A “white supremacist who idolized Adolf Hitler” was sent to prison for 10 years in a court decision in the United Kingdom on May 14, 2010. Ian Davison was jailed for making chemical weapons, and reportedly made enough ricin to murder nine individuals. Ian Davison was a member of the “Aryan Strike Force.” His son received a sentence of 2 years in prison.
UK: Aryan Strike Force's Ian and Nicky Davison Sent to Prison
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We support our unqualified, universal human rights for all. We urge Nazis, white supremacist, racial supremacist, and those who promote violence and hate to release the burden of the hate and violence from their hearts, and to rejoin the family of humanity in support of our universal human rights. We condemn all those who seek violence and murder is the path to advancing any cause.
When we promote cartoons that mock an individual religion, race, gender, or ethnicity, are we mocking them – or mocking human dignity?
In April 2010, a controversial U.S. comedy television cartoon “South Park” censored one of their broadcasts which was to include a cartoon of Muhammad along with other religious figures in their cartoon, after receiving threats from the New York blog “Revolution Muslim.” As a response to the South Park censorship, one cartoonist, Molly Norris, came up with the satirical suggestion to make May 20 as “Draw Muhammad Day.” Molly Norris was shocked that people took her “joke” seriously, and planned to indeed hold a “Draw Muhammad Day” on May 20; Ms. Norris has since called for this to be canceled, but some still plan to do this.
Despite the predictable offense to Muslims, a number of cartoonists have done cartoons of Muhammad and Muslims. Cartoons of Muhammad have been done and published by Swedish artist Lars Vilks and by Danish political cartoonist Kurt Westergaard. There has been an extreme reaction to these (and other) cartoons. Lars Vilks was recently assaulted during a lecture on free speech in Sweden, and was the target of a transatlantic murder plot that including two American women promoting violent jihad. In January 2010, Kurt Westergaard’s home was broken into by a man with an axe and a knife. Both have received numerous death threats. There have been numerous threats and protests by Muslims offended by cartoon of Muhammad. Such outrage is not limited only to violent extremists, as many Muslims view images of Muhammad to be disrespectful to their religious views.
Nor is such outrage limited to individuals and groups. On April 15, 2008, the Pakistan National Assembly passed a resolution to urge the United Nations to support an international death penalty for those responsible for such cartoon “blasphemy.” This Pakistan National Assembly session was attended by Pakistan Prime Minister Gilani, “who arrived moments after the passage of the resolutions.” So while it may be comforting to only subscribe such concerns to a few “radicals” in groups like “Revolution Muslim,” clearly there is a broader group around the world who find such cartoons outrageous enough to warrant “capital punishment.”
In the West, there have been a number of articles on this subject by Muslim authors, explaining why Muslims are offended by such cartoons. On Muslim author, Shahed Amanulla, decries the idea of “Draw Muhammad Day” as “Collectively Punishing Muslim Americans.” Another Muslim author, Zahed Amanullah, states that while he is offended by such cartoons, “For many Muslims, pointing to a cartoon, a teddy bear, or a voodoo doll and saying it’s the prophet, doesn’t make it so. We know better than to worship them.” Mr. Amanullah clearly states that there is diversity of opinion on this subject among Muslims.
Public comments to such articles by Muslim authors often complain that they don’t sufficiently defend our human rights of freedom of expression. So I am writing this from the perspective of a non-Muslim supporter of our universal human rights, with a statement on our responsibility for human dignity, a message to non-Muslim readers, and a message to Muslim readers.
Human Rights and Responsibilities include Human Dignity
Does our human rights include the “right” to be offensive? Yes, they do. But along with our rights also come responsibilities that are inherent in any shared society. That includes the responsibility to also defend each others’ human dignity. Such commitment to human dignity is a fundamental part of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, signed by the United States of America and other nations of the world.
Human dignity is also recognized in the preamble of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which recognizes “the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world.” The signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 1948 by the nations of the world included a statement that the United Nations recognized such rights as part of their respect “in the dignity and worth of the human person and in the equal rights of men and women.”
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was created in the aftermath of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Germany, a nation that brought crimes against humanity to a level not previously witnessed by mankind. But one of the Nazis’ first tool to degrade and attack human dignity was Julius Streicher’sDer Sturmer newspaper created in 1923; Streicher was inspired to join the Nazi party after hearing an Adolf Hitler speech in 1921.
From 1923 through the end of Nazi Germany, Der Sturmer (“the Attacker”) was a publication that attacked the humanity and dignity of Jews in Germany and around the world, using “cartoons.” The notorious Der Sturmer cartoons were historically significant in spreading images to degrade Jews and portray them as enemies against Germans and all of humanity. The Der Sturmer anti-Semitic newspaper and cartoons were used to spread hate against Jews throughout Germany among the common man, and were distributed to Germans in countries around the world. The Calvin College states that the distribution reached over 2 million readers at one point. Along with the cartoons degrading and spreading hatred towards Jews, Der Sturmer’s fevered pitch of hate against Jews called for extermination of the Jewish people, for which Julius Streicher was tried and convicted of war crimes. The Nuremberg courts that convicted him warned of “the poison that he has put into the minds of millions of young boys and girls will continue on for years to come, since he concentrated so much of his hatred for the Jews.”
