Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Karen Armstrong Describes Pope's Words As "Extremely Dangerous"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Karen Armstrong Describes Pope's Words As "Extremely Dangerous"

    KAREN ARMSTRONG DESCRIBES POPE'S WORDS AS "EXTREMELY DANGEROUS"
    By Lucy Jones

    Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, DC
    December 2006, pages 28-29

    Many European newspapers thought Pope Benedict XVI should have
    shown greater sensitivity in his Sept. 12 address to the University
    of Regensburg, in which he quoted a Byzantine emperor, Manuel II
    Paleologus, as saying: "Show me just what Mohammed brought that was
    new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as
    his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

    "Like the Danish cartoons," said the London Times on Sept. 16, "the
    pope's words provide a golden opportunity for Islamist militants to
    inflame the millions who have no access to his full speech with a
    distorted interpretation of his words and his intentions.

    "It might have been wiser," The Times added, "if the pope had excised
    from his speech any remark, especially a quotation about the Prophet
    Muhammad, that could be taken out of context by those for whom
    ecumenism is anathema."

    Admonished Britain's Guardian the same day: "Even if Benedict XVI,
    despite his reputation for meticulous preparation, had failed to
    appreciate the impact of his thoughts, his advisers should have.

    "There might have been less protest had Benedict a clearer record
    in favor of dialogue with Islam," the newspaper continued. As a
    cardinal in the Holy See, Benedict was known to be skeptical of John
    Paul II's pursuit of conversation, the Guardian noted. One of his
    earliest decisions as pope, it pointed out, was to move Archbishop
    Michael Fitzgerald, one of the Catholic Church's leading experts on
    Islam and head of its council on interreligious dialogue, away from
    the center of influence in Rome, to Egypt as a papal nuncio.

    "[The pope] appears to have had no idea that his academic musings at
    his old university in Bavaria would have such an impact," wrote The
    Independent on Sept. 17, "and that is precisely why he deserves to
    be criticized."

    Writing in the same newspaper the following day, however, the author
    Karen Armstrong found it "difficult to believe that his reference to
    an inherently violent strain in Islam was entirely accidental.

    "Coming on the heels of the Danish cartoon crisis," she continued,
    "his remarks were extremely dangerous. They will convince more Muslims
    that the West is incurably Islamophobic and engaged in a new crusade."

    In Germany, however, Die Welt said on Sept. 18 that the Islamic world's
    anger about the quote was groundless because it merely expressed a
    "historically documented fact."

    According to the newspaper, it is neither provocative nor blasphemous
    to point out that "Christianity, abuses notwithstanding, is essentially
    not a religion of conquest, as practiced personally and successfully
    by the prophet of Islam.

    "The hysterical reactions from the Muslim world mainly show that there
    are enough influential people who take advantage of any opportunity
    in order to start a clash of cultures," it concluded.

    "The pope does not have to apologize for expressing an opinion," said
    Spain's El Mundo the same day. "He upheld an idea we fully share:
    tolerance."

    But Germany's Frankfurter Rundschau of Sept. 18 thought the pontiff's
    remarks were ill-advised.

    "A pope is not a scholar who can philosophize for himself without
    considering the consequences," the paper argued. "He must put himself
    in the place of those listeners who feel humiliated by the West."

    Echoed France's Liberation the same day: "He is not expected to compete
    with Bush's neoconservatives in fueling... a war of civilizations,
    but to preach coexistence between religions."

    French Genocide Law Said to "Contribute to Dogmatization" "Pointless,"
    was how France's Liberation of Oct. 13 described a bill passed by
    the lower house making it a crime to deny that the Turks committed
    genocide against the Armenians in 1915.

    Even if some dispute the term "genocide," the newspaper editorialized,
    "The destruction of the Armenian people of Asia Minor...is an
    historical fact which is hard to deny."

    It went on to add, however, that the new bill "contributes to the
    dogmatization of historical research, the best example which can
    be found in Turkey," and concluded, "This law will hinder the very
    people who are seeking progress in this area."

    "It is not for the law to write history," argued Le Monde the previous
    day. "It is for the people of Turkey to remember and for diplomacy
    to encourage them to do so."

    Turkish intellectuals who already have spoken of the genocide at home,
    Le Monde pointed out, believe the French bill "would be grist to the
    mill of nationalists ready to demand that Ankara impose...economic
    reprisals against France."

    It "borders on the absurd," noted Austria's Die Presse of Oct. 12,
    that France may make the denial of Armenian genocide punishable by
    imprisonment, while in Turkey prison looms for those who say genocide
    occurred.

    "How can there be an open, scholarly discussion if this can land you
    in prison in two countries?" it asked.

    However, that day's Der Standard supported the bill, which had yet
    to be passed by the Senate and president.

    While acknowledging that the vote may be the result of "consideration
    for the 450,000 French-Armenians in the country," the Austrian paper
    went on to argue that the killings seem to meet the genocide criteria
    laid down in United Nations conventions.

    "This is why the bill passed by the Paris MPs is to be approved
    of," it concluded, "even though it may be based on petty electoral
    considerations."

    Nobel Prize for Turkish Writer Seen as Having "Strong Political Aspect"
    In addition to the Nobel Prize for Literature, Orhan Pamuk "could also
    have received the Nobel Peace Prize," wrote Spain's El Pais on Oct. 13,
    the day after the Turkish writer was awarded the honor. "He is one of
    the intellectuals who has reflected with the greatest brilliance...on
    the depravity of national, ethnic or religious fanaticism."

    Awarding the prize to Pamuk was "the best decision the Nobel Prize
    committee has taken for years," opined Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine
    Zeitung the same day, likening it to 1970's Nobel Prize to the Soviet
    dissident author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

    The Czech daily Hospodarske Noviny of Oct. 13 questioned the judges'
    intentions, however. "The Nobel Prize for Literature for a writer
    who was charged in Turkey last year for daring to speak aloud about
    the Armenian genocide and massacres of Kurds has a strong political
    aspect," it said. "Pamuk's literary qualities are unquestionable,
    but the Nobel Prize committee's decision this year was more political
    than literary," it concluded.

    Afghanistan Described as "Let Down By the Rest of the World" The
    murder in Afghanistan on Sept. 25 of Safia Amajan, director of the
    Ministry of Women's Affairs in Kandahar, emphasized "the despicable
    ideology of the Taliban," the U.K.'s Independent wrote the following
    day. Amajan had opened numerous female schools and provided hundreds
    of women and girls with an education that, only five years ago,
    was denied them by the obscurantist Taliban.

    Her murder-believed to have been orchestrated by the Taliban-underlines
    how shamefully Afghanistan has been let down by the rest of the world,
    said the newspaper.

    "The reason is neglect," it continued, adding that President Hamid
    Karzai's warnings about the deteriorating security situation in his
    country "were ignored by a world preoccupied by Iraq.

    "It is now apparent that the battle for Afghanistan did not end in
    2001," the newspaper concluded. "The fall of Kabul was merely the
    beginning of that struggle. And, as this latest murder shows, the
    terrible truth is that the forces of enlightenment and democracy are
    in retreat."

    Lebanon Cited as Possible Role Model for Palestinian State Germany's
    Die Welt of Sept. 21 welcomed the parliament's approval for the
    dispatch of up to 2,400 navy personnel to patrol Lebanon's coast.

    There are "good reasons" for the deployment, the paper argued, ranging
    from the need to stabilize Lebanon to Berlin's desire to become
    "an important player in the Middle East."

    That day's Frankfurter Rundschau agreed, saying that parliament has
    taken the correct decision. There is an "historic dimension" to the
    deployment, the newspaper noted, because a stable Lebanon could serve
    as a template for a future Palestinian state.

    "An established state, with Beirut as the capital, in which citizens
    take matters that concern them into their own hands, could turn out
    to be a model for the center of the Middle East conflict," it said.

    Lucy Jones is a free-lance journalist based in London.

    http://www.wrmea.com/archives/December_20 06/0612028.html
Working...
X