Saturday, January 30, 2010

Blair living in a wonderland of his own making


Saturday, January 30, 2010

LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

Blair living in a wonderland of his own making

If the world is watching the charade going on in Chilcot enquiry, as delivering justice to the victimized Iraqis and Afghanis, by charging former British Prime Minister Tony Blair for his illegal participation in a war that his own people so overwhelmingly opposed, the entire proceeding will be a serious let down. However, it is illuminating to the world, how far Blair is living away from the realities of human existence in the Third World. Some of Blair’s hallucinations about British role in the present world are mind-boggling.

Blair’s stand made out that even though 9/11 was not carried out by Saddam, a collective punishment is due for the entire Muslim world. That in effect was the underlining motivation of ‘war on terror’.

Blair stressed, that he had the total security of the West in mind, when he sided with Bush to pound Iraq. He had no regret for the excessive nature of human tragedies that the overwhelming aerial bombing had resulted in. To take out Saddam and his two sons, US and UK killed over 200,000 in direct bombings. And that too while the entire world, even France and Russia, that can be counted as major stakeholders in the Western World’s overall security, had given advance and persistent indication that they would NOT side with the US and UK in waging war on Iraq.

In his six hour testimony, he seems to have been influenced by the Jewish Neo-con strategies in the use of power and the need to secure the Western world, while US exploits its armed power to take over weak and indefensible nations with oil income that may translate into security threats in the distant future.

In his paranoia he has not bothered to chalk out the consequences of the armed attacks on foreign countries. US/UK/Israel have reached the limits of the efficacy of their armed might that has now opened the Pandora’s Box. Blair has taken up the same Israeli line on Iran. He again and again brought up Iran in his testimony. He is oblivious to the fact that in Afghanistan which the US and NATO forces have completely destroyed, they are now suing for a peace move --- so disdainfully rejected by Taliban. Their prime target Al Qaida has now resorted to a ‘hide and seek’ game gamboling all over the world. And it should be no surprise if they too pick up from Blair and Bush and start with their own collective punishment strategies, fine-tuned to take revenge on the Axis.

 Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai

Thursday, January 28, 2010

World snubs India over Taliban - Delhi’s ‘No Good Taliban’ Stand Junked, Largest Aid Donor Marginalised In Kabul - By Ashis Ray - The Times of India


The Times of India report copied below --- 'World snubs India over Taliban' --- is a serious blow to our Government's handling of its foreign affairs.

India's Afghan policy is highly hampered by its policymaker's Brahminical ideological and communal obsession against Muslims. A globalised India will have to drive out those mentally prejudiced policy makers, that are not ready to play realpolitik strategies when dealing on the world stage. A big world is out there and India's parochial hangups are a big drag around its smooth progress in foreign relations. India's secularism itself is a sham for all the world to witness. Its democratic institutions must reflect the Indian ethos in totality and not be muzzled by the 3% Brahmin minority's hegemony on power. Let India and Indian people breath free and give 15% Muslims their rightful representation at all levels of its decision making.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai


 




World snubs India over Taliban


Delhi’s ‘No Good Taliban’ Stand Junked, Largest Aid Donor Marginalised In Kabul


Ashis Ray | TNN 


London: A one-day international conference on Afghanistan on Thursday rejected India’s argument that there were no degrees of Talibanism. British PM Gordon Brown, hosting the conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, announced in his opening address the establishment of a $500 ‘trust fund’ to buy “peace and integration’’ with warriors who are engaged in violence for economic rather than ideological reasons. A whopping $140 million has already been pledged for this year.
 
    During his pre-conference discussion with British foreign secretary David Miliband, external affairs minister S M Krishna had specifically said, “There should be no distinction between a good Taliban and 
a bad Taliban.’’ But the Indian stand clearly fell on deaf ears. It was also unclear if remnants of Afghanistan’s Northern Alliance, once cultivated by India, would be accommodated in any way. There was also no reference to the erstwhile foreign minister, Abdullah Abdullah, who put up a spirited fight in the first round of the recent controversial presidential election and exposed a fraud before withdrawing from the contest.
 
    Krishna was allocated a seat in the 
second of three rows of attendees at the conference which in itself reflected India’s peripheral role in Afghan affairs in the eyes of the international community. This, despite India being the biggest regional aidgiver to Afghanistan, with a commitment of $1.3 million.
 
    Earlier in the week, Turkey, a Pakistan ally, did not even bother to invite India to a confabulation on Afghanistan. Krishna was among 70 foreign ministers and officials of in
ternational organisations who attended the convention at the 185-yearold Lancaster House. Pakistan supports a differentiation between Taliban segments, including being soft towards the Afghan Taliban, who are sponsored by the ISI. In an interview to a British daily on Thursday, foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi claimed: “Pakistan is perhaps better placed than any other country in the world to support Afghan reintegration and reconciliation.’’
 
