officials and journalists that the "supporter is as equally guilty as one who committed blasphemy," and so therefore they should all take "a lesson from the exemplary death" of Salman Taseer.

If that's what counts for religious moderation in Pakistan, I think it's a little late to be talking about extremists hijacking the religion. The religion has long since been hijacked, and it's now moving on to even bigger things.

Pakistan is a special case, but it is hardly a unique one. In Egypt, Coptic Christians were recently slaughtered in an Islamist terrorist attack. The Egyptian government, which has a long record of brutalizing and killing its own Christian minority, was sufficiently embarrassed by the competition from non-governmental Islamists that it is now offering protection. How long that will last is anyone's guess.

But Pakistan is special because it has nuclear weapons and is inextricably bound up in the war in neighboring Afghanistan and the larger war on terror. U.S. relations with the Pakistani military remain strong, but as we've seen with Turkey, good relations with a military don't make up for losing support from an allied government as it goes Islamist. And it seems unlikely that a government can long stay secular when the people want it to become ever more Islamist.

Sadanand Dhume, a Wall Street Journal columnist (and my colleague at the American Enterprise Institute), writes that even "relatively secular-minded Pakistanis are an endangered species."

While most of the enlightened chatters remain mute or incoherent as they struggle for a way to blame Israel for all of this, the question becomes all the more pressing: How do we deal with a movement or a nation that refuses to abide by the expiring cliché "Islam means peace"?

(C) 2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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Comments

Hard Thought

A fanatic is someone that when presented with evidence that their beliefs are wrong thinks that if they just believe more and harder then their beliefs will be justified. Murdering people that don't share their beliefs becomes justified.

Islamists and liberal progressives both suffer from this delusion.

Posted January 7, 2011 at 2:21:11 AM


Anton D Rehling

First the argument that Islam is being high jacked by extremist shows a pure lack of understanding of how and from whom Islam sprang. In spite of any argument to the contrary Islam sprang from the Warlord Mohamed who declared himself a prophet of the Greatest of the Gods. The greatest of those gods was Allah AKA moon god. The expansion of his followers was by the sword, accept or die. Other principles of expansion were adopted such as deception i.e.…. we are a religion of peace.

That is where we find ourselves today, deceived by the followers of Islam’s claim that they are a religion of peace and extremist have high jacked their peaceful religion. If in fact we all saw the followers of Islam to be what they are, do you think we would view Islamic immigration as anything less than an invasion to build numbers for possession and conversion?

Posted January 7, 2011 at 9:37:43 AM


karl anglin

We build too many walls

and not enough bridges.

---Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)

Posted January 7, 2011 at 12:32:41 PM


Red Baker

We should all study Islam to see what it really is, what its aims are. They are either at your feet or at your throat. It is logical to conclude that Islam is inherently genocidal, its aim is to conquer and convert or kill all who are different. The only limitation is their capability.

Posted January 7, 2011 at 12:46:06 PM


Tex Horn

Amen, Red Baker.

Posted January 7, 2011 at 2:03:20 PM


Chris

Too bad Pervez Musharraf ain't still in power. With regards to Islam, I once started reading the Koran and by the first couple sentences I could see that the peace they are talking about when they say Islam is a religion of peace is after the only people left alive on earth are Muslim. That's if they follow the Koran to the letter. I do have a couple friends who are Muslim, and from what they say, I believe they take some of it with a grain of salt.

Posted January 7, 2011 at 2:49:06 PM


Abu Nudnik

"We build too many walls and not enough bridges." -Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)

Good thing Newton wasn't an engineer: a bridge is a wall: When one drives on top of a wall it's called a bridge.

Good thing Newton wasn't a military strategist. Dante let his opponents breach the wall after disarming his party. Result? Massacre, banishment and, on the plus side, a great poetic trilogy. Ditto the Trojans.

Newman was a pretty good physicist though.

Posted January 7, 2011 at 5:50:28 PM


Richard Ryan

Some Muslims may take some of the Koran with a grain of salt, but I remember that precious few of them condemned 9/11 while most of the Muslim world was celebrating and shooting their guns in the air like a bunch of infantile six-year olds.

Richard Ryan

Posted January 7, 2011 at 8:06:36 PM


Bernie

Great article and really great comments. First remember that Sir Isaac Newton was a born again Christian and an expert on the Book of Revelation. I'm sure he saw how the 12th Iman or Mahadi in the Koran matches so well with the AntiChrist of the Bible. Could it be??? Islam is more than a religion as it is a complete way of life with civil controls and laws which govern. Seems in its darkest days Christianity was the same. Of coarse those of us who claim to be Christians and follow the teachings of our Messiah (The Living Word),are taught to love our enemies. I don't think that is found in the Koran. My love and prayers to the G-d of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob whose Son is the Messiah and L-rd Yashua, go out to all Muslims but not to their teachings or their sacred book of evil.

Posted January 10, 2011 at 3:56:56 PM


Rick

Islam is a religion of peace only toward Muslims. Everyone else falls in the "enemy of Islam" category. Islam gives its enemies no peace.

Posted January 10, 2011 at 7:52:49 PM


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