Fanatical savages…

Among the world’s five great religions, Islam is the youngest.  It shows.  Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, and Jews have generally matured enough to get beyond fanatical and savage protests in reaction to perceived insults to their religion and they punish those who participate in such protests—not so Muslims.  People in the other religions shrug off the intolerance, turn their backs on it, and go on with their lives—not so Muslims.  If Islamic believers who have matured beyond fanatical responses still can’t control their savage and fanatical brethren, something is wrong.

A Muslim quoted in the NY Times yesterday said something like, “I respect Moses, Jesus, and the other prophets.  Why can’t the U.S. respect the Prophet Mohammed.”  This is an example of the myopic thinking of many Muslims, not just fanatics.  How dare they presume to dictate to me or anyone else how I feel about the prophets or anything else?  This kind of ignorance and arrogance is precisely what stands in the way of any solution for Middle East peace.  It’s like trying to reason with your five-year-old about world-shaking issues after he’s caught raiding the cookie jar.  You can’t have a mature discussion with people who are driven to deadly tantrums by their emotions.

The events in Libya were telling.  Here a popular ambassador, a man who helped Libyans shake the yoke of a brutal dictator and his family, was murdered by a small group of fanatical savages.  His popularity and the fact that the U.S. saved the Libyan rebellion lulled the U.S. government into thinking that he and the American presence in Libya were safe.  A big mistake, considering the consequences.  But a reasonable mistake.  One assumes that a democracy, no matter how fledgling, would protect foreign diplomats.  In fact, that’s the responsibility of any country receiving foreign diplomats.  The Libyan people failed to fulfill that obligation.

If a bunch of fanatical savages in the U.S. threatened the Libyan embassy in Washington or the consulate in NYC, you can bet there would be SWATs there in full regalia ready to defend Libyan diplomats.  Those SWAT members wouldn’t care if the aggressors were from X religion or the Libyans were Muslims.  The Libyans failed to meet their obligation.  They failed their own religion.  Apathy and cultural immaturity made them turn their backs on a friend.

Let’s face it:  the founders of the five great religions lived in different times, a dark age in human history that preceded the Dark Ages.  It was an age of intolerance where you were either a believer or a heathen and a target.  We live in different times.  The world has shrunk through commerce and communications.  People once separated by culture and geography now have to live with each other and be tolerant.  Are the people of the world ready to step forward and live at peace?  Apparently not.  At least Muslims aren’t.

Religious intolerance is a sign of immaturity at the best and human savagery at the worst.  Sure, a Florida preacher burning a Koran is both stupid, disrespectful, and intolerant.  Sure, a cartoonist lampooning the Prophet Mohammed has poor taste and not much of a sense of humor.  Sure, a film against the Prophet is inappropriate if not sacrilegious.  These incidents are isolated events.  A mature religion shakes off such incidents, makes statements like I just made, and moves on.  This is a sign of wisdom and proof of a belief in the sanctity of life where all religions, or even the lack of one, are respected.  A mature religion doesn’t encourage murder and mayhem as a reaction—better said, a mature religion supports the punishment of those who react in that way.  One thing is disrespect—another is murder.  Islam is not such a religion.  It’s probably at least ten centuries from being one.

I was turned off by both Scorsese’s The Last Tempation of Christ and Gibson’s The Passion of Christ.  So were many others.  The two films represent two extremes that I found tasteless, artless, and basically worthless.  I shrugged them off, though.  I’m not particularly religious, but I could imagine what some true believers might feel about these films.  They shrugged them off too.  We recognize here in the U.S. that such distasteful movies represent the price we’re willing to pay for living in a free society.  And, if you have a different opinion, it’s your right to express it without my blowing you up with an RPG.

And here’s a twist for you:  I thought the film version of Jesus Christ, Superstar, which also portrayed Christ as having more than a platonic relationship with Mary Magdalene, was much better than either of the films named above, and more entertaining.  (I especially liked the singer who portrayed Judas.  The film spurred me on to check out the Gnostic gospels long before Dan Brown’s book made them popular.)  I’m sure Muslims would consider Mohammed, the rock star, or even Jesus, the rock star, as blasphemous, but don’t they want a Prophet who can relate to modern cultural values, including music?  Apparently not.  Too many (and one is too many) of them want to live as zombie slaves to Sharia law.

The Arab Spring is a myth.  It makes a good story, but democracy is not busting out all over in Muslim lands.  Muslims aren’t ready for democracy.  Just their record of women’s rights excludes them.  They can’t even get along with themselves (Sunnis versus Shi’ites, for example), let alone with others.  The most stable governments in the Middle East are theocracies—Iran and Israel—and they are at each other’s throats.  (Maybe it’s the geography.  Jews and Muslims don’t seem to have a problem in America with religious tolerance, although both are continuously picked on by Christians.)