Anyone who has seen the Der Sturmer cartoons and articles can readily see the truth in this. Jews were caricatured in hateful ways that did not end with Nazi Germany. The hate cartoons by Der Sturmer and others sought to degrade, dehumanize, and strip the dignity from Jews. Yet the Der Sturmer hate cartoons remain alive on the Internet, and are part of the root web site of the “white nationalist hate group” Stormfront in America. In America, the Der Sturmer cartoons are viewed as part of our freedom of expression – despite all the horrors that they contributed to.
How can humanity not have learned its lessons after seeing the consequences of demonizing and degrading identity groups in Nazi Germany? But we know it did not and has not. Even as the United States of America was signing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, offensive cartoons continued to appear and have continued to appear over the decades — especially about black Americans.
Nor have such offensive cartoons been limited to only “fringe” organizations, or relegated only to distant history. Racial caricature cartoons of U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice have appeared in the Washington Post and many other publications. The parade of racial caricature cartoons of President Barack Obama have been in many places.
Iran has hosted an International Holocaust Cartoon Competition of its own for those who deny that the Holocaust took place. In many parts of the Arab press (as well as the Western media), anti-Semitic cartoons degrading and dehumanizing Jews and Israeli leaders have been commonly published for many years.
There seems to be no end of ways to create offensive cartoons about any race, religion, gender, or national origin. Mocking the human dignity of others in offensive cartoons depicting men, women, children seems to be the great equalizer of those promoting disrespect and some cases, outright hatred. Still, offensive cartoons have been defended by our freedom of expression.
We respect such universal human rights. But we also recognize, as did the United Nations in their Universal Declaration of Human Rights that all human beings are also equal in dignity as well. Such human dignity is not just a right, it is also a responsibility.
A Message to Non-Muslim Readers
Cartoons about Muhammad has caused an outcry of indignation by offended Muslims, especially in Muslim majority nations. To non-Muslim readers, I am aware that one of the main reasons for the continued popularity of cartoons about Muhammad and Muslims to some non-Muslims is a defiance to those telling you that you are not allowed to do this. The perspective is “I’ll show them what I can and cannot do. I’ll show them about how they seek to silence my freedom of expression.” People like to win arguments, and they don’t like being told what they can and cannot express. But there is also a point at which your reason must also win over your emotions of frustration.
There are many things that we are “free” to do, but we do not do out of respect for others, as part of civil society, and to peacefully co-exist. We are free to spit on our neighbor’s lawn, but if we want to be good neighbors that live in peace, we do not. Do you feel deprived, censored, from not offending your neighbor? Of course not. You know better. You have to live together.
But when it comes to cartoons about Muhammad and Muslims, such reason seems to disappear. Some seek to demonize Muslims in cartoons to prove their “freedom of expression.” What do you really think you are accomplishing by offending Muslims? Do you think that demonizing Muslims will impact religious extremism or extremism? What minds do you think contempt will change? What hearts do you think disrespect will reach?
Some non-Muslims are simply angry, tired of being threatened, and want to “strike back” at religious extremists by targeting all Muslims. Have you considered that by seeking to offend all Muslims to get back at religious extremists that you have judged all Muslims as one, singular monolithic group that must all think and believe the same way? How different is it for non-Muslims to condemn all Muslims than it is for Muslim religious extremists to condemn all non-Muslims unequivocally?
In your anger and frustration, aren’t you becoming exactly what you seek to condemn?
What really infuriates many of you is the inconsistency on public condemnations of offensive expressions. This is especially the case among many Christians, whose images are regularly defiled and disgraced in art galleries, national television, on the Internet. Some believe that “well, if our religious views can be mocked, why can’t theirs?” But you also know “two wrongs don’t make a right.” Christians also are commanded to love their fellow human beings. Currently a popular anti-Islam website has an image of the cartoon character “Calvin” urinating on the Qur’an. It is no small irony that the image is simply a Photoshop modification of the cartoon character “Calvin” urinating on the Christian cross, or anything else someone respects.
You can choose to be different from those whose actions outrage you, or you can choose to be no different. Which choice do you think will gain you credibility in the world? Have we learned nothing from humanity’s history of living together?
A Message to Muslim Readers
To Muslim readers, it is reasonable to expect respect and human dignity. It is reasonable to expect that your religious views and images are not offended. Such human dignity is both a right and a responsibility. However, we must all recognize that statements and images that we merely view as offensive are not a crime. We may view such images and comments as disrespectful, contemptible, but we also know that “two wrongs don’t make a right.” While the majority of the likely Muslim readers are no doubt stating, “of course, I know that,” the reality is that in many parts of the world (including in the West), there are those who continue to seek to punish “blasphemy” with capital punishment – either legally or by taking the law into their own hands and claiming they are divinely guided.
