| From Race to Religion | |
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by François Blumenfeld-Kouchner, September 8, 2007
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A post in Foreign Policy’s blog this week entitled “Here come the blonde, blue-eyed terrorists?” makes much of the “Aryan”-looking German converts to Islam making it into the terrorists’ ranks. I don’t know that it’s such a new phenomenon (plenty of Caucasian-like terrorists in the past, and indeed if you look beyond Islamic terrorism, plenty of Caucasian terrorists), but I must say that for this anti-racist atheist, this new focus heralds a hope that attention will be shifted from ethnicity (e.g.: “Arabs”) to religion (e.g.: “Islam”) as the excuse for terrorism. Not that I think like some of the anti-religious crowd that religion necessarily breeds violence -I actually get on better with many religious moderates than with a number of fellow atheists; and I’m only too aware that I must be compensating for the lacking irrationality of religion in many ways- but I do think that it’s a bad excuse, since its premises are wholly mistaken.
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François Blumenfeld-Kouchner was born in Paris in 1978. He has been an itinerant student in France, Scotland and Ireland before reaching Chicago, where he currently lives, studies and teaches. More... |
Anonymous
arabs and caucasians
If you're going to use outdated racial classifications you should at least know that Arabs are Caucasians.
François Blumen...
Point well taken -thanks for
Point well taken -thanks for the correction. But indeed my argument was against racial classifications to start with.
shimshon123
Islam is too simple
jez
The problem
is terrorism. Or more specifically terror. Terror is practised by various entities regardless of religion: Separatist, fundamentalist, state, fascist, xenophobic, anti-capitalist...The US and Israel are not muslim let alone islamist, yet they practice terror. The same goes for
the Rote Armee Faktion or the republican and unionist paramilitaries and the british army in Northern Ireland.
François Blumen...
Shimson and Jez - Shimson -I
Shimson and Jez -
Shimson -I agree with you and, no, I'm not suggesting that the problem is Islam. I'm only arguing 1) that any kind of religion serving as an excuse for violence is a bad idea: so I'm not saying that religion is either necessary or sufficient to engender terrorism (you can have religion without violence or violence without religion), but since I believe that religions are fundamentally erroneous, I think it'd be good to do away in particular with any religious justification of violence. 2) that "racism" -as in: he's not white, he must be a terrorist- is not a useful interpretation of the terrorist phenomenon, including as a prevention measure (Islamic terrorism uses converts was the topic of the FP post), and it can lead to huge "blunders" that should not be tolerated in a democracy (e.g.: de Menezes's assassination by the British police, which I mentioned in another post). I doubt that a shift away from ethnicity towards religion would help prevent this "racism" (or xenophobia, or whatever), but why not hope?
Jez - The definition of terrorism is an interesting point (although the introductory chapter on this point in Hoffman's "Inside Terrorism" is borderline tedious, it is useful in this case). Of course, we're in disagreement as to the US practicing terror: I just watched the Bourne Supremacy, and it didn't seem to me that it was a documentary, sorry.
jez
Euh,François, how is your
Euh,François, how is your take on the Bourne Supremacy a logical rebuttal of my pointing out that the US practises terror? I am not stating an opinion. I am merely point out what can be observed in the media (unless the media show nothing but lies): innocent populations all over the world being massacred, terrorised, tortured by the US army and other armies armed by the US. All this has been well documented by one of the, if not the, most experienced western journalists in the middle east: Robert Fisk, particularly in his lates book. Par pitié, don't just dismiss Fisk out of hand.
I think the word terrorism defines it's self very well: Terror.
François Blumen...
Ah, all irony is lost.
Ah, all irony is lost.
vazalt
"This is not us" (from Pakistan)
I like this tune:
"This is not us"
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