We are lucky here in the U.S.  Sure, there is religious intolerance.  Some people are raising the same questions about whether Romney’s true allegiance will be to the country or his Mormon church in the same way Kennedy was attacked for being Catholic with an allegiance to the Pope.  For most people, a candidate’s religion is irrelevant (as long as he believes in God—I suppose the real test will be when an atheist runs for president).  There’s also LGBT intolerance, racial intolerance, intolerance of immigrants, and so forth.  Still, we generally frown on people killing other people as an expression of intolerance.

In particular, we are not a theocracy.  A democracy can’t be a theocracy.  There cannot be a state religion in a democracy.  And religious law—for example, Sharia—cannot be the law of the land.  Mohammed was a religious leader and prophet, not a statesman or dictator or liberator.  For his times, he was an all right guy.  There are good things in Islam.  Like the other great religions, though, there’s plenty of stuff that’s out-of-date and completely irrelevant for modern times.  We have to recognize the good stuff and apply it to our lives and simply smile at the parts that are irrelevant.  If we don’t, there is no future for peace on this planet.

Until Muslims can control and punish their fanatical brethren who commit atrocities, until they can get beyond the need of such a strong nexus between their religion and their government, and until they develop a thick enough skin to shake off insults to their beliefs, they are not mature enough for democracy.  Until that happens, they are little children who might as well believe in Peter Pan.  ‘Nough said.

And so it goes….

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3 Responses to “Fanatical savages…”

  1. Scott Says:

    Hi, Steve,

    A thought provoking article. I can’t find anything to specifically disagree with. As you might recall, my wife is Persian, and is Moslem. My mother in law’s first comment was how stupid these violent people are. My father in law’s comment was that it doesn’t really have anything to do with religion – it is about an angry people looking for any excuse to explode. If it wasn’t this film, it would have been something else.

    My own first thought, beyond how they need to get past violence as a legitimate response (basically, I think, what you are saying) is that this is exactly the response the minister in Florida (if not the filmmaker himself) intended when he started to promote the film. If you know that you poke a wild animal with a stick enough times in order to get it to wake up and attack the people standing around there, do you share in the guilt when those bystanders are hurt?

    I don’t want to excuse a group of angry people being incited toward hatred toward the United States by their own leaderships in any way shape or form, but I also don’t want to let the idiot who keeps poking them with a stick when he knows well what’s going to happen off the hook, even a little. There’s too much damage done over there to expect them to dial back their hatred overnight, but things like this don’t make it any easier for that to be accomplished eventually.

  2. steve Says:

    Hi Scott,
    We’re probably mostly in agreement. I guess I’m a bit more adamant: Islam has to become mature enough that believers (1) don’t need a theocracy and (2) can keep reactions to nuts like the Florida preacher and the French cartoonists from being violent. All religions teach non-violence but most believers don’t kill stupid people for doing or saying stupid things.
    However needling that idiot preacher and those crazy French cartoonists seem to be, though, a true democracy has to tolerate crazies–it’s called free speech. But you can’t yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater. That’s maybe the metaphor you’re after. The preacher is yelling fire in the crowded theater called Earth and Earth has become a very small place. Clearly we need to strike a happy balance somehow.
    Your father-in-law’s comment is correct, of course. I remember during the Troubles in Ireland that the press painted the violence as Catholic-Protestant intolerance. It wasn’t that at all. The Protestants were allied with England and the Catholics were for a free Ireland. It was entirely political and has been since the time of Cromwell. I’m not sure enough English recognized this for a long time. Something similar is occurring in Scotland right now, but so far violence has been kept to a minimum, except for football games (i.e. soccer).
    r/Steve

  3. Scott Says:

    >>All religions teach non-violence but most believers don’t kill stupid people for doing or saying stupid things.<<

    Unless they're abortion doctors or someone visiting a clinic that performs abortions…

    I know it's not exactly the same thing, but there are fanatics all over the place. Far more of them in the middle east, unfortunately. Less of them in Iran than one might think, judging by the news. Rick Steves did a nice piece on PBS a few years back on Iran.

    The leaders of many of these countries in the middle east have no interest in maturing their faithful – that's how they keep their power at this instant in time. So the converse is true – they actually promote this sort of a reaction.

    Most of my father in law's stories about intelligent people he knew in Iran before their revolution end with the words "and then the mullahs had him killed." Not a good place for someone to speak up as the voice of reason, even today…