Absurdities from the Borderline
February 6, 2008
“SHEEEEEEEIT…I’ll take any nigga’s money if he GIVIN’ it away!”
– Senator Clay Davis from season 4 of HBO’s The Wire
I’ve probably mentioned this before, but I’m standing on the border, the vertical equator dividing two very different cultures which don’t even share an alphabet. As such, I have a choice vantage point to observe what oftentimes seems to be the pungent fecality (yes, I just made up that word) of human thought. Allow me to elaborate. Pull up a chair and let me clear my throat.
I don’t know, but perhaps Arabs seem exotic to Western eyes? Edward Said’s Orientalism and all that? To Saudis, Americans are aliens. Not the E.T., Reese’s piecies, fuzzy kind…No, the anal probe, Independence Day type. At least to a certain type of Saudi…the Saudi that knows no English. The Saudi who views America through a haze of cultural and linguistic ambiguity…But I digress…
I have many friends like this. Well-read friends who nevertheless call me to ask me to translate simple sentences they encounter when accessing their e-mails or cell phones. Friends who do not have the linguistic ability to grasp the complexities of the word “crusade”…who only understand “Crusade”. There is a prevalent belief among these friends of mine that American politics, that the American government is explicitly and overtly evangelical. That American foriegn policy is governed by fanatical Christian doctrines.
Now, let me clarify something. I don’t pretend to neglect the importance of the evangelical variable within the American political equation. The flock form a coveted bloc of votes. The entire equation, however, is a capitalist, not a religious, formula.
For example, my friends view the invasion of Iraq in Biblical terms. They believe that Bush and them captured Babylon so that Christ can come home. They think Cheney and Rummy are catchin up on their Psalms and Chapters, payin their tithes, bein good Catholics. Come on, now.
A cursory glance at American foreign policy throughout the twentieth century reveals how deeply reductive these claims are. What about America’s involvement in Central and South America? Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the U.S. commited atrocities in the Phillipines not to fulfill the prophecies foretold in Exodus or some such nonsense…they were simply serving the interests of United Fruit. How dya like them apples?
But, like De Niro said, there’s a flip side to that coin. Gray fecal matter sprays in both directions. Brain farts know no nationality.
I was having an e-convo yesterday with someone on slamonline.com who informed me that Islamic “shia law” dictates, according to some interpretations, that “infidels” should be killed regardless of anything else.
Now, my interlocutor has mixed up “Shar’ia” law (the word “shar’ia” simply means “law” in Arabic, so “Shar’ia law” is kinda redundant, but whatever) and the word “shia”, which is a sect of Islam (a sect I don’t belong to, incidentally. I’m a Sunni). But the point is that a lot of people tend to believe that terrorism is a product of some misguided Muslims misinterpreting religious texts to mean that they should “kill all infidels”, meaning “kill all non-Muslims”. There is a clear flaw in this perception, however. Put yourself in the place of this hypothetical terrorist. Let’s say you are convinced that you must “kill all infidels”. Wouldn’t you target Italians, Frenchmen, Ukrainians, Romanians, Bulgarians, Filipinos and South Africans? All these countries could be termed “infidels” (which is not an Islamic term, by the way). But why do terrorists always seem to target America?
It has nothing to do with “infidels”. It has everything to do with American foriegn policy, which even I, an Americo-phile, find repugnant. Here is a list of qualms people in the Middle East have with American foriegn policy:
1- America supports Israel unconditionally. Israel occupied Palestine in 1948. That’s just a fact. And Israel has since displaced millions of Palestinian refugees, while giving any Jewish person in the world the right to migrate to Israel. So this means that if you’re a Palestinian who was forced to flee your home to a neighboring country like Jordan or Syria, you stay there, because you’re “all Arabs”. Meanwhile, if you’re Jewish and you’re born and bred in Miami or Iceland or Paraguay, then you have the right to become a full-fledged Israeli citizen, no questions asked. This irks a lot of people in these parts. Not to mention the fact that Muslims are barred by Israel from visiting the Temple Mount, one of the three Islamic holy sites. So a Muslim like me cannot visit Jerusalem. But an American or a European can.
Now where does America figure in here? If you go back and look at the literature, you’ll find countless transgressions committed by Israel which caused the United Nations to unanimously condemn Israel. America always vetoes such unanimous condemnations. It also supplies Israel with weapons. The official line is that this is because Israel is the only “democracy” in the region. The real reason is that Israel has one of the most powerful lobbies in the American political structure. So if you want to get elected, you best be supporting Israel.
2- America has military camps in the Middle East, in countries like my native Saudi Arabia. Now, American civilians have always worked in Saudi Arabia in large numbers, and nobody has ever had a problem with that. But people don’t like the idea of a foreign military presence which is here indefinitely. Ironically, this has decreased the number of Americans who come over here to work, something which benefitted everyone. Americans got paid extremely well and in turn Saudi Arabia benefitted from their expertise. But now Americans are scared to come here.
3- The obvious one: Iraq.
So people like Osama bin Laden take these issues and turn them into recruiting tools. He paints himself in the role of someone who is resisting American oppression, and takes verses from the Qur’an out of context to support his position. The fact is, though, that his actions are indefensible from an Islamic viewpoint. Combat in Islam is very explicitly limited to self-defense. Salman al Oadah, one of my favorite scholars, wrote an open letter to Osama bin Laden in which he challenged him to justify his militant actions in Islamic terms. Because al Oadah is familiar with the Qur’an, bin Laden declined the challenge. People who become smitten with bin Laden are usually young men who get caught up with the romanticized version of reality that bin Laden serves up and have limited knowledge of actual texts. It is appealing to play the role of martyr, especially when there seems to be no other way to resist American dominance.
So, I guess I’m trying to say that perception is two-fifths of the law. Wait, isn’t that “possession”, not “perception”? Well, screw you…I perceive it to be “perception”.SHEEEEEEEEEEEEEIT.
February 6, 2008 at 6:55 pm
Hooray for the Penny Dreadful! It’s fabulous. You know, you may have a larger audience than you think since I totally linked this blog to my own (which of course, has a limited readership of like, 1, but 1 is still more than none). I would like to suggest that you change evangelistic to evangelical. This is the term as it is used here. An evangelical Christian. Then, throughout the piece, you can drop the Christian and just say evangelicals. This may lend even more credibility to your already well-reasoned and straightforward argument. I think your title is great, too. Perhaps you should change that to your headline. I think it could work for you. Anyway, save it for when you’re writing a monthly column at The Believer. It’ll be swell.
P.S. Do you have a job?
February 9, 2008 at 12:42 am
I’m reading your blog, ‘Riq. It’s all smart and stuff. And for the record, I’ve been saying for years that if the terrorists really hated freedom so much, they’d send all their suicide vests to Amsterdam.
Also, I tried to pick up Cities of Salt at the B&N-run on-campus book store, but they ain’t have it. Probably just Amazon it soon.
P.S. I totally read your blog!
February 15, 2008 at 10:43 pm
How old are you, dude?
February 17, 2008 at 10:17 am
Fluxland: 28. But my wisdom exceeds that of old men.