To challenge such views, it is essential that more Muslims are visible to the public in supporting our unqualified, universal human rights, and are visible to the public taking exception to those who would defy such freedoms. We need more public demonstrations of our shared commitment for human rights, pluralism, and dignity – and not just on the Internet or in conference rooms, but in the public together.
I know that you have other things to do with your life besides condemning Muslim extremists and other extremists. You have family, school, job, and other responsibilities that demand your time and attention. But the hope for peace for the next generation is largely dependent on the history that we write today. Whether that history is only written by the angry and the offensive or whether that history is written by those committed to our universal human rights – is our decision. We must continue to defend such human rights by defying religious extremists who would rationalize violence and hate against others.
I offer Muslim readers the opportunity on May 20 to publicly express online their own commitment to our universal human rights and pluralism, as a counter to “Draw Muhammad Day.” Provide your responses on your commitment to our universal human rights and pluralism via at info@realcourage.org, and they will be shared with the world on Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)’s web site at RealCourage.org.
I invite you to use May 20 as an opportunity to publicly show that you are larger than those who would mock you and share your convictions on our shared human rights and pluralism.
Our Choices, Our Responsibilities
Contempt and hate have the same universal application, regardless of our religion, race, gender, or ethnicity.
But we can choose a different path. Instead of choosing universal contempt, we can choose a path of universal human rights and dignity.
We share a common conscience towards how we treat humanity and how respect each other. We share a common responsibility to our shared universal human rights. We share a common obligation to upholding each others human dignity.
I have dusted off one of my own “cartoon” characters from when I was a small boy, a stick man figure that I used to call “Mr. Blank.” I have added him here to make a point – anyone can make a cartoon, everyone has free expression. It is our choice and our responsibility how we use that free expression.
We are Responsible for Equality And Liberty.
In defending those universal human rights, we are also Responsible for Human Dignity.
WOKV reports that “The FBI is looking at this case as a possible hate crime, and now they’re analyzing it as a possible act of domestic terrorism. ‘It was a dangerous device, and had anybody been around it they could have been seriously injured or killed,’ says Special Agent James Casey. ‘We want to sort of emphasize the seriousness of the thing and not let people believe that this was just a match and a little bit of gasoline that was spread around.'” WJXT also reports that the FBI characterized the failed attacker as someone with knowledge of explosives, and at this time the suspect is wanted for arson and hate crimes. According to UPI, there were 60 people in the building at the time of the attack. First Coast News in Jacksonville is reporting on the condemnation of the possible terrorist attempt by local and national community leaders.
The FBI has released a surveillance video of the suspect in the May 10, 2010 attack on the Jacksonville, Florida mosque. From the video, the suspect appears to be a middle-aged white man.
Image of May 10 Attacker from Surveillance Videos (Photo: FBI)
The FBI is asking for those with any information on the May 10, 2010 bombing to contact the FBI at 904-248-7000, the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office at 904-630-0500, or CrimeStoppers of Northeast Florida at 866-277-8477.
Islamic Center of Northeast Florida (ICNEF) in Jacksonville, Florida (Photo: ICNEF web site)
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Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) condemns such hate and violence. We support our unqualified, universal human rights, including our freedom of conscience and the pluralism to allow such freedoms. We urge all those who promote hate and violence to unburden their hearts from hate and violence.
On May 12, 2010, in Washington DC, arguably the most powerful man in the world, United States President Barack Obama, publiclysupported the efforts of Afghanistan President Karzai for reconciliation with those supporting the Taliban supremacist ideology.
The basis for such a planned surrender to defiance against supporters of the Taliban, which have been amongst the most notorious human rights violators in history, was based on two points:
1. The Taliban are not all really the Taliban. President Karzai and President Obama argue that many Taliban supporters do not support the Taliban ideology. President Karzai states that “there are thousands of the Taliban who are not ideologically oriented,” and President Obama states that “the Taliban is a loose term for a wide range of different networks, groups, fighters, with different motivations.” In fact, the word “Taliban” means “students,” and many of their original recruits came from madrassas supporting their ideology. The Encyclopedia of Islam & the Muslim World describes the Taliban ideology as an “innovative form of sharia combining Pashtun tribal codes.” To describe the Taliban as anything other than the “students” of this ideology, simply ignores the very meaning of the word “Taliban.” Moreover, it places very real and disingenuous blinders about the supremacist views that Taliban “students” have.
Afghanistan Taliban "Police" Beat Women in Public - in Kabul - in 2001 - We Must Never Let Afghanistan Return to This
2. Support for the Afghanistan Constitution indicates a support for Universal Human Rights. On May 12, 2010, U.S. President Obama stated that: “the United States supports the efforts of the Afghan government to open the door to Taliban who cut their ties to Al-Qaeda, abandon violence, and accept the Afghan constitution, including respect for human rights. I look forward to a continued dialogue with our partners on these efforts.” Since 2004, a key question that has not been clearly answered is whether referencing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as something to be “observed” constitutes support of unqualified, universal human rights in the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. But recent history in Afghanistan continues to make this an ever-concerning question. Inviting the Taliban back into political and public roles in Afghanistan society will only further make this question more evident, no matter how inconvenient that question may be. (It is noteworthy that not a single press question on the subject of human rights was recorded at the May 12, 2010 joint Obama/Karzai news conference.)
Afghan Parliament Calling for Death Penalty for Apostates According to "the laws in place in Afghanistan" (Photo: Gulf Times)
Let’s also be clear as well – creating a nation-state whose name embodies only one religion should be the starting point to ask questions about its legitimate support for our unqualified universal human rights and religious pluralism. Certainly, it would be a question if the U.S. was not the United States of America, but was instead renamed the “Christian United States of America.” Such a decision would rightly be a cause for global criticism and condemnation. But when a nation is named the “Islamic Republic of Afghanistan,” asking questions about its commitment to pluralism is viewed as simply being narrow minded. For pluralism to work, pluralism must be consistent. We can’t expect pluralism in some cities, some states, and some nations, and not others. Just like we can’t have borders around our unqualified, universal human rights.
The Afghanistan Constitution has two clauses that are key to consider here:
— Afghanistan Constitution, Article 3: “In Afghanistan, no law can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion of Islam.”
— Afghanistan Constitution, Article 7: “The state shall observe the United Nations Charter, inter-state agreements, as well as international treaties to which Afghanistan has joined, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”
Many Americans would be more comfortable reading Article 3 as merely a non-binding cultural statement that reflects a general more, sort of like “In God We Trust” on American coins. But that is not what Article 3 states. What Article 3 states is “no law can be contrary to… Islam.” How do you prove that and ensure equality? How do you prove that and ensure liberty? How do you prove that and ensure universal human rights? The English translation of the Afghan Constitution states that Article 7 calls for “observing” the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. But the word “observe” has multiple meanings in the English language, “observe” can be viewed as “conform with” or merely “to take note of.” Which is it?
For nearly the past 6 years, human rights groups have been asking this question. But no one wants to discuss this question. However, it is a fundamental question now that Presidents Obama and Karzai are using as a baseline to measure whether Taliban supporters can be reconciled and reintegrated within the Afghanistan government, military, and political system. How else do they plan to gauge whether Taliban supporters will now support “human rights,” as President Obama stated they must on May 12? They will simply ask him if he supports the Afghanistan constitution, and expect that no one will be impertinent enough to ask the obvious question “has support for the Afghanistan constitution demonstrated support for human rights?”
In 2004, Equality Now reported in a December 2004 report “Action 21.3 – Access to Justice for Afghan Women” on this subject. In the Equality Now posting, the author stated: Article 22 of this Constitution provides: ‘Any kind of discrimination and privilege between the citizens of Afghanistan are prohibited. The citizens of Afghanistan — whether man or woman — have equal rights and duties before the law’. Article 3 of the Afghan Constitution provides that ‘no law can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion of Islam.’ It is critical that the Supreme Court ensures that its judgments harmonize these provisions of the Constitution rather than impose singular interpretations of the Koran that are harmful to women and do not respect the constitutional right to equality between men and women.”
In 2006, Equality Now reported in Action 21.4, that “Following her visit to Afghanistan in 2005, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women noted that one of the principal causes of pervasive gender-based discrimination and violence against women in Afghanistan is the lack of enforcement of the rule of law. The Special Rapporteur particularly noted that the ‘diverse and contradictory interpretations’ of Sharia Law tended to ‘undermine the establishment of any universal code of conduct’ and worked to legitimize the violation of women’s rights in Afghanistan.”
In 2007, Equality Now reported in Action 2.15 that “Afghanistan ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) in March 2003 and adopted a new Constitution in January 2004, which provides for equal rights for women and men before the law. However, women continue to be violently targeted in Afghanistan and denied equal rights and equal protection of the law. The United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) published research in 2006 documenting systematic abuse of women’s rights in Afghanistan, including violence against women instigated by state actors such as the army and police, including forced prostitution, forced marriage, rape, kidnapping and sexual assaults. In June 2007 two women journalists were murdered with many others receiving death threats. On 25 September 2006 Safia Ama Jan, the southern provincial head of Afghanistan’s Ministry of Women’s Affairs, was murdered outside the front gate of her Kandahar home. In recent months a large number of schools for girls have been forced to close after being attacked. ”
In 2008, Equality Now reported in Action 2.16 that “Afghanistan ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) in March 2003 and adopted a new Constitution in January 2004, which provides for equal rights for women and men before the law and protects freedom of speech. However, women continue to be violently targeted in Afghanistan and denied equal rights and equal protection of the law and Malalai Joya remains suspended from parliament.”
In July 2009, the United Nations reported that “Afghan women have limited freedom to escape the norms and traditions that dictate a subservient status for females….Violence, in its acute form, makes it presence felt in widespread lawlessness and criminality. Findings reveal that Afghan women are subjected to an increasingly insecure environment. Women participating in public life face threats, harassment and attacks. In extreme cases, women have been killed for holding jobs that are seen to disrespect traditional practices or are considered ‘un-Islamic.'”
Afghanistan: Girls recovering from poison gas attack (Photo: Reuters/Mohammad Ishaq)
What Are We to Believe, President Obama and President Karzai?
Are we supposed to believe that all of this is because all of these Afghanistan citizens, courts, state actors — ALL reject the Afghanistan constitution?
Or should we instead recognize that they understand the Afghanistan constitution better than Americans do, and the only relevant clause is “In Afghanistan, no law can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion of Islam,” based on whatever interpretation that individual, the court, that state actor, and even that terrorist, may have of how they view and interpret “Islam?”
With this proven history of inconsistency within the very Afghanistan government and state institutions, and throughout its citizenry on the issue of what “human rights” even mean, let alone what universal human rights women and all human beings deserve, how can we expect “reconciled” Taliban to now “respect human rights” in a way that could possibly mean anything?
Afghanistan President Karzai and U.S. President Obama Meet at White House (Photo: AP/Evan Vucci)
This is an inconvenient question for an America tired of war, and tired of Afghanistan’s problems. It is an inconvenient question for an America with financial and plenty of other problems of its own. Even the press is tired of it, as seen by their total unwillingness to ask a single question at the May 12, 2010 press conference on human rights or women’s rights, even when yet more girls’ schools were poison gassed the day before in Afghanistan. They really would rather not discuss this inconvenient question about human rights. It is a distraction from the tactical and detailed topics that are less troubling to discuss. With growing threats from Pakistan and Iran, some even view that Afghanistan is simply something Americans can no longer afford to pay attention to.
But we have another choice – the ability not to be driven only to a path of ultimate failure, but to address conflicts honestly and show the courage of our convictions and our support to human rights to the world.
Instead of fleeing from Afghanistan as a hopeless disaster, we could also choose to honor the sacrifices of the lives of American men and women by challenging Afghanistan to become an example instead.
America: Learning from Our Own History of Supremacism
For American readers, imagine in 1961, if President John F. Kennedy decided not to challenge the ideology of the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan (KKK). Imagine if he chose instead to convince us that really that the KKK was just a “loose term” for a lot of people who are uneducated, come from broken homes, and have had career and financial challenges, and instead believed that “there are thousands of the KKK who are not ideologically oriented.”
Moreover, imagine if President John F. Kennedy then decided to encourage members of the Ku Klux Klan to leave that terrorist organization by offering them the incentives of government jobs, even positions in the U.S. military and police forces, if they accepted a U.S. Constitution that calls for equal rights.
Where would America have ended up if we never faced the ideology of white supremacy and defied it as a nation?
Will America Learn from its own lessons in Defying Supremacism?
America’s documented commitment to equal rights were part of its founding identity from its very Declaration of Independence. Yet despite this, slavery existed. Despite the declaration that “all men are created equal,” a form of racial apartheid existed throughout many parts of America even into the 20th century. In 1961, the United States had been a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights for 13 years – and still racial supremacism and apartheid style laws of racial segregation existed in many parts of America. The Declaration of Independence was not enough and our Constitution was not enough. We had to amend our very Constitution to guarantee the racial equality that was inherently promised in our national identity since July 4, 1776. America has made more than its share of mistakes. We have done things the hard way, the wrong way, many, many times before. Haven’t we learned from our lessons and national struggles in defying supremacism?
If we KNOW this, and we have seen, with our eyes and our own history, what it takes to defy supremacist ideologies, why do we believe that Afghanistan will somehow be different? Why do we believe that agreeing with the Afghanistan government’s plan to “reconcile” with Taliban supporters who will claim to support the Afghanistan constitution and “human rights” has one iota of credibility, without challenging the Taliban’s supremacist ideology?
We know better. Too many are too tired, too distracted, and too discouraged to acknowledge what we know. But we have also learned another lesson in history that problems delayed are not problems denied. Such problems continue to plague us over and over again, and the mistakes that we make in Afghanistan will also set expectations for making similar mistakes in other parts of the world.
