Rudyard Kipling"
“When you're left wounded on Afganistan's plains and
the women come out to cut up what remains, Just roll to your rifle
and blow out your brains,
And go to your God like a soldier”
General Douglas MacArthur"
“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”
“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.” “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”
“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .” “The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
“Nobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
The Soldier stood and faced God
Which must always come to pass
He hoped his shoes were shining
Just as bright as his brass
"Step forward you Soldier,
How shall I deal with you?
Have you always turned the other cheek?
To My Church have you been true?"
"No, Lord, I guess I ain't
Because those of us who carry guns
Can't always be a saint."
I've had to work on Sundays
And at times my talk was tough,
And sometimes I've been violent,
Because the world is awfully rough.
But, I never took a penny
That wasn't mine to keep.
Though I worked a lot of overtime
When the bills got just too steep,
The Soldier squared his shoulders and said
And I never passed a cry for help
Though at times I shook with fear,
And sometimes, God forgive me,
I've wept unmanly tears.
I know I don't deserve a place
Among the people here.
They never wanted me around
Except to calm their fears.
If you've a place for me here,
Lord, It needn't be so grand,
I never expected or had too much,
But if you don't, I'll understand."
There was silence all around the throne
Where the saints had often trod
As the Soldier waited quietly,
For the judgment of his God.
"Step forward now, you Soldier,
You've borne your burden well.
Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,
You've done your time in Hell."
The
questions rational Malaysians have to ask is what does Madani want to
do with Najib? We have to ask this as no Madani member has said that
Najib getting his house arrest or even a full pardon is a calamitous
thing.
The only folk playing it somewhat straight is Umno. For the
most part, they want Najib to walk or at least walk around his house.
The
worst thing about this hiding is that it gives legitimacy to a whole
range of voices who only have mala fide intentions to the idea of a
secular and democratic Malaysia.
Zahid the saviour?
Khairy Jamaluddin was right in that there was an intention to hide this addendum for whatever reasons.
The
former Umno man was right when he claimed that there was a conspiracy
in Madani to keep Najib in jail or that some people in Umno want to keep
Najib in jail.
He was also right to claim that party chief Ahmad
Zahid Hamidi wants to be a saviour but a saviour to who exactly, Khairy
is unsure.
I
hate even writing this, but as a former minister, Khairy is right again
when he questioned the believability of the legal apparatus of the
government claiming that it did not know about this addendum’s
existence.
Bridget Welsh, one of the best hands when it comes to Malaysian politics, reminds us in her opinion piece “Partial pardon poison” that with Najib staying behind bars, Zahid’s position as Umno president remains secure.
“He
(Zahid) is the only clear winner of the partial pardon decision. He can
claim some leniency was gained through pressure, but does not have to
fear displacement - at least for now.”
The
“for now” part, at least, is urgent now. Mind you, the reduced sentence
was merely the tenderising process and I am sure Najib will get his
get-out-of-jail card eventually or at the very least his house arrest,
which for Malaysia and a man of his resources, means the same thing.
His acolytes in Umno are already plotting their next move, and no doubt the rakyat would be subjected to another “sandiwara” (show) very soon.
Rakyat’s trust eroding, kleptocrats gettingaway
With
the way Madani operates, I am sure that the only people who will
benefit from this are the illiberal forces of this country.
All
the prime minister has done with this issue and the high-profile
corruption cases is to muddy the waters. And rational Malaysians have to
wonder why.
Indeed, when a convict – this would be the former prime minister – uses the current premier’s words as a point for his political persecution defence, you know you are in Madaniville.
“I
believe Anwar’s recent remarks on flaws in the prosecutorial process
strongly validate my longstanding concerns about the legal proceedings
against me.
“For six years, I have maintained that these
proceedings exemplify rushed and flawed prosecutions,” Najib told the
court last week during the defence stage of his RM2.27 billion 1MDB
corruption trial.
In justifying the dismissal not amounting to acquittal (DNAA)
for Zahid’s corruption case linked to millions of ringgit from Yayasan
Akalbudi, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim advanced the narrative that this
was partly a political persecution by former prime minister Dr Mahathir
Mohamad.
The fact that Zahid, Najib, and every other alleged
kleptocrat said the same thing points to the narrative that is being
shaped by the mainstream political establishment when it comes to how it
deals with kleptocrats.
Of course, when Anwar made those remarks,
which occurred when Najib’s wife Rosmah Mansor was acquitted of money
laundering charges, he said - “Why (ask me about Rosmah’s case outcome)?
Do you want me to interfere in the judicial process? I have my personal
view and I have my personal reasons, whether I like it or dislike it.
“But we have to talk about judicial independence. How do you want judicial independence?"
How do I want my judicial independence? Well done, of course. But this has nothing to do with judicial independence.
Indeed
when it comes to this addendum no matter what the prime minister says,
there were operatives in the justice system who knew of this addendum
and they all kept their mouths shut hiding the truth from the rakyat.
This is a pattern when it comes to the justice apparatus in Madani.
As former MACC chief Latheefa Koya,
who belled the cat in the Zahid case, reminded us - “Stop trying to
fool the people by repeating endlessly that Zahid’s DNAA was the court’s
decision.
“Article 145(3) is clear, the court had no choice in the matter. So don’t blame the court.”
Former Bersih chairperson Ambiga Sreenevasan’s public statements in the Zahid case were prophetic.
“We saw the evidence. The judge found a prima facie case.
“You insult our intelligence and the judge for pursuing this line of argument.
“Don’t defend the indefensible and then talk about reform,” the lawyer said.
This
is another self-inflicted wound that the men from Madani have
engineered. What the prime minister has done is cast a shadow over every
operative in his administration, but worst of all, he has given the
PAS-led Perikatan Nasional a new narrative to hang their hat on.
Now
we know why all these laws restricting free speech are in play. This is
not about the opposition’s hypocrisy. Any rational person knows they
are mendacious and hypocritical.
This is about how people can trust the good ship Madani and the person steering it.
The curse of being a Malaysian PM By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Malaysiakini : The king and his royal brothers are there to protect the interests of
the rakyat. So, why is Najib driving a wedge between the rakyat and the
royals?
Some people claim that the Madani government has acted as
if it has been muzzled, and badly mismanaged the royal addendum saga,
thus enabling Najib to crow non-stop about his house arrest. The
administration must work harder to bolster its image before the rakyat
is further disillusioned.
Members of the opposition are taking
full advantage of Najib gloating in public about his royal addendum and
house arrest. Will the Madani administration stop them from undermining
the government?
Like night follows day, many Malaysians fear that a
full pardon will possibly follow the move to allow a house arrest. They
strongly believe this will happen especially after the unexpected
reduction in his sentence.
Najib has been through three courts. The High Court, the Appeals Court, and the Federal Court. He was tried by nine judges. The apology which he offered, years after his sentencing, was made almost as an afterthought and sounded most insincere.
The
rakyat was shocked by last year’s reduction in his sentence and the
discounted fine. They worry about the two-tiered system of justice in
the nation. They compare people who were jailed after stealing food to
feed their families with Najib who stole billions of ringgit, not to
feed his family, but to satisfy his and his family’s greed.
We are aware that when the Pardons Boards
for the various states meet and consider the appeals of prisoners,
their decisions are not announced in the media. The Minister in the
Prime Minister’s Department (Federal Territories) Dr Zaliha Mustafa has
confirmed that decisions are never made public as they are confidential.
We
also understand, perhaps rightly or wrongly, that when prisoner appeals
are submitted to the Pardons Board, the applicants would naturally be
told whether their appeals have either been denied or approved.
However,
Najib’s appeal is mired in controversy. If he was given house arrest or
a pardon, the whole nation would be horrified. The reduction in his
sentence and discount for his fines has already angered us.
Why
are the authorities lenient with Najib? He dominates the media at a
time when we want to hear Putrajaya discuss important things about
Malaysia, like the protection of children and young women, ways to
combat rising crime, the failures and corruption of Puspakom
which we’ve known about for decades, the environmental degradation,
flood mitigation measures, the healthcare system, and cost of living
crisis.
Master manipulator
Don’t ignore
Najib’s seven-minute video which he made a week after his conviction. He
claimed that the SRC International money had been used for Umno-Baru’s
“welfare programmes” and “corporate social responsibility” (CSR)
initiatives for orphans. Apparently, none had been used for himself.
