*Islamism's Love-Hate Relationship with Democracy*


*by Burak BekdilThe Gatestone Institute
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/5333/the-islamist-way>March 14, 2015*

*http://www.meforum.org/5114/islamism-democracy
<http://www.meforum.org/5114/islamism-democracy>*



[image: http://www.meforum.org/pics/large/879.jpg]

*Turkey's top Muslim cleric, Mehmet Gormez, thinks Austrian lawmakers are
Islamophobic.*

Islamists often do not hide it: They love head-count democracy in lands
where they make a majority; and hate it in lands where they are in the
minority. They would crush other faiths, including different sects and
practices of their own faith -- or no faith, for that matter -- where they
are in power.

In that happy set-up, the intriguing word "tolerance" is nowhere to be
seen. Respect for the minority is too rare a commodity: "This is our land,
we are in the majority, we rule and we rule it as we wish; and if you don't
like it, go to hell."

Surprisingly (or maybe not), Islamists happen to become dedicated warriors
of tolerance, religious freedoms, human rights and all other fancy tags
when they live (in their choice of) Muslim-minority countries. Just imagine
what could happen if 1.5 million Israelis lived in the Gaza Strip bordering
a militarily, economically and technologically mighty, larger, more
populous Hamas-ruled Palestinian state with a Jewish minority. Tolerance
and rights for the Jews? Would you want to be a Jew there?

*Islamists love head-count democracy where Muslims make a majority; and
hate it where they are in the minority.*

Naturally, the Islamist Turkish mind is not programmed to think differently
from: "Let's crush the infidels at home and seek broader rights for Muslims
in non-Muslim lands in Europe, America and Asia." Pluralism, to their way
of thinking, *should* be the respected norm -- where Muslims are in the
minority. The latest Austrian law regulating Islamic practice is no
exception to the Islamist's golden rule.

The new Austrian law, passed on Feb. 25, aims at integrating Muslims and
fighting Islamic radicalism by promoting an "Islam with an Austrian
character." It seeks to reduce outside meddling by prohibiting foreign
funding for mosques, imams and Muslim organizations in Austria. It also
stresses that Austrian law must take precedence over Islamic Sharia law for
Muslims living in the country.

The new law regulates at least a dozen separate issues, including
relatively non-controversial matters such as Muslim holidays, Muslim
cemeteries, Muslim dietary practices and the activities of Muslim clergy in
hospitals, prisons and the army. The law also grants official recognition
<http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist/sahin-alpay/religion-cannot-be-engineered_373981.html>
to holidays and commemoration days of the Alevis, the largest Muslim
minority faith in Turkey. The Austrian state will finance lessons on the
Alevi faith taught at both private and public schools.

"In this respect," writes Soeren Kern
<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/5277/austria-reforms-islam-law>, a
senior fellow at the Gatestone Institute, "the [Austrian] government has
met all of the demands put forth by Muslim groups in the country."

But Turkey's Islamists and the state religious authority have once again
asked for more rights -- which they meticulously avoid granting to
non-Sunni believers in their own country.

Unsurprisingly, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan slammed the Austrian bill.
"On the one hand you tell about the EU *acquis* [accumulated legislation],
but on the other hand you take steps which totally oppose the EU
*acquis*," said
Erdogan
<http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-president-erdogan-slams-austrias-controversial-islam-law------.aspx?pageID=238&nID=79005&NewsCatID=338>
.

He further said
<http://www.aa.com.tr/tr/haberler/472012--28-subatta-amac-yonetimi-millete-vermemekti>:
"In Switzerland and Austria new regulations pass that [negatively]
influence Muslims' lives ... as if this is in favour of Muslims..."

Echoing the same view, Turkey's EU minister, Volkan Bozkir, said
<http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-president-erdogan-slams-austrias-controversial-islam-law------.aspx?pageID=238&nID=79005&NewsCatID=338>:
"We cannot accept any harm to Muslims because of this law."

And Professor Mehmet Görmez, head of Turkey's state-controlled, pro-Sunni
religious authority, or Diyanet, issued a long statement. Basically,
according to Professor Gormez: a) This law does not befit Austria or
Austrian history; b) This law is the outcome of the wave of "Islamophobia"
that has engulfed Europe, and; c) [His] call to the Muslims in Austria is
to display their reactions within the framework of democratic rules.

Once again, the Turks were not shy about displaying *their* sheer hypocrisy
when they demanded "broader rights" for Muslims in two European countries.

>From the State Department's 2013 International Religious Freedom report
<http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/2012/eur/208376.htm>:

There were reports of abuses of religious freedom, including the
imprisonment of at least one conscientious objector for his religious
beliefs … The [Turkish] government did not clarify the legal authority
under which the Greek Orthodox Halki seminary could reopen after being
closed for more than 40 years ... Some religious groups faced restrictions
registering with the government, owning property, and training their
members and clergy … Although religious speech and conversions are legal,
some Muslims, Christians, and Bahais faced government restrictions,
surveillance, and occasional harassment for alleged proselytizing or
providing religious instruction to children …

There were reports of societal abuses and discrimination based on religious
affiliation, belief, or practice. Christians, Bahais, many non-Sunni
Muslims, including the sizeable Alevi population, and members of other
religious minority groups faced threats and societal suspicion. Jewish
leaders reported some elements of society continued to express anti-Semitic
sentiments. Persons wishing to convert from Islam experienced harassment
and violence from relatives and neighbors.

Turkey's Islamists slammed the Austrian law that recognizes [Muslim] Alevi
holidays, while they themselves resist calls to recognize the Alevi houses
of prayer, or Cemevis, or to grant abstention to Alevi schoolchildren from
the compulsory religion classes that essentially teach Sunni Islam.

"Expansion and conquest" make up one the pillars of Islamist doctrine. For
that reason, it requires, and overtly or covertly struggles for,
"dwindling" non-Muslim populations and rights in Muslim-controlled lands
and "expanding" Muslim populations and rights in non-Muslim countries. It
is simply futile to expect Islamists to demonstrate a crumb of the
tolerance they demand of non-Muslim nations.

*Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a columnist for the Turkish daily**
Hürriyet and a fellow at the Middle East Forum.*




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