http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=27767
 

Islamic Terrorism justified by the Economist

Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
  <http://www.americanchronicle.com/bioPics/author1225.jpg> 



Orientalist, Assyriologist, Egyptologist, Iranologist, and Islamologist,
Historian, Political Scientist, Dr. Megalommatis, 49, is the author of 12
books, dozens of scholarly articles, hundreds of encyclopedia entries, and
thousands of articles. He speaks, reads and writes more than 15, modern and
ancient, languages. He refuted Greek nationalism, supported Martin Bernal's
Black Athena, and rejected the Greco-Romano-centric version of History. He
pleaded for the European History by J. B. Duroselle, and defended the rights
of the Turkish, Pomak, Macedonian, Vlachian, Arvanitic, Latin Catholic, and
Jewish minorities of Greece, asking for the international recognition of the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. Born Christian Orthodox, he adhered to
Islam when 36, devoted to ideas of Muhyieldin Ibn al Arabi. 

Greek citizen of Turkish origin, Prof. Megalommatis studied and/or worked in
Turkey, Greece, France, England, Belgium, Germany, Syria, Israel, Iraq,
Iran, Egypt and Russia, and carried out research trips throughout the Middle
East, Northeastern Africa and Central Asia. His career extended from
Research & Education, Journalism, Publications, Photography, and Translation
to Website Development, Human Rights Advocacy, Marketing, Sales & Brokerage.
He traveled in more than 80 countries in 5 continents. He defends the Right
of Aramaeans, Oromos, Berbers, and Beja to National Independence, demands
international recognition for Somaliland, and denounces Islamic Terrorism.

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Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis 
May 23, 2007
  <http://www.americanchronicle.com/articlePics/article27767.jpg> 

In two previous articles, we denounced a provocative forgery that was
published in the Economist (under a subversive title "The Meaning of
Freedom"
http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=91498
27) in favour of the Turkish foreign minister's wife. Accepting the
headscarf as Islamic is sheer commitment to Islamic Terrorism, as the
imposition of headscarf on women is a pillar of the Islamic Terror
theorists. This attitude exposes the Economist's columnist gravely. 

In this article, we will further analyze excerpts that testify to the
columnist's absolute naivety and clear misunderstanding of the politically
extremist agenda of the dangerous Turkish premier and his foreign minister.
Trying to support what he gullibly enough considers as democratic right of a
majority party to elect a president, the author of this majestic
misinformation helps extend the powers of a venomous enemy of the Western
world and the world's civilizations, a far more dangerous than Hitler
person. 

We can imagine what will ensue, in case Erdogan prevails in Turkey, by
taking into consideration that, in contrast with Hitler's impact on his few
friends (Italy, Japan, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, the Palestinians and more
particularly Mufti Husseini of Jerusalem), Erdogan's impact will potentially
be exercised on more than 1.3 million people! 

Democracy or Secularism? Democracy is Secularism!

Many pro-liberal European and American politicians, businessmen, and
journalists tried to view the present ideological confrontation in Turkey as
a predicament of the type: 'Democracy or Secularism'.

By itself, this testifies to the dreadful collapse of the Western societies
and the leading groups of powers that shape decision making procedures
therein; to some extent, the confusion is due to the collapse of the Soviet
system, and the rise of the religious feeling / concern. 

Many people in the Western societies find the secularism as reason of the
existing moral collapse, but this is due to a rather late misinterpretation;
secularism does not mean atheism, rejection of all the existing religions,
agnosticism or indifference to moral and religious issues. Secularism means
a state and a society that are 'religiously neutral'. 

As such, they have no religious 'contents', therefore involving separation
between religion and state. 

Secularism is not an ideology, as it is content-empty; it is a democratic
approach and solution of conflicts and strives among the followers of
various religious systems, cults, and faiths. It implies absolute respect of
the 'Other' in a society whereby various religions and cultures coexist. 

When first introduced, before more than 100 years, secularism as concept was
thought to be part of the French Freemasonic anticlericalism, and so it was.


However, with all the changes that have occurred ever since, and with the
gradual amalgamation of peoples and ethnic groups allover the world,
secularism - void of ideological contents and disconnected from
evolutionist, atheist, and materialist biases - is by definition the only
means able to help many religious, ethnic and linguistic groups cohabitate
peacefully, without one of them dominating the others. 

Taken into consideration that few countries have remained intact of
immigration during the past decades, we can realize that modern societies
need Secularism as key to Democracy. It is only secularism, secular society,
secular legislation, and secular practice that helps avert the imposition of
a Catholic majority model over the Muslims, the Protestants, the Orthodox,
the Jews, the Buddhists, the Hindus, and the atheists of France. In the same
way, it is only secularism, secular society, secular legislation, and
secular practice that helps avert the imposition of a Sunni Muslim majority
model over the Shia (Alevite), Aramaeans, Armenians, Orthodox Greeks, Jews,
and atheists of Turkey. 