Well, he would say that, wouldn’t he? Prisons are full of people who claim to be innocent.
These
welfare programmes were not mentioned during his trial, the witnesses
failed to mention these welfare programmes, and he omitted to mention
the orphans.
Najib is not just a common thief who stole the
rakyat’s money, he is also a liar and a desperate one, who is still
trying to convince his gullible supporters, that he is innocent of all
the charges.
He
is a convicted felon and he should be left to serve his sentence. He
should not be allowed house arrest or further reductions of his fine and
sentencing.
On the day Najib was convicted of all seven charges,
for abuse of power, money laundering, and criminal breach of trust, a
succession of Umno-Baru leaders expressed their sympathy for the
convicted criminal.
Where was their sympathy for the rakyat?
Despite
overwhelming evidence from overseas supplied by governments and
financial institutions, Najib continued to be economical with the truth
about 1MDB.
Najib appears to wield more power now than some
ministers in Putrajaya. He is a master manipulator and good at
controlling people.
The Madani administration should stop him from issuing statements from Kajang.
DAP should quit kowtowing to extremists By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, January 06, 2025
Malaysiakini : So it is better for these Malays to think of DAP as whipping boys
rather than a political party that opposes a theocratic state because
God knows, nobody wants to spook the Malays.
These recent attacks
by Akmal and the “Green Wave” were humiliating and extreme, but what was
made clear was that DAP could not rely on the Madani establishment to
counter the extreme attacks of the religious far right.
When Kok
was embroiled in the halal certificate fiasco, what did the prime
minister, the one that DAP would sacrifice anything for, say?
"There
is a problem... regulations are necessary so that Muslims do not feel
apprehensive. But if she (Kok) feels that the regulations are not
necessary in a certain area, discuss it properly," Anwar had said when
Kok raised the matter.
Keep in mind that Kok was only responding to public statements from the religious head of the prime minister’s cabinet.
The
fact that Kok is still under investigation is further evidence that any
kind of dissent concerning a religious policy which affects non-Muslims
would involve state security intervention.
‘Sinofsecularism’
Meanwhile, PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang is linking DAP to the scourge of secularism. Oh, how I wish DAP defended secular principles as enthusiastically as they bend over for Madani.
I
would use this platform to defend nearly everything it says and do. It
is not as if DAP has not touted its secular pedigree when it suited its
purposes.
Loke had previously said that his party need not drop the secular nation agenda and its slogan “Malaysian Malaysia” merely to reap support from other ethnic groups.
“Before forming the unity government, all parties agreed not to touch on each party’s principles and constitutions,” he added.
Muftibillperfect test
The
Federal Territories Mufti Bill, a bill which would radically change the
power dynamics between secular and religious law of this country, is
still in play.
This would be the perfect opportunity to test DAP’s
commitment to secularism. DAP not only has to object to this bill but
this should not come as a surprise to its coalition partners because
everyone knows where DAP stands on the issue of separation between
mosque and state, right?
The state wants its non-Muslim partners
to be complicit in the formation of religious laws. Why? Because it not
only gives a fig leaf of democratic legitimacy but also demonstrates
religious and racial superiority over its partners.
Any kind of religious law - no matter the religion - is, in reality, a suicide pact.
Death of free speech
Remember
that DAP supported the death of free speech - albeit in a most cowardly
fashion - seeing as how the Communications and Multimedia Act
amendments were pushed through.
DAP and Harapan would have virulently opposed these amendments if they had been done by PN.
Madani has gift-wrapped a set of legal but oppressive tools for the “Green Wave”.
Where does this leave rational Malaysians? Nowhere good.
You
see there is no trade-off. If Madani could point to policies in
education, healthcare and social services which were egalitarian and
utilitarian, then rational people would have no choice but to ignore
these political moves by the Madani elites as the price of doing
business.
“Those
who wanted a different government from that of Umno now have the same
party and practices in power, with Anwar providing the means for the
party’s leaders and their family members to be rehabilitated, including
through taxpayer-funded patronage,” she said.
Easysurfing for ‘Green Wave’
We
are always told that if it was not a Madani government, then we would
have to accept the “Green Wave”. I say why make the “Green Wave’s” job
easier? Why lay the foundation in terms of policy and governmental
procedure, or lack of it, for the “Green Wave”?
A good example of this gaslighting is Howard Lee’s latest piece about PAS’ “derhaka” (treason).
The
hypocritical and mendacious PN has demonstrated that it is willing to
slay Malay establishment sacred cows to gain political power.
However,
the greatest threat to the non-Malay community came from within this
unity government when the Umno youth leader inflamed the KK Mart issue,
which caused domestic terrorist attacks against the convenience store
chain. Not to mention, the founders of KK Mart were humiliated and
dragged through the court system.
The grand old man of Malaysian politics, Lim Kit Saing, said in a recent speech, that we should learn from life experiences, I concur. DAP shouldn't play the victim card if they are willingly a punching bag for the illiberal forces.
Let us look at the three
points raised by PAS when it comes to the National Fatwa Council and
keep in mind that this is supposed to affect Muslims only but more
importantly, these are guidelines.
Point 1: Symbols and elements that contradict Islamic beliefs such as symbols of other religions and religious songs.
This
would mean there are no religious symbols of non-Muslims in
PAS/Perikatan Nasional-controlled states. If these guidelines are
followed by PAS/PN, this would mean any non-Islamic religious symbol
anywhere would be an affront to Islam.
Is PAS really claiming
this? This would also mean that anyone wearing a cross or any kind of
religious iconography around Muslims would be in violation of this
guideline.
Point 2: Holding such celebrations at government premises and involving Muslim staff.
Is
there a legal provision and not merely a guideline for this? Are
non-Muslim government employees banned from holding any kind of
celebration or activity on government premises?
PAS cites a
religious guideline but is the minister contravening any laws? This is
an extremely important point and perhaps one that Madani should address.
Point 3: Causing unrest among Muslims and affecting national harmony.
Who
is causing unrest? The Muslims who participated in the carolling? So
this would mean that any time Muslims celebrate any kind of religious or
cultural festival with non-Muslims this would cause unrest and affect
national harmony.
Really? So all this time, when prime ministers,
royalty, and politicians who held open houses in their personal
residences or government offices for non-Muslim festivities, were
affecting national harmony?
Celebrating non-Islam religions
Kepong MP Lim Lip Eng has the right of it when he says
- “If PAS is truly serious about this issue, they should clarify
whether they also intend to ban official Deepavali celebrations for the
Indian community, Gong Xi Fa Cai for the Chinese community, or Kaamatan
and Gawai festivals in Sabah and Sarawak, which are organised by
government agencies.”
As for Section 298A of the Penal Code, what
exactly was the minister’s blasphemous act which insulted a religion?
What exactly did the minister say or do which insulted a religion?
By
merely celebrating or acknowledging a religion other than Islam, is
that blasphemous? Maybe to PAS and perhaps to Madani if the minister is
investigated on this charge.
So this would mean that any time
anyone acknowledges another religion other than Islam, no matter the
context, it would be considered blasphemous?
What is important to
remember here is this. Non-Muslims are constantly told that Islamic law
will not affect us. We are constantly told to mind our own business and
not to interfere when it comes to Islamic law.
PAS and perhaps
Madani by its silence have demonstrated that this is a complete lie.
What PAS is attempting to do, is destroy a DAP politician by claiming
that even when he is doing his job as a minister and politician and
promoting the diversity of this country, it is an affront to Islam.
This
is made worse by the fact that the prime minister of this federal
government is yet again leaving a non-Muslim member of his cabinet out
to dry.
With friends like this the government, who needs enemies?
To quote Suhakam on the public caning of a repeat khalwat
offender in Terengganu - “Punishments that inflict physical violence
and public humiliation have no place in a modern justice system.
“They
undermine Malaysia’s commitments to human rights, tarnish its legal
integrity and erode the dignity of individuals - a value upheld by all
religions, including Islam.”
As someone who is against state caning, the issue here is not about this form of punishment but rather PAS’ intent.
What is PAS’s intention when it comes to this public form of barbarity? It intends to instil fear into the Muslim community.
