Unfathomable Zealtory

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/27/AR2006032701299.html

Unfathomable Zealotry
Bush would like it to be, but that with the exception of the (largely) Christian West, the rest of the world has been mostly silent. The Americans have protested, the Brits have protested, the Vatican has protested and so (I assume) have some others. But if there has been a holler of protest from anywhere in the Muslim world, it has not reached my ears. That is appalling.
The murder of a person for his religious belief ought to be inconceivable. It is something we in the West stopped accepting hundreds of years ago, and while Americans and others continued to kill on account of race deep into the past century, the right of the government to take a life on account of religion has not even been argued in the longest time. We are way beyond that.
‘What strikes me about the threat to execute Abdul Rahman, the Afghan who converted to Christianity, is not that Afghanistan remains deeply medieval and not even remotely the democracy that George W. Bush would like it to be, but that with the exception of the (largely) Christian West, the rest of…’)Afghanistan was once under Soviet occupation, and it may have learned something from those days. Just as the Soviets sometimes pronounced political dissidents to be insane (why else would they question a perfect system?) so have Afghans decided that Rahman is nuts. (Why else would a Muslim choose Christianity?) Now that the case has been dropped and he has been placed in solitary confinement for his own protection, he will probably be spirited out of the country. To remain in Afghanistan is to remain in grave peril of death.
Rahman’s troubles began, as they do for so many, with a divorce. In contesting his attempt to gain custody of his children, his wife told the court that Rahman would be an unfit father because he had converted to Christianity about 16 years earlier. This is what’s known in football as a late hit. Nonetheless, when the prosecutor heard of the conversion, he promptly charged Rahman with apostasy, which is punishable by death. Rahman’s choices were once to repudiate his conversion or plead insanity. The latter would have been the more sane choice.
“The world is too much with us,” Wordsworth once wrote. This is certainly the way I feel. To be confronted on an almost daily basis with the horrors of Iraq is profoundly disturbing. The torture and decapitation of huge numbers of people, the casual homicides, the constant suicide bombings – all of this makes you wonder about your fellow man. It is no longer possible, as it once was, to see the world only from your front porch, being disturbed only by the ringing of the bell on some passing ice cream truck. In Africa, Asia, too much of the world – it is Joseph Conrad much of the time: “The horror! The horror!”
But you can say that these horrors are usually being inflicted by a minority. You say it is a few crazed terrorists of Iraq who are doing the killing. It is not most Iraqis. You can say the same about suicide bombers and torturers and rogue governments, like the one Saddam Hussein once headed. You can take solace in numbers. Most people are like us.
Then comes the Rahman case and it is not a solitary crazy prosecutor who brings the charge of apostasy but an entire society. It is not a single judge who would condemn the man but a culture. The Taliban are gone at gunpoint, their atrocities supposedly a thing of the past. In our boundless optimism, we consign them to the “too hard” file of horrors we cannot figure out: the Khmer Rouge, the Nazis, the communists of the Stalin period. Now, though, this awful thing returns and it is not just a single country that would kill a man for his beliefs but a huge swath of the world that would not protest. There can be only one conclusion: They were in agreement.
The groupthink of the Muslim world is frightening. I know there are exceptions – many exceptions. But still it seems that a man could be killed for his religious beliefs and no one would say anything in protest. It is also frightening to confront how differently we in the West think about such matters and why the word “culture” is not always a mask for bigotry, but an honest statement of how things are. It is sometimes a bridge too far – the leap that cannot be made. I can embrace an Afghan for his children, his work, even his piety – all he shares with much of humanity. But when he insists that a convert must die, I am stunned into disbelief: Is this my fellow man?
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Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

:hehe:
Our resident RSS\muslim killer Cynic is posting garbage from another muslim hater. Famous Zionist Neo-Con writer Richard Cohen
Ask this Jew about the “**Unfathomable Zealotry” **of a Isreali soldier who snipers 6 year old Palestinian Children, aint it true?
Or as the RSS bigot Cynic who wrote this post about the “**Unfathomable Zealotry” **of his RSS cadres who burned thousands of Gujrati muslims alive
people in glass houses should’nt throw stones.

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

we will ask him about that when that issue is raisedright now issue is this so stick to it................... why pointing towards dichotomy rife in muslim world makes the pointer bigot I never got that........

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

so cynic is the new bot for "copy paste" ?

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

captain sarcasm aside but can u deny even a single issue raisde there.. the resounding silence over this matter in umah world is deafening the same people who jsut a week back were burning everythign in their path.. in my home-tonw lucknow they even killed four hindus( have no clue what they had to do with that cartoon episode) .. so we are talking about this kind of emotional people.. in this eposide although they will register their prtest somewhere in some talk shwo some smart a$$ will come and say we condemn it and it will be done and dusted.. i say where is the zeal that we see in other issues in this case.......... ..

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

cynic, can you highlight the issues YOU are interested in talking about?

You can't compare the "cartoon saga" with every other single issue and demand that Muslims go on to streets to protest the issue which is so much more "dear" to you. Did you find "hundreds" (lets not talk about thousands) of people demonstrating against Saddam Hussein, Iran, Pakistan (Baluchistan)? Massacre in Bengladesh? and many many more incidents that took place around the world in different times... Think about it, you don't get to see "Muslims" condemning an act so "unanimously" so often. So get over the demand of "Ummah protesting for the lone convert" (or other converts for that matter).

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

Captain - rather than discussing it around the bush. Do you support killing Rahman (Christian Convert) or you feel he has right to live normally.

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

^ Rahul, there are several views of how to deal "convert-outs", I don't have a "solid" opinion as of yet, from history I've learnt that a son-in-law of Prophet PBUH had also converted-out but he was not killed, thats where I lean towards more.

EDITed.

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory

Why should we protest against what we think is right?

Re: Unfathomable Zealtory


many a times we don't protest what we think is wrong either :)