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The
publication of some cartoons in Denmark that offended Muslim sensibilities
the world over, the defence of the cartoonist in several quarters
under the plea of freedom of information, the violent reaction in
many countries, especially Pakistan, and the decision to use the
OIC to make demands on the western world constitute one of those
exceptional cases when something can be said for all the parties
involved and much more can be said against them.
The
party in whose favour little can be said is the cartoonist. What
motivated him while drawing the offensive sketches is far from clear.
Maybe he was seriously disturbed by the common (in his country)
perception of the threat from terrorism. It is also possible that
the Muslim immigrant community in his country had offered him cause
to nurse a grievance against it and thus added to the anti-Muslim
sentiment that has been sweeping the entire world for quite some
time, particularly since September 11, 2001. Whatever the provocation,
he stumbled into a grave error when he apparently tried to trace
the roots of terrorism in the Islamic belief. Muslims have only
recently joined the roll of terrorists. Those senior to them belonged
to other religious denominations, while some claimed to be non-believers.
Their actions were not attributed to the founders of their faiths.
The singling out of Muslim faith for the authorship of terrorism
amounted to a dangerous provocation.
However,
it may be true that a section of the western public opinion has
been influenced by the claims of some militant Muslim groups that
they commit acts of terrorism as a religious obligation and in order
to win the pleasure of God. That an uninformed western citizen may
be led into accepting such claims as authentic is understandable
but this cannot be said about scholars among them. They know, perhaps
better than their counterparts in the Muslim world, that no religion
sanctions attacks on the lives of innocent people for the realisation
of economic and political objectives. That the cartoonist in this
case did not have the benefit of this insight could be his sole
defence, whatever its worth. It is also possible to suggest that
he could not foresee his work would seriously hurt the Muslims.
That again is no defence.
Unfortunately,
the matter has been complicated a great deal by denying the Muslim
peoples satisfaction on the grounds that the cartoonist's right
to freedom of expression cannot be challenged. This line of argument,
which is based on untenable assumptions, has led some Muslim groups,
and even a couple of governments, into demanding new laws to prevent
attacks on sacred personages or other offences related to belief.
This demand too is based on untenable premises.
The
fact is that the human rights code already bars attacks on founders
of religions and the beliefs of various communities, particularly
if such attacks cause hatred against the target groups and have
the potential of incitement to violence.
The International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights
says (Article 20(2)) that states party to it should "prohibit
any advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes
incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence." Similar
restrictions on freedom of expression are found in the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Religious Discrimination. Under
it, all parties are obliged to prohibit "dissemination of ideas
based on racial superiority or hatred, incitement to racial discrimination,
as well as all acts of violence or incitement to such acts against
any race or group of persons of another colour or ethnic origin,"
as well as participation in "propaganda activities, which promote
and incite racial discrimination." Further, the European Convention
on Human Rights (Article 10(2)) declares that the right to freedom
of expression carries with it duties and responsibilities and, therefore,
it "may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions
or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic
society for
the protection of the reputation or rights of
others."
One
may also refer to the European court's decision in the case of Otto-Preminger-Institut
vs Austria. The Austrian government had seized and forfeited a film
on the grounds that it constituted an attack on the Christian religion.
The court justified the forfeiture on the grounds that the film
attacked the "right of citizens not to be insulted in their
religious feelings by the public expression of views of other persons."
In France, a person was convicted for denying the Holocaust as such
denial fuelled anti-Semitic feelings. And now a British historian
has been convicted for denying the Holocaust, although he claimed
to have revised his views.
However, what is involved here is not a point of law but a matter
of culture. The Christian societies of Europe have developed their
culture of free debate to an extent that writers and film-makers
can discuss Christianity and Jesus Christ in any manner without
angering their majorities or hurting their feelings. Colonial bondage
over long decades denied large populations of Asia and Africa, and
they include the whole of the Muslim world, the possibilities of
developing traditions of free discourse, and of tolerance for dissent.
The Afro-Asians in general and the Muslims (Arabs especially) in
particular have been the victims of stereotyping and misrepresentation
for many years.
The
Muslims, in South Asia specially, have been forced to fall back
on what Iqbal called the defence mechanism of dogma by suffering
denial of their political and economic rights for centuries. They
will not be helped to overcome their intellectual and cultural lag
by being offensively reminded day in and day out of their inadequacies.
All
restrictions on the freedom of expression as well as on academic
and artistic freedom are bad and can never be accepted as anything
more than a necessary evil justifiable in consideration of the shortcomings
found among a community's children or its grown-ups who display
under-developed minds or mindsets that are not amenable to reason.
For that reason, certain restrictions on dissemination of writings
and audio-visual material among children and impressionable youth
can be permitted, but these curbs can neither be made universal
nor permanent. All societies have a right as well as an obligation
to inculcate habits of free debate and tolerance for dissent that
would make censorship or other thought-control methods unnecessary.
Not
much can be said for the violent reaction to publication of the
cartoons. It is not necessary to add to the sizeable literature
in which the poverty of protest methods has been discussed in detail.
The wave of anger across the Muslim world is understandable, the
form public anger has taken is not. There is little doubt that,
once again, religious sentiments are being exploited for political
ends and the regime is being threatened by the most favoured of
its own protégés. However, three points need to be
made.
First, the militants claiming to be inspired by their belief, have
gravely undermined their cause by abandoning the high moral ground
that the revolutionary terrorists of Asia and Africa had occupied.
The so-called terrorists of South Asia occupy a place of honour
among the freedom- fighters. And so do the cadres of the African
National Congress (led by none other than Nelson Mandela, one of
the greatest men of peace humankind has known). They resorted to
terrorism only to rid the oppressed of the fear of colonial despotism.
They found their targets only among the symbols of oppression or
its agents; they swore to spare innocent citizens, especially women
and children. They were not ordinary killers. The militants of today,
who have targeted uninvolved people, have indicted themselves as
mindless criminals. They have vastly reduced their compatriots'
ability to engage the rest of the world in a fruitful dialogue to
ensure a peaceful, multi-cultural, pluralist world.
Secondly,
Pakistanis have entered the fray with unclean hands. A state that
permits discrimination on the basis of belief, and that too by constitution
and by law, and gloats over it, is not entitled to protest against
such discrimination by others, whether real or imagined. We have
to put our own house in order before we can set out to teach others
justice and fairplay.
And, thirdly, let us not depend on the rusted medieval guns of the
OIC to secure us victory on a battlefield on which the Muslims are
the weaker party in numbers as well as in terms of strategic strength.
The division of the world into religious blocs will create crises
worse than those spawned by the cold war. The OIC should limit its
role to intra- Muslim-world matters and may do what it can to promote
good governance and social justice in Muslim states, and, at best,
as a forum for a dialogue with other denominations. It will destroy
itself completely if it chooses the path of confrontation with the
non-Islamic world. The only legitimate battle lines on the international
landscape as well as in one's own land are those that divide the
haves and the have-nots. All other confrontations militate against
contemporary sensibility.
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