biographiesofFranzKafka

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 29 April 2013

Salman Rushdie: Whither Moral Courage?

Posted on 03:33 by Unknown

In February 2012, a Saudi poet and journalist, Hamza Kashgari, published three tweets about the Prophet Muhammad: "On your birthday, I will say that I have loved the rebel in you, that you've always been a source of inspiration to me, and that I do not like the halos of divinity around you. I shall not pray for you."  "On your birthday, I find you wherever I turn. I will say that I have loved aspects of you, hated others, and could not understand many more." "On your birthday, I shall not bow to you. I shall not kiss your hand. Rather, I shall shake it as equals do, and smile at you as you smile at me. I shall speak to you as a friend, no more." He claimed afterward that he was "demanding his right" to freedom of expression and thought. He found little public support, was condemned as an apostate, and there were many calls for his execution. He remains in jail.
... the grand old man of Indian painting, Maqbool Fida Husain, was hounded into exile in Dubai and London, where he died, because he painted the Hindu goddess Saraswati in the nude (even though the most cursory examination of ancient Hindu sculptures of Saraswati shows that while she is often adorned with jewels and ornaments, she is equally often undressed).. Rohinton Mistry's celebrated novel "Such a Long Journey" was pulled off the syllabus of Mumbai University because local extremists objected to its content...

We find it easier, in these confused times, to admire physical bravery than moral courage - the courage of the life of the mind, or of public figures. A man in a cowboy hat vaults a fence to help Boston bomb victims while others flee the scene: we salute his bravery, as we do that of servicemen returning from the battlefront, or men and women struggling to overcome debilitating illnesses or injuries.

It's harder for us to see politicians, with the exception of Nelson Mandela and Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, as courageous these days. Perhaps we have seen too much, grown too cynical about the inevitable compromises of power. There are no Gandhis, no Lincolns anymore. One man's hero (Hugo Chávez, Fidel Castro) is another's villain. We no longer easily agree on what it means to be good, or principled, or brave. When political leaders do take courageous steps - as France's Nicolas Sarkozy, then president, did in Libya by intervening militarily to support the uprising against Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi - there are as many who doubt as approve. Political courage, nowadays, is almost always ambiguous.
Even more strangely, we have become suspicious of those who take a stand against the abuses of power or dogma. It was not always so. The writers and intellectuals who opposed Communism, Solzhenitsyn, Sakharov and the rest, were widely esteemed for their stand. The poet Osip Mandelstam was much admired for his "Stalin Epigram" of 1933, in which he described the fearsome leader in fearless terms - "the huge laughing cockroaches on his top lip" - not least because the poem led to his arrest and eventual death in a Soviet labor camp.
As recently as 1989, the image of a man carrying two shopping bags and defying the tanks of Tiananmen Square became, almost at once, a global symbol of courage.
Then, it seems, things changed. The "Tank Man" has been largely forgotten in China, while the pro-democracy protesters, including those who died in the massacre of June 3 and 4, have been successfully redescribed by the Chinese authorities as counterrevolutionaries. The battle for redescription continues, obscuring or at least confusing our understanding of how "courageous" people should be judged. This is how the Chinese authorities are treating their best known critics: the use of "subversion" charges against Liu Xiaobo, and of alleged tax crimes against Ai Weiwei, is a deliberate attempt to blind people to their courage, and paint them, instead, as criminals.
Such is the influence of the Russian Orthodox Church that the jailed members of the Pussy Riot collective are widely perceived, inside Russia, as immoral troublemakers because they staged their famous protest on church property. Their point - that the leadership of the Russian Orthodox Church is too close to President Vladimir V. Putin for comfort - has been lost on their many detractors, and their act is not seen as brave, but improper.
Two years ago in Pakistan, the former governor of Punjab, Salman Taseer, defended a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, wrongly sentenced to death under the country's draconian blasphemy law; for this he was murdered by one of his own security guards. The guard, Mumtaz Qadri, was widely praised and showered with rose petals when he appeared in court. The dead Mr. Taseer was widely criticized, and public opinion turned against him. His courage was obliterated by religious passions. The murderer was called a hero.
In February 2012, a Saudi poet and journalist, Hamza Kashgari, published three tweets about the Prophet Muhammad:
"On your birthday, I will say that I have loved the rebel in you, that you've always been a source of inspiration to me, and that I do not like the halos of divinity around you. I shall not pray for you."  "On your birthday, I find you wherever I turn. I will say that I have loved aspects of you, hated others, and could not understand many more." "On your birthday, I shall not bow to you. I shall not kiss your hand. Rather, I shall shake it as equals do, and smile at you as you smile at me. I shall speak to you as a friend, no more."
He claimed afterward that he was "demanding his right" to freedom of expression and thought. He found little public support, was condemned as an apostate, and there were many calls for his execution. He remains in jail.
The writers and intellectuals of the French Enlightenment also challenged the religious orthodoxy of their time, and so created the modern concept of free thought. We think of Voltaire, Diderot, Rousseau and the rest as intellectual heroes. Sadly, very few people in the Muslim world would say the same of Hamza Kashgari.
This new idea - that writers, scholars and artists who stand against orthodoxy or bigotry are to blame for upsetting people - is spreading fast, even to countries like India that once prided themselves on their freedoms. In recent years, the grand old man of Indian painting, Maqbool Fida Husain, was hounded into exile in Dubai and London, where he died, because he painted the Hindu goddess Saraswati in the nude (even though the most cursory examination of ancient Hindu sculptures of Saraswati shows that while she is often adorned with jewels and ornaments, she is equally often undressed).
Rohinton Mistry's celebrated novel "Such a Long Journey" was pulled off the syllabus of Mumbai University because local extremists objected to its content. The scholar Ashis Nandy was attacked for expressing unorthodox views on lower-caste corruption. And in all these cases the official view - with which many commentators and a substantial slice of public opinion seemed to agree - was, essentially, that the artists and scholars had brought the trouble on themselves. Those who might, in other eras, have been celebrated for their originality and independence of mind, are increasingly being told, "Sit down, you're rocking the boat."
read more: http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/17172-whither-moral-courage

