“There is no Why ?” By F. Sheikh

( Can we afford common sense? )

( Photos from NYT )

On August 7, 1974 a French stuntman, Phillipe Petit strode back and forth for 45 minutes on a galvanized steel rope tied between two World Trade Center towers. Many New Yorkers woke up to this awesome scene of a thin man dressed elegantly in black robe tip toeing fearlessly on the steel rope. It took Mr. Petit years to prepare for this stunt and made about 100 trips of the towers.

NYT writes about the incidence, “The night before, Mr. Petit and a small band of friends and conspirators slipped past the guards disguised as construction workers to execute their plan. Just after dawn, Mr. Petit stepped out into a stiff breeze. A quarter mile below, hundreds of pedestrians cheered as they looked skyward.

 “Get off there or I’ll come out and we’ll both go down,” a police officer shouted.

And when Mr. Petit descended 110 floors to the street below, he was taken away in handcuffs.”

When asked why you did it? He responded “There is no why? If I see three oranges I have to juggle, and if I see two towers, I have to walk.”

 Later District attorney dropped the charges in exchange for a free performance in Central Park. Mr. Petit remarked that this is the most beautiful sentence he ever received.

Few weeks ago New Yorkers woke up to another beautiful scene of two huge white flags flying and fluttering in breeze atop the Brooklyn Bridge. Very few were laughing and many criticized the NYC police for serious security breach. New York City police felt embarrassed that it happened right under their nose and it has started investigation. Yesterday two German artists came forward and admitted that they did it to honor German born engineer who built the bridge and celebrate the open space of New York. The New York officials want to prosecute the artists. The artists were confused and surprised by the stiff reaction shown by many New Yorkers and the New York officials.

The two incidences show the world before and after 9/11. Everything is viewed through the prism of security breach, terrorism and a nagging question always hangs on our head – why it happened? Sometime there is no why!  

Yesterday I went to Home Depot to buy few things and one of the items was small utility knife. When I scanned it at self-pay counter, the sign came on the screen “Please show your Driver License to the attendant”. I was puzzled. The attendant told me it was because of utility knife.

I think we are reaching at the pinnacle of paranoia and the claim that we will not let the terrorists affect our way of life is a hollow slogan.  We are becoming a society of suspicion and paranoia who no longer can afford a common sense approach. It is time to step back and look at what are we doing to ourselves with this never ending fear of terrorism.

F. Sheikh

 

     

 

Qit’ah about myself

Today, August 11, 2014 is my 72nd Birthday. I have said this Qit’ah about myself, which I want to share with all my friends.

Mirza Ashraf

قطعہ

یہی
خواہش رہی ہے جب سے میں نے آنکھ کھولی ہےمرے گلشن میں فکر و علم بن کر پھول کھل جائے

اور اِس
گلزارِ ہستی میں ابھی تک سر بگرداں ہوں

گلِ حکمت
سے اک پتی ہی مجھ کو کاش مل جائے

اشرف
yehi khwahish rahi hai jab se main ne aankh kholi haimeray gulshan main fikr-o-ilm ban ker phool khill ja’ayaur es gulzar-e-hasti main abhi tak sar-ba-gardaan hoongul-e-hikmat se ek pati hi mujh ko kaash mill ja’ay Mirza Ashraf

Is there something about Islam?

(A worth reading analysis by Kenan Malik, an author, BBC broadcaster, lecturer, NYT columnist and a proud atheist. F. Sheikh)

“Every year I give a lecture to a group of theology students – would-be Anglican priests, as it happens – on ‘Why I am an atheist’. Part of the talk is about values. And every year I get the same response: that without God, one can simply pick and choose about which values one accepts and which one doesn’t.

My response is to say: ‘Yes, that’s true. But it is true also of believers.’ I point out to my students that in the Bible, Leviticus sanctifies slavery. It tells us that adulterers ‘shall be put to death’. According to Exodus, ‘thou shalt not suffer a witch to live’. And so on. Few modern day Christians would accept norms. Others they would. In other words, they pick and choose.

So do Muslims. Jihadi literalists, so-called ‘bridge builders’ like Tariq Ramadan (‘bridge-builder’, I know, is a meaningless phrase, and there are many other phrases that one could, and should, use to describe Ramadan) and liberals like Irshad Manji all read the same Qur’an. And each reads it differently, finding in it different views about women’s rights, homosexuality, apostasy, free speech and so on. Each picks and chooses the values that they consider to be Islamic.

I’m making this point because it’s one not just for believers to think about, but for humanists and atheists too. There is a tendency for humanists and atheists to read religions, and Islam in particular, as literally as fundamentalists do; to ignore the fact that what believers do is interpret the same text a hundred different ways. Different religions clearly have different theologies, different beliefs, different values. Islam is different from Christianity is different from Buddhism. What is important, however, is not simply what a particular Holy Book, or sacred texts, say, but how people interpret those texts.

