BAKU: Azeri authorities to bargain over jailed opposition leaders’re

Azeri authorities to bargain over jailed opposition leaders’ release – politician

Turan news agency
26 Oct 04

Baku, 26 October: The sentencing of seven opposition leaders was one
of the main issues discussed at the meeting of the Our Azerbaijan
bloc today. At a news conference after the meeting, the chairman
of the bloc [and Musavat party chairman], Isa Qambar, said that
the sentence was not “unexpected”. In his opinion, the authorities
will “bargain” with international organizations over the opposition
leaders’ release. According to Qambar, the bloc has a programme to
secure their release.

Assessing the first year of [Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev’s
presidency, he said that the social and economic situation of the
Azerbaijani people had significantly worsened and the level of
corruption surged over the past year. There is no progress in the
Karabakh issue and the political system of the country is in an
“appalling” state, Qambar said.

The Musavat leader touched on the [forthcoming presidential] elections
in Ukraine. He pointed to cooperation between the Our Azerbaijan
and Our Ukraine blocs. He said Our Azerbaijan was interested in the
victory of Viktor Yushchenko.

Karabakh People’s Will Should Be Central In Negotiations

Karabakh People’s Will Should Be Central In Negotiations

Azg/am
29 Oct 04

Bruce Jackson, president of the US Committee on NATO, visited Artsakh
within the frameworks of German Marshal Foundation.

After finishing the official part of the visit, Jackson had a 15
minute-long meeting with journalist. Noting that their delegation
includes influential politicians and representatives of worldâ~@~Ys
leading mass media, Jackson said that the aim of their visit was
to stress the importance of the region and to show their desire for
peace here.

Bruce Jackson said that the delegation has already been to Baku and
Yerevan and that they will leave for Tbilisi and the Pankis gorge
from Stepanakert. He refrained commenting on his impressions from
the region telling that each member of delegation has to present his
conclusion back home.

Speaking of the possibility of the US administration being changed,
Jackson noted that even if George Bush remains in the White House there
will possibly be new suggestions, aimed at conflict settlement, for the
South Caucasus problems. Here the American diplomat put the necessity
of settling the Nagorno Karabakh conflict as soon as possible.

Itâ~@~Ys vital that the societies of the states interested in conflict
settlement be informed about whatâ~@~Ys going on because they can
essentially influence their governments in finding a right decision,
Jackson said.

Speaking of the Karabakh conflict, Jackson said that he thinks the
settlement will be easier reached if Karabakh peopleâ~@~Ys will is
considered during the talks.

The foreign delegation had meetings with the President of Nagorno
Karabakh Arkady Ghukasian, defense minister Seyran Ohanian and
representatives of NGOs. They visited the sites still bearing the
signs of the past war. The schedule of Baku visit was the same,
Jackson said.

By Kim Gabrielian from Stepanakert

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Tbilisi Mayor Sacks District Head For Precious Gift

TBILISI MAYOR SACKS DISTRICT HEAD FOR PRECIOUS GIFT

ArmenPress
27 Oct. 2004

TBILISI, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS: Zurab Tchiaberashvili, the mayor
of Georgia’s capital Tbilisi convened a press conference today to
announce that he was dismissing head of a Tbilisi district for giving
him an expensive watch as a gift. The press conference was broadcast
live by leading Georgian televisions.

“I am asking you how can head of a district with a monthly salary of
150 Lari (USD 82), present me with a watch costing USD 1,500?” Zurab
Tchiaberashvili said, demonstrating the watch.

“Adamia will file resignation immediately. And I warn all heads
of the districts that drastic changes will be carried out in the
administrations of the Tbilisi districts,” the mayor warned.

Later in the day the move by the mayor was welcomed by president
Saakashvili during a government session.

“Of course my watch is not as expansive as the one presented as
a gift, but anyway I want you to receive my watch as my gift for
your good job,” President Saakashvili said, taking off his watch and
handing over it to Zurab Tchiaberashvili, who was also attending the
cabinet session.

Vatican Mentions Of Armenian Genocide In “Catholic’s Handbook”

Vatican Mentions Of Armenian Genocide In “Catholic’s Handbook”

Azg/am
28 Oct 04

The Armenian Genocide’s international acknowledgment became the
first priority of the Armenian state after the power shift in
1998. Pres. Kocharian affirmed this state policy to UN in 1998 and
2000 and to OSCE in 1999.

European community responded to the Armenia’s claims, and France
and Vatican soon after recognized the Genocide. These days when the
Turkey’s EU accession is on the agenda and when the Armenian Genocide
issue comes up to the surface, Vatican City issued its “Fundamentals
of Church’s Social Doctrine” official communiqué on October 25.