Another Choice for Afghanistan
What if instead of surrender and abandoning the sacrifices of so many in Afghanistan, we chose to make a stand for freedom and human rights? What if we challenged Afghanistan to accept the Universal Declaration of Human Rights not just as an “observation” in their constitution, but as fundamental to their law and acceptance of pluralism in a new nation of Afghanistan – not just for Muslims but for all Afghan citizens? What if denied accepting any reconciliation of the Taliban until a new plan of national re-education was conducted explaining that Afghan citizens would accept pluralism, women’s rights, and human rights as part of their identity of as a new nation of Afghanistan?
What if all our efforts were not towards just an “Islamic Republic of Afghanistan,” but instead to a “Free Republic of Afghanistan?”
The managers of our resources and our tactics will argue that such choices are impossible, unacceptable. They will argue that the die is cast for Afghanistan and that choosing another path is impossible.
But as we have seen wherever we have not challenged such supremacist ideologies, we continue to see a drip, drip, drip affect of hate, abuse of women and religious minorities, and international terrorism continue to grow.
We have given billions of dollars to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, but very little of our own lessons on challenging supremacism and our own commitment to universal human rights. The price that we continue to pay is a growing terrorist threat to the American homeland, to Pakistan, and the world from the very same Taliban ideology that in Afghanistan, U.S. President Obama says on May 12, 2010, he is willing to open the door to “reconcile” with. This is the very same Taliban ideology that reportedly shaped a recent terrorist who plotted to attack America in New York City’s Times Square.
Seeking a different direction for Afghanistan would be very painful, costly, and difficult.
But in the long run, won’t the alternative be even worse?
If we legitimize those who support the ideology of the Taliban to “reconcile” with the Afghanistan government, what have we learned?
Let us choose instead to be Responsible for Equality And Liberty.
On May 12, 2010, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)’s Jeffrey Imm protested the calls for “reintegration” and “reconcilation” of the Afghanistan Taliban at the White House meeting of President Obama and Afghanistan Karzai. R.E.A.L. had women and men supporters, and people of diverse religious faiths join us there and during our picket of the White House.
R.E.A.L.’s Jeffrey Imm pointed to the history of human rights abuses and attacks on women’s rights by the Taliban, and urged President Obama and President Karzai to make human rights a priority as any part of peace in Afghanistan. R.E.A.L supporters also picketed the White House sidewalk, spoke to the public, and helped to educate the public on the plight of the Afghanistan women.
As President Karzai’s motorcade pulled away from the White House, R.E.A.L.’s Jeffrey Imm held up a sign for them to see “Human Rights Fight Terrorism,” chanting “No to the Taliban, Yes for Human Rights.”
Afghanistan President Karzai and U.S. President Obama Meet at White House (Photo: AP/Evan Vucci)
Today, at the White House, supporters of R.E.A.L. will be asking U.S. President Obama and Afghanistan President Karzai to reconsider the planned discussions on “reintegration” and “reconciliation” of Taliban supremacists in Afghanistan, including suggestions to allow them to return to the police and armed forces.
The reason that the United States of America is in Afghanistan today is because of the September 11 attacks on America by Al-Qaeda terrorists, with the Afghanistan Taliban providing a safe haven for such terrorist training and plots to kill thousands of Americans. The statutory reason that the United States is in Afghanistan is based on the September 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force, which gives vague terms around what the American military can do in response to those associated with the 9/11 attacks.
But if we have learned anything from the 9/11 attacks, it is that there are those in the world who deliberately and consciously seek to reject our unqualified, universal human rights. There are those who reject our freedom of conscience, freedom of speech, freedom of press, and our right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. There are those who reject a pluralist society that respects our differences, but ensures our unity in an omniculture of universal human rights.
Any foreign or domestic policies that ignore human rights and that ignore women’s rights (half of humanity) are bad decisions, and directions that we will not support.
We have seen a steady stream of HATE against women in Afghanistan, some of it by the Taliban, and some of it by the Afghanistan government. Such hate begins with a conscious and deliberate rejection of our unqualified, universal human rights. Such hate and rejection of human rights is the same root cause of terrorist tactics whether they are domestic or international. This is what American and Afghanistan government policy must first address.
But the rejection of human rights for women and others goes beyond the Taliban. The Taliban are a reflection of such hate also found in the Afghanistan government and society.
In Afghanistan, Americans must ask where is the policy for human rights? Where is the policy to address the root causes of terrorism?
What are we fighting for?
Human rights and women’s rights are not an afterthought, not a marginal issue for human peace, and certainly not inconsequential in addressing the ideological basis for terrorism tactics.
We will have no security without human rights. We will have no security without women’s rights.
We will have no conscience if we abandon the Afghanistan women to hate, misogyny, violence, and yes – the TERRORISM – of the Taliban and those who view women as less than human beings.
When we abandon the victims of terrorism, we enable terrorists ourselves.
Choose Love, Not Hate. Love Wins.
Afghanistan: Girls recovering from poison gas attack (Photo: Reuters/Mohammad Ishaq)
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) is planning a public demonstration to call for human rights in Afghanistan and our opposition to the ideology of the Taliban. We call for U.S. and other government policies to make women’s rights a priority in their decisions. Decisions that do not prioritize women’s rights – half of humanity – are decisions that we will always question.
Our demonstration will be on Wednesday, May 12 from 12 Noon to 2 PM in Washington DC at Lafayette Park and the White House sidewalk. The demonstration will coincide with Afghanistan President Karzai’s and United States President Obama’s meeting on May 12 to plan “reconciliation” or “reintegration” between members of the Taliban and the Afghanistan nation.
We will be joined by women and men, Muslims, Christians, Hindus, Jews, and people of diverse races and ethnic origins – who share our commitment to unqualified, universal human rights and to pluralism.
We support efforts to achieve peace, but we also know that peace without human rights, will only provide more suffering to the most vulnerable. We seek to keep hope alive for human rights for all in Afghanistan.
We remain concerned about the false belief that Taliban members will allegedly “renounce violence” against soldiers and tanks, when they may instead continue a reign of terrorism against Afghanistan women, minorities, and other Muslims.
— the perspective among some in Afghanistan that there is a “good Taliban” and a “bad Taliban” – we believe that those who continue to accept the Taliban’s anti-human rights ideologies do not offer any “good” for the Afghanistan people or for peace
— the history of the Taliban ideology in oppressing women, religious minorities, and Muslims in Afghanistan
— the reports that reconciliation plans may include allowing Taliban members “to join the Afghan army or police force”
We call for any “peace” to ensure that women’s, minorities’, and Muslims’ universal human rights are made a priority in Afghanistan. We believe that Taliban supremacists are no different than any other religious or racial supremacists. We urge people of all religions, all ethnic groups, all genders, and all races to join us in our concern for a real peace, based on a commitment to human rights in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan Taliban "Police" Beat Women in Public - in Kabul - in 2001 - We Must Never Let Afghanistan Return to This
The Taliban’s anti-human rights ideological views are no different than any other organization that defies our universal human rights. So we ask President Obama to tell President Karzai “no to reconciliation” with those who continue to promote the Taliban supremacist ideology. Those who renounce the Taliban supremacist ideology and who support our universal human rights are the only ones that America should be supporting reconciliation policies towards. Support for our unqualified, universal human rights must be a priority for any peace in Afghanistan.
We will meet at Lafayette Park at 12 Noon. Our planned goal is to be there from 12 Noon to 2 PM. I have met with the National Park Service about the Lafayette Park and White House sidewalk area, we expect to receive our permit by fax by close of business on May 11 (we spoke to NPS on May 11 AM and they confirm this). However, we don’t require a permit for less than 25 individuals (backup plan). In addition, we submitted our assembly notification to the Metropolitan DC police of our intent to protest in the Pennsylvania Avenue blocked off street area between Lafayette Park and the White House.
To quote Demond Tutu, “Reconciliation is not about being cosy; it is not about pretending that things were other than they were. Reconciliation based on falsehood, on not facing up to reality, is not true reconciliation and will not last.”
May 2010: “Hamid Karzai is failing Afghan women”
— Anber Raz: “The message of the women was loud and clear: they were not prepared to see their rights sacrificed and did not support the plan to give positions of power to the Taliban. The Taliban have many differing aims, but one thing has remained consistent: their opposition to women’s rights and equality.”
— “when Karzai met with a leading Afghan militant group last March as part of the process leading up to reintegration, one of its main demands was for a new constitution – so you may forgive the women of Afghanistan for fearing the worst.”
If you are taking the Washington DC subway (Metro), you should exit at the Farragut West (Orange/Blue Lines), Farragut North (Red Line), or McPherson Square (Orange/Blue Lines) metro stops.
FARRAGUT NORTH METRO STATION to WHITE HOUSE Walking Directions: 1. Exit station through CONNETICUT AVE & K ST NW entrance. 2. Walk a short distance S on Connecticut Ave NW. 3. Walk straight on 17th St NW. 4. Walk approx. 1 block S on 17th St NW. 5. Turn left on I St NW. 6. Walk a short distance E on I St NW. 7. Turn right on Connecticut Ave NW. 8. Walk approx. 1 block S on Connecticut Ave NW. 9. Bear right on Jackson Pl NW. 10. Walk approx. 1 block S on Jackson Pl NW. 11. Turn left on Pennsylvania Ave NW. 12. Walk approx. 1 block E on Pennsylvania Ave NW.
On May 10, 2010 at 9:35 PM, there was a firebomb attack at the Islamic Center of Northeast Florida (ICNEF) in Jacksonville, Florida. Media reports state that no one was injured and no significant damage was done.
WJXT reports that the Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department stated that “an explosive device caused a small fire” at the back of the building. The fire was put out with fire extinguishers and caused minimal damage. WJXT also reported that the FBI had obtained surveillance video of a man who was carrying a gasoline can, and that the video would be released later on May 11, 2010.
WOKV reported that in April 2010 a man interrupted a service at the Jacksonville mosque, stating “stop this blaspheming” and said that “I will be back.” Police have not yet established if there is any connnection.
Islamic Center of Northeast Florida (ICNEF) in Jacksonville, Florida (Photo: ICNEF web site) WOKV Photo of ICNEF After Attack (Photo: WOKV)
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) condemns such hate and violence. We support our unqualified, universal human rights, including our freedom of conscience and the pluralism to allow such freedoms. We urge all those who promote hate and violence to unburden their hearts from hate and violence.
Stars and Stripes reports: “The cross, which has stood in various forms for the last 76 years as a memorial to World War I soldiers, was stolen late Sunday night or early Monday morning”
— “Vandals cut through a series of metal bolts to remove the cross — still covered by a wooden box — from its concrete foundation.”
In London on May 9, 2010, the anti-democracy organization Hizb ut-Tahrir called for Pakistanis to reject the Pakistan government as “traitors,” and called for Pakistanis to support the creation of a global extremist caliphate. Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Dr. Abdul Wahid called for the Paksitani people to support a “re-establishment of the Khilafat, an obligation from Islam.”
The British Hizb ut-Tahrir organization also condemned U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s remarks as a “farce” that there would be “severe consequences” if the planned NYC car bomb plot was established to have been planned from within Pakistan. The anti-democracy Hizb ut-Tahrir organization once again blamed terrorist attacks within Pakistan on the United States. The anti-democracy Hizb ut-Tahrir organization also stated that the Pakistan government showed “open contempt for the blood and honour of our people.”
According to Hizb ut-Tahrir, “The event was chaired by Atif Salahuddin from Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Pakistan Committee and was addressed by Dr Abdul Wahid, Chair of the Executive Committee Hizb ut -Tahrir Britain, Qasim Ali, Chair of Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain’s Pakistan Committee and Community leader Mushtaq Raja from Walthamstow. ”
May 9, 2010: Anti-Democracy Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain Group Hold London Event Condemning Pakistan Government's Relationship with United StatesMay 9, 2010 - Anti-Democracy Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain Group Leaders Speak -- Dr. Abdul Wahid - top row, third from left
In July 2009, a London Times report “British Islamists plot against Pakistan” on British members of Hizb ut-Tahrir stated that UK members had been incited to go to Pakistan to seek to influence Pakistan military members and others to instigate a “coup” against the current Pakistan government. The London Times report described how Hizb ut-Tahrir members’ “aim was to subject Muslim and western countries to Islamic rule under sharia law, ‘by force’ if necessary”… where ” ‘every woman would have to cover up’ and stoning to death for adultery and the chopping off of thieves’ hands would be the law, he said.” The London Times report added that Hizb ut-Tahrir aims of “Islamic rule would be spread through ‘indoctrination’ and by ‘military means’ if non-Muslim countries refused to bow to it. ‘Waging war’ would be part of the caliphate’s foreign policy.”
From Page 37 of Hizb ut-Tahrir Pakistan's Manifesto - Calling for "Violent Extemism" Training for all male children 15 years of age
In December 2009, a major United Kingdom university stopped the Hizb ut-Tahrir from using public university facilities for a debate. On December 10, BBC reported that attempts by the Hizb ut-Tahrir to hold a public event at Queen Mary College was canceled once the media reported about them. In their report BBC stated about Hizb ut-Tahrir that “A leaflet displayed on its website once urged Muslims to ‘kill [Jews] wherever you find them’.” A spokesman for Student Rights told BBC that “Hizb ut-Tahrir speakers have been known to condone suicide bombings and support Islamist movements which undertake terrorist acts such as Islamic Violent Extemism.”
“Hizb ut-Tahrir is an Islamist network that is committed to creating an Islamic Caliphate that spans the globe. The organization is banned in Germany and Russia as well as several Arab countries and targets Muslim children between the ages of 9 and 18. Many compare their efforts to organizations like the Hitler Youth. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, is counted among their alumnus.”
Dr. Jasser stated that “Hizb ut-Tahrir preaches an ideology that calls for the destruction of the principles that America is founded on.”
BBC television broadcast on its Panorama television show on the Hizb ut-Tahrir, interviewing a British “influential Muslim figure” who stated about Hizb ut-Tahrir to BBC: “I believe that if Hizb ut-Tahrir are not stopped at this stage and we continue to let them to politicize and pollute the youngsters’ minds and other gullible peoples minds, that what will happen in effect is that these terrorism acts and these suicide bombings that we hear going on around us in foreign countries, we will actually start seeing these incidents happening right outside our doorsteps.”
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) supports our unqualified, universal human rights for all. We urge Hizb ut-Tahrir supporters to drop the burden of the hate ofextremism from their hearts, and to rejoin the family of humanity in support of our universal human rights.