It will fall on deaf ears...
 
Bruce
 

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1830098/posts

 
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/pos
ts> Hirsi Ali's challenge to humanity-recognize dangers of Islam and Western
cultural disintegration




To recognize the dangers of Islam and Western cultural disintegration under
the tyranny of multiculturalism. 


Ayaan Hirsi Ali is arguably the bravest and most remarkable woman of our
times. 


To understand why this 37-year-old woman is extraordinary, she must be
assessed in the context of the forces pitted against her in her twin
struggles to force the Western world to take note of Islam's divinely
ordained enslavement of women, and to force the Islamic world to account for
it. 


A series of incidents this week placed the forces she battles in stark
relief. Sunday Muslims shot up the Omariyah elementary school in Gaza. One
man was killed and six were wounded in the onslaught. The murderers attacked
because the UN-run school in Rafah had organized a sports day for the
children, in which little boys would be playing with little girls. 


The idea that that boys and girls might play sports together was too much
for the righteous believers. It was an insult to Islam, they said. And so
they decided to kill the little boys and girls. 


On May 3, in Gujrat, Pakistan, Muslims detonated a bomb at the gate of a
girls' school. Their righteous wrath was raised by the notion that girls
would learn to read and write. That too, they felt, is an insult to Islam. 


On April 28, US soldiers in Iraq discovered detonation wires across the
street from the newly built Huda Girls' school in Tarmiya, north of Baghdad.
They followed the wire to its source and discovered the school had been
built as a deathtrap. The pious Muslims who constructed the school had
filled propane tanks with explosives and buried them beneath the floor. They
built artillery shells into the ceiling and the floor. To save the world for
Allah, they decided to butcher little girls. 


And the brutality is not limited to the Middle East. Last month in Oslo,
Norway, Norwegian-Somali women's rights activist Kadra was brutally beaten
by a crowd of men piously calling out "Allah Akhbar." She was attacked for
exposing the fact that inside their mosques in Norway, Norwegian imams
praise female genital mutilation in the name of Allah. 


LATE LAST year Hirsi Ali published her memoir, Infidel. In describing her
own life, what she actually explains are the two competing human impulses -
conformity and individualism. In her own life, the clash of the two has been
played out on the stage of Islamic ascendance and Western cultural collapse.



Hirsi Ali was born in Somalia to a politically active father who sought to
free his country from Said Barre's Marxist dictatorship. Forced to flee the
country with her family, Hirsi Ali's childhood in Arabia and Africa revolved
along the axis of Islamic ascendance at the hand of the Saudi-financed
Muslim Brotherhood and Khomeini's Iran. 


Hirsi Ali's rebellion against Islam was personal, not political. As a young
girl and later as a young woman, she found herself abused and stifled by the
dictates of Islam just as her youthful spirit wished most to take flight. As
a five-year-old in Somalia, she screamed in pain and shock when her
grandmother tied her down and had a man with a knife mutilate her genitals. 


Living in Saudi Arabia she was struck by the oppressiveness of the "true
Islam." Why, she wondered were she and her mother and sister prohibited from
leaving their apartment without a male relative escorting them? As an
adolescent in Nairobi she wondered why the enjoyment she felt in the company
of boys was sinful. 


Why did her mother need to suffer the humiliation of polygamy? Why could she
not choose her own husband? Why was she told by one and all that her normal
human impulses to seek love, respect and compassion and think for herself
were sinful and evil? 


AS SHE puts it, "I could never comprehend the downright unfairness of the
rules, especially for women. How could a just God - a God so just that
almost every page of the Koran praises his fairness - desire that women be
treated so unfairly? When the [Islamic teachers] told us that a woman's
testimony is worth half of a man's, I would think, Why? If God is merciful,
why did He demand that His creatures be hanged in public? If He was
compassionate, then why did unbelievers have to go to Hell?" 


In her words, "The spark of will inside me grew even as I studied and
practiced to submit." Ali credits Harlequin romance novels for her initial
mental deliverance from submission. These books, with their passionate loves
and steamy sex scenes were her first glimpse at the possibility of freedom.
The novels showed her that the emotions and desires she was told to repress
were natural and could even be beautiful and right. 