The Turkish Hyuriet touches on the communiqué in October 26 issue only
because the “genocide” section of the communiqué mentions Armenians in
a row of eliminated nations. Hyuriet notes that Vatican’s communiqué
aiming at involving Christian believers in the social and political
life has become a “Catholic’s handbook”.

“The Armenian genocide, which began the century, was a prologue
to horrors that would follow. Two world wars, countless regional
conflicts and deliberately organized campaigns of extermination took
the lives of millions of faithful”, the communiqué reads.

The Hyuriet closes up saying that the communiqué was prepared by
Renato Martino, president of Vatican Cityâ~@~Ys Commission on Justice
and Reconciliation, and presented to the mass media.

Recent discussions over Armenian Genocideâ~@~Ys in Europe bring the
acknowledgment of this historic tragedy closer to the international
community. The fact that the Turkish press keeps the issue in its
spotlight means that political circles of Turkey are also concerned
with the issue.

By Hakob Chakrian

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Armenian Cause To Be Discussed In Venice?

ARMENIAN CAUSE TO BE DISCUSSED IN VENICE?

Azg/am
28 Oct 04

The Azg Daily informed readers in its October 26 issue about
a scientific conference titled “Armenians and Turks Throughout
History. Millennium-long Relations” to be held in Venice on October
28-30.

The Turkish Akos wrote about the conference in October 15 issue without
giving any information on the organizers but telling where it will
launch and also mentioning the names of participants. The fact that
Levon Zekiyan and Ramon Gevorgian were engaged in organizing the
conference evidences that the initiative came from the Armenian side.

Ruben Safrastian, head of the Turkish department of Oriental
Studiesâ~@~Y Institute of Armenia, will also participate at the
conference but his name together with the names of Zekiyan and
Gevorgian were not included in the list of reporters. Taner Akcam,
a Turkish scientist, will lecture on “Ittihad Solution to Armenian
Cause and the Problem of Republican Turkâ~@~Ys Identity”, Iv Ternon
on “Psychology of Denying”, Murad Belge on “Armenian Cause and
Human Rights”, Bask?n Oran on “The Origin of a Taboo. Historic and
Sociological Barrier in Turkish Public Opinion Concerning the Armenian
Cause”, Ferhad Qemal on “The Art of Being Armenian in Turkey”, Rag?p
Zaraqolu on “From Ottoman Multinational Society to National Monopoly
of a Republic. Where is the way out?”

All of the reports touch on the Armenian Genocide either directly
or indirectly. The reason for this is that the Armenian Cause,
especially in Turkish perception, includes this issue. The Turkish
taboo and the problems Turkish public opinion faces directly result
from the Genocide.

According to Akos, the conference is envisaged to seat Armenian and
Turkish scientists at the table to discuss the Armenian Cause and to
bring closer the sides.

Itâ~@~Ys obscure what the newspaper means with “bringing the sides
closer”. We may presume that Turkey understands that the Turkish
policy towards Armenia stands for bad relations. Even if the Venice
discussions have no influence on Armenia its results will certainly
have.

The influence will be notable as regards the Armenian Genocide
acknowledgment. There are organizational minuses in the conference
preparation, besides the fact that the scientist representing Armenia
will have no report in Venice which turns him into observer. The
major miscount of Armenian organizers is in representing only 4
scientists with only one report whereas Turkey has 6 participants
with as many reports.

This fact makes us worry especially while considering the possibility
that the Genocide issue may come up during discussions and especially
if these discussions are aimed at “bringing closer the nations”.

Besides the quantitative inconsistency there is another bothering
circumstance, i.e. the tendency of discussing Armenia-related issues
(Armenian Genocide, Armenian-Turkish relations) in isolation from
Armenia. Will the Venice conference continue the tragic practice of
solving the Armenian Cause without Armeniaâ~@~Y s participation? Time
will show.

By Hakob Chakrian

–Boundary_(ID_AjBpqpckzm5PVHEuL0ZCwA)–

Ashot Ghulian-Steven Mann Meeting In Washington

ASHOT GHULIAN-STEVEN MANN MEETING IN WASHINGTON

Azg/am
28 Oct 04

According to Mediamax news agency, in the end of the last week, Ashot
Ghulian, NKR foreign minister, met with Steven Mann, US co-chair of
OSCE Minsk group, in Washington. In the course of the meeting, the
prospects for the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh issue were discussed
and the participants of the meeting touched on the factors hindering
the peaceful solution of the problem.

“Particularly, we touched upon the militant statements made by
Azerbaijan and the country’s official policy that arouses hatred
towards the Armenian nation,” ministry informed. Ghulian emphasized
the importance of utilizing the potential of the publicities involved
in the conflict, which doesn’t work as a result of Azerbaijan’s
position. Steven Man said that displaying the political will among
the sides in conflict, as well as beneficial public opinion are the
necessary preconditions that secure achievement of the final peace.