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in censorship, thinking about fascism | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home
View mobile version

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book review: The Frankfurt School at War - the Marxists Who Explained the Nazis to Washington
    Secret Reports on Nazi Germany: The Frankfurt School Contribution to the War Effort ,  by FRANZ NEUMANN, HERBERT MARCUSE, and OTTO KIRCHHEIM...
  • Al Worden: ‘The loneliest human being’
    What’s it like to be the most isolated human in all eternity? BBC space correspondent meets Al Worden, command module pilot of Apollo 15, wh...
  • Academic reforms and DU's circus of reason
    हम होंगे baccalaureate  हम होंगे baccalaureate  Associate baccalaureate  एक दिन हमे VC में है विश्वास पूरा है विश्वास हम होंगे baccalaureate...
  • VIJAY PRASHAD: Mr. Modi Wants to Come to America
    ... Modi has been at the helm in that state since 2001. The following year, in 2002, Modi presided over the mass killing of Muslims by his p...
  • Atheist Siddaramaiah and God's changing role in politics
    K. Siddaramaiah, a rare Indian politician who wears his atheism on his sleeve, took the oath as the next chief minister of Karnataka on Mond...
  • Kabita Chakma: Sexual violence, indigenous Jumma women & Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh
    There has been a high rate of violence against women all over Bangladesh in recent years. Kapaeeng Foundation figures for January 2007 to De...
  • The Act of Killing is being hailed by critics as one of the best films of the year
    'You celebrate mass killing so you don't have to look yourself in the mirror'  Joshua Oppenheimer went to Indonesia to make a d...
  • PAUL KRUGMAN - Hitting China’s Wall
    All economic data are best viewed as a peculiarly boring genre of science fiction, but Chinese data are even more fictional than most. Add a...
  • अयोध्या : तीन पीढ़ियां तीन दृष्टिकोण - के पी सिंह, फैजाबाद
    जन्नतनशीन रहीमुल्ला के एक दिसम्बर, 1936 को पैदा हुए बेटे लाल मोहम्मद 22-23 दिसम्बर, 1949 की उस रात के गिने-चुने प्रत्यक्षदर्शियों में से हैं...
  • MURTAZA HAIDER - Islam at war – with itself
    Muslim societies have thus evolved into places where revenge is confused with justice, forgiveness with weakness, and peace with cowardice. ...

Categories

  • A K Ramanujan's Three Hundred Ramayanas (1)
  • Afghanistan (7)
  • Africa (9)
  • Ahimsa (17)
  • animals (2)
  • Art (4)
  • Astronomy (9)
  • Bangladesh (23)
  • birds (5)
  • Books and literature (40)
  • Burma (4)
  • CARTOONS (2)
  • censorship (33)
  • childhood (15)
  • China (23)
  • communalism (85)
  • corruption (24)
  • critical theory (34)
  • current affairs - India (139)
  • current affairs - international (51)
  • democratic protest (40)
  • Dilip's notes and articles (6)
  • ecology (36)
  • economics (23)
  • education (14)
  • energy (2)
  • Evolution (2)
  • films (3)
  • Global War and Violence (52)
  • history (81)
  • human rights (89)
  • Indian culture (13)
  • Japan (2)
  • justice (100)
  • labour matters (27)
  • media (26)
  • medicine (6)
  • Middle East (27)
  • mining (13)
  • music (2)
  • naxalism (20)
  • Nepal (2)
  • Obituary (6)
  • organised crime (30)
  • Pakistan (30)
  • Palestine / Israel (5)
  • Partition related texts (3)
  • philosophy (10)
  • Photos (16)
  • Poetry (2)
  • religion (23)
  • Russia (10)
  • Sampradayikta Virodhi Andolan (2)
  • satire (2)
  • science (20)
  • short stories (2)
  • Social networking (8)
  • Sri Lanka (2)
  • the human mind (36)
  • the oceans (6)
  • thinking about fascism (68)
  • Tibet (3)
  • women's rights (32)
  • Workers' movements (9)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (119)
    • ►  June (133)
    • ►  May (114)
    • ▼  April (100)
      • 1984 carnage - 5 convicted, main accused Sajjan Ku...
      • SAMIR NAJI al HASAN MOQBEL: Gitmo Is Killing Me
      • National Investigation Agency finds Liyaqat crosse...
      • Wars push number of internally displaced people to...
      • GITA SAHGAL - Backlash against Bangladeshi bloggers
      • USHA RAMANATHAN: Aadhaar: Private ownership of UID...
      • Salman Rushdie: Whither Moral Courage?
      • Books reviewed: What happened to Occupy?
      • Yonathan Listik: The True Meaning of Autonomy
      • Hungary warned its democracy could be put under in...
      • Mihir Srivastava: How Big Business Gets Its Way in...
      • Rahul Pandita - Under Pressure: Migrants flee from...
      • The Law That Saved a Billion Lives
      • NAPM - ACTION ALERT AGAINST MIS-BEHAVIOUR OF PUBLI...
      • JAMAL KIDWAI: Nitish Kumar's Desperate Posturing
      • Jacob Heilbrunn: Israel's Fraying Image
      • Sony world photography award winners – in pictures
      • British officials predicted war – and Arab defeat ...
      • Pravin Sawhney: Subtle Chinese ping-pong
      • Police behaviour worse than mad animals', will int...
      • Maryam Namazie: Defend Bangladesh's Bloggers
      • Factory collapses in Bangladesh, killing 87 (?)
      • Book review: Resistance, Rebellion, & Writing - Al...
      • Garga Chatterjee: Bad moon rising
      • Austerity in Europe? Tighten the military belt
      • 'Women invite sexual harassment': Madhya Pradesh C...
      • Academic reforms and DU's circus of reason
      • SAMI ZUBAIDA: Women, democracy and dictatorship
      • 'Thinking through Law: South Asian histories and t...
      • Ancient Tree Clones To Be Planted In Effort To Fig...
      • "No More Hurting People!"
      • ENCAPSULATED UNIVERSES: A Conversation with Lera B...
      • China - Fast Change and Its Discontents (Dissent m...
      • Nuclear Testing in the Marshall Islands: A Chronol...
      • Life in a Real Nuclear Wasteland
      • China's 100 million religious believers must banis...
      • James Lovelock: A man for all seasons
      • A Khmer Rouge Goodbye
      • MOON MAN - What Galileo saw. BY ADAM GOPNIK