    As a goodwill gesture, the conference was preceded by a lifting of UN sanctions on five leaders of the obscurantist Taliban regime, which was ousted by armed forces led by the US after the 9/11 attack on New York by the Afghanistan-based al-Qaida. Among the beneficiaries is former foreign minister Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil.

Karen Armstrong --- Think Again: GOD : Foreign Policy Magazine

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/10/19/god_0?page=full














Think Again: God

BY KAREN ARMSTRONG | NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2009

"God Is Dead."
No. When Friedrich Nietzsche announced the death of God in 1882, he thought that in the modern, scientific world people would soon be unable to countenance the idea of religious faith. By the time The Economist did its famous “God Is Dead” cover in 1999, the question seemed moot, notwithstanding the rise of politicized religiosity -- fundamentalism -- in almost every major faith since the 1970s. An obscure ayatollah toppled the shah of Iran, religious Zionism surfaced in Israel, and in the United States, Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority announced its dedicated opposition to “secular humanism.”
But it is only since Sept. 11, 2001, that God has proven to be alive and well beyond all question -- at least as far as the global public debate is concerned. With jihadists attacking America, an increasingly radicalized Middle East, and a born-again Christian in the White House for eight years, you’ll have a hard time finding anyone who disagrees. Even The Economist’s editor in chief recently co-authored a book called God Is Back. While many still question the relevance of God in our private lives, there’s a different debate on the global stage today: Is God a force for good in the world?
So-called new atheists such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens have denounced religious belief as not only retrograde but evil; they regard themselves as the vanguard of a campaign to expunge it from human consciousness. Religion, they claim, creates divisions, strife, and warfare; it imprisons women and brainwashes children; its doctrines are primitive, unscientific, and irrational, essentially the preserve of the unsophisticated and gullible.
These writers are wrong -- not only about religion, but also about politics -- because they are wrong about human nature. Homo sapiens is also Homo religiosus. As soon as we became recognizably human, men and women started to create religions. We are meaning-seeking creatures. While dogs, as far as we know, do not worry about the canine condition or agonize about their mortality, humans fall very easily into despair if we don’t find some significance in our lives. Theological ideas come and go, but the quest for meaning continues. So God isn’t going anywhere. And when we treat religion as something to be derided, dismissed, or destroyed, we risk amplifying its worst faults. Whether we like it or not, God is here to stay, and it’s time we found a way to live with him in a balanced, compassionate manner.


"God and Politics Shouldn’t Mix.
Not necessarily. Theologically illiterate politicians have long given religion a bad name. An inadequate understanding of God that reduces “him” to an idol in our own image who gives our likes and dislikes sacred sanction is the worst form of spiritual tyranny. Such arrogance has led to atrocities like the Crusades. The rise of secularism in government was meant to check this tendency, but secularism itself has created new demons now inflicting themselves on the world.
In the West, secularism has been a success, essential to the modern economy and political system, but it was achieved gradually over the course of nearly 300 years, allowing new ideas of governance time to filter down to all levels of society. But in other parts of the world, secularization has occurred far too rapidly and has been resented by large sectors of the population, who are still deeply attached to religion and find Western institutions alien.
In the Middle East, overly aggressive secularization has sometimes backfired, making the religious establishment more conservative, or even radical. In Egypt, for example, the remarkable reformer Muhammad Ali (1769-1849) so brutally impoverished and marginalized the clergy that its members turned their backs on change. When the shahs of Iran tortured and exiled mullahs who opposed their regime, some, such as Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, concluded that more extreme responses on the part of Iran’s future religious rulers were necessary.
Shiism had for centuries separated religion from politics as a matter of sacred principle, and Khomeini’s insistence that a cleric should become head of state was an extraordinary innovation. But moderate religion can play a constructive role in politics. Muhammad Abdu (1849-1905), grand mufti of Egypt, feared that the vast majority of Egyptians would not understand the country’s nascent democratic institutions unless they were explicitly linked with traditional Islamic principles that emphasized the importance of “consultation” (shura) and the duty of seeking “consensus” (ijma) before passing legislation.
In the same spirit, Hassan al-Banna (1906-1949), founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, began his movement by translating the social message of the Koran into a modern idiom, founding clinics, hospitals, trade unions, schools, and factories that gave workers insurance, holidays, and good working conditions. In other words, he aimed to bring the masses to modernity in an Islamic setting. The Brotherhood’s resulting popularity was threatening to Egypt’s secular government, which could not provide these services. In 1949, Banna was assassinated, and some members of the Brotherhood splintered into radical offshoots in reaction.
Of course, the manner in which religion is used in politics is more important than whether it’s used at all. U.S. presidents such as John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama have invoked faith as a shared experience that binds the country together -- an approach that recognizes the communal power of spirituality without making any pretense to divine right. Still, this consensus is not satisfactory to American Protestant fundamentalists, who believe the United States should be a distinctively Christian nation.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES

"God Breeds Violence and Intolerance.
No, humans do. For Hitchens in God Is Not Great, religion is inherently “violent … intolerant, allied to racism, tribalism and bigotry”; even so-called moderates are guilty by association. Yet it is not God or religion but violence itself -- inherent in human nature -- that breeds violence. As a species, we survived by killing and eating other animals; we also murder our own kind. So pervasive is this violence that it leaks into most scriptures, though these aggressive passages have always been balanced and held in check by other texts that promote a compassionate ethic based on the Golden Rule: Treat others as you would like them to treat you. Despite manifest failings over the centuries, this has remained the orthodox position.
In claiming that God is the source of all human cruelty, Hitchens and Dawkins ignore some of the darker facets of modern secular society, which has been spectacularly violent because our technology has enabled us to kill people on an unprecedented scale. Not surprisingly, religion has absorbed this belligerence, as became hideously clear with the September 11 atrocities.
But "religious" wars, no matter how modern the tools, always begin as political ones. This happened in Europe during the 17th century, and it has happened today in the Middle East, where the Palestinian national movement has evolved from a leftist-secular to an increasingly Islamically articulated nationalism. Even the actions of so-called jihadists have been inspired by politics, not God. In a study of suicide attacks between 1980 and 2004, American scholar Robert Pape concluded that 95 percent were motivated by a clear strategic objective: to force modern democracies to withdraw from territory the assailants regard as their national homeland.
This aggression does not represent the faith of the majority, however. In recent Gallup polling conducted in 35 Muslim countries, only 7 percent of those questioned thought that the September 11 attacks were justified. Their reasons were entirely political.
Fundamentalism is not conservative. Rather, it is highly innovative -- even heretical -- because it always develops in response to a perceived crisis. In their anxiety, some fundamentalists distort the tradition they are trying to defend. The Pakistani ideologue Abu Ala Maududi (1903-1979) was the first major Muslim thinker to make jihad, signifying “holy war” instead of the traditional meaning of “struggle” or “striving” for self-betterment, a central Islamic duty. Both he and the influential Egyptian thinker Sayyid Qutb (1906-1966) were fully aware that this was extremely controversial but believed it was justified by Western imperialism and the secularizing policies of rulers such as Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser.
All fundamentalism -- whether Jewish, Christian, or Muslim -- is rooted in a profound fear of annihilation. Qutb developed his ideology in the concentration camps where Nasser interred thousands of the Muslim Brothers. History shows that when these groups are attacked, militarily or verbally, they almost invariably become more extreme.

"God Is for the Poor and Ignorant."
No. The new atheists insist vehemently that religion is puerile and irrational, belonging, as Hitchens argues, to “the infancy of our society.” This reflects the broader disappointment among Western intellectuals that humanity, confronted with apparently unlimited choice and prosperity, should still rely on what Karl Marx called the “opiate” of the masses.
But God refuses to be outgrown, even in the United States, the richest country in the world and the most religious country in the developed world. None of the major religions is averse to business; each developed initially in a nascent market economy. The Bible and the Koran may have prohibited usury, but over the centuries Jews, Christians, and Muslims all found ways of getting around this restriction and produced thriving economies. It is one of the great ironies of religious history that Christianity, whose founder taught that it was impossible to serve both God and mammon, should have produced the cultural environment that, as Max Weber suggested in his 1905 book, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, was integral to modern capitalism.
Still, the current financial crisis shows that the religious critique of excessive greed is far from irrelevant. Although not opposed to business, the major faith traditions have tried to counterbalance some of the abuses of capitalism. Eastern religions, such as Buddhism, by means of yoga and other disciplines, try to moderate the aggressive acquisitiveness of the human psyche. The three monotheistic faiths have inveighed against the injustice of unevenly distributed wealth -- a critique that speaks directly to the gap between rich and poor in our society.
To recover from the ill effects of the last year, we may need exactly that conquest of egotism that has always been essential in the quest for the transcendence we call “God.” Religion is not simply a matter of subscribing to a set of obligatory beliefs; it is hard work, requiring a ceaseless effort to get beyond the selfishness that prevents us from achieving a more humane humanity.

