http://www.cephasministry.com/islam_dissects_jihad_in_america_emerson.html
DIVERSITY VS. FREEDOM
- Jihad on the Campus By James Fulford (With in twenty-four hours of this controversy, the web site of the student paper where the original outrage took place had vanished from the World Wide Web, causing some of the links below to vanish. This may be because the University is taking its summer vacation, but it’s common for universities to destroy the web archives of student papers that offend against diversity by being diverse. See The Orwellian Memory Hole:Vanishing Archives. By Wendy McElroy.)
- On February 19, Omar Siddiqui, a law student at Toronto’s Osgoode Hall Law School published an article which spoke approvingly of women being flogged for adultery (as long as the skin wasn’t broken), and quoting the old law that, “In cases where a child has been born which is not even seen as direct evidence of fornication, and the mother is breast feeding the child, she must not be punished for fear that the child will lose a mother.”
- Turned around, that sentence means that it’s OK under Islamic law to flog a nursing mother, possibly to death, if her child was born as the result of adultery. He also compared the flogging of a Nigerian woman to the North American problems feminists are always complaining about: While one girl in Nigeria is wrongly punished, thousands of women in the Canadian system are denied equal access and fair treatment under the law. Most people can see a basic qualitative difference between 100 lashes for adultery, and 78 cents on the dollar, but not Omar Siddiqui. Several people complained about this, including Raha Shahidsaless and Demitry Papasotiriou. Papasotiriou used the expression “pathetic and irrelevant religious dogma” and said that there was “NOTHING, absolutely nothing spiritual about that Islamic faith” [sic].
- All of which, you would think, would be instantly agreed with by any University Administration concerned with religious freedom (non-existent in the Moslem world), or the status of women. In fact, we should be reading that Mr. Siddiqui has been ridden out of town on a rail by enraged feminists, like Skipper Ireson in the poem. But no! According to a May 1, 2000 National Post story, Peter W. Hogg, dean of Osgoode Hall, said he was embarrassed by the response to this anti-female ranting, and he wrote letters saying that he was “sorry that the editors chose to publish the article” criticizing Islam’s anti-woman, anti-freedom laws.
- “The article was essentially a criticism of Islamic law but it also made some unjustified criticisms of the Islamic belief system. It was very offensive to Muslim students,” he said. “I started to get just a torrent of e-mails from Muslims all over North America.” Papasotiriou issued an apology of sorts (Intolerance for Intolerance), partly in response to “anonymous and threatening e-mails.” But he still feels that that certain Islamic tendencies are to be condemned: To those who uphold inhumane customs and practices based in accordance with their religious teachings that they attempt to qualify as just and humane, I recommend to them to live in a country, if only briefly, where my aunt was murdered when she was gunned down at a bus stop because she was not veiled and where the spokesperson for the police noted that she provoked the attack (July 14, 1994, Algeria).
- With that sort of attitude, you can see why Dean Hogg’s university is “investigating complaints that the article breached the school’s code of non-academic conduct that prohibits hatemongering.” After all, Algeria’s local custom of shooting down unveiled women is a Third World custom. And as such, it is above criticism (by Westerners, that is. Muslim women can complain if they like.). Terry Heinrichs of York University wrote a letter to the National Post asking who Dean Hogg thought he was “to legislate what qualifies as unjustified criticisms of Islam?” I presume Mr. Heinrichs is next on the list of people to be disciplined.
- He’s been studying American history, and has picked up foreign ideas about “Free Speech” and “Civil Liberties.” There’s an organization called CAIR, the Council on American Islamic Relations. CAIR was established to “promote a positive image of Islam and Muslims in America.” Their Canadian chapter may have been the inspiration behind the e-mails that Dean Hogg received. CAIR believes that “misrepresentations of Islam are most often the result of ignorance on the part of non-Muslims and reluctance on the part of Muslims to articulate their case.” That’s fine with me. I’m opposed to misrepresentations myself. Unfortunately, it’s not misrepresentations and ignorant prejudice that CAIR fights on a daily basis.
- They’re fighting the truth, and any criticism of Islamic belief or practice. Daniel Pipes has been subjected to a lot of intimidation and so have many others who have dared to criticize Islam. Steven Emerson, producer of Jihad in America, is actually in hiding. But it would be unfair to blame CAIR for York University’s actions in this case. The Canadian academic community is quite capable of rolling over and playing dead, or worse, without being asked. However, if Dean Hogg wants to make the Osgoode Hall Law School acceptable by Middle Eastern standards, he still has a long way to go.
- Here is short list of suggestions for reform: No beer on campus, offenders to be flogged. Christian and Jewish chapels to be pulled down, so that no stone shall stand upon another, and their chaplains expelled (with a flogging). All women of any description whatever to be removed from the campus, except for the students’ wives. (Up to four in number per student but no concubines.) All the books in the library to be burned, with the exception of the Koran. (Gibbon says that the Caliph Omar did not do this to the Library of Alexandria, but that doesn’t mean Dean Hogg can’t do it.) Finally, Dean Hogg should change his name, the sound of which is offensive to True Believers, who consider the pig to be ritually unclean. These measures should propel his University both forward into the 21st Century and backward into the 6th. May 2, 2001 http://www.vdare.com/fulford/diversity_freedom_gihad.htm
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http://www.paklinks.com/gs/all-views/4384-york-university-takes-action-against-islamophobia.html
CANADIAN UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS APOLOGIZE FOR
STUDENT’S ISLAMOPHOBIC REMARKS
(Ottawa, Canada ? 04/25/01)
The President and Vice-Chancellor
of York University, along with the Dean of Osgoode Hall Law School, have
strongly condemned and apologized for an Islamophobic commentary that recently appeared in Obiter Dicta, a student
newspaper of the law school.
The University is also taking disciplinary action against the student who wrote the March 12th op-ed piece, “In Allah We Trust”, which included statements such as:
“…children and adults alike of Islam do not have the luxury of CHOICE…
precisely because of Islam’s oppressive, backwards and brutal realities which is an affront to basic human dignity…”
“…there is NOTHING, absolutely nothing spiritual about that Islamic faith. At best, it is a protocol of social conduct, a hybrid if you will of the worst elements of communism and fascism co-existing in a monstrous symbiosis; of oppression and most pervasive and intolerable regulation…”
“…As for the readers of our paper, all I can say to you is to BEWARE and to beware of the religious fanatics among us and false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly are ravenous wolves!”
The commentary was in response to a series of educational articles about Islamic Law that had previously appeared in the Obiter.
(See http://www.yorku.ca/obiter/march/mar12/Mar12-Allah.html for full commentary)
In letters sent to York University President Lorna Marsden and Law School Dean Peter W. Hogg, CAIR CAN Executive Director Riad Saloojee wrote:
“Rarely, however, have we ever encountered the malice and deep-seated prejudice. Indeed, the article goes far beyond either opinion or scholarly debate; it incites hatred against Muslims and crosses into the realm of hate literature.”
“That a law school paper, committed to the service of its student body, would publish such hate is intolerable…We request that the university administration conduct an investigation into the matter and take appropriate measures to ensure that this situation never re-occurs.”
In her reply to CAIR-CAN, President Marsden, wrote:
“Osgoode Hall Law School and York University take very seriously their commitment to social equality, and both the School and the University endeavour at all times to be respectful of difference and diversity.”
“…A formal complaint has been filed against [the student] and the Associate Dean of the Law School … has begun proceedings in accordance with the Presidential Regulations Governing the Conduct of Students at York University.”
“Please be assured, therefore, that this matter has been treated with every seriousness by the administration of York University, and prompt remedial and disciplinary action has been taken.”
Dean Hogg also replied to CAIR CAN, stating:
“May I say how deeply sorry I am that the offensive article was written by a law student and published in Obiter Dicta,
the student newspaper…”
“We are deeply committed to tolerance and equality for all races and religious faiths. Our formal policy in this regard
is prominently posted around the Law School. It is very upsetting when members of the community fail to respect those
values.”
>In the March 19th issue of the Obiter, Dean Hogg and eight students wrote to condemn the bigoted article. The editor also issued an apology.
(See http://www.yorku.ca/obiter/march/mar…ntsmar-19.html for letters and apology)
“It is encouraging to see such fair-minded and swift action from the administration of York University towards such a hateful attack on Islam,” said CAIR CAN Board member Dr. Jamal Badawi.
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