Dan wrote:
>
> Silahkan baca pengalaman tangan pertama di Afghanistan
> http://www.timesonl ine.co.uk/ tol/comment/ columnists/ 
> guest_contributo rs 
> <http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors>
> /article1480090. ece
>


Buat yg pengen baca, saya copy paste di bawah ini.  Oh ya, buat rekan 
Khaidar, The famous Ibn waraq akan mengeluarkan tulisan mengkonter 
Edward said.  Sebagai spesialis Edward Said, anda kudu liat liat lebih 
dahulu.  huehehehehhe ....  infornya ada di bagian bawah artikel ini.

====
How my eyes were opened to the barbarity of Islam
Is it racist to condemn fanaticism?
Phyllis Chesler

Once I was held captive in Kabul. I was the bride of a charming, 
seductive and Westernised Afghan Muslim whom I met at an American 
college. The purdah I experienced was relatively posh but the 
sequestered all-female life was not my cup of chai --- nor was the male 
hostility to veiled, partly veiled and unveiled women in public.

When we landed in Kabul, an airport official smoothly confiscated my US 
passport. "Don't worry, it's just a formality," my husband assured me. I 
never saw that passport again. I later learnt that this was routinely 
done to foreign wives --- perhaps to make it impossible for them to 
leave. Overnight, my husband became a stranger. The man with whom I had 
discussed Camus, Dostoevsky, Tennessee Williams and the Italian cinema 
became a stranger. He treated me the same way his father and elder 
brother treated their wives: distantly, with a hint of disdain and 
embarrassment.

In our two years together, my future husband had never once mentioned 
that his father had three wives and 21 children. Nor did he tell me that 
I would be expected to live as if I had been reared as an Afghan woman. 
I was supposed to lead a largely indoor life among women, to go out only 
with a male escort and to spend my days waiting for my husband to return 
or visiting female relatives, or having new (and very fashionable) 
clothes made.

In America, my husband was proud that I was a natural-born rebel and 
free thinker. In Afghanistan, my criticism of the treatment of women and 
of the poor rendered him suspect, vulnerable. He mocked my horrified 
reactions. But I knew what my eyes and ears told me. I saw how poor 
women in chadaris were forced to sit at the back of the bus and had to 
keep yielding their place on line in the bazaar to any man.

I saw how polygamous, arranged marriages and child brides led to chronic 
female suffering and to rivalry between co-wives and half-brothers; how 
the subordination and sequestration of women led to a profound 
estrangement between the sexes --- one that led to wife-beating, marital 
rape and to a rampant but hotly denied male "prison"-like homosexuality 
and pederasty; how frustrated, neglected and uneducated women tormented 
their daughter-in-laws and female servants; how women were not allowed 
to pray in mosques or visit male doctors (their husbands described the 
symptoms in their absence).

Individual Afghans were enchantingly courteous --- but the Afghanistan I 
knew was a bastion of illiteracy, poverty, treachery and preventable 
diseases. It was also a police state, a feudal monarchy and a theocracy, 
rank with fear and paranoia. Afghanistan had never been colonised. My 
relatives said: "Not even the British could occupy us." Thus I was 
forced to conclude that Afghan barbarism was of their own making and 
could not be attributed to Western imperialism.

Long before the rise of the Taleban, I learnt not to romanticise Third 
World countries or to confuse their hideous tyrants with liberators. I 
also learnt that sexual and religious apartheid in Muslim countries is 
indigenous and not the result of Western crimes --- and that such 
"colourful tribal customs" are absolutely, not relatively, evil. Long 
before al-Qaeda beheaded Daniel Pearl in Pakistan and Nicholas Berg in 
Iraq, I understood that it was dangerous for a Westerner, especially a 
woman, to live in a Muslim country. In retrospect, I believe my 
so-called Western feminism was forged in that most beautiful and 
treacherous of Eastern countries.

Nevertheless, Western intellectual-ideologues, including feminists, have 
demonised me as a reactionary and racist "Islamophobe" for arguing that 
Islam, not Israel, is the largest practitioner of both sexual and 
religious apartheid in the world and that if Westerners do not stand up 
to this apartheid, morally, economically and militarily, we will not 
only have the blood of innocents on our hands; we will also be overrun 
by Sharia in the West. I have been heckled, menaced, never-invited, or 
disinvited for such heretical ideas --- and for denouncing the epidemic 
of Muslim-on-Muslim violence for which tiny Israel is routinely, 
unbelievably scapegoated.

However, my views have found favour with the bravest and most 
enlightened people alive. Leading secular Muslim and ex-Muslim 
dissidents --- from Egypt, Bangladesh, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Pakistan, 
Syria and exiles from Europe and North America --- assembled for the 
landmark Islamic Summit Conference in Florida and invited me to chair 
the opening panel on Monday.

According to the chair of the meeting, Ibn Warraq: "What we need now is 
an age of enlightenment in the Islamic world. Without critical 
examination of Islam, it will remain dogmatic, fanatical and intolerant 
and will continue to stifle thought, human rights, individuality, 
originality and truth." The conference issued a declaration calling for 
such a new "Enlightenment". The declaration views "Islamophobia" as a 
false allegation, sees a "noble future for Islam as a personal faith, 
not a political doctrine" and "demands the release of Islam from its 
captivity to the ambitions of power-hungry men".

Now is the time for Western intellectuals who claim to be antiracists 
and committed to human rights to stand with these dissidents. To do so 
requires that we adopt a universal standard of human rights and abandon 
our loyalty to multicultural relativism, which justifies, even 
romanticises, indigenous Islamist barbarism, totalitarian terrorism and 
the persecution of women, religious minorities, homosexuals and 
intellectuals. Our abject refusal to judge between civilisation and 
barbarism, and between enlightened rationalism and theocratic 
fundamentalism, endangers and condemns the victims of Islamic tyranny.

Ibn Warraq has written a devastating work that will be out by the 
summer. It is entitled Defending the West: A Critique of Edward Said's 
Orientalism. Will Western intellectuals also dare to defend the West?

Phyllis Chesler is an Emerita Professor of Psychology and Women's 
Studies at the City University of New York


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