"God Is Bad for Women."
Yes. It is unfortunately true that none of the major world religions has been good for women. Even when a tradition began positively for women (as in Christianity and Islam), within a few generations men dragged it back to the old patriarchy. But this is changing. Women in all faiths are challenging their men on the grounds of the egalitarianism that is one of the best characteristics of all these religious traditions.
One of the hallmarks of modernity has been the emancipation of women. But that has meant that in their rebellion against the modern ethos, fundamentalists tend to overemphasize traditional gender roles. Unfortunately, frontal assaults on this patriarchal trend have often proven counterproductive. Whenever "modernizing" governments have tried to ban the veil, for example, women have rushed in ever greater numbers to put it on. In 1935, Shah Muhammad Reza Pahlavi commanded his soldiers to shoot hundreds of unarmed demonstrators who were peacefully protesting against obligatory Western dress in Mashhad, one of Iran’s holiest shrines. Such actions have turned veiling, which was not a universal practice before the modern period, into a symbol of Islamic integrity. Some Muslims today claim that it is not essential to look Western in order to be modern and that while Western fashion often displays wealth and privilege, Islamic dress emphasizes the egalitarianism of the Koran.
In general, any direct Western intervention in gender matters has backfired; it would be better to support indigenous Muslim movements that are agitating for greater opportunities for improved women’s rights in education, the workplace, and politics.
JOHN PHILLIPS/TIME LIFE PICTURES/GETTY IMAGES

"God Is the Enemy of Science."
He doesn’t have to be. Science has become an enemy to fundamentalist Christians who campaign against the teaching of evolution in public schools and stem-cell research because they seem to conflict with biblical teaching.
But their reading of scripture is unprecedentedly literal. Before the modern period, few understood the first chapter of Genesis as an exact account of the origins of life; until the 17th century, theologians insisted that if a biblical text contradicted science, it must be interpreted allegorically.
The conflict with science is symptomatic of a reductive idea of God in the modern West. Ironically, it was the empirical emphasis of modern science that encouraged many to regard God and religious language as fact rather than symbol, thus forcing religion into an overly rational, dogmatic, and alien literalism.
Popular fundamentalism represents a widespread rebellion against modernity, and for Christian fundamentalists, evolution epitomizes everything that is wrong with the modern world. It is regarded less as a scientific theory than a symbol of evil. But this anti-science bias is far less common in Judaism and Islam, where fundamentalist movements have been sparked more by political issues, such as the state of Israel, than doctrinal or scientific ones.

"God Is Incompatible with Democracy."
No. Samuel Huntington foresaw a "clash of civilizations” between the free world and Islam, which, he maintained, was inherently averse to democracy. But at the beginning of the 20th century, nearly all leading Muslim intellectuals were in love with the West and wanted their countries to look just like Britain and France. What has alienated many Muslims from the democratic ideal is not their religion but Western governments’ support of autocratic rulers, such as the Iranian shahs, Saddam Hussein, and Hosni Mubarak, who have denied people basic human and democratic rights.
The 2007 Gallup poll shows that support for democratic freedoms and women's rights is widespread in the Muslim world, and many governments are responding -- albeit haltingly -- to pressures for more political participation. There is, however, resistance to a wholesale adoption of the Western secular model. Many want to see God reflected more clearly in public life, just as a 2006 Gallup poll revealed that 46 percent of Americans believe that God should be the source of legislation.
Nor is sharia law the rigid system that many Westerners deplore. Muslim reformers, such as Sheikh Ali Gomaa and Tariq Ramadan, argue that it must be reviewed in the light of changing social circumstances. A fatwa is not universally binding like a papal edict; rather, it simply expresses the opinion of the mufti who issues it. Muslims can choose which fatwas they adopt and thus participate in a flexible free market of religious thought, just as Americans can choose which church they attend.
Religion may not be the cause of the world’s political problems, but we still need to understand it if we are to solve them. "Whoever took religion seriously!” exclaimed an exasperated U.S. government official after the Iranian Revolution. Had policymakers bothered to research contemporary Shiism, the United States could have avoided serious blunders during that crisis. Religion should be studied with the same academic impartiality and accuracy as the economy, politics, and social customs of a region, so that we learn how religion interacts with political tension, what is counterproductive, and how to avoid giving unnecessary offense.
And study it we'd better, for God is back. And if "he" is perceived in an idolatrous, literal-minded way, we can only expect more dogmatism, rigidity, and religiously articulated violence in the decades ahead.
Want to Know More?
Karen Armstrong has spent the past 25 years writing about the centrality of religion to the human experience. Before her most recent book, The Case for God (New York: Knopf, 2009), she wroteThe Bible: A Biography (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2007), an account of the not entirely orthodox way that the Bible came into being.
Over the last few years, the so-called New Atheists have become increasingly vocal about the dangerous shortcomings of religion in such books as Sam Harris' The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason (New York: W.W. Norton, 2004), Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion(New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2006), and Christopher Hitchens' God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (New York: Hachette Book Group, 2007).
Recently, some books have sought out a middle ground between atheism and fundamentalism. These include Robert Wright's The Evolution of God (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2009), which incorporates evolutionary psychology to explain shifts in belief over time, and Economist editors John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge's God is Back (New York: Penguin, 2009), examining the curiously vital relationship between modernity and religion.
Religion scholar John Esposito and polling expert Dalia Mogahed argue in Who Speaks for Islam: What a Billion Muslims Really Think (New York: Gallup Press, 2007), a book based on more than 50,000 interviews in Muslim countries, that Westerners have been getting Islam wrong for decades.
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR : The last words