      • Religion and after: Bangladeshi identity since 1971
      • Hindu migrants from Pakistan: Waiting for a new ch...
      • India's juvenile homes are hellholes, says report ...
      • Gujarat govt's failure to protect people in 2002 r...
      • With police help, banned Naxal group takes on Maoi...
      • Snakes the vanguard of the oppressed?
      • Man accused of raping five-year-old in Delhi arres...
      • बंगलादेशी जनउभार और भारत की मुर्दाशान्ति: किशोर झा
      • Can social media clear air over China?
      • Kepler telescope spies 'most Earth-like' worlds to...
      • Supreme Court leaves Vedanta's fate in tribal's hands
      • New Zealand Legalizes Gay Marriage; Spectators Sin...
      • NAPM Press Release: More evidence linking payment ...
      • Juan Luis Sánchez - Voices of the plazas
      • Seashell Sound
      • John le Carré: 'I was a secret even to myself'
      • Defiant anti-corruption blogger Alexei Navalny goe...
      • Police records show Gujarat riots weren’t a sudden...
      • Zakia Jafri to file a protest petition against clo...
      • From the Desert Steppe of Kazakhstan Into the Vast...
      • Robert Fisk: President Assad's army is starting to...
      • Guantanamo Bay - President Obama's shame: The forg...
      • Millions face starvation as world warms, say scien...
      • Delhi University's 4 year degree course: Reforms a...
      • Chinese Journalists resist censorship: Timothy Gar...
      • Mohamed Morsi backs Egyptian military after malpra...
      • Ex-miners to join the anti-Thatcher protesters in ...
      • The Lies of the Land
      • The Middle Ground: Earnest mediation between Maois...
      • Lankan Tamil newspaper office torched in pre-dawn ...
      • Medha Patkar calls off fast after assurance of inq...
      • "The only people who can destroy Islamofascism are...
      • The full Fukuyama: the end of everything
      • Bharat Bhushan: Credible deterrence
      • Inside Bangladesh: Hindus continue to lose land an...
      • Thatcher's legacy
      • Mamata Banerjee's TMC trashes iconic Presidency Co...
      • Pablo Neruda's importance was as much political as...
      • Egypt's army took part in torture and killings dur...
      • Seema Sirohi: The BJP's Bangladesh problem
      • Medha Patkar's Indefinite Fast. Day 7. Demonstrati...
      • Among the Non-Believers: The lives of Sikhs and Ch...
      • Bulandshahr, another instance of how India torture...
      • Book Review: The Cure for Loneliness - the lives o...
      • Subhash Gatade: Muslim Right: Why does it want to ...
      • 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Court to decide on re-openin...
      • Ramachandra Guha: THE MIRACLES OF MAO - A bizarre ...
      • Rampant injustice: Maruti Suzuki Workers Appeal fr...
      • Corruption, fear and silence: the state of Greek m...
      • Citizen's demonstration against inaction by Mahara...
      • An Open Letter to the world on the Bangladesh cris...
      • VIJAY PRASHAD: Mr. Modi Wants to Come to America
      • A dangerous connivance - Jamaati's in Bangladesh a...
      • Janata Dal (U) blasts Narendra Modi for making Lok...
      • Rohini Hensman: Steering Between Islamophobia & Mu...
      • Solidarity Vigil in Delhi for Bangladesh's Shahbag...
      • Women hit back at India's rape culture
      • Book Review: The Left and Political Islam
      • Hubble's Latest Mind Blowing Cosmic Pictures
      • Young and good looking: the saviours of Europe’s Left
      • Israel to jail teenage conscientious objector for ...
    • ►  March (5)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile