The Tragedy of Islam by Michael Graham
I take no pleasure in saying it. It pains me to think it. I could very well lose my job in
talk radio over admitting it. But it is the plain truth: Islam is a terror organization.
For years, I've been trying to give the world's Muslim community the benefit of the doubt,
along with the benefit of my typical-American's complete disinterest in their faith.
Before 9/11, I knew nothing about Islam except the greeting "asalaam alaikum,"
taught to me by a Pakistani friend in Chicago.
Immediately after 9/11, I nodded in ignorant agreement as President Bush assured me that
"Islam is a religion of peace."
But nearly four years later, nobody can defend that statement. And I mean
"nobody."
Certainly not the group of "moderate" Muslim clerics and imams who gathered in
London to issue a statement on terrorism and their faith. When asked, "Are
suicide bombings always a violation of Islam?", they did not answer, "Yes.
Always." Instead, these "moderate British Muslims" replied, "It depends."
Precisely what it depends on, news reports did not say. Sadly, given our new knowledge of
Islam from the past four years, it probably depends on whether you're killing Jews. That
is part of the state of modern Islam.
Another fact about the state of Islam is that a majority of Muslims in countries like
Jordan continue to believe that suicide bombings are legitimate. Still another is the poll
reported by a left-leaning British paper that only 73 percent of British Muslims would
tell police if they knew about a planned terrorist attack.
The other 27 percent? They are a part of modern Islam, too.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations is outraged that I would dare
to connect the worldwide epidemic of terrorism with Islam. They put it down to
bigotry, asserting that a lifetime of disinterest in Islam has suddenly become
blind hatred. They couldn't be more wrong.
Not to be mean to the folks at CAIR, but I don't care, that is. I simply don't care
about Islam, its theology, its history. I have no interest in it at all. All I care about
is not getting blown to smithereens when I board a bus or ride a plane. I care about
living in a world where terrorism and murder/suicide bombings are rejected by all.
And the reason Islam itself has become a terrorist organization is that it cannot
address its own role in this violence. It cannot cast out the murderers from its
members. I know it can't, because "moderate" Muslim imams keep telling me they
can't. "We have no control over these radical young men," one London imam moaned
to the local papers. Can't kick 'em out of your faith? Can't excommunicate them?
Apparently Islam does not allow it.
Islam cannot say that terrorism is forbidden to Muslims. I know this because when the
world's Muslim nations gathered after 9/11 to state their position on terrorism, they
couldn't even agree on what it was. How could they, when the world's largest terror
sponsors at the time were Iran and Saudi Arabia both governed by Islamic law.
If the Boy Scouts of America had 1,000 scout troops, and 10 of them practiced suicide
bombings, then the BSA would be considered a terrorist organization. If the BSA refused to
kick out those 10 troops, that would make the case even stronger. If people defending
terror and murder repeatedly turned to the Boy Scout handbook and found language
justifying it and the scoutmasters simply said "Could be" the Boy
Scouts would have been driven out of America long ago.
Today, Islam has entire sects and grand mosques that preach terror. Its
theology is used as a source of inspiration by terrorist murderers. Millions of Islam's
members give these killers support and comfort.
The question isn't how dare I call Islam a terrorist organization, but rather why more
people do not.
As I've said many times, I have great sympathy for those Muslims of good will who
want their faith to be a true "religion of peace." I believe
that terrorism and murder do violate the sensibilities and inherent decency of the vast
majority of the world's Muslims. I believe they want peace.
Sadly, the organization and fundamental theology of Islam as it is constituted today
allows for hatreds most Muslims do not share to thrive, and for criminals they oppose to operate in the name of their
faith.
Many Muslims, I believe, know this to be true and some are acting on it. Not the members
of CAIR, unfortunately: As Middle East analyst and expert Daniel Pipes has reported, "Two
of CAIR's associates (Ghassan Elashi, Randall Royer) have been convicted on
terrorism-related charges, one (Bassem Khafegi) convicted on fraud charges, two
(Rabih Haddad, Bassem Khafegi) have been deported, and one (Siraj Wahhaj) remains at
large."
But Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf admits what CAIR will not. He's called for a
jihad against the jihadists. He's putting his life on the line (Islamists have tried to
assassinate him three times) in the battle to reclaim Islam and its fundamental
decency. He remembers, I'm sure, that at a time when Western, Christian
civilization was on the verge of collapse, the Muslim world was a bastion of rationalism
and tolerance. That was a great moment in the history of Islam, a moment that
helped save the West. Let's hope Islam can now find the strength to save
itself.
Free Times Editor's note: As always, the views expressed by columnist Michael Graham do
not necessarily reflect those of Free Times. Graham has already attracted national media
attention with his on-air remarks about Islam and terrorism (Washington Post,
"Muslims Call Comments by WMAL Host 'Hate-Filled,'), and we considered not running
this column because of the incendiary views it expresses. Ultimately, however, we decided
to let you read the column and make up your own mind. Let us know what you think by
emailing editor@free-times.com or news@free-times.com
As a person who actually listened to the radio
show when Michael Graham expressed his opinion that by not condemning terrorism the
Islamic religion has become a terrorist organization, I would like to set the record
straight. Graham did not say that all Muslims are terrorists, but that all of these
terrorists were committing their heinous acts in the name of Islam. As long as Muslim
leaders continue to condone these acts, the religion of Islam will be a terrorist
organization. When those Muslims who do not support Bin Laden and Company separate
themselves from the radical fringe of their faith, then and only then will
Islam become a religion of peace. Jeffrey E. McMillan |