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Mona Charen
Mona Charen
25 May 2012
Obama's Education Hypocrisy -- Again

    If you were a child in the District of Columbia school system (51st in state rankings for … Read More.

22 May 2012
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17 May 2012
Obama, Barnard and Women

The president dropped by Barnard College (my alma mater) this week to deliver the commencement address. It wasn'… Read More.

This Is Rare Courage

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When the New York Times covered a party in honor of Ayaan Hirsi Ali's new book, "Nomad," they placed it on the same page as a sympathetic story about American Muslim women who choose to wear the full cover. The placement was telling.

The Times story about women who cover their entire bodies, including their faces, spoke of the challenges they face in America — the stares, the insults, the discomfort. Though the story made clear that Islam does not require women to socially disappear in this fashion, the women explained that covering makes them feel "closer to God." There was more than a whiff of pity in the tale. "'People don't understand,' (Hebah Ahmed) said, wiping a tear with the edge of her sleeve. ' We're really strong, but it takes a toll on you. Sometimes you think, I just want to rest.'"

There is nothing wrong with the editors' decision to run a story about the small number of American Muslim women who choose to wear niqabs — except for this: Like other major liberal outlets, The Times has been utterly derelict in reporting about another aspect of life among American Muslims — honor killing.

When it comes to the brutal slayings of young Muslim women by their fathers, brothers, or husbands, The Times gets squeamish.

As Ms. Hirsi Ali relates, this misplaced sensitivity arises from the cult of multiculturalism, which would rather tolerate egregious crimes against women than offend Third World sensibilities. When the Said sisters, 19-year-old Amina and 17-year-old Sarah, were shot and killed by their father, Yaser Said, in a suburb of Dallas in late 2007, the story was buried. Though the father had been enraged by his elder daughter's refusal to submit to an arranged marriage and by news that both girls had been secretly dating non-Muslim boys, the few stories about the case were careful to dismiss suggestions of honor killing. The Times failed to cover the story. (It was mentioned, briefly, in an opinion piece.)

Hirsi Ali offers many more examples of honor killings here in America that have received scant or, in many cases, euphemistic coverage.

Fearful of stereotyping Muslims, journalists often characterize these crimes as ordinary domestic violence. Five months after the Said girls' murders, an Afghan immigrant in Henrietta, N.Y., stabbed his 19-year-old sister to death because she frequented clubs and wore "immodest" clothing. In January 2008, a Pakistani immigrant living in Jonesboro, Ga., murdered his 25-year-old daughter by strangling her with the cord from an iron when she announced that she wanted to divorce her (arranged) husband.

Hirsi Ali, a refugee in every sense from the Muslim world, pleads for Western feminists to ride to the rescue of the hundreds of millions of Muslim women and girls who are abused, mutilated, sold, traded, beaten, and hidden away in the Muslim world. "But the more pressing business is what feminists can do now to prevent an alien culture of oppression from taking root in the West ... This is what Americans can learn from Europe's experience with Muslim immigration: we simply cannot compromise our own principles by tolerating honor killing, female genital mutilation, and other such practices."

Hirsi Ali's deeply negative views about Islam (her last book was called "Infidel") must of course be considered alongside the views of women who find meaning and even nobility in the faith. But Hirsi Ali's views command particular attention for this reason: She speaks for millions of the voiceless. We don't hear from the others because it is a very rare heroine indeed who is willing to live as Hirsi Ali must. She is protected at all times by a security detail. Her life is in constant danger.

She has sacrificed so much to tell the truth as she sees it. She could so easily have melted into a welcoming Western society and kept her head down. The least we, who have known nothing but comfort, can do is to pay attention. Her journey from Somalia to Saudi Arabia to Kenya to Holland to America is, as she puts it, a journey of time travel as much as physical travel. It would be worth hearing the reflections of anyone who had come so far. But to hear from someone as warm, sensitive, intelligent, and insightful as Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a great gift.

To find out more about Mona Charen and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Awesome commentary!
I saw this article written in The Tennessean newspaper June 20, 2010. It is insightful and truthful regarding Sharia Law. Another author Nonie Darwish is an ex-Muslim female who lectures extensively on college campuses and churches and warn the USA against Islamic encroachment into legal and cultural control of our nation. There is nothing peaceful about this religion! Islam desires war and monopoly over all other faiths of the world.
Christian compassion need not include capitulation and surrender of the basic tenet that Jesus Christ IS the Son of God. Allah is the moon god, son of the sun god Baal, against whom Jehovah God battled in the Old Testament.
A mosque was blocked from being built in Brentwood near Nashville, and we are in the process of battling against one in Murfreesboro, TN. They wish to breed cells of destruction against the American way of life outlined in the U.S. Constitution, where individual liberties begin. Liberty is a Christian concept.
Please continue your education of Americans to wake us up! Blessings always, Don Westcott, Smyrna, TN
P.S. As a public figure, you may wish to get a body-guard for protection against "jihad justice".
Comment: #1
Posted by: Donald A. Westcott
Mon Jun 21, 2010 10:01 AM
This is for Miss Mona: Please write about this issue.
*
* Published 00:44 02.06.10
* Latest update 00:44 02.06.10
One kid in Immanuel
Of bigotry, and how the failed settlement of Immanuel put itself on the map.
By Sahara Blau
Comment: #2
Posted by: amin
Wed Jun 23, 2010 5:02 PM
This is a great article and timely as our book club will be discussing Infidel today. ABC's Diane Sawyer reported on female mutilation then said a follow up would be televised as so many emails had asked for it. However, when it was to air, nothing. Was ABC shut up by the Muslim lobby in America?
Comment: #3
Posted by: Jane Ross
Thu Jun 24, 2010 9:21 AM
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