You
will not see hands being chopped off for corruption or high-ranking
factotums or their hangers-on being whipped for this sort of thing.
Instead, you will see the average Joe rakyat who most probably voted for them bearing the brunt of these forms of punishment.
This
was pure, unadulterated hypocrisy, not to mention the mendacity of the
PAS political apparatus, and PAS is essentially thumbing its nose to the
secular and constitutional guardrails of this country.
The fact that Madani was completely silent on the matter indicates how much the federal government fears the “Green Wave”.
With the Perlis mufti
and his fait accompli announcements, we witnessed the agitations within
the religious establishment, which is characteristic of theocracies.
PAS
is demonstrating that while it will sustain the elites and the scores
of apparatchiks within its theocracy, average Muslims will feel the
harsh glare of their atavistic religion on their backs.
CMA amendments
What the government hopes to do with amendments to the Communications and Multimedia Act (CMA) is to attempt to regulate the flow of information.
Why? Because the state understands that the opposition has a far better grasp of social media tactics than it does.
Keep
in mind that for most of the denizens in the corridors of power in
Madaniville, freedom of speech was of paramount importance to get their
message across when they were out of power.
Now, because of their inability or unwillingness to execute reforms, they resort to "shooting the messenger" type tactics.
Ultimately,
what the Madani regime is doing is building more dictatorial
foundations for the theocratic state to further build on.
To be
honest, I don’t think even Perikatan Nasional would have come up with
such a gambit because they understand that there are enough dictatorial
tools in the box to handle dissent.
Mufti bill
Together with the amendments to the Syariah Courts (Criminal Jurisdiction) Act (Act 355), the Federal Territories Mufti Bill
only consolidates power with the religious class, which includes PAS
and the far religious elements in all mainstream political parties and
further diminishes the influence of the supposedly secular DAP.
If Madani assumes that it would control the religious message by passing these bills, it is sorely mistaken.
The far religious right has demonstrated that they are willing to slay sacred cows in their quest for dominance.
Over
the decades, ever since these types of bills were proposed, the
religious far right, the deep Islamic state and culture war warriors
have been pushing for these amendments as an amelioration of secular
democratic first principles.
The narrative that religious laws will not affect non-Muslims
is merely a talking point. No government will ever give this talking
point legal effect. Indeed, no political coalition will ever guarantee
that religious laws will not affect non-Muslims.
Why? Because
those who advocate for these kinds of laws understand that religious
laws influence and erode democratic guardrails and the purpose of such
laws is dominion over everyone, believer and non-believer.
Rogue cops blamed for forced disappearances
Rational
Malaysians have to decide - is the state’s narrative that the
disappearance of Pastor Raymond Koh and Amri Che Mat the work of rogue police officers, or was there something more sinister at play?
Who
had the power, if this allegation is true, to order a tactical squad to
kidnap Malaysians for whatever reasons? Who had the authority to issue
such commands, and who felt secure enough that their crime would go
unsanctioned by any elected government?
Who had the political
influence to concoct such a manoeuvre that bypassed the traditional
state security apparatus and mete out whatever fate befell these people?
Make
no mistake, the answers to these questions would offer no relief and
would most probably demonstrate either how the political apparatus has
lost control of the religious bureaucracy or how the two are no longer
mutually exclusive.
Whoever these people are, they are confident
that the narratives of the state security apparatus would shield them
from whatever repercussions or sanctions of the Madani regime.
The enemy has always been within.
KK Mart socksfiasco
When Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh told his friends at KK Mart to find another business,
you have to ask yourself why he didn’t care about “the livelihood of
workers - most of whom are Malay Muslims” that Mydin hypermarket boss
head Ameer Ali Mydin thinks would be in jeopardy if Akmal continued with his reckless religious agenda.
You have to ask yourself why Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan would write a piece warning people not to be sympathetic to KK Mart and its vendor by describing the former’s business practices as “questionable”.
And
what did the prime minister think of Umno wanting to destroy a viable
business which hires many Malay Muslims? Did he really think that Umno, a
partner in his government, acting this way was going to burnish his
racial and religious credentials?
Mohamad is right about one thing. Malaysia is at a pivotal juncture.
Ushering in the new year, I leave readers with this:
“The
object of a new year is not that we should have a new year. It is that
we should have a new soul and a new nose, new feet, a new backbone, new
ears, and new eyes.”
Communications Minister Fahmi
Fadzil has a history of distorting the truth and deflecting blame to the
press when the mandarins of his party are in trouble.
Even when he was the communications officer for PKR, Fahmi (above) had no problem playing heavy and causing confusion amongst Pakatan Harapan allies.
Take for instance in 2016, DAP’s Syerleena Abdul Rashid had to publicly correct Fahmi about the Kajang Move.
Remember when Fahmi blamed the media for spreading stories about the supposedly non-existent feud between Anwar Ibrahim and Azmin Ali?
“That
is something portrayed by the media. I understand that there could be a
perception of such, but the reality is, there are no camps. What we
have now is a PKR that is strong and united.”
I
have no idea if Fahmi really believes what he says but what I do know
is that one of the more important ministries, which could be an asset to
this government, is becoming a liability under Fahmi’s watch.
Teoh Beng Hock’s family
By
visiting Teoh’s family, Anwar legitimised their grievances against the
state, which is a good thing. However, it remains to be seen if the
visit was part of a sandiwara (charade) to manage public perception.
Keep in mind that the Court of Appeal
has ruled that - “The death of Teoh was caused by multiple injuries
from a fall from the 14th floor of Plaza Masalam as a result of or which
was accelerated by an unlawful act or acts of persons unknown,
inclusive of the MACC officers who were involved in the arrest and
investigations of the deceased.”
I
hope that Teoh is the reckoning the MACC deserves but the question is,
will the Madani state dare spook the security establishment?
M Indira Gandhi
At
this point in time, this has become more than just how the state is
endorsing a religious kidnapping. At every step of the way, Indira has
met nothing but resistance from the state and a political apparatus,
which has used her when convenient and discarded her cause when in
power.
This is really about how this mother has confronted the
state and the state security apparatus through its various permutations,
which enabled the kidnapping of her child.
What
this mother is going through, has been going through, is the
existential struggle of state-sponsored religious oppression that one
day soon, all non-Muslims will endure in a very overt manner.
One day soon, we will all feel her pain.
Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh
What Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh has demonstrated is that Umno continues to give the middle finger to Madani.
This
is an operative who knows that he is untouchable. This is an operative
who carries out the overt hostility the racial and religious
establishment has towards non-Muslims.
The KK Mart obscenity
demonstrates how state actors can bring non-Muslim commercial interests
down to their knees in the most vile manner if it so chooses.
Akmal is merely following like a good student from the playbook of his elders. Akmal is the smug poster child for the Malay uber alles crowd.
While
political operatives from Umno have claimed they have told him to stop
these provocations, and the Yang di-Pertuan Agong has told everyone to
cease and desist during the KK Mart obscenity, and while he is under a
sedition investigation, he understands that he has the power to give the
middle finger to everyone.
Remember what former Umno, former Bersatu, and now Pejuang member Mukhriz Mahathir
said - “Looking at Umno when there were big issues which we could not
address, we would talk about DAP, Chinese chauvinism, and how Lim Kit
Siang becoming prime minister would destroy Malaysia, that the Malays
would disappear, and the mosques can no longer air the azan.
“I
admit that I too have said such things, in front of a 100 percent Malay
audience. Thinking back, I feel guilty and a sense of regret.”
The
Umno Youth chief's war against non-Malay/Muslim participation in
politics and social life comes at a time when political realignment of
the Malay establishment is taking place.
Akmal will, of course, feel no guilt or regret.
Najib Abdul Razak
Former prime minister and convicted felon Najib Abdul Razak has had a good year.
While
the young Muar MP Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman may get caned for his
offences, folks like Najib, his wife, and former comrades are thriving
in Madani, with possible house arrests, discharges not amounting to
acquittals (DNAAs) and acquittals.
In
nearly every perversion of justice, the prime minister defects the
blame to others, forgetting when he was in the opposition, he laid the
blame squarely on the person in the seat of power.
When you have
PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang and preacher Zakir Naik arguing that it
is better to live under corrupt Muslim rule than an honest non-Muslim
rule, this is the definition of the Madani strategies when it comes to
Najib. This is the message it sends.
This is the message that the
elites, especially those connected with the Umno establishment, are
hearing loud and clear - especially with the elevation of Musa Aman in
Sabah.
Tajuddin does not offer any
differences, merely launches into a history lesson about Dr Mahathir
Mohamad and Lee Kuan Yew (he will always be Harry to me) both of who the
author claims used realpolitik strategies in dealing with public
perception and the business of governance.
The problem with these
types of claims is the efficacy of these strategies is the long-term
outcome of both countries. With one, we can see how the strategy used
has had a deleterious effect on the country and its institutions of
governance and the other, well the trains run on time.
Tajuddin
likes to talk about the Islamic reform movement he was a part of back
in the day, while I can only rely on the fact that I a non-Muslim, was
serving king and country.
So, I may have no useful insight about
Islamic reform or politics beyond firsthand experience in how it
reshaped the various branches of the state and federal government.
I
can make no useful contribution to this discourse beyond the first-hand
experience of racial and religious prerogatives that seeped into the
system alienating many serving officers. This was not confined to the
security apparatus but also the civil service.
In fact,
Malaysians of a certain age have nothing to contribute to this
discussion because their experience as Malaysians – whatever their
ethnic heritage – means nothing when it comes to politics and Islamic
reform which swept through this country but which is apparently
something we cannot comprehend.
Controlling narrative
Tajuddin
talks of Mahathir wanting to control the narrative which is exactly the
point I made in my piece he finds so objectionable – “Dr Mahathir
Mohamad, when in power, played it both ways. He demonised PAS and
allowed his bureaucracy to be shaped by religious forces which had deep
roots in both the political Islam of PAS and whatever was shaping the
Middle East back in the day.” This is the part that Tajuddin overlooks.
The
author dismisses Sisters of Islam and I, which is fine because people
should be free to express their dismissal of other people’s opinions as
they see fit, but the problem with the strategy of controlling the
Islamic narrative by empowering governmental agencies like Mahathir did,
was an organisation like Sisters of Islam was deemed as deviant.
Now
perhaps the author could explain the “good” this does when it comes to
the religious discourse in the majority community. By controlling the
religious narrative this way, did Mahathir change mindsets or merely get
Umno the vote, while embedding the community with anti-democratic
impulses and empowering a theocratic class?
Now what Tajuddin
should explain to the reader is how exactly Anwar's religious narrative
is helping subdue the religious forces in this country as Mahathir’s did
at that time.
Mind you I do not think Mahathir was successful
because in attempting to control the religious narrative what he did was
plant the seeds for a theocratic class which Anwar and PAS are
attempting to control and use now.
I get some people are fixated
when Mahathir and Harry Lee are mentioned in the same sentence but what I
find interesting, is that Mahathir with his run-in with the royalty for
instance (for self-serving interests no doubt) enhanced the democratic
processes in this country by curtailing their powers.
Of course, he messed up the judiciary but there you go. What is the upside of what Madani is doing?
Changing whose mindset?
Now for Tajuddin, all this sandiwara by Anwar is an attempt to change mindsets. We have to ask ourselves two questions.
The
first is what mindset is Anwar trying to change? We know PAS’ religious
positions, what is the different position that Madani wants the Malays
to change to?
The second question, if there is no difference
between these positions, then what was so egregious about my piece that
warranted his response?
In other words, since I apparently know nothing about politics and Islamic reform, please enlighten us as to how this sandiwara
helps us reinforce the democratic guard rails of this country and
maintain the racial and religious equilibrium of this country? Or is
this not what this reform is about?
When the democratic guardrails
in this country have been supplanted by theocratic diktats, would we be
shocked that “…. political change requires many other art forms and war
strategies …” and wonder where it all went wrong?
Look how the
country has changed over the years. You see, politicians do not use
religion to empower people. They never have. What they use religion for,
is to subjugate people. This is why the country has changed so much
after all these brilliant art forms and war strategies.
Maybe if
folks in power and people who gave them power, listened to people
writing from conscience (which is never easy because you alienate so
many people as people have always been tribal in their political
allegiances and you open yourself up to abuse), we could have had a real
chance for political change.
Madani was too cowardly to
put forward an alternative Islamic narrative. Dr Mahathir Mohamad, when
in power, played it both ways. He demonised PAS and allowed his
bureaucracy to be shaped by religious forces which had deep roots in
both the political Islam of PAS and whatever was shaping the Middle East
back in the day.
Both PAS and Madani do not think that Malaysia is a secular country. This is what PAS deputy president Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man
said -"Malaysia is not a secular country. If it was, why should DAP
include ‘to fight for a secular country’ in its own manifesto?
"Islam
is the official religion of the federation. Then there is the idea of
Malaysian Malaysia. No Malay can accept the concept of equality."
And
here is what the prime minister thinks of secularism - “Sometimes these
politicians will say that if Anwar becomes prime minister then Islam
will be ruined, secularism and communism will gain a foothold, and LGBT
will be recognised.
“This is a delusion. Of course, it will not happen and God willing, under my administration, this is not going to happen,” the Malay Mail Online reported Anwar as saying.
Now, to be fair to the prime minister, he did define secularism here in a more “moderate way”
- “There is no issue about complete separation of state and religion
because Islam is the religion of the federation, but it is not a
theocratic state where you can impose Islamic laws on everybody,
including non-Muslims.”
Limited secularism?
Keep
in mind that this moderate form of secularism does not apply to
unilateral conversion or the banning of words, films and any other
things that would offend the sensitivities of Muslims in this country.
Hence,
to claim that Islamic imperatives would not be imposed on non-Muslims
is complete horse manure. It certainly does not apply to the new media
bill which nobody voted for because they are cowards and charlatans, but
non-Muslims were told this bill was needed to maintain stability and of
course "think of the children".
These
days, it is Putrajaya who is pursuing the Federal Territories Mufti
Bill which would radically transform the powers of the religious far
right in this country. This is something that PAS dreams of. This is
something the deep Islamic state has been preparing for.
The bill is best defined by Sisters in Islam
– “The Mufti Bill, which grants unelected officials the power to
legislate without transparency or due process, exemplifies the dangerous
erosion of democratic principles and constitutional rights.
“Such
laws risk undermining the fundamental freedoms of Malaysians, fostering
a culture of control rather than empowerment, and silencing diverse
perspectives crucial for a progressive society.”
Keep in mind that the bill comes on the heels of a recent Federal Court ruling which struck down 16 criminal syariah provisions in Kelantan.
The
Federal Court ruling is perhaps one of the strongest rejections by the
diminishing centre-right establishment of the theocratic agenda, pushed
by political operatives like PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang.
Theocrats
do not like pushback and when this happens, they stir the pot even
more. What this Federal Court ruling has demonstrated is that there are
still constraints from the federal government.
When people say the
atmosphere is charged, what they are really saying is that the people
against this Federal Court ruling are spooked.
Now isn't the mufti
bill, something that PAS desires? Think about it this way. Can anyone
point to overt differences in religious policies when it comes to PAS
and the government?
When a PAS operative decided to ban lotto
shops in Kedah, what was the response from the federal government? What
was Madani’s response to the caning of syariah offences in Johor?
What was Madani's response to rainbow-coloured Swatch watches?
What was Madani's response to the socks controversy? What was Madani’s
response to unilateral conversion? What was Madani's response when Umno
Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh viciously attacked a non-Muslim
member of its coalition?
In 2017, while still incarcerated and
Hadi was on a rampage using Act 355 to stake the religious high ground,
as reported in the press, Anwar was not against the idea merely that he
had his own ideas about strengthening religious law in this country. We now know what those ideas are.
In
times of economic uncertainty, it benefits PAS to portray itself as an
outsider. It gets to point to a convenient scapegoat - the Chinese
community by demonising the DAP and playing the victim card when it
comes to the way this government persecutes its political rivals. In or
out of government, PAS is getting exactly what it wants.
Rational Malaysians are merely getting a view of the shape of things to come.
Upbringing
and social interaction in childhood are important. Siti’s immediate
environment is a country that is compartmentalised into different races
and religions. It is not entirely her fault because all she knows is
what happens under her tiny tempurung.
If
anyone is to be blamed, it is our leaders for failing to smash this
coconut shell. Siti’s poor knowledge of Chinese surnames and family
names showed that her integration with non-Malays was non-existent.
One does not need a PhD for this, but common sense and community spirit will suffice.
As a first-term MP, Siti probably received her guidance from her observations of our state assemblies and Parliament.
Day
in, day out, all they ever talk about are race, religion and royalty.
There are more important matters than these 3Rs but why would she know
any better?
This is her limited exposure, from the time she was born, to the day she was in court to receive her judgement for defamation.
Moreover, she’d seen how MPs who made racist comments were rarely punished, if at all.
Would
the police charge her for making the provocative remarks? Umno-Baru’s
Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh and PAS’ Kedah menteri besar, Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor escaped punishment for their racist slurs, and Siti probably thought she too was “an untouchable”.
Umno-shaped elephant in room
Interestingly,
Siti’s problems can be traced to Umno-Baru, the party that now stands
tall in the federal coalition government. Siti claimed that she had
sourced her information from an Umno-Baru/BN election pamphlet which has since been discredited.
When precisely was it discredited?
Before or after Siti was taken to court. So, is the rakyat expected to
say, “Oh, it’s all right then! Umno-Baru is a coalition partner, so the
Lims and Teresa Kok should not create a fuss.”
What
has happened to the police probe about this contentious pamphlet? What
excuse has the Umno-Baru president concocted about this “source”, which
Siti once treated as her bible?
Umno-Baru commissioned this pamphlet. What does that say about the integrity of our Madani administration?
Don’t just blame Siti, because the system in which she was raised is also at fault.
More
importantly, we should apportion a large part of the blame on
successive leaders who failed to change the narrative about Malaysia.
Malaysia
has never been led by “true” leaders. Those who claim to be leaders
merely have huge egos. They’re too timid to make a real difference, and
not brave enough to initiate meaningful change.
Spiralling higher education standards
Siti
would have spent at least three years working on her PhD but by the end
of her 45-minute speech last year, during campaigning in the Kemaman
by-election, her integrity was thrown into the gutter.
Malaysia
mass produces thousands of PhD graduates every year, from 1,247 in 2010
to 4,560 in 2021. Siti’s failure to fact-check and list her sources,
caused many Malaysians to doubt her PhD and thesis. They are right to
blame her recklessness and irresponsibility.
However,
they should also question the quality of our universities and
academics. If standards have slipped, what is the Education Ministry’s
response?
The minister should be held responsible for the low standard of education. Quality matters more than quantity.
Aping her seniors
Siti
was failed by the system. She could have done so much good to improve
the lives of hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Malaysians,
especially the Malays.
She could have used her
influence as an MP to lift Malay women out of the poverty trap and to
exercise their women's rights, especially in conservative Malay
communities.
She could have taken advantage of her position as a politician to unite the rakyat.
Instead
of doing all the wonderful things we hoped our politicians would do,
Siti decided to stick to the same well-trodden path as her party elders,
to bash the DAP, Chinese, communists, and Singapore.
She
tried to emulate the male MPs in her party and continue their rhetoric
about saving Islam and defending the Malays, but this time, she decided
to raise the stakes.
She made defamatory remarks about three DAP leaders having blood ties with communist leader, Chin Peng and the late Singapore prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew.
Did
she think she had successfully earned the praise and attention of the
PAS leaders? They did not come to her defence after she made the
inflammatory remarks. Poor Siti, even PAS leaders failed her.
However,
don’t just blame Siti. Blame the system and the failure of our leaders
to change it for a better multicultural Malaysia.
Malaysiakini : In Malaysia, of course, the sensitivities of non-Muslims when it comes to free speech are not taken into account.
When
it comes to Muslim hate speech, anything goes in Malaysia where even
someone like Perkasa president Ibrahim Ali got away with threatening
to burn Bibles in 2014 because in the words of the attorney-general,
“This is not a sentiment or intention to cause religious disharmony, but
this is defending the sanctity of Islam that is clearly defined in
laws.”
Indeed, the Attorney-General’s Chambers, when touching on the bible burning issue said, as reported by The Edge
- “As decided by the court, before a statement is said to have
seditious tendencies the statement must be viewed in the context it was
made... When studied in its entire context, Datuk Ibrahim’s statement is
not categorised as having seditious tendencies.
“It was clear Datuk Ibrahim Ali had no intention to create religious tensions but was only defending the purity of Islam.”
Hoodwinking rakyat
It
is amazing the lengths that Madani and its enablers would go to
gaslight the rakyat into believing that this is for our own good. DAP MP
Syerleena Abdul Rashid in carrying water for Madani attempts to use the
“think of the children” gambit.
She
writes: “This is our moment to act. By supporting these changes, we
stand against the darkness of exploitation and for the light of safety,
justice, and hope.
“In Malaysia, there will be zero tolerance for
those who prey on our children and the protection of our children
remains non-negotiable.”
Really? Adults who prey on children are
mainstream in Malaysia. What do you think child marriage is? Why do you
think that an organisation like Sister in Islam is hell-bent on leather
urging authorities to end this practice?
Here is the latest dispatch from Sisters in Islam regarding this issue, as reported by the Malay Mail Online:
“In Malaysia, there are several provisions within the Islamic laws
which inadvertently may necessitate the child bride or her parent to
choose marriage rather than other alternatives, often under the guise of
‘social protection’.
”This practice not only endangers young girls but also undermines Malaysia’s commitment to safeguarding children’s welfare.”
So,
get off your high horse and your bellicose rant about having “zero
mercy” and “non-negotiable” and attempt to correct a serious problem
here in Malaysia without hoodwinking the rakyat with these appeals to
emotions and gaslighting, for amendments that would irremovably damage
freedom of speech here in Malaysia.
If you read all these
amendments, which seem to have come from the “how to be a fascist and
force people to like you” playbook, the Madani government is gaslighting
people into thinking that these proposed laws are well defined but, as
nearly everyone has pointed out, they are open to interpretation and
gives the state obscene power to interpret it as it sees fit.
Of
course, some people are still under the illusion that these laws would
be used to contain the likes of Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh
but the reality is that not only would they be used to go after whomever
the state thinks aggrieve it but also be used to reinforce certain
narratives at the expense of the moderate centre.
This is exactly what an operative like Akmal does.
‘Super liberals’
I’ll give you an example. Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim talks of the “super liberals”.
In this country, the Islamists, Malay far-right and even mainstream
Malay political operatives demonise these groups which they consider
anathema to their race and religion.
Is this a form of hurting the
sensitivities of a specific group or is it a way how the state
marginalise certain groups? Which narrative does the revised CMA favour?
Let us have another go at this. Recently, PAS MP Siti Mastura Muhammad said she would study the judgment made against her to pay Lim Kit Siang, DAP chairperson Lim Guan Eng, and Seputeh MP Teresa Kok for defaming them.
How
exactly did she defame them? Well, she linked them to the defunct
Communist Party of Malaya’s big cheese. Now we know what the state
thinks of communists, right?
The state even took action against a coffee shop for allegedly using utensils featuring images of communist leaders, I can’t believe I typed these words but there you go.
So, would this PAS MP be sanctioned by the state using the CMA? If you believe that, then you would believe anything.
In
fact, seeing how the state views communists, by claiming that members
of the ruling coalition were part of some sort of communist identity,
should have warranted intervention by the state security apparatus. But
nada, this PAS MP got away with saying what she said.
Why? It is
because although they got some form of justice from the courts, what she
said was acceptable narratives by the mainstream Malay political
establishment and have been used by Malay uber alles political operatives from the establishment and opposition to demonise specific communities.
And
this is really what the CMA amendments are about. It is about the state
wanting no dissent from the narratives that Madani is attempting to
shape.
Worse, Madani is building the foundation for a theocratic
state to inherit and build upon. The state wants you to believe that
this is done for political stability.
Reading Huntington in Syria: Islamic barbarians against Islamic barbarians by Giulio Meotti
Wednesday, December 04, 2024
Syrian rebel forces take Aleppo city center
INN : In the race to Damascus, the cleanest has the itch, or in this case,
the shortest beard. Or as the Dutch-based Iranian academic Afshin Ellian
put it, “all the jihadist terrorist groups in Syria will return to
fight against each other, against Assad, against the Kurds and the
Americans, and it will be a bloody battle between Islamic barbarians.”
During
the first two centuries of Islam, Muslim armies faced the most
prolonged fighting on the Syrian front, since it was here that Islam
faced its most formidable enemy, the Byzantine Empire. Syria, therefore,
is the key area for Islamic apocalyptic speculation. And the videos
that are coming in prove it.
Syrian rebels in pick-ups
with machine guns, carrying weapons supplied by Turkey, after having
conquered Aleppo in a few hours, are on the road to Homs and Damascus.
Alongside them ride British jihadists who converted to Islam after a
privileged childhood spent in the Anglican Church.
The jihadists began kidnapping Kurdish girls, like the little Yazidi sex slave in Gaza.
A war of all with and against all for the sole glory of Islam.
Never has a book been so direct about Islam as “The Clash of Civilizations” by Samuel Huntington: “Islam has bloody borders”.
In
Gaza, the barbarity of Hamas. In Lebanon, the barbarity of Hezbollah.
In Syria, barbarians against barbarians. And in the midst of all this
there is a small blue enclave, a land of Western civilization and
culture: Israel.
In
Syria there are the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and the Hezbollah
militias in crisis who are shooting at the militias of Al Qaeda and the
Muslim Brotherhood. The Syrian rebels are Sunni. The Syrian regime is
Alawite, a small and heretical syncretistic minority that makes them
natural allies of Tehran, which cannot afford the collapse of Damascus.
Assad has an ostrich neck and shifty eyes, but he is cunning and brutal.
And he will do practically anything to survive.
Meanwhile the barbarians have already started cutting off heads again.
The Christians, as usual, will pay. My thoughts are with them, with the women and with the Christians.
And
since Qatar and Turkey and Saudis arm Sunni Muslims and Russia arms
Shiites in a new Great Game, European countries should have armed
Christians, like the Christian militias that fought against ISIS in
Iraq.
America is historically in the Sunni axis (the Turks
who send the jihadists are actually the second largest army in NATO)
and the Eurocrats just hope only to calm their internal Sunni
populations who are on everyone’s side, with Iran but also with the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Distinguishing the right Syrian rebels from the wrong ones is a bit complicated.
Considered
the greatest living Arab poet and a major figure in world poetry, the
Syrian Adonis is one of the favorites for the Nobel Prize in Literature
every year. He will not win it because he is “Islamophobic”. Adonis told
Libération: “In more than sixty years, we see whether the life of the
Arabs has progressed or declined. Where was Iraq and where is it today?
The same goes for Syria, Libya, Yemen, Egypt… All are in continuous
decline. Why have all the peoples of the world made progress in
knowledge and the Arabs nothing? They lack nothing and yet they continue
to decline. Because we live in the past and fourteen centuries later,
the references remain the caliphs.”
And it is a religious
problem, says Adonis. “My position is that the Arabs will never advance
as long as religion is their political reference point. The relationship
between Islam and man must be based on law and freedoms, while Islam
gives more rights to Muslims than to non-Muslims. Syria, for example, is
full of non-Muslims. But the non-Muslim will always be second class,
without the same rights as the Muslim.”
The violence in the Middle East is not caused by Israel, it is caused by Islam.
And it should concern us, as the Algerian novelist Boualem Sansal said in 2016:
“The
only force deeply rooted in Arab-Muslim society is religion. The
Islamist movement occupies space and prevents the emergence of any other
ideology. There is, of course, a competition between Salafi Islam and
traditional Islam, between Shiites and Sunnis. However, today we see
that the differences are fading within the Sunni world, while the
confrontation between Shiites and Sunnis is taking place. But here too,
strategic alliances are being formed. Little by little, the Muslim world
is rebuilding itself and regaining its original ambitions and its
hegemonic will. The frontier with the West is beginning to be abolished
because political Islam is opening up spaces in London, Paris and
Brussels. We can imagine that in thirty years Islam will govern the
entire Muslim world that it will have unified. In sixty years it will
set out to conquer Western civilization.”
We have already lived it, barely ten years ago.
François
Hollande, called to testify at the trial for the November 13, 2015
attacks in Paris, confessed that the government "knew that operations
were being prepared." The former president revealed in court that the
socialist government of the time knew that "operations were being
prepared and that individuals had put themselves in the river of
refugees to deceive the surveillance."
"All the
members of the commandos, foreigners or French who remained in Syria,
took the migratory route from Eastern Europe," confirmed Jean-Charles
Brisard, president of the Center for the Analysis of Terrorism, to Le Figaro. "They took the Balkan route, after Kosovo opened the passage in 2015, to get to Hungary."
The
list of terrorists in Paris and Brussels and the borders through which
they entered Europe a few weeks before the massacres: Ten members of the
terrorist cell responsible for the attacks in Paris and Brussels stayed
or transited in Hungary between July and November 2015, taking
advantage of the flow of migrants. They will all pass through Budapest's
Keleti station, which in those days was full of journalists there to
tell us how bad Viktor Orban's government was in wanting to stop the
flow of migrants. In those days Hollande was busy announcing that France
would welcome migrants.
Here we go again. At this very moment, future massacres in Europe are being prepared.
The mainstreaming of Islamic extremism by Matthew M. Hausman
Tuesday, December 03, 2024
INN : Antisemitic slurs and tropes are shouted by street mobs, taught in
college classrooms, and repeated by journalists, politicians, and
celebrities. The world’s oldest hatred is also disseminated by
pseudo-scholars who use the gloss of academia to slander Jewish
tradition and claim, among other things, that the Temple never stood in
Jerusalem and Jews are foreign interlopers descended from non-indigenous
peoples who usurped a country – Palestine – that never existed. They
are also committed to validating a people – the Palestinian Arabs – who
are a modern political creation.
Anti-Jewish
hatred is exacerbated by political, media, and academic establishments
that provide no counterbalance and instead rewrite history, for example,
by denying the Jews’ unbroken connection to their homeland as reflected
in the archeological record and whitewashing the persecution of Jews
under Islam. They are quick to denounce any perceived affront to Arab or
Muslim sensibilities and just as quick to denigrate any expressions of
Jewish pride or Israeli sovereignty.
Indeed, the
mainstream generally refuses to acknowledge Muslim antisemitism, the
relationship between radical Islam and terrorism, or the history of
jihadist colonialism. Liberal pundits instead wax poetic about claims of
Islamic tolerance, while rationalizing any antisemitic or anti-western
excesses as reactions to Israeli provocations or American imperialism.
Unable
to tolerate criticism of their own warped and bigoted views, they
invariably claim to be victims of censorship whenever their screeds
against Jews and Israel are exposed as antisemitic vitriol (though it
seems nobody ever prevents them from speaking). But they remain mute
regarding the historical subjugation and negative imagery of Jews under
Islam, the influence of this imagery on anti-Israel rejectionism, and
the cultural justifications for the murder, rape, and torture of
Israelis.
To most progressives, Hamas and Hezbollah are
neither extreme nor radical; and in the historical context of Islamist
supremacism, they might actually have a point.
Traditionally,
life was difficult for non-Muslims under Islam – particularly Jews, who
were dispossessed from their land by conquest, relegated to dhimmi
status, and generally degraded, abused, and denied human rights. Despite
claims of tolerance throughout the Islamic world, the general treatment
of Jews was often no better than in Christian Europe.
During
the early Islamic period, for example, Jews were forced to wear
distinctive badges or metal seals around their necks. Starting in
ninth-century Baghdad, they were required to wear yellow badges (a
practice that was brought to Europe by returning crusaders) and were
often physically branded, while in Egypt they were required to wear
bells on their garments. Throughout the Islamic world, Jews were often
isolated or confined to ghettos, forbidden from using the same
bathhouses as Muslims, and subjected to pogroms, massacres and forced
conversions just as they were in Christian Europe.
Despite
the fantasy of equity and prosperity during the Golden Age of Spain,
Jews in the Iberian Peninsula often fared little better than their
brethren under Christian rule. This reality was illustrated by the
experiences of Rambam (Maimonides) and his family, who left their native
Cordoba, not because of Christian Jew-hatred, but because the ruling
Almohads gave the Jewish community the choice of conversion, exile, or
death – centuries before the expulsion from Christian Spain.
The
idea that Jewish life in the Islamic world was idyllic until the
establishment of modern Israel is preposterous. Antisemitism was
ubiquitous after the rise of Islam and ultimately influenced Arab
hostility towards the reborn Jewish nation. Those who believe the myth
of peaceful coexistence are not typically of Sephardic, Mizrachi or
Yemenite Jewish descent. If they were, they would be more likely to know
from the experiences of parents and grandparents how precarious Jewish
life was in Arab lands and how antisemitism there preceded Israel’s
rebirth by centuries.
Anti-Jewish
sources appear in both written and oral tradition, for example, in
Quranic verses accusing the Jews of perverting scripture (e.g., Sura
3:63; 3:71; 4:46), eschatological passages from the Hadith foretelling
their ultimate extermination (Sahih al-Bukhari, Vol. 4, Book 56, No.
791), and references in both to the slaughter of the Jews known as Banu
Qurayza in Medina. Thus, it is not surprising that Jews in Islamic
society were scorned, demeaned, and subjugated; and given the doctrinal
basis for this enmity, hostility for the state of Israel was inevitable.
The
reality of Muslim antisemitism is ignored by those who believe that
obsequious apologetics is necessary to atone for past colonialism. But
Islamist Jew-hatred is fully embraced by radical progressives, whose
chants of “from the river to the sea…” are really calls for genocide.
The irony is lost on these useful idiots that the fundamentalist
ideology they deem politically virtuous rejects the foundation of their
woke identities. There are no “Queers for Palestine” or “CODEPINK”
feminists who would be welcome in a fundamentalist Islamic state where
women are subjugated, and gay people are killed.
What
western apologists fail to appreciate is the integral persistence of
dogma that divides the world into “dar al-Islam” (house of Islam) and
“dar al-Harb” (house of war) and demands the subjugation of infidels.
And in the absence of theological reformation, it seems unlikely that
pandering dialogue will ever foster sincere acceptance of non-Islamic
cultures or true peace with a Jewish state.
The affinity
between radical Islamists and the progressive left seems
counterintuitive given the left’s disdain for religion in its own
cultural backyard. But the so-called “red-green alliance” makes perfect
sense considering that leftists and Islamists share a common hatred of
western democratic values – and of Jews and Israel.
It
is this shared hatred that influences progressives to (a) rationalize
tenets that justify atrocities against Jews and (b) cheer Hamas for
resisting an “occupation” that only exists in the minds of leftists,
terrorists, and Palestinian Arab revisionists. The progressive refusal
to acknowledge the religious basis of anti-Israel hatred suggests a
worldview shaped either by ignorance or a repudiation of history,
democratic values, and common decency.
Whatever
the motivation, the progressive coddling of Islamists clearly is no
path to peace. Nor is pressuring Israel to cease defending herself
before achieving her objectives against Iran and its terrorist proxies.
The road to peace, moreover, does not require a two-state solution with
people who deny Jewish history. Rather, it depends on genuine acceptance
of the Jews’ sovereignty in their homeland, which necessarily requires a
reformation of thought, ideology, and doctrine.
But what encourages such reformation, and can it be imposed from without?
The
traditional peace process always ignored the elephant in the room –
i.e., the faith-based foundation of anti-Israel rejectionism – and
demanded unilateral concessions by Israel based on revisionist
presumptions, e.g., the validity of a Palestinian Arab narrative that
denies Jewish history. This was true of Oslo, the Obama-era strategy of
bullying Israel and appeasing Iran, and the Biden embrace of anti-Israel
and antisemitic progressives.
If anything, October 7th proved the fecklessness of these policies and the two-state concept.
The
only deviation from the policy failures of past administrations was the
Abraham Accords during President Trump’s first term, which sought
normalization through shared economic, cultural, and strategic
interests. Perhaps this strategy could facilitate the doctrinal change
necessary for reformation – and perhaps not. But reinvigorating the
accords as a paradigm while simultaneously renewing America’s commitment
to a strong Israel might pave the way for real ideological change that
could significantly influence the geopolitical landscape of the Mideast
during a second Trump term.
BBC hears of horror and hunger in rare visit to Darfur massacre town By Lyse Doucet
BBC : It
was RSF fighters, along with allied Arab militias, who ran amok in
el-Geneina last year, mainly targeting residents from the non-Arab
Masalit community in what human rights groups, including UN experts,
have described as ethnic cleansing and possible war crimes and crimes
against humanity. Human Rights Watch concluded it was a possible
genocide.
The Sudanese army has also
come under sharp criticism. Arab civilians were also reported to have
perished in this turmoil, many from shelling by army tanks, or in
blistering air raids.
Both the RSF and the SAF deny accusations of war crimes and point accusing fingers at their rivals.
Many Sudanese have fled across the border from el-Geneina to Chad
Few journalists have made it to el-Geneina to see its plight, including the aftermath of what were two massacres over a period of several months last year, which the UN says killed up to 15,000 people.
The
frenzy of violence, rape and looting is regarded as one of the worst
atrocities in Sudan’s brutal conflagration, which has created the
world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
We
travelled from the Chadian border town of Adre, with the UN delegation,
on a journey of less than an hour on a rippling dirt track enveloped in
dust, which slices through the desolate semi-desert plateau dotted with
half-built or abandoned clay-brick buildings.
A
small number of hulking lorries packed with the aid of the UN’s World
Food Programme, as well as rickety Sudanese carts driven by horses or
donkeys, go back and forth across a border marked by not much more than a
few wooden posts and ropes.
But on
the other side of the frontier, across the no-man’s land in a dry
sloping wadi and along our bleak route, gun-toting RSF fighters in
camouflage uniforms patrol this part of Sudan. Some are just young boys
who flash cheeky grins.
But, before
we left Adre, knowing how hard it may be to gather testimonies inside,
we spent time in the sprawling informal camp run by the UN and Chadian
authorities close to the border. A throng, mainly women of all ages,
some cradling children, fill the vast field. It’s a temporary settlement
of startling proportions.
Everyone
we spoke with was from el-Geneina. And they all carried their stories
with them as they escaped acute hunger and the horrors visited upon
their homes.
“When we fled, our young
brothers were killed,” piped up a self-assured 14-year-old Sudanese
girl in a rose pink headscarf, who spoke calmly and quietly about
terrifying times.
“Some of them were still breastfeeding, too young to walk. Our elders escaping with us were killed too.”
I asked her how she managed to survive.
“We
had to hide by day and resume our journey in the middle of the night.
If you move during the day, they will kill you. But even moving at night
is still so dangerous.”
Her family
finally made the hard choice to leave their homeland. Her mother was
with her but she didn’t know where her father was.
“Kids were separated from their fathers and husbands,” shouted an elderly woman whose dark eyes blazed with anger.
“We used to get food from our farms," chimed in another woman as their stories tumbled over each other.
“But when the war began, we couldn’t farm and the animals ate our crops, so we were left with nothing. “
Civilians in el-Geneina got a rare chance to tell the UN of their desperate plight
In
el-Geneina, our first stop is a modest health centre in the al-Riyadh
displacement camp, where Sudanese women in brightly coloured veils sit
in chairs along the wall, or huddle on bamboo mats on the floor.
A
delegation of mainly elderly men, some with crutches, sit closer to the
front under the shade of the corrugated metal roof and wide-boughed
trees which frame an open wall.
It
feels like a different el-Geneina. There's no visible presence of armed
RSF men in a leafy neighbourhood lined with humble mud houses. Young
boys turn cartwheels, women in vivid head-to-toe veils walk purposively
past, and donkey carts ferrying water drums trot along dusty dirt roads.
“We
have suffered a lot,” underlines a community elder, a white-turbaned
teacher who is the first to address the visiting UN team in their
signature blue vests. He speaks precisely and carefully.
“It’s
true that when the war started some people supported SAF, and some
supported RSF. But as displaced people we are neutral and in need of
every kind of assistance.”
This
camp was first established in 2003, a reminder that Darfur's agony
erupted two decades ago when the infamous Arab militia known as the
Janjaweed sowed terror among non-Arab communities and was also accused
of multiple war crimes. It gave rise to the RSF.
The
teacher listed a catalogue of basic needs – from food for malnourished
women and children, to schools and clean water. He also explained that
most women are now in charge of their families.
Some
of the young women, only their eyes visible, film the meeting on their
phones, perhaps wanting some record of this rare event.
Mr Fletcher addressed them directly.
“You
must often feel that no-one is listening and that no-one understands
what you have endured, more than anyone else in the population, and
maybe more than anyone else in the world.” They respond with vigorous
clapping.
The UN's next stop, behind
closed doors, is even more forthright when Mr Fletcher and his
colleagues sit in front of a gathering of Sudanese and international
NGOs based in Darfur who are struggling to respond to this enormous
catastrophe.
Unlike the UN, they
haven’t waited for permissions from Gen Burhan’s government to operate
here; approval for the UN’s international staff to be based here was
recently revoked.
Twenty NGOs,
working without reliable internet or electricity or even phones, and
struggling to obtain more Sudanese visas for staff, say they’re trying
to help the 99.9% of the population in need. Their message was clear –
the UN system was failing them.
The WFP has struggled to get much-needed aid into Sudan
“More
needs to be done,” Tariq Riebl, who heads the Sudan operations of the
Norwegian Refugee Council, tells us after the meeting. But he says his
worst fear “is that no-one cares, that they’re only paying attention to
other crises such as Ukraine and Gaza”.
“This
is one of the worst conflicts we've seen in recent memory, in terms of
the violence that's been committed, and people fleeing,” he emphasises.
“And there are also very few actual famines anymore, but this one is one.”
So
far, the global Famine Review Committee (FRC) has declared it in one
part of the Zamzam displacement camp housing about half a million people
in North Darfur; more than a dozen other areas are said to be on the
brink.
“The UN can't just charge across the border anywhere we would like to,” insists Mr Fletcher.
“But
this week we’ve got more flights coming in to regional airports, more
hubs opening inside Sudan, and we're getting more people on the ground
as well.”
During his week-long visit
to Sudan and its neighbours, he met representatives of both the SAF and
the RSF to push for more access across lines and across borders.
He started his new job vowing “to end impunity and indifference”.
“It
would be rash to say I can end impunity alone,” he remarks
diplomatically about a conflict in which rival regional powers have been
arming and assisting the warring parties.
The
United Arab Emirates is accused of backing the RSF, although it denies
this. While countries including Egypt, Iran, and Russia are known to be
supporting the SAF. Others are also weighing in, including Saudi Arabia
and regional organisations including the Arab Union, with all sides
saying they’re working for peace, not war.
When
it comes to indifference, after Mr Fletcher's first visit many more
Sudanese and aid workers will be watching closely, hoping he can make a
difference in this "toughest crisis in the world".
One hundred years of Arab warfare against Jewish civilians Dr. Michael Krampner
INN : The Jews of Mandate Palestine were politically
powerless and greatly outnumbered by Arabs throughout the land. The
Mufti of Jerusalem, nominally a religious figure but in fact a
politician and a vicious Jew-hater, continually badgered the British
authorities and incited Arabs against the Jews, for instance by claiming
that Jews putting a temporary gender separation, mechitza, at the Kotel for
Yom Kippur services in 1929 was an assault on the Al Aqsa Mosque and an
attempt by Jews to desecrate it, tear it down and rebuild the Temple.
The Mufti had a long reach and a willing audience and his message
arrived in Hebron, where the small Jewish community had lived in peace
with their Arab neighbors for a long time.
Yet,
there must have been Arab hatred and resentment of Jews festering
beneath the surface calm of Hebron because upon receiving the Mufti’s
false message that the Jews were storming Al Aqsa, a mob of thousands of
armed Arabs descended on the small unarmed Jewish community of Hebron,
murdering, maiming stealing and destroying.
Having
trusted their Arab neighbors, only a few of whom tried to help them
(despite the Jews having helped them in many ways through the years,
ed.) and protect them, the Jews of Hebron including the Yeshiva
students, their rabbis, Jewish merchants, and Jewish women and children
were murdered and maimed in gory and grotesque ways. The Arab pogromists
murdered David Shainberg of Memphis, Tennessee that day along with many
others. Schwartz does not spare the details of the butchery and those
details are very reminiscent of October 7.
Although
there were few officials and police available to protect the Jews in
Hebron, most of the policemen were Arabs, some of whom joined in the
pogrom. (Ed. See Rabbi Kook's efforts here.) To
their credit, a few Arabs of Hebron not only refused to join in but
protected Jews at some risk to themselves. Nevertheless, Arab pogromists
killed more Jews in the Hebron Massacre of 1929 than European
pogromists murdered in the more famous Kishineff pogrom of 1903.
From that pogrom Ghosts of a Holy War draws
a straight line, mostly through the person of the Mufti, from the
Hebron Massacre to the weak-kneed response of the British to the two
year campaign of murder and destruction conducted by Arabs in Israel
from 1936-1938 (sometimes called “The Arab Revolt”) to the Mufti being
expelled from Mandate Palestine just before World War Two and obtaining
refuge in Berlin with his hero, Adolph Hitler, who gave the Mufti the
job of propagandizing the Arab world against the Jews and recruiting
Arab soldiers to fight the Allies.
After
Israeli independence the Arab world seethed with even more hatred for
Jews, made all the worse because the Arabs were unable to defeat Israel
on the battlefield, even with substantial aid from their Soviet
sponsors. By the 1960s the Arab war against the Jews, which after
consultation in Moscow the Arabs decided was a ‘national liberation
movement,’ was led by the Mufti’s cousin’s son, Yasser Arafat, in his
campaign of murder, bombing and kidnapping against Jews.
Schwartz
recounts that Arafat was offered a so-called ‘two state solution’ on
multiple occasions and turned it down rather than recognize the
existence of Israel as a legitimate state.
More
recently Schwarz visited Hebron to find that Hebron is an Arab city
whose mayor is a convicted terrorist-murderer who was released by Israel
in a prisoner swap and whose constituents see his status as terrorist and murderer as a feature not a defect.
She
found that after October 7, the Arab lies about what had happened were
similar to those which had been spread by the Mufti after the Hebron
Massacre. After the Hebron massacre the Mufti had spread the lie that it
was the British who had murdered the Jews of Hebron, or the Jews
murdered themselves in order to cause a wave of sympathy for Zionism, or
that it was the Jews who attacked the Arabs and the Arabs murdered the
Jews in self-defense and that, in any event, it was not nearly as bad as
the Jewish victims and survivors claimed.
Likewise,
after the October 7 massacres across southern Israel, the common
talking points in the Arab world have included that it was not so bad,
not that many Jews were killed, no one was raped, the victims did not
include civilians or women and children but were only soldiers on
military bases and that the Israeli Defense Forces themselves killed
most of the victims.
The Arab
apologists don’t explain why Hamas is still holding Israeli hostages
more than a year later, except to say that October 7 was a legitimate
reaction to Israeli oppression. Even the Arab apologists don’t explain
why, if that is so, something so similar happened on multiple occasions
before Israeli statehood in Jerusalem in 1920, in Hebron and Jerusalem
in 1929 and throughout the 1930s.
No
one wants to say that some Arabs are so soaked in hatred of Jews that
they will commit any atrocity and tell any lie to excuse it.
Shwartz
is clearly ambivalent about the current situation in Israel and
believes that Arabs within Israel ought to have full political and civil
rights and be able to live in peace within Israel’s borders and that
Israelis ought to have peace and recognition. She dislikes ‘settlers’ in
Judea and Samaria who she claims unnecessarily provoke Arabs. She also
dislikes the murder and violence perpetrated by Arabs against Jews. A
sense of human decency permeates her book.
To
her credit, Schwartz has done a good job of telling the story of the
Hebron Massacre and its consequences and showing the connections between
that event almost one hundred years ago and today.
If
there is one failing to this well-researched and well-written book it
is that Schwartz does not inquire deeply into the ideological, social
and cultural factors that could turn Arab farmers and merchants into a
howling, murdering, pillaging mob just on the say-so of one man most of
them had never even seen or heard.
Still, Ghosts of a Holy War is worth the reader’s time and attention as a solid history and review of the Arab War against Jewish civilians.