Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta islamofobia. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta islamofobia. Mostrar todas as mensagens

sexta-feira, 12 de dezembro de 2014

Não, não sou anti-semita!

Às vezes cansa. Cada vez que faço qualquer crítica à actuação do governo de Israel, chovem as acusações de anti-semitismo. Por isso vou tentar ver se consigo deixar a minha posição clara:

- Não desejo mal a ninguém por ser Judeu, Muçulmano, Cristão, Budista, Agnóstico, Ateu ou qualquer outra religião ou falta dela.

- Na realidade não desejo mal a ninguém. Talvez seja uma posição ingénua, mas não tiro prazer do mal que acontece aos outros.

- Nenhum grupo étnico ou religioso se sobrepõe ao indivíduo. Isto significa que nenhum Judeu é individualmente culpado pelo que outra pessoa da sua etnia ou religião fez ou faz. O mesmo é válido para todos os outros credos.

- O Holocausto Nazi existiu e os Judeus as suas principais vítimas. Não foi o único genocídio da história e nem sequer do último século, mas foi o pior de todos eles.

- O anti-semitismo é um crime grave. Tão grave como o racismo, a xenofobia ou a islamofobia.

- Não apoio terrorismo de espécie nenhuma, por nenhum grupo e contra nenhum grupo. Seja ele a Al Qaeda, o Stern Gang, a ETA, o Boko Haram, Al Shabab, FP-25, Baader Meinhof ou Exército Vermelho Japonês.

- Criticar o governo de Israel não significa fazer dos seus vizinhos santos. Já públiquei inúmeros artigos sobre isso, sobre a Primavera Árabe, sobre o Egipto, Líbano, Síria e muitos outros.

- Criticar o governo de Israel não significa fazer dos palestinianos santos. Também já escrevi muitas vezes sobre os crimes de Yasser Arafat, do Hamas, sobre os bombistas suicidas entre outros.

- São muitos os Judeus de todo o mundo e até em Israel que criticam também a actuação deste e outros governos de Israel. Incluem sobreviventes do Holocausto, antigos militares, ONGs e até lóbis oficiais.

A única curiosidade é mesmo a forma como a acusação de anti-semitismo é utilizada constantemente como arma para silenciar qualquer oposição à actuação de Israel. O problema é que provavelmente.... "you might just have overplayed your hand".

segunda-feira, 23 de julho de 2012

Islamofobia

Owen Jones - The Independent
Artigo escrito no jornal inglês "The Independent" por Owen Jones sobre a questão da islamofobia. Talvez o melhor artigo sobre o assunto que tenho lido. A lógica é simples: pegue-se no que é dito diariamente por figuras públicas, líderes de opinião e meros mortais como qualquer de um nós e imagine-se o que aconteceria se substituíssemos a palavra Islão por Judaísmo e muçulmano por judeu. Felizmente o anti-semitismo hoje em dia é residual (para além do insulto fácil utilizado regularmente para quem critica alguma política do governo israelita) mas a islamofobia está viva e de boa saúde. E é assim que líderes populistas e sem escrúpulos conseguem - se tiverem o contexto certo - levar povos inteiros a apoiar e cometer os mais aboníveis crimes, como aconteceu há sete décadas atrás.

Owen Jones: Islamophobia - for Muslims, read Jews. And be shocked


Imagine our alarm if nearly half the UK population said they believed that 'there are too many Jews'

To be a prominent Muslim means suffering a daily diet of bigotry and even outright hatred. This week, Mehdi Hasan – who, other than my colleague Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, is Britain's only prominent Muslim journalist – wrote of how, every day, he is attacked as a "jihadist" and a "terrorist". He has been described as a "dangerous Muslim shithead", a "moderate cockroach", and worse. The message from his critics is clear: Muslims have no legitimate place in public life.
Mehdi Hasan was right to speak out, but it must not be left to Muslims alone to take on this bigotry. A tide of Islamophobia has swept Europe for many years, and – shamefully – all too few have taken a stand. Even many who regard themselves as "progressives" have either remained silent or even indulged anti-Muslim prejudice. It's time for Muslims and non-Muslims alike to join forces against the most widespread – and most acceptable – form of bigotry of our times.

Think I'm exaggerating? Consider that the far-right's main target of choice is no longer Jews or black people: it's Muslims. The BNP portrays itself as a crusade against the "Islamification" of Britain; in the 2010 election, it launched a "Campaign Against Islam". Its leader, Nick Griffin, describes Islam as "wicked" and a "cancer", and has blamed Muslims for problems such as drugs and rape. The English Defence League stages frequent – and often intimidating – street rallies protesting against Muslims.

But anti-Muslim prejudice isn't simply confined to the far-right fringes. I attended a Stockport sixth form with a large Muslim student population. The reality of their lives is all but airbrushed out of existence. When they appear at all, it's generally as fanatics, extremists or a community somehow "harbouring" dangerous extremists. (When do Britain's whites face the absurdity of being called on to crack down on far-right fanatics supposedly in their ranks?) One study took a selection of newspapers in a single week: 91 per cent of reports featuring Muslims were negative.

One of my Muslim fellow students was Dr Leon Moosavi, fast becoming a national authority on Islamophobia. He battles against the widespread denial that anti-Muslim prejudice is a problem. But consider that, in one poll conducted by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, 45 per cent of Britons agreed that "there are too many Muslims" in Britain. Imagine if nearly half the population admitted to believing that "there are too many Jews" in Britain: how loud would our alarm be?

Of course, it is not just a British problem: the poison of Islamophobia has infected Europe's political mainstream. According to a Pew Research Center survey, nearly six out of 10 Europeans believe that Muslims were "fanatical", and half believed they were "violent". As here, the European far-right aims fire at Muslims above all other groups. In the Netherlands, an anti-Muslim party led by Geert Wilders is the third largest in parliament. Wilders compares the Koran to Mein Kampf, calls Islam a "Trojan Horse" in Europe and demands that the country's 850,000 Muslims be paid to leave the country. Wilders doesn't languish on the fringes: the current Dutch cabinet depended for two years on his party's support.

Or take sleepy Switzerland, where the Swiss People's Party (SVP) is the biggest party in the country's Federal Assembly. The SVP won a referendum on the banning of minarets, which the party's general secretary described as "symbols of Islamic power". During the vote, Geneva's mosque was repeatedly vandalised. Farhad Afshar, the president of the Coordination of Islamic Organisations, had no doubt what signal was sent by this vote: "that Muslims do not feel accepted as a religious community". But it gets even darker than that. In June, the Zurich-based SVP politician Alexander Müller was forced to stand down after tweeting: "Maybe we need another Kristallnacht… this time for mosques." The parallels with anti-Semitism could not be more overt.

In France – where recently 42 per cent polled for Le Monde believed that the presence of Muslims was a "threat" to their national identity – a record number voted for the anti-Muslim National Front in April's presidential elections. Denmark's third largest party is the People's Party, which rails against "Islamisation" and demands the end of all non-Western immigration. The anti-Muslim Vlaams Belang flourishes in Flemish Belgium. But those who take a stand against Islamophobia are often demanded to qualify it with a condemnation of extremism. When is this ever asked of other stands against prejudice? When we condemn anti-Semitic hate, must we criticise repressive Israeli policies in the same breath? It would be absurd – they are completely separate issues, and indeed millions of Jews across the world oppose the actions of Israel's government.

Anti-Muslim hate is a European pandemic. I'm proud to stand with Mehdi Hasan and other Muslims facing Islamophobia. But – I implore, I beg fellow non-Muslims – stand with them too, before this hatred spirals further out of control.

(fonte: theindependent)