Ashot Ghulian left for the USA to participate in the conference of
representatives dedicated to Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement and
held at Michigan University. Particularly, Tofik Zulfugarov, former
Azeri foreign minister, Vladimir Kazimirov, RF former diplomat,
and other experts on Nagorno Karabakh conflict held speeches at
the conference.

UCLA Armenian Jerusalem Conference and Web Links

PLEASE ANNOUNCE AND CIRCULATE TO INTERESTED PERSONS

ntid=2199

http://

ARMENIAN JERUSALEM AND ARMENIANS
IN THE HOLY LAND

November 6-7, 2004, UCLA, Court of Science (CS 50)

Honorary Chairman
Archbishop Torkom Manoogian
Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem

Sponsored by
Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History
University of California, Los Angeles

Cosponsored by the UCLA
The G.E. von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies
Center for European and Eurasian Studies
International Institute

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 9:30 A.M.-1:00 P.M.

Armenian Jerusalem and Armenians in the Holy Land–An Introduction
Richard G. Hovannisian, University of California, Los Angeles

Armenian Monasteries in the Holy Land, Seventh Century
Nina Garsoïan, Columbia University, Emerita

The Cathedral of Saint James and Its Collections
John Carswell, Oriental Institute, Chicago, and American University
of Beirut, Emeritus

The Manuscript Collection of Saint James Monastery
Abraham Terian, St. Nersess Seminary, New York

INTERMISSION

Armenian Patriarchal Succession in Jerusalem
Haig A. Krikorian, Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem Support
Organization

The Armenian Lords and the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 12th-13th Centuries
Claude Mutafian, Université de Paris-Nord

Relations of the Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem with Greater
Armenia, 14th-15th Centuries
Sergio La Porta, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

LUNCH

SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 2 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.

The Reign of Jerusalem’s Patriarch Grigor Gandzaketsi Paronter
(1613-1645)
Roberta R. Ervine, St. Nersess Seminary, New York

Armenian-Greek Church Relations in Jerusalem and the Patriarchate
of Constantinople in the 17th Century
Albert Kharatyan, Institute of History, Erevan

The Armenian Mosaics of Jerusalem: A Reconsideration
Christina Maranci, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

INTERMISSION

Mkrtich Khrimian and the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem
Emma Kostandyan, Institute of History, Erevan

Genocide Survivors in the Holy Land, 1917-1919
Vahram Shemmassian, California State University–Northridge

The Armenian Legion and the End of Ottoman Rule in Palestine
Robert Krikorian, George Washington University

SUNDAY AFTERNOON, November 7, 2004 – 1:30-5:30 p.m.

>From Armash to Jerusalem: Patriarchs Eghishe Turian and Torkom Kushakian
Vartan Matiossian, Universidad del Salvador, Buenos Aires, and
Hovnanian School, New Jersey

The Armenians of Palestine, 1918-1948
Bedross Der Matossian, Columbia University

The Armenian Ceramics of Jerusalem: Three Generations since 1919
Nurith Kenaan-Kedar, University of Tel-Aviv

INTERMISSION

The Calouste Gulbenkian Library of the Armenian Patriarchate
Sylva Natalie Manoogian, University of California, Los Angeles

New Avenues of Research on the Armenians in Jerusalem and the Holy Land
Kevork Hintlian, Director of Research, Swedish Institute, Jerusalem

The Centrality of Jerusalem for Armenians Worldwide
Sossie Andezian, National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS),
Paris

–Boundary_(ID_ck1xM6jIlFPrPr7NnAsi+A)–

http://www.international.ucla.edu/cnes/events/showevent.asp?eve
www.uclaarmenian.org

Debating Islam’s “Golden Age”

Front Page Magazine
25 Oct. 2004

Debating Islam’s “Golden Age”
By FrontPage Magazine
FrontPageMagazine.com | October 26, 2004

(In our October 8th issue, we ran Mustafa Akyol’s article Still
Standing for Islam – and Against Terrorism. Below is a response from
Bat Ye’or, followed by a rejoinder from Mr. Akyol, and then a final
word from Bat Ye’or. – The Editors)

*
Spare Us Another “Golden Age” By Bat Ye’or

The hope inspired by Mr. Mustafa Akyol’s long article in Front Page
Magazine is tempered by his deception. Mr. Akyol speaks of the
necessity to re-interpret the fundamental teachings and scriptures of
Islam, particularly the hadith and sira (the biography of the Prophet).
Finally we see here a potential Muslim effort to continue and improve
the critical exegesis initiated by the great Orientalists of the 19th
century, particularly Ignaz Goldziher, whose work has since become
anathema to the Muslim intelligentsia. However, Mr Akyol does not
explain on what authority a selection of hadith and events of the sira
will be made, since, he himself, in the course of his argumentation,
simply uses them to prove the justice of Islam.

