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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
altmuslim this week - september 1, 2008 - This week, Ramadan begins (at the same time, for a change), a fascinating week in US politics, and getting to the bottom of Harun Yahya's Islamic creationist movement.
ASIDES
editor's blog
Zero tolerance for Muslim participation in politics? - The very people who fight to push Muslims out of the public square are also the ones clamoring for our communities to get out in the streets and prove our loyalty to the US. If only they could see the contradiction for themselves. (August 6, 2008)

Geeking out at SXSW Interactive - There is no better place to mingle with other geeks than at South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive, one of the largest Internet-focused conferences in the country, where we presented a panel discussion on "Online Extremism - And The Muslims Who Fight It" (March 20, 2008)

CONTRIBUTORS
PODCASTS
altmuslim review 029 - A vibrant Muslim media could have an opportunity to restore balance to the Muslim public image - if it can get on its feet. In this episode, we explore the state of the Muslim media. Also, an interview with the creator of "Muslim Cafe", Navid Akhtar. (July 5, 2008)

altmuslim review 028 - Where in the world is altmuslim? This month, we report on the halal industry from the World Halal Forum in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and from Milan, Italy where we speak to Italian Muslims about the challenges they face. (May 20, 2008)

ELSEWHERE
Shahed will be participating in a panel discussion, Sourcing Islam, at the Religion Newswriters Association conference in Washington, DC (September 20, 2008)

Rushdie is no believer in free speech - Irfan Yusuf, The Age (Australia) (August 8, 2008)

Shahed will be participating in the Progressive Revival group blog at BeliefNet (July 29, 2008)

Western civilization? What a good idea that would be - Irfan Yusuf, New Zealand Herald (July 22, 2008)

Shahed will be speaking about the role of the Web in promoting Muslim civic engagement at the ISNA South Central Zone Conference in Houston, Texas (July 5, 2008)

Shahed will give a presentation, Shaping the Public Debate About Muslims, at the Center for American Studies in Rome, Italy (May 12, 2008)

Zahed will be a guest on BBC Radio 4's "Sunday" programme speaking about religious podcasting (May 4, 2008)

Rafia and Shahed will be guests on South Africa's Channel Islam, speaking about interpreting Islam in the modern world (March 28 & April 4, 2008)

Shahed will be speaking at the CAMP International Leadership Summit in Princeton, NJ (March 29, 2008)

Shahed will be a guest on Radio Tahrir, airing on WBAI 99.5 FM in New York, speaking about the Muslim block vote (April 1, 2008)

Shahed will be appearing on The Agenda with Steve Paikin for a recap of altmuslim's SXSW panel "Online Extremism" (March 26, 2008)

altmuslim is hosting a panel discussion at 2008 SXSW Interactive, "Online Extremism (And The Muslims Who Fight It)" (March 9, 2008)

Count blessings, then tally taxes - Hesham Hassaballa, Chicago Tribune (February 24, 2008)

'Busharraf' gets the people's message - Irfan Yusuf, New Zealand Herald (February 22, 2008)

Shahed will be participating in the US-Islamic World Forum in Doha, Qatar (February 17-19, 2008)

Sharia an unlikely threat - Irfan Yusuf, stuff.co.nz (February 13, 2008)

Converts' dangerous pull towards extremism - Irfan Yusuf, Sydney Morning Herald (February 7, 2008)

Safiyyah will be appearing on The Agenda with Steve Paikin for a debate on "Today's Young Muslim Women" (February 1, 2008)

Sidelining the loud-mouthed cultural warriors - Irfan Yusuf, Canberra Times (January 10, 2008)

Safiyyah will be guest writing at the TVO website offering commentary on the two-part TV series Britz (February 2008)

IN THE NEWS
National publisher kills Spokane journalist’s book - [Amanullah] sent e-mails to about 200 graduate students in Islamic studies, telling them of Spellberg's "frantic" call and asking if they had heard about the novel. "What I got back was a collective shrug of the shoulders," says Amanullah. "The thing that is surreal for me is that here you had a non-Muslim write a book, and you had a non-Muslim complain about it, and a non-Muslim publisher pull the book." (August 20, 2008)

Self censoring Muslims - "But Amanullah says he never wanted the book pulled. 'I'm upset the book wasn't published,' he said, 'not because I agree or disagree with the book.' For him, 'I don't want to be in the position where we are stifling speech. Preemptive censorship is not in our interest. That's worse than even censorship. We're not going to silence our way out of problems.'" (August 12, 2008)

You still can’t write about Muhammad - "But Ms. Spellberg wasn't a fan of Ms. Jones's book. On April 30, Shahed Amanullah, a guest lecturer in Ms. Spellberg's classes and the editor of a popular Muslim Web site, got a frantic call from her. "She was upset," Mr. Amanullah recalls. He says Ms. Spellberg told him the novel "made fun of Muslims and their history," and asked him to warn Muslims." (August 5, 2008)

Why the silence? - "Both reactionary religion and militant secularism are on the rise, with both displaying a rigid certainty and a desire for power that will do nothing to benefit society. In this context, it is vital that people with open-minded faith speak up and demonstrate alternatives. [altmuslim.com has] set many good examples in this regard." (January 8, 2008)

Does the US tolerate anti-Muslim speech? - "You see more hostility towards Muslims now than you did the year after 9/11," says Shahed Amanullah, editor of a Muslim web-zine, AltMuslim.com. He and other observers point to America's failure to capture Osama bin Laden, the continuing difficulties in Iraq and Afghanistan, and news of terrorist plots overseas as reasons why many Americans feel hostile towards Muslims. (December 7, 2007)

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Honor Killing
Saving Banaz Mahmod
The case of Banaz Mahmod shows that some segregated immigrant communities exert draconian control over women in order to act out the frustration of feeling helpless in a foreign land.

On April 28, 2006, 20 year-old Banaz Mahmod Bakabir Agha's body was found hacked to pieces and packed in a suitcase in a suburb of London. Her crime was leaving an abusive arranged marriage and wishing to marry a man of her own choice. Finally, on June 12 of this year, her killers were brought to justice when a British court convicted her father Mahmod Mahmod and her uncle Ari Mahmod of her murder.

Banaz's case illustrates how a host of factors can come together to allow such grotesque honour crimes to occur. Archaic and misogynistic cultural beliefs, on the one hand, reduce women to objects of ownership and control, whose family members have no qualms in obliterating them for imagined sins against tradition. On the other is a host foreign culture suspicious of a ghettoised and economically disenfranchised Muslim minority, and hence slow to provide protection. Banaz had repeatedly asked the police to provide her with protection and even given them a list of three people whom she believed would try to kill her, to no avail.

Finally, also blameworthy is the persistent silence of the Muslim Council of Britain, and other Muslim groups who jump to organise protests when Muslim women are denied the right to wear niqabs but choose to ignore their plight when they fall prey to the brutality of their own families.

The collusion of all of these factors, the low priority given to Muslim women's freedom by their own cultural tradition, their host nation and ultimately their religious community are all to blame in the Banaz case.

The saga began in late July 2005 when twenty year old Banaz left the marriage that her Iraqi Kurdish family had arranged for her at age seventeen, and returned to her family home. According to police reports, Banaz complained of being repeatedly abused and raped by her husband. In one incident, he punched her in the face and knocked out one of her front teeth because she had dared to call him by his first name in public. Despite her family's opposition to her divorce, Banaz chose to stay on in her family's home. In late 2005, Banaz met and fell in love with Rahmat Suleimani, a Kurdish man from a different tribe.

The love affair ignited even more of her family's ire. Already shamed at the fact that Banaz's sister Bekhal had left the home at age 15 to escape family violence, Banaz's uncle, Ari Mahmod, convened a family council in which the elders decided to kill Banaz to reclaim their family honour. Banaz was told of this plan by her mother and went to the police to report the death threat. Terrified at the course of events and still believing that her mother would protect her, Banaz refused to enter a shelter, but the threats against her life continued.

A chilling episode in the story took place on New Year's Eve 2006. Banaz was lured into her grandmother's house in nearby Wimbledon to meet with her father and uncle to sort out her divorce. While there, she became terrified when her father first made her drink brandy to sedate her (something she as a Muslim had never done before) and then proceeded to put on gloves. Hysterical and drugged, Banaz ran out of the house by smashing a window with her bare hands and found help in a nearby caf�. However, when she went to the local police they refused to believe her story.

In a video made at this time, one can see an obviously disorientated Banaz lying on a hospital bed and detailing her father's suspicious actions. On January 21, 2006, Banaz's family attempted to kidnap her boyfriend, Rahmat. In the days following the attempt Banaz again went to the local police station and filed a report saying she would co-operate fully in any investigation against her family. Four days later, while in her family home, Banaz was killed. Her body was found on April 28, 2006, with the bootlace used to strangle her still around her neck.

There is nothing that can mitigate the horror of an innocent life taken at the behest of the very people that were responsible for bringing it into the world. At the most primary level, a crime which involves a father killing his own daughter, whose only mistake was to choose her own mate, should evoke the deepest disgust in every human heart. But the Banaz case is also an indictment against the religio-cultural confusion becoming increasingly symbolic of West-European society in the twenty-first century.

Muslim immigrant communities like the Iraqi Kurds are geographically and economically ghettoized, with little incentive and few logistical reasons to assimilate into the mainstream. Segregated thus, these communities recast adherence to traditional customs as a form of resistance to a foreign culture they perceive as hostile and unwelcoming. Exerting draconian control over women becomes a convenient means of acting out the frustration of feeling helpless in a foreign land.

At the same time, host cultures use the issue to substantiate their own delusions regarding the 'other' people living in their homeland. The 'xenophobic' Britons treat the occurrence of such crimes as proof of the barbarism and backwardness of immigrants. The 'cultural relativist' Britons, used to exoticising the 'other', simply look elsewhere, unsure of how to judge such a saga of unabated cruelty.

In either case, girls like Banaz are denied the help they need.

Finally, religious groups such as the powerful Muslim Council of Britain find delving into such matters generally useless to their political and mobilisation aims. By disposing of the issue of honour killings in a convenient web disclaimer about the "pre-islamic" nature of the custom, they expose their own dubious commitment to Muslim women like Banaz, who are left to fend for themselves when it comes to fighting against repression in their own communities.

Rafia Zakaria is associate editor of altmuslim.com and an attorney and member of the Asian American Network Against Abuse of Women.  She teaches courses on constitutional law and political philosophy. This article previously appeared in Daily Times (Pakistan).


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4 COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE



Rafia,

Thank you for this article. It is sobering and painful to those of us who are committed to women's rights and our religion. There needs to be pressure put on organizations to respond to this type of violence. What can be done?

For one we must go further than simply saying that something is "cultural". Yet, I feel that people who murder women for "honor" could care less about what the Qur'an or sunnah says. In what terms do we fight against this type of violence? I am really interested to know what Rafia and others think.

Salaam.


Another wake-up call in a world full of wake-up calls. When will we finally be bothered enough by the noise to do something other than hit the snooze button?

May God have mercy on the soul of Banaz, as well on those who stood by and did nothing.


"Finally, also blameworthy is the persistent silence of the Muslim Council of Britain, and other Muslim groups who jump to organise protests when Muslim women are denied the right to wear niqabs but choose to ignore their plight when they fall prey to the brutality of their own families."

You're right, Muslim groups should be more vocal. MCB missed the boat on this one, sad since they have been forthright before. Its been more than a 'web disclaimer'. One wonders what the author of this piece chose to hear and what not to hear:


1. 'Call it a crime of dishonour' say Muslim leaders
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article1922495.ece

2. Nothing Honourable in Honour Killings http://www.mcb.org.uk/features/features.php?ann_id=151

3. 'Forced Marriages: A Wrong, not a Right' http://www.mcb.org.uk/features/features.php?ann_id=1458

4. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/3150142.stm



Poor girl, there must be more done about this problem. I can't believe somebody was able to kill his sister / child. May Allah have mercy on her.


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