The relationship between religion, interpretation, identity and politics can be complex. We can see this if we look at Myanmar and Sri Lanka where Buddhists – whom many people, not least humanists and atheists, take to be symbols of peace and harmony – are organizing vicious pogroms against Muslims, pogroms led by monks who justify the violence using religious texts. Few would insist that there is something inherent in Buddhism that has led to the violence. Rather, most people would recognize that the anti-Muslim violence has its roots in the political struggles that have engulfed the two nations. The importance of Buddhism in the conflicts in Myanmar and Sri Lanka is not that the tenets of faith are responsible for the pogroms, but that those bent on confrontation have adopted the garb of religion as a means of gaining a constituency and justifying their actions. The ‘Buddhist fundamentalism’ of groups such as the 969 movement, or of monks such as Wirathu, who calls himself the ‘Burmese bin Laden’, says less about Buddhism than about the fractured and fraught politics of Myanmar and Sri Lanka.”

“And yet, few apply the same reasoning to conflicts involving Islam. When it comes to Islam, and to the barbaric actions of groups such as Isis or the Taliban, there is a widespread perception that the problem, unlike with Buddhism, lies in the faith itself. Religion does, of course, play a role in many confrontations involving Islam

The tenets of Islam are very different from those of Buddhism. Nevertheless, many conflicts involving Islam have, like the confrontations in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, complex social and political roots, as groups vying for political power have exploited religion and religious identities to exercise power, impose control and win support. The role of religion in these conflicts is often less in creating the tensions than in helping establish the chauvinist identities through which certain groups are demonized and one’s own actions justified. Or, to put it another way, the significance of religion lies less in a given set of values or beliefs than in the insistence that such values or beliefs – whatever they are – are mandated by God.

And it is in this context we need to think about whether there is ‘something about Islam’.There are a host of different views that Muslims hold on issues from apostasy to free speech, views that range from the liberal to the reactionary. The trouble is that policymakers and commentators, particularly in the West, often take the most reactionary views to be the most authentic stance, in a way they would rarely do with Buddhism or Judaism or Christianity.”

The whole article is worth reading and he concludes his article with following paragraph:

“So, yes there is something about Islam that needs challenging. But equally, there is something about secular liberalism, and the blindness and pusillanimity of many secular liberals, the bigotry of many critics of Islam, and the cynicism of many secular governments in their exploitation of radical Islam, that needs challenging too.”

Read full article by clicking:

http://kenanmalik.wordpress.com/2014/08/12/is-there-something-about-islam/#comment-14603

 

“The Last Temptation of Israel” By Andrew Sullivan

(Posted By F. Sheikh)

What is one to make of the fact that the deputy speaker of the Knesset has called for ethnic cleansing in Gaza?

He’s not an obscure blogger for the Times of Israel. He is a luminary of the Likud – a man who got 23 percent of the vote in a contest for the Likud Party leadership. He was appointed to his current high position by Benjamin Netanyahu. And this is his proposal for Gaza:

a) The IDF [Israeli army] shall designate certain open areas on the Sinai border, adjacent to the sea, in which the civilian population will be concentrated, far from the built-up areas that are used for launches and tunneling. In these areas, tent encampments will be established, until relevant emigration destinations are determined. The supply of electricity and water to the formerly populated areas will be disconnected.

b) The formerly populated areas will be shelled with maximum fire power. The entire civilian and military infrastructure of Hamas, its means of communication and of logistics, will be destroyed entirely, down to their foundations.

c) The IDF will divide the Gaza Strip laterally and crosswise, significantly expand the corridors, occupy commanding positions, and exterminate nests of resistance, in the event that any should remain.

You read that right. There will be temporary “camps” where the Gaza population will be “concentrated”; they will be expelled with subsidies; basic supplies of water and electricity will be cut off for those who remain. The war-time ethics he recommends are: “Woe to the evildoer, and woe to his neighbor.” He backs the “annihiliation” of Hamas and all their supportersHis strategic goal is to “turn Gaza into Jaffa, a flourishing Israeli city with a minimum number of hostile civilians.” (Modern Jaffa, of course, was built on the ethnic cleansing of most of its Palestinian inhabitants in 1948.)

The usual response to this kind of thing among the lockstep pro-Israel community is that it is a tiny fringe opinion. And I can only hope they’re right. But what concerns me is that this racist, genocidal bigot was appointed deputy speaker of the Knesset by the current prime minister. What concerns me are the statements of Ayelet Shaked, the telegenic young protege of Naftali Bennett, who is touted as a future prime minister. This is from a Facebook post she wrote the day before the gruesome lynching of an Arab teen who was forced to drink gasoline and then burned to death by Jewish extremists. Note that her call for war came before any Hamas rocket was fired:

Behind every terrorist stand dozens of men and women, without whom he could not engage in terrorism. They are all enemy combatants, and their blood shall be on all their heads. Now this also includes the mothers of the martyrs, who send them to hell with flowers and kisses. They should follow their sons, nothing would be more just. They should go, as should the physical homes in which they raised the snakes. Otherwise, more little snakes will be raised there.

I suppose someone will claim that the deputy speaker of the Knesset, and the former head of the National Security Council or the former chief rabbi in Israel or the head of the largest Jewish youth group in the world are fringe figures. But I note that, so far as I have been able to find, there have been no consequences for their statements for any of them. And I have to ask a simple question: which leader of another American ally has appointed a man who favors genocide and ethnic cleansing as the deputy speaker of the legislature? Which other democracy has legitimate political parties in the governing coalition calling for permanent occupation of a neighboring state – and deliberate social engineering to create a new demographic ethnic reality in that conquered land? Putin’s Russia has not sunk that low.

http://dish.andrewsullivan.com/2014/08/05/the-last-and-first-temptation-of-israel/