Disputing the veracity of the claim in the sacralized biography of
Muhammad regarding the massacre of the Qurayza Jews is most welcome
since it negates the Muslim command to kill Jews in order to emulate
the Prophet. This assertion must be fully encouraged, because the
treatment of the Jews by the Prophet has became the standard by which
the classical Muslim jurists formulated their policy toward
non-Muslims, as embodied in the Shari’a and in the jihad’s rules.
Hence, when non-Muslims (primarily Hindus and Christians) were killed
in Bali, Amrozi, the Indonesian terrorist, invoked the fate of the Jews
in the oasis of Khaybar, perhaps confusing them with the mass slaughter
of their co-religionists, the Qurayza. Although many of the Jews of
Khaybar were killed in an unprovoked jihad campaign by Muhammad, those
vanquished Khaybar Jews who surrendered were not killed, but were
dispossessed and became exploited dhimmi tributaries, until, within a
decade later, they were expelled by the “Rightly Guided” Caliph Umar.

In fact, there is no way for us, in the 21st century. to know what
really happened in a small Arabian oasis in the seventh century given
the lack of contemporary evidence. But Mr. Akyol again contradicts
himself by implying that the Qurayza’s punishment was justified,
because they acted treacherously while of course there are no objective
proofs for such accusations, which rest merely on the demonization of
the victims. Moreover the problem does not concern only the Qurayza
Jews but the Jews and Christians throughout the Hedjaz, who were, soon
afterward dispossessed, and within a decade of Muhammad’s death,
expelled, according to his professed (i.e., again, in the sira)
deathbed wishes.

As Mr. Akyol stated rightly, this was not exceptional at that time. The
problem now is that such acts have been attributed to the Prophet
Muhammad who is the model to be emulated by all Muslims. Hence, while
even worse wars might have been perpetrated in the world by rulers long
since forgotten, the acts and sayings of Muhammad concerning
non-Muslims are still binding for over a billion Muslims today. To
decry Dr. Bostom’s analyses, based on 13 centuries of Islamic teaching
and writing, and accepted today in all Muslim countries, is almost
surrealistic.

It is true that now we see an effort by Muslim theologians to
contextualize the actions and words attributed to the Prophet Muhammad,
and thereby introduce an element of relativity between the seventh
century, and the present. But this timid and belated tendency has not
the slightest influence on the current jihadist war of terror against
the West overwhelmingly approved in the Muslim countries.

Mr Akyol’s explanation of jihad itself is particularly disingenuous. In
a democracy “a final jihad on western secular materialism” is shocking.
This is especially concerning given that the word “faith” can be
understood in its Muslim sense which states that the only true faith is
Islam. (Qur’an 3:17).

What exactly is “western secular materialism”? Will that be replaced by
a Shari’a morality? Much of Mr. Akyol’s reasoning seems inspired by the
International Institute of Islamic Thought set up in 1983 in the U.S.A.
to teach the Islamization of Knowledge. This program, financed by Saudi
Arabia, was developed under the guidance of, among others, Ismail Raji
al-Faruqi, a Palestinian Professor who taught at Temple University. A
document from the Islamization of Knowledge program summarized its
objectives:

“The new reform effort should present a systematic and methodological
approach to rebuild Islamic knowledge on the same firm foundation that
supported Islamic Civilization in its first cycle. The Muslims, being
an Ummah (nation) of a Divine message, can only rise to civilization
dominance if they carry the message in its original clarity, purity,
and relevance.”1

The program to reform Islamic religious thinking thus aims at
reinforcing traditional teaching through modern reasoning. Thus, one is
imprisoned within a circular argumentation which goes back to its
Islamic starting point. While I understand the difficulties of
reforming a religion, a process that takes centuries, and does not
relate to Islam alone, I deplore the violent animosity displayed
against those writers and researchers in the West who denounce, very
courageously, the brazen acts of terrorism perpetrated throughout the
world, primarily against non-Muslims, by Muslims invoking the very
texts that Ibn Warraq, Bostom, Spencer, and so many others have
analyzed, and brought to public attention.

Mr. Akyol denies their self-evident interpretations, and that is his
right, but he should try to convince – not a Western audience – but
over a billion Muslims who curiously share the views of the Muslim
texts and authorities quoted by the courageous authors mentioned above.
Mr. Akyol prefers to try and persuade Westerners of the perfection of
Islam, simply denying that the horrors that occurred in Muslim history,
chronicled with great accuracy by Dr. Bostom, either didn’t happen, or
were not done by Muslims. This sort of twisted logic is little removed
from the warped thinking which justified the bizarre accusations that
the CIA, Americans, or Zionists must have perpetrated 9/11 because
Muslims could not commit such horrors. Many books elaborating this
preposterous thesis were disseminated in Europe, and in the Muslim
world.

