- By Azar Majedi - November 5, 2004
'Islam against Islam' is an interesting topic. The irony of a believer
criticising the beliefs is provocative. I
am not a Moslem; I am an atheist. However, I have lived Islam; I have
firsthand experience of Islam. I was born within a religious conflict:
a religious mother and an atheist father. From childhood, I began to
see the flaws, the restrictions, the misogyny, the backwardness, the
dogma, the superstition, and uncritical nature of Islam vis-à-vis the
enlightenment, the freethinking spirit of atheist thinking.
I became an atheist at the age of 12.
The establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran after a failed revolution
laid bare many other appalling and cruel dimensions of Islam, which
we later came to label political Islam. It was not only dogma or superstition
anymore. It was torture, summary executions, stonings, amputations,
and the rape of 9-year-olds in the name of marriage. Another face of
Islam? Perhaps. But a real one. Millions in Iran, Afghanistan, Saudi
Arabia, the Sudan, Nigeria, and Iraq are experiencing this true face
of Islam daily.
With the coming to power of the Islamic Republic in Iran, we began
to witness a revival of the Islamic movement as a political movement,
i.e. the emergence of political Islam. I prefer not to talk about this
movement as fundamentalism, but rather political Islam. We are talking
here about a contemporary political movement which refers to Islam as
its ideological framework and vision. It is not necessarily a doctrinaire
and scholastic movement, but it embodies different and varied trends
of Islamic tendencies. It is a political movement seeking hegemony and
a share of power in the Middle East, North Africa and in Islamist communities.
This movement embodies Islamists who hypocritically defend freedom
of clothing, so as to oppose the banning of veils in schools and for
under-aged girls in their fight against the secularisation of society
in the West, and those in Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq and Algeria who throw
acid at unveiled women, slash them with knives and razors, and who flog
them for not observing veiling. They are part and parcel of one movement.
This movement is a threat to humankind. It is a movement, against which
all freedom loving, equality seeking human beings must take a firm and
uncompromising position.
'Islam against Islam' may imply finding ways and means to reform Islam,
to resort to so-called more moderate interpretations of Islam. As a
personal, private belief this may be possible, but as a political movement
it is not. The movement which has terrorised the world, we are experiencing
today, and which we have become firsthand victims of, is incapable of
reform.
We are dealing with a political movement which resorts to terror as
the main means of achieving power. My experience in Iran explicitly
shows that the only way to deal with this movement is to relegate it
into the private spheres, eradicate it from the state, education and
societal sphere. To do this, we need to build a strong movement both
in the region and worldwide.
In my opinion, there are a number of points which can be the basis
for an international united front against political Islam in order to
make the world a better, more humane and safer place.
Defence of secularisation and de-religionisation of society is one
of them. This banner has historically proven successful in the fight
against the church and now against the gains of political Islam. The
voice for secularism has become loud and clear in Iran. There is a strong
movement for the secularisation of society in a country under the siege
of political Islam for 25 years. We should unequivocally raise this
banner in the West and in the East. We should recreate the spirit of
the 18th century, the enlightenment, and the French Revolution, in a
contemporary manner.
The fight for universality of human rights and women's rights is another
important cause. In the past two decades the Islamists were largely
aided by the proponents of cultural relativism. By defending this racist
concept, the Western academia, media and governments turned a blind
eye to the atrocities committed by this misogynist and reactionary movement,
not only in the so-called "Moslem world", but in Islamic communities
in the West. Apparently, according to this concept, there are some rights
that are suitable for Western women and not appropriate for women like
me, who are born in the other part of the world.
The veil, sexual apartheid, and second class citizenship were justified
by reverting to this arbitrary concept of "their culture". A violation
that felt appalling if committed against a Western woman, was a justifiable
action committed against a woman born under Islam. This double standard,
this sheer violation of humane principles must be stopped. I must admit
that it has been pushed back a great deal. We have fought hard against
it for more than one decade.
Defence of children's rights is
another fight which must be extended to areas where so-called religious
beliefs are concerned. The veiling of under-aged girls must be banned,
not only in schools, but altogether. The veiling of children is a clear
violation of their universal rights. Just as we fight for obligatory
education for children, abolition of child labour, banning of corporal
punishment, we should fight for the banning of veiling of under-aged
girls. This has the same significance as other basic children's rights.
The veil deprives a child from a happy normal life, and healthy physical
and mental development; it brands their life as different by segregating
them. It defines two sets of gender roles and imposes it upon children
who have no way of protecting themselves and demanding equality and
freedom. Children have no religion; they are only by accident born into
a religious family. Society has a duty to protect them and uphold their
rights as equal human beings.
Abolition of religious schools is another important arena. This is
also an important principle of a secular state, and for the protection
of children's rights. Children must be free from official religious
teachings and dogmas. Religion's hands must be eradicated from children's
lives. The new legislation in France regarding banning of conspicuous
religious symbols in public schools and institutions, is an important
step but insufficient.
In order to safeguard children's rights, religious schools must be
abolished. Otherwise, we create religious ghettos, segregate children
living in religious families from the society, and condemn them to a
life in isolation. The new legislation is the easiest way out for the
state. But we cannot remain indifferent to these children's lives. The
society and the state have the duty to protect their rights. They should
be allowed to integrate in the society, to go to school like any other
child, and to be free from the meddling of religion in their lives,
at least until they are still children.
The recognition of the right to unconditional freedom of expression
and criticism is one of the important pillars of a free society and
free thinking. The right to criticise Islam is another important means
of fighting religious dominance in society. We need to and must criticise
Islam relentlessly, without the fear of being beheaded in countries
under the siege of Islam, or of being called racist in the West. Islamophobia
is a new term created by Islamists or their apologists in order to stop
a growing critical movement against Islam and Islamic movements. This
is as hypocritical as it is regressive.
I call upon all of you here to recognise the
importance and the urgency of demanding secularisation and the de-religionisation
of the state and society, unconditional freedom of expression and criticism,
recognition of women's equality and the universality of their rights,
the banning of child veiling, and the abolition of religious schools.
In order to build a better, safer, freer and a more egalitarian world,
we must unequivocally raise this banner.
About:
Azar Majedi is the head of the Organisation
for Women's Liberation. The above speech was made in a Paris
conference entitled 'Islam against Islam' on 30 October 2004.

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Azar Majedi