Her impulse to rebel was matched by her impulse to conform. As a teenager,
Hirsi Ali tried to be a faithful Muslim and even joined the Muslim
Brotherhood. Embracing the notion of submission she began wearing a
full-body burka. 


But try as she might, she could not accept that her own will had no inherent
value. She blamed the preachers for the terror she saw as a Muslim girl,
believing they must be distorting the Koran. "Surely," she writes, "Allah
could not have said that men should beat their wives when they were
disobedient? Surely a woman's statement in court should be worth the same as
a man's?" 


Yet, when she sat down and read the Koran on her own, she found that
everything the preachers had said was written in the book. 


AT 21, HIRSI Ali emancipated herself. Fleeing from an arranged marriage to a
Somali immigrant in Canada, she sought and received asylum in Holland.
There, she embraced Dutch society and freedoms and quickly flourished in a
true rag-to-riches immigrant tale. She learned Dutch fluently and began
supporting herself as a translator. In just four years she had bridged the
cultural divide between Africa and Europe and began studying political
science with the creme de la creme of Dutch society at the University of
Leiden. 


A mere decade after her arrival, as a naturalized Dutch citizen, she was a
pubic figure, an outspoken social critic of Islam in Europe. In January
2003, she was elected to Parliament as a member of the conservative Liberal
Party. 


IN HOLLAND, Hirsi Ali found herself confronted by a kinder, gentler type of
cultural tyranny - the moral relativism of political correctness and
multiculturalism dictated by the Left. Just as she rejected Islamic
oppression in Africa, so in Holland she refused to submit to the will of the
majority not to notice, judge or take action against the misogynist tyranny
and anti-Western culture of the Muslim minority. 


Hirsi Ali's labors brought her to Theo Van Gogh. In 2004 the two produced
the film Submission, Part One. The short film shows a young Muslim woman
wearing a see-through burka. Passages of the Koran permitting the abuse of
women are written on her body. The woman prays in submission to Allah all
the while noting her abject suffering in his name. At the end of the movie,
the woman raises her head to Allah and calls into question the
reasonableness of her submission. 


The film's provocative message placed both Hirsi Ali and Van Gogh's lives in
imminent danger. And on November 21, 2004 Van Gogh was butchered by a Dutch
Muslim on the streets of Amsterdam. The murderer stabbed a letter into Van
Gogh's chest in which he threatened to murder Hirsi Ali "in the name of
Allah Most Gracious and Most Merciful." 


While Hirsi Ali was forced to flee her home and live under armed guard in
army installations, her message proved too much of a challenge for the Dutch
establishment which vomited her out last year. Her own party found a
formality on which to revoke her citizenship and throw her out of the
country and the parliament. Although the public outcry that ensued forced
the government to restore her citizenship, the message was clear. 


HIRSI ALI moved to Washington, DC. As a fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute she continues to warn the West of the dangers of Islam and of
Western cultural disintegration under the tyranny of multiculturalism. Just
last month, her work brought an imam from Pittsburgh to call for her murder
for the crime of apostasy. 


In her life and work, Hirsi Ali personifies the central challenges of our
times. She holds a mirror up to the Islamic world and demands that it
contend with the evil it propagates in the name of divinity. 


She holds a mirror up to the Free World and demands that we defend our
freedom against the onslaught of moral relativism and cultural decline. 


So too, she demands our compassion for the women of Islam. She says we must
see the suffering beneath the veil and work to alleviate it. Whether it
means that we must mass produce and distribute Arabic and Urdu copies of
Harlequin romance novels throughout the Islamic world; challenge veiled
women to explain why they ascribe to a faith that gives men the divine right
to beat and rape women; or simply hold Muslim communities in the West to the
standards of freedom on which our civilization is based, the West must help
these women free themselves from oppression. 


Finally, in our own societies we must protect and uphold voices like Hirsi
Ali's. For the past five years, Hirsi Ali has lived under threat of death
for her views. 


We must understand that only when she, and people like her can walk on the
streets unafraid will we have properly defended our freedom.


 



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