Respect for the non-practicing followers of a religion

Furthermore, secularism helps alleviate another - perhaps even more critical
- issue of our modern societies. If we do not take into consideration the
existing various religious groups and minorities, and if we do not take into
account atheists and agnosticists, there is still a great obstacle against
the adoption of a fully religious society in our days. 

Without rejecting the existence of a Supreme Being, and without
ideologically rejecting their religion, hundreds of millions of people
belong to their religions, without however practicing them! This generated
another social category that democratic sensitivity obliges us to take into
consideration. We should not necessarily view them as one group, but we
should take into account their concern and problems. 

These are the people who go fishing on Fridays in order to avoid paying a
quasi-compulsory visit to the mosque; these are the people who sleep as late
as possible on Sunday morning, so that they have no possibility to attend a
service in the church. Democratic society implies that they must feel no
constrain to do 'something' they do not want to, they must feel no threat if
they do not do 'it', and they must be sure that no reprisals of any sort may
happen to them in case they do not practice 'it', namely if they do not
practice their religion.

The non-practicing followers of the prevailing religion in a country must be
offered every possible support to live in peace and without any socially
imposed obligation and/or fear. A religiously uni-dimensional society cannot
become the alibi of camouflaged religious propaganda that through various
ways helps convert the non-practicing followers of that religion to
practicing and fervent ones. 

The only means to address the issue is a secular society. 

That is why Secularism has risen to top priority for any government in the
world to implement; Secularism is the epitome of Democracy, its foremost
pillar. 

Wherever Secularism disappears, lack of respect for the 'Other' and
fanaticism rise and proliferate, expand and prevail. 

In the light of this introductory note, we will continue examining the
Economist's falsification that we already castigated in two earlier
articles. We already stressed the point that the Turkish foreign minister's
wife's headscarf is not a matter of apparel, but of the Islamic Terror's
Supreme Symbol. The misinformation and the pro-Erdogan propaganda reach a
peak with the following paragraph: 

"But the challenge which Mrs Gul's apparel poses for Turkey's strict
secularism is more than imaginary. Until now, neither she nor the wife of
any other top politician in the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party
has been welcome in the chamber of parliament, the presidential palace or
any military premises-because as devout Muslim ladies, they cover their
heads. The idea of a scarved mistress of the presidential residence, guarded
by soldiers trained to uphold secularism, delights some Turks and enrages
others." 

Look at the perfidious expression: 'soldiers trained to uphold secularism'! 

Vicious and pathetic! 

Soldiers are never trained to 'uphold' principles of their societies, but
mainly the national defence and at times the social order and discipline. To
discredit and vulgarize secularism, the columnist composes a sentence in
which he brings a social ideal and principle close to the .. guards of a
presidential residence! 

And what means a ludicrous sentence as "the idea of a scarved mistress ...
delights some Turks and enrages others"? 

It is as if we dare say the following:

"the idea of a German Chancellor who in 2007 would be follower of Hitler ..
delights some Germans and enrages others". 

An impossible sentence! 

Principles matter; emotions do not. A correspondent is expected either to
close his/her mouth or to formulate morally acceptable sentences. 

Anything that is morally sinister is to be castigated. 

And the bogus-Islamic headscarf is morally sinister. 

You don't know Islam; close your mouth, instead of committing suicide! 

This is what a well versed into Islam scholar or an illuminated Muslim would
say to the comical columnist of the Economist. More particularly about the
next paragraph: 

"In almost every other part of the Muslim world, controversy over female
headgear is growing. Turkey and Tunisia are at one end of the Muslim
spectrum; both ban female civil servants, as well as students in state
schools, from covering their hair. One Turkish judge was nearly assassinated
after decreeing that teachers could not wear scarves even on their way to
work. But in Saudi Arabia and Iran, the rules go the other way. No woman may
appear in public with more than face and hands exposed."

It is the same approach and irresponsible attitude as earlier; there are
some who are delighted and there are some who are enraged! There are some
countries that do not accept and there are some countries that impose
headscarf! 

This does not inform the Western reader about the social contextualization,
about the social behavioural ramifications of the attitude towards the
headscarf; and yet, what truly matters for the unaware reader is to know
what it means for a woman to wear headscarf in this or in that country, what
are the consequences in her daily life, what is her social status, and the
same for those who do not wear headscarf - wherever this is legally or
socially possible. 

The columnist should speak about the interconnectedness between headscarf
and domestic slavery, between headscarf and excision, between headscarf and
female bestializing. 

Instead of this, the ridiculous attempt to form an imaginative field of
semiotics whereby, as in the Western societies people know the world in
terms of Left - Center - Right, the Muslim world oscillates between two
extremes, Turkey being one and Saudi Arabia (or Afghanistan) the other, with
Egypt, Sudan, Nigeria and Pakistan being in-between. 

This starts as ludicrous and ends up as criminal, as there are Human Rights
involved; and in that case only Turkey's legislation is acceptable - not
extreme! 

The rest of the realms are just inhuman and barbaric. 

Note: Qajar dynasty Persian Painting; women did not wear the headscarf that
today's Satanic sheikhs want to impose.



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