It would be meaningless to answer all of Mr. Akyol’s affirmations,
accusations and denials, including the genocide of the Armenians. His
total rejection of the history of dhimmitude, despite copious
documentation by both Muslim and non-Muslim sources, and its
replacement by a glorification of a just and peaceful Islamic rule over
tens of millions of subjected, non-Muslim peoples, precludes any
understanding between those who call a jihad a genocidal war, and those
who call it a liberation (even having the temerity to deny the jihad
genocide of the Armenians). Mr. Akyol invokes testimonies which are
contradicted, multiple times over, by others he chose to ignore.

A mass of documents from a vast array of sources describe throughout
the centuries and even till today, the trials of populations –
Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians, Hindus, Buddhists, Animists –
vanquished by the Muslim armies. The affirmations of modern scholars
that he quotes, just confirm the political rewriting of history but do
not suppress, by overlooking them, the veracity of the facts enunciated
by Dr. Bostom. Mr. Akyol’s affirmation that it was not Muslims who
perpetrated the acts described is merely his personal opinion based on
his current appreciation of Islam. Finally, while Mr. Akyol’s efforts
to modernize religious beliefs are praiseworthy, they should be
directed exclusively at convincing his coreligionists, not attempting
to persuade the non-Muslim victims of Muslim aggression that their
ordeal did not happen or was an idyllic era for which they should be
grateful. Spare us another “Golden Age”.

Notes

[1] Amber Haque ed., Muslims and Islamization in North America:
Problems & Prospects, Amana Publications, Maryland, 1999, p.19.

*

Inviting Bat Ye’or To Consider Fairness
By Mustafa Akyol

It appears that both Ms. Ye’or and Mr. Bostom believe that terrorists
such as al-Qaeda spring from and represent the supposedly inherent
violence of Islam. I argue, on the other hand, that the current
“Islamic terrorism” we face stems from a distortion of the true Islamic
faith.

In order to defend my case, let me shortly answer the questions,
counter the criticisms and unveil the misjudgments of Ms. Ye’or.

The first issue is about the traditional, post-Koranic Islamic sources.
Ms. Ye’or welcomes my critical approach to the hadith and sira
traditions but criticizes me for failing to “explain on what authority
a selection of hadith and events of the sira will be made.” (Hadiths
are sayings attributed to Prophet Muhammad and sira are his
biographies.) I feel free to question these traditional sources,
because they are very late constructs. The earliest sira was written
about 150 years after the Prophet. Hadiths were compiled even later.
And it is already known that these sources include many fake,
irrational stories. I just argue that the inauthenticity is wider than
commonly acknowledged.

But how will we judge these sources, as Ms. Ye’or rightly asks. Robert
Spencer raised the same question, too. My answer is the Koran. The
Koran must be the sole infallible Islamic criterion and hadiths should
be compared with its verses and the overall message. There are some
modern scholars who reach this conclusion. Professor Hayri Kirbasoglu,
a theologian in Ankara University and an expert on hadiths, argues that
a new method is necessary to evaluate the hadith collection and
compatibility with the Koran — a criterion much neglected before –
should be its basis. The same holds for sira as well.

With this reasoning, I see the sira and hadith accounts about the
massacre of the men of Bani Qurazya as incompatible with the Koran.
Thus I reject it.

Ms. Ye’or welcomes my rejection of this story, but finds another reason
to accuse me:

But Mr. Akyol again contradicts himself by implying that the Qurayza’s
punishment was justified, because they acted treacherously while of
course there are no objective proofs for such accusations, which rest
merely on the demonization of the victims.

There is a logical inconsistency here. Ms. Ye’or says that there “are
no objective proofs” showing that Bani Qurazya was treacherous, but
there is no objective proof for the rest of the story as well. We can
either take the story at face value or doubt or reject it completely.
By taking the killing as granted but by doubting its accepted reason,
Ms. Ye’or stealthy walks away from fairness.

Ms. Ye’or also questions my effort to redefine jihad as an intellectual
stance against atheism, and its philosophical underpinning, i.e.
materialism. First of all, she asks what this is. Put simply,
materialism is the idea that matter is all there is, God is imaginary
and we humans are the products of a blind process of evolution.

Ms. Ye’or then asks whether I want to replace the materialist morality
with a “Shari’a morality”. The latter term is an oxymoron[i] and it is
not my vision for any society. But, yes, I would love to see a
transformation from the materialist morality, which feeds hedonism and
selfishness, into a theistic morality — which depends on the
recognition that we are not mere animals in a struggle for survival and
our lives have a meaning beyond earthly mundane existence.

This topic is undoubtedly related with science and Ms. Ye’or noticed
that. Good. Yet, she traced my ideas to the “Islamization of Knowledge”
project that was launched by International Institute of Islamic
Thought. Probably to add an alarming detail, Ms. Ye’or also notes that
the institute in question was “financed by Saudi Arabia.”

Yet, this is totally unrelated to me. The scientific project that I
believe in and actively support is not the “”Islamization of
Knowledge,” but the “Intelligent Design Theory.” And it has nothing to
do with Saudi Arabia; it is in fact a brainchild of several prominent
American scientists and thinkers and is spearheaded by the Discovery
Institute in Seattle and the Intelligent Design Network based in
Kansas. Intelligent design theorists argue for a paradigm shift to
liberate modern science from the materialist dogma. This is desperately
needed because of the overwhelming scientific evidence against
materialist theories of origins such as Darwinism.[ii] In my article
titled Why Muslims Should Support Intelligent Design, I explain why
this theory is a common intellectual stance for all theists, whether
they be Christian, Jewish or Muslim.

In short, I am not trying to “Islamize” knowledge as Ms. Ye’or assumes,
rather I seek objectivity and argue that knowledge — in the form of
scientific data — is already compatible with the basic tenets of
theistic religions such as Christianity, Judaism and Islam.

After her suspicions about my scientific endeavors, Ms. Ye’or employs a
straw man argument against me. She makes a caricature of what I have
said in my recent reply to her colleague, Andrew Bostom, and then
attacks that caricature.

According to her, I “affirmed that it was not Muslims who perpetrated
the acts described” by Mr. Bostom. I was “simply denying the horrors
that occurred in Muslim history”, and I was asserting that those
horrors “either didn’t happen, or were not done by Muslims.” From here,
she goes on to equate me with bizarre conspiracy theorists who pointed
to the CIA or the Mossad as the force behind 9/11.

What I said in fact was totally different. The exact wording in my
article in question include statements such as, “there of course were
many kinds of ‘Muslims’ who looted and pillaged simply for profit and
other worldly gains” and “Muslims can do evil, not because Islam
directs it, but because they themselves individually choose to do so.”
What I did was to distinguish between the Muslim acts for the sake of
Islam and the Muslim acts for the sake of worldly interests. I accepted
all the horrible massacres committed by such figures as Tamerlane,
Mahmud Ghaznavi, Mohammad Ghori, early Seljuks, and so on. But I
explained that these people were hardly good representatives of the
Islamic faith. In a more illustrative example, I showed that the
sacking of Thessalonica in 904 was not a “jihad campaign,” as Andrew
Bostom portrayed, but rather the work of Arab corsairs which acted
simply for world profit — the same motive that drew the “Christian
corsairs” of the Caribbean.

I really can’t understand how Ms. Ye’or overlooks what I have said,
distorts it so overtly and then expects to be persuasive.

I am sure she can do better than this.

Ms. Ye’or also criticizes me for speaking to the Westerners about
Islam. “While Mr. Akyol’s efforts to modernize religious beliefs are
praiseworthy,” she kindly says, “they should be directed exclusively at
convincing his coreligionists.” That is indeed true and I am indeed
trying to appeal to my co-religionists, too. But the struggle for the
soul of Islam has become, especially after September 11, a global issue
in which non-Muslims have a share to say. The outcome of that struggle
is very much related with Western, and especially American, policies
towards the Islamic world. That’s why I think that a fair assessment of
Islam in the West is crucial and I am trying to be helpful to that
assessment. We should also keep in mind that many opinion leaders of
the Islamic world are either living in the West or are affected the
Western intellectual climate; so it is not odd to argue for an Islamic
renewal in this medium.

But Ms. Ye’or believes that I am not being helpful. Interestingly, she
accuses not just me, but also many prominent Western scholars who study
Islam. According to her, “the affirmations of modern scholars” that I
quote from, “just confirm the political rewriting of history.”
Political rewriting of history for what? To luster Islam? And by the
many American, British, Italian historians that I quote from? Let me
remind that the scholars in question are not the usual guests of the
“Campus Watch,” rather they include names like Bernard Lewis and Daniel
Pipes. What could compel such historians to engage in a distortion of
history for the sake of a religion that they don’t adhere to? Who could
stir such a global conspiracy? The learned elders of Mecca whose
protocols are discovered by Ms. Ye’or and her colleagues?

A better explanation – of the Ockham’s Razor type – might be that in
fact it is Ms. Ye’or and her colleagues who are engaged in a political
rewriting of history.

I hope they are not. Or if they are, that they will reconsider their
stance. They should not see such self-criticism as an indignity.
Abrahamic monotheism, whether it be in the Jewish, Christian or Islamic
tradition, teaches us that it is indeed a great virtue to retreat from
a mistake.

And I will pray to better witness the virtues of Ms. Ye’or.

Notes:

[i] The term sharia refers to Islamic law. I don’t see it as the source
of an Islamic morality, because I believe that morality should stem
from personal faith, not penal law. The “enforced morality” we can see
in the horrible example of the Taliban, and in the Saudi regime, can
only achieve hypocrisy. In a forthcoming article of mine, titled
Deconstructing Islamic Radicalism, I deal with this issue in detail.

[ii] Intelligent Design is not creationism. The latter is based on a
literal interpretation of the Bible. Intelligent Design, on the other
hand, do not refer to religious texts, it is based purely on scientific
data. Intelligent Design theorists criticize Darwinism not because it
is against the Scripture, but rather because it is against the recent
findings of modern science.

*

Inviting Mr Akyol to Consider Intellectual Integrity, Without
Triumphalism

By Bat Ye’or

Let me begin by answering Mr. Akyol’s accusation of a “logical
inconsistency” which is entirely his own. He implies that I take for
granted the killing of the Banu Qurayza while in fact I said that
“there is no way for us, in the 21st century to know what really
happened in a small Arabian oasis in the seventh century given the lack
of contemporary evidence.” It is Mr. Akyol who rejects – a welcome
attitude – the hadith version that describes the execution of all the
Jewish males and the enslavement of their women and children. But a
little later he, himself, accuses the Qurayza Jews of having being
treacherous, hence justifying a treatment that he has previously
denied. Mr. Akyol has assumed from his own imagination that I take for
granted a massacre, and on this distorted and gratuitous allegation,
has accused me of unfairness.

Accusations of “distortions”, “unfairness”, “selectivity”, in my
analyses of dhimmi history manifest an unwillingness to acknowledge the
violent history of Islamic expansion. What we are now seeing in Sudan
echoes the Muslim chronicles of jihadist expansion over the centuries
across Asia, Africa, and Europe. I am used to such ad hominem
indictments because I have refused, deliberately, to accept the
Islamophile stratagem that deflects the jihad violence onto the victims
of jihad, or minimizes the victims’ trials, by specious arguments. I
have explained this position in chapter 10 of The Decline of Eastern
Christianity: From Jihad to Dhimmitude.

As a researcher on dhimmi peoples (the non-Muslim indigenous
populations subdued by jihad conquests), I tried to recover their
testimonies from the ashes of their past. Mr. Akyol’s negationist view
on the Armenian genocide, and his whitewashing of the historical jihad
illustrates both his lack of objectivity, and his contempt for the
detailed historical records of a multitude of non-Muslim populations.
His refusal of John of Nikiu’s account which he attributes to an
alleged xenophobic Egyptian character as a whole is spurious and
racist. The horrors of the Arab conquest in Armenia, narrated by local
historians, corroborate similar accounts, including that of John of
Nikiu, a distinguished member of the Coptic clergy. In fact, the
descriptions that recount in detail the warfare: slavery, massacres,
deportation, destruction, cities or villages razed, usually come from
Muslim chroniclers. Such events are referred by Mr. Akyol as
“liberation wars”. It looks as if Mr. Akyol has an encyclopedic
knowledge of both Western and Islamic civilizations regarding every
“historical episode”, allowing him to assert that Islam has a better
record than the West, – after he rejects any event he dislikes.

The numbers of former non-Muslims involved in jihadist operations
against their own people, throughout history, under whatever pressures
(including for example, the gulam/devshirme enslavement systems for
Christian children under the Seljuks and Ottomans, which, combined
persisted for over 500 years), are beyond calculation. But, like the
contemporary examples of the American “Taliban” John Lindh, or the
British “shoe bomber” Richard Reid, they represent individuals
propelled along by a 13 centuries old jihad system which they have
neither invented, nor engineered. This system embodies an ideology of
world domination and world governance based on specific strategies and
tactics conceived from the 8th – 9th centuries as a war machine against
the infidels. Patrick Sookdheo’s excellent book Understanding Islamic
Terrorism 1 examines in detail from its inception till today, the
Muslim framework of relations with non-Muslims.

Historical contingencies and accidental enrolment or participation of
Christians or others in this theological warfare machinery cannot hide
the basic and perennial structural configuration that has destroyed
through massacres, slavery or oppression countless populations. Peoples
recording their own history – i.e., Buddhists, Hindus, Zoroastrians,
Bahais, Assyrian Christians, Armenians, Copts, Maronites, Greeks,
African and Mediterranean Jews and Central Europeans Christians –
contradicts the Islamophilic re-casting of history that designates
imperialistic Islamic expansion through jihad war- a “liberation”.
Such historical obfuscation has nurtured modern Islamic
“fundamentalism” and terror. Free nations today find themselves
engulfed in a 13 centuries-old jihadist war about which they know
almost nothing – being oblivious to both its ideology, and its tactics.

I do not know what Mr. Akyol means by “saving the soul of Islam”. If it
implies a projection on others of the negative aspects of one’s own
history or their negation, such a salvation seems to me doubtful,
indeed. A recent debate in Cairo (October 5-6) discussed the way to
implement a radical revision of Islamic scholarship and Jusrisprudence
and called for both religious and political reforms. This may be a
positive harbinger for progress, if religious hierarchies do not
succeed in condemning it. 2

A little less triumphalism and certitude, and a little more humility
will pave the way toward an intellectual integrity that forbids
equating massacre and liberation.

Notes:

1 Patrick Sookhdeo, Understanding Islamic Terrorism, with a foreword by
General Sir Hugh Beach, Isaac Publishing, Pewsey, U.K., 2004.

2 MEMRI, Inquiry and Analysis – Egypt/Reform Project, October 22, 2004,
N° 192.

Mustafa Akyol is a political scientist, columnist, writer and a
director at the Intercultural Dialogue Platform, based in Istanbul.

Bat Ye’or is the world’s foremost authority on Dhimmitude. Her latest
study is Islam and Dhimmitude. Where Civilizations Collide. Her
forthcoming book, Eurabia: The Euro-Arab Axis, will be published in
January 2005.

–Boundary_(ID_zynb0sdJNhk83MVFgdNy+g)–

TBILISI: Closer business co-operation with Armenia

Closer business co-operation with Armenia

The Messenger, Georgia
26 Oct. 2004

The Chambers of Commerce of Georgia and Armenia signed a cooperation
agreement at the end of the Georgian-Armenian business forum, which
was held within the framework of the official visit to Georgia of
the president of Armenia Robert Kocharyan.

The Chairman of the Commerce and Industrial Chamber of Georgia Jemal
Inaishvili declared that despite being neighbors, commodity trade
between Georgia and Armenia does not correspond to its real potential.
“The sides agreed to increase bilateral communications and to intensify
mutually advantageous cooperation,” he said. The Armenian companies
displayed foodstuffs, alcohol drinks and industrial goods at the
business-forum.

The Minister of Economy Kakha Bendukidze told Prime News that Armenian
investments in Georgia are very important for the country.

TBILISI: Environmental, socio-economic issues threaten Caucasus

Environmental, socio-economic issues threaten Caucasus

The Messenger, Georgia
26 Oct. 2004

Joint UN-OSCE report says South Caucasus can transform potential
dangers into areas of co-operation
Compiled by Keti Sikharulidze

In a new report on the environment and security, analysts warn
that non-traditional environmental and socio-economic threats could
exacerbate existing conflicts in the Caucuses.

The report, entitled ‘Environment and Security: Transforming risks
into co-operation’ and supported by both the UN and the OSCE, was
released at the start of the conference of Eastern European, Caucasus
and Central Asian Environment Ministers October 22.

The report is part of a wider effort called the Environment and
Security (ENVSEC) initiative, jointly run by the OSCE, the UN
Development Programme (UNDP) and Environment Programme (UNEP), and
identifies key environmental issues that may effect security in the
Southern Caucasus.

In its press release, ENVSEC states that the report highlights three
common areas of concern, either negatively as sources of potential
conflict or positively as opportunities for co-operation and confidence
building, for Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia.

The three areas are environmental degradation and access to
natural resources in areas of conflict; management of cross-border
environmental concerns, such as water resources, natural hazards,
and industrial and military legacies; and population growth and rapid
development in capital cities.

The Environment Ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia were
invited to discuss the report with the representatives of partner
countries and agencies at the launch event, after which was held a
regional conference of Eastern European, Caucasus and Central Asian
Environment Ministers.

“The Southern Caucasus countries are confronted by similar social,
political and economic transformation that are altering century-old
relationships within and between them, and shaping their development.
Each of these transformation has an impact on, and could be effected
by, the state of the natural environment,” said Director of UNDP
Regional Bureau or Europe and the CIS Kalman Mizsei.

Director of UNEP’s European office Frits Schlingemann added this could
pose a threat to stability in the region, saying that environmental
stress and change could undermine security in the three South Caucasian
courtiers.

Co-coordinator for OSCE economic and environmental activities
Marcin Swecicki agreed, saying that “today we face a variety of
non-traditional threats to security, posed by socio-economic and
environment issues.”

“However,” Schlingemann added, “sound environmental management and
technical co-operation could also be a means for strengthening security
while promoting sustainable development if three governments decided
to do so.”

The ENVSEC Initiative builds on the combined strengths and field
presence of the lead organizations in three main areas: assessment and
monitoring of environment and security linkages; capacity building and
institutional development; and integration of environment and security
concerns and priorities in international and national policy-making.