| |
Muslims, not Americans, are religious bigots
WashingtonExaminer.com
|
According to an article in Time magazine, there has been no increase in
violence against Muslims since the announcement of plans to build a
mosque near Ground Zero. (Alan Diaz/AP) |
Time magazine asked this week whether America has “a Muslim problem,” and
suggested that “many” of those opposed to the Ground Zero mosque “are motivated
by deep-seated Islamophobia.” The same article scowls disapprovingly that “46%
of Americans believe Islam is more likely than other faiths to encourage
violence against nonbelievers.” (What could have possibly given them that idea?)
But, as the article concedes, there has been no increase in violence against
Muslims. In reality, Americans remain fastidiously tolerant of all religions,
even one that inspired 19 fanatics to hijack four commercial airliners on 9/11
and kill more than 3,000 Americans in the bloodiest attack in our nation’s
history. Time requires a peculiar sort of blindness to see so much imagined
intolerance in America — especially based solely on “anecdotal evidence” — while
nearly ignoring the religious intolerance in most Islamic countries. A group of
triumphalist Muslims seeks to erect an Islamic center near Ground Zero in a city
that already has 100 mosques, and they face, at worst, disapproval, stern looks
and calls to relocate their project.
Contrast this with a news report by
journalist Mindy Belz in the current issue of World magazine, concerning
Afghanistan’s small community of Christian converts. Belz describes how an
Afghan television station recently broadcast a video of a baptismal service,
sparking riots in the streets of Kabul and leading to the arrest of 25
Christians. Nobody knows at this time the fate of those arrested. Because it is
illegal for Muslims to convert in Afghanistan — as it is in most Islamic
countries — people who choose any other faith face the death penalty. Adherents
of other religions, meanwhile, are subject to official discrimination and
persecution, despite guarantees to the contrary in Afghanistan’s constitution.
Thus, the plight of Christians is shared in many Islamic countries by Buddhists,
Baha’is, Hindus and Zoroastrians.
As Time puts it, it is wrong to
“conflate Islam with terrorism and savagery.” But the world must be dealt with
as it is and not as we wish it were. That requires us to accept the reality that
Muslim nations are the most religiously intolerant places on Earth, and that a
startling number of Islamic clerics worldwide still refuse to condemn violence
against nonbelievers. In contrast, Americans who oppose the mosque are not even
demanding that its developers be arrested or harmed in any way for their
beliefs. They ask only that the mosque developers voluntarily show common sense,
decency and sensitivity for America’s loss on 9/11.