Thursday, January 28, 2010

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

THE LAST WORDS that Indian Minister Anand Sharma spoke on NDTV's India panel meet, at Davos, projected India to be bringing up its society within next decade to alleviate poverty, spread education, provide job opportunities, and raise India's voice in the portals of developed world.

I could not help recalling how much Anand Sharma's vision for India was different from the universalism of an ordinary man of desert, that sent out the his last message from the mount ---- not for his clan, not for his tribe, not for his race, not for his country, but the entire world at large.

In 14 centuries that visionary’s dream, by the grace of Allah, has touched the lives of billions around the globe. I wish Anand Sharma; breaking mental bondage of his surroundings could have dreamed and spoken a world inclusive role for India, to usher in an economic and welfare era, different from that of the West and the East ideals.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai

Sunday, January 24, 2010

LETTER TO THE EDITOR:Indian Judiciary should not cross the Green Line


Sunday, January 24, 2010

LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

Indian Judiciary should not cross the Green
Line

An Indian court decision had seriously challenged the constitutional right of freedom of religion of a Muslim woman, under the threat that if she is not willing to lift her veil for a voter’s card and subsequently an identification check at Election Booth, she would not be allowed to vote.

This is like instant disenfranchising of a citizen without any recourse to any legislated law of the land.

For 63 years Muslims women had been most enthusiastic in lining up to vote and had been part of that Muslim vote bank, that proved to be a make or break difference to the fortunes of many a legislator all around the nation. The burqa, niqab, hijab or chaadar of Indian Muslim women had never been a problem. To make that an issue, probably taking a cue from Western world’s current wave of Islamophobia unfortunately has some local references too.

There is conscious attempt to neutralize the crucial Muslim vote bank in as many ways and in as many pretexts as the some vested interests could devise. While at one point, BJP’s newly appointed President Nitin Gadkari has rooted for compulsory voting, to ensure that Hindus too vote en mass and thus neutralize the block voting by Muslims, the wording of the judicial judgment in this case has some intended or unintended corollaries, that will call for a swift review.

At another level, India’s constitutional secularism too is at stake. The general definition of ‘secularism’ all around the world is based on the separation of State and religion in state affair. Our coming Republic Day is most appropriate time to reflect on the working of our constitutional secularism. Sadly, however,it is open to public scrutiny that in practice in India, religion and especially the supposedly Hindu cultural – a heavily colored religious version of Hindutva, the new political face of Vedic Brahminical dominance of the social polity, is allowed to rule the roost even in the portals of secular institutions.

Judiciary is one such area, where recently a spate of judgments has been coming forth, which is openly directed towards India Muslims and their religious affairs. Muslim organisation, including All India Muslim Personal Law Board is apparently snowed over by having to deal with the avalanche of such judicial judgments that would ordinarily provoke a Shah Banu like response from the community at large. General feeling among Muslims is that whatever may be merit of points raised by the Judiciary, the underlining attitude is to narrow the area of freedom that all religious groupings have a right to expect from India’s secular constitution. The entire exercise is looked upon by a cross section of Muslim community as a new form of communalism wrapped in the cloak of justice and fairplay. Justice not only should be done, but should be seen to be done. On that count the current season of anti-Muslim focus of forced reform is more to create disunity among the community and to introduce the divide and rule strategy, as long as Muslim are kept on the sideline of Indian polity. The so-called liberals and that includes even some of politically savvy Ulema too, are dithering in their responses and willing to compromise as far as possible. However, unless they draw a Green Line and let the State know, where the secular government should not cross it, the social polity will fracture at a worst time, when its unity is so badly needed to face challenges coming from outside our borders.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai