Archive for July, 2008

World Youth Day 2008 And The Iraqi Youth

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Blogger: Chaldean Thoughts
Article: World Youth Day 2008 And The Iraqi Youth
Originaly Posted On: 2008-07-08 01:24:00

Next week, more than 125,000 international visitors will attend World Youth Day 2008 in Sydney, Australia. Unfortunately, the Iraqi Christians youth team has been denied the opportunity to meet with the youth from around the world.

BaghdadHope wrote on his blog:

On March 2007 Father Rayan P. Atto, parish priest of the Chaldean church of Mar Qardagh in Erbil, expressed a dream. Today, more than

Blogger: The Muslim Network for Baha’i Rights
Article: Department of Civil Status leads discrimination against Baha’is
Originaly Posted On: 2008-07-15 09:07:34

Dr. Basma G. Moussa, a leading Egyptian Baha’i blogger, and Assistant Professor at the prestigious Cairo University, wrote an article for the left-leaning El Badeel Newspaper on the discrimination adherents of the faith are met with in Egypt. Entitled “The Department of Civil Status Leads the Discrimination Against Baha’is”, the article is a forceful and compelling reminder of the importance of protecting the individual rights of citizens, regardless of race, gender or beliefs. For, as Dr. Moussa eloquently states, not guaranteeing these rights can weaken feelings of citizenship, thus creating opportunities for sectarianism to surface, and a return to the ignorant tendencies of the past.

Click for larger image

  • In 2004, an administrative decision by Egypt’s “Department of Civil Status” allowed for only three religions - Islam, Judaism and Christianity - to be listed under the religion field in identification papers, lamentedly denying thousands of Baha’is their right to the simplest of civil rights. Some of the hurdles faced by Egyptian Baha’is, as explained by Dr. Moussa, are explained below:
  • Birth certificates aren’t issued to Baha’i infants. A child’s denial of her/his right to a birth certificate has detrimental effects throughtout her/his lifetime, as it prevents access to health care and education. Further, working mothers aren’t entitled to maternity leave due to the absence of a birth certificate.
  • Apart from the risks entailed in not being able to produce a National ID card, should a brush with law enforcement officials ever occur, its lack automatically denies Baha’is from gaining employment, attaining higher education, deferring mandatory conscription, authenticating formal papers, dealing with financial institutions, etc.
  • Baha’i youth cannot determine their position when it comes to conscription, because they lack National ID cards. As a result, many have been suspended from universities.
  • Bahai’s in Egypts are not issued death certificates, thus denying widow(er)s and orphans from obtaining pension.
  • Obtaining passports is out of the question, as the process requires a National ID card.
  • Baha’i marriage certificates are not recognized by the state. This prevents spouses from travelling freely and prevents their future children from obtaining birth certificates.
  • Egyptian Baha’is cannot seek court protection or demand their rights in the upcoming period as they do not possess ID cards.
  • Despite the January 29 ruling, the Department of Civil Status has shown signs of willingness to alter its position, justifying it by resorting to fatwas (religious edicts) that claim there are only three divine religions.

    We at the Muslim Network for Baha’i Rights share Dr. Moussa’s amazement and confusion at the Department’s rationale, and strongly condemn this injustice.

    Blogger: Point of no return
    Article: Relations turn deadly between Jews and Persians
    Originaly Posted On: 2008-07-16 07:41:00

    Israel and Iran are at daggers drawn, as Iran’s missile-rattling last week testifies. But it was not always thus, declares Claire M. Lopez, an intelligence specialist, in this succinct analysis for the Middle East Times.

    ” Jews and Persians have, in fact, millennia of cordial relations between them; it is only in the past three decades that the relationship has turned deadly.

    The historical presence of a small Jewish minority in Iran dates to the Babylonian captivity of biblical times: when Cyrus the Great freed the captive Jewish people, not all chose to return home.

    At the 1948 formation of the State of Israel, there were some 100,000 Jews living in Iran — a factor that must have figured to some extent in the quick establishment of good relations with the shah by Israel’s first national leadership.

    Over the next quarter century, this Jewish community in Iran prospered as they played an important role in the economic and cultural life of the country. A good fit in economic and trade matters saw a steady exchange of Iranian oil in return for Israeli technical expertise in agricultural areas and high quality military hardware for the shah’s rapidly modernizing armed forces. The development of Israel’s nuclear weapons program, discreet but hardly a secret, aroused no evident concern in the shah’s Iran.

    Strains of anti-Semitism, historically an integral element of Islamic jihadi ideology in general, had begun to expand anew in the first part of the 20th century. As the Zionist movement developed from 19th century dreams into the reality of fulfillment with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, key figures such as Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, stoked latent Arab hatred of Jews as he joined forces with Adolf Hitler’s Nazi war machine.

    But when Holocaust survivors actually succeeded in re-constituting the Jewish homeland, in one fell swoop, Jews achieved the impossible: they cast off their dhimmi status and established a modern nation state on land Muslims considered sacred (the waqf).

    And while Iran’s deeply conservative Shiite clergy did not automatically share the Arab world’s resentment against the upstart Jewish nation, their own seething hostility toward the rule of the Pahlavi Dynasty, at once secular and repressive, had turned outward against the shah’s friends and allies long before the 1979 revolution.

    The Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was among a minority of Iran’s deeply traditional Shiite marjas who absorbed and nurtured the virulent anti-Semitic motifs that eddied up from early Koranic references, certain German political philosophers such as Martin Heidegger, and the full-fledged poison of Nazi ideology.

    Khomeini’s mentor, the Ayatollah Abol-Shassem Kahsani, an intensely anti-Semitic cleric himself, also played a defining role.

    Of course, it’s not just anti-Semitism that fuels today’s enmity between Iran and Israel. Largely a creation of European Jews whose long centuries of exile steeped them in the thinking and values of Western civilization, today’s State of Israel is also an outpost of modern, secular, democratic, civil society — which, of course, makes it anathema to the tradition-bound mores of an Islamic society hearkening back to the seventh century.

    So it was that when Khomeini took power in his 1979 coup d’etat, tens of thousands of Iran’s Jews fled to Israel, Israel’s key world ally (the United States) became the Great Satan, and relations between the two countries took a nosedive.

    Today, Iran’s theocracy is seized with a millennialist fervor that harnesses the bitter resentments of its IRGC Iraq war survivors to spearhead its 21st century geo-strategic ambitions. The theological inspiration draws from belief in the return of the Disappeared 12th Imam (or Mahdi), who is expected to return to earth in time of great chaos and strife to usher in the Day of Judgment and preside over 1,000 years of peace and justice. The Shahab-3 missiles project the more earthly ambitions of a would-be nuclear power.

    The lines are drawn; Iran and Israel are at swords’ points. The implications for the United States and the world are incalculable. What is not known is what are Israel’s ultimate red lines, what is the final tipping point that could spell the difference between militaristic posturing and war. Jews and Persians have never fought a war. They needn’t now if tolerance and reason can somehow triumph over blind faith in thrall to seventh century zeal.

    Read article in full

    Blogger: Ihsan
    Article: Liberal Left Islamophobia (part IV) : Lebanon
    Originaly Posted On: 2008-06-01 18:29:00

    A number of liberal left blogs have been posting photographs of women supporters of Hizbullah who appear in “western” clothing (T-shirts etc.). The overt and subtext message of these photographs is something that I’ve addressed earlier on a blog entry titled “scantily clad orientalists.”

    The message is that: “their women dress just like ours, therefore we got nothing to worry about.”

    But

    Blogger: Point of no return
    Article: Iraqi Jew tells his story in the European Parliament
    Originaly Posted On: 2008-07-02 15:46:00

    Flanked by Moise Rahmani and Assist. Prof Carole Basri, JJAC co-chair Iraqi-born Edwin Shuker holds up In the hell of Saddam Hussein, one Baghdad Jew’s account of arrest, torture and inprisonment. (JJAC)

    Justice for Jews from Arab Countries has now taken its campaign to the European Parliament:

    (BRUSSELS) July 1, 2008 - “We lost everything we had,” declared Edwin Shuker, a displaced Jewish refugee from Iraq at a hearing in the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium held on July 1, 2008. The European Parliament is the only directly elected parliamentary institution of the European Union (EU). Together with the Council of the European Union, it has been described as one of the most powerful legislatures in the world.

    The hearing was organized by Paulo Casaca, MEP, with the European Friends of Israel and the B’nai B’rith in association with Justice for Jews from Arab Countries (JJAC), the international coalition of organizations that are seeking justice for the up to one million Jews displaced from Arab countries since 1948. In attendance were Jews with roots in Arab countries including Moise Rahmani from Belgium (born in Cairo) and Prof. Carole Basri of the USA (family from Baghdad).

    Shuker, a UK resident and co-Chair of JJAC, said, “Two refugee populations emerged from the Arab-Israeli conflict, both suffered, both were victims and justice requires equal consideration and redress.” He continued, “We want to bring the achievements that have been realized in the US, to Europe.”

    Read press release in full