|
“Yes, I am a
terrorist. Write that down: I admit I am a terrorist.
[The Qur’an] says it is the duty of Muslims to bring
terror to the enemy, so being a terrorist makes me a
good Muslim.”
These are the
words of Marwan Abu Ubeida, the subject of a Time
magazine piece entitled “Inside the Mind of an Iraqi
Suicide Bomber.” It is gratifying to see Time
being willing to take this trip into Marwan’s mind,
since most mainstream media outlets have been singularly
uninterested in the thought processes of jihad
terrorists. But even Time doesn’t explore the
implications of Marwan’s words. And this is no trivial
omission: jihadists from Osama bin Laden and Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi to Marwan Abu Ubeida have consistently made
clear that today’s jihadists are working from mainstream
traditions and numerous Qur’anic exhortations, and that
by means of these traditions and teachings they are able
to gain recruits among Muslims worldwide — as well as to
hold the sympathy of others whom they do not recruit.
This explains why there has been no widespread,
sustained, and sincere Muslim outcry against the jihad
terrorist enterprise in general.
Marwan makes it
clear: “The jihadis are more religious people. You ask
them anything — anything — and they can instantly quote
a relevant section from the Qur’an.” He is chillingly
forthright: “The only person who matters is Allah — and
the only question he will ask me is ‘How many infidels
did you kill?’” He invokes Qur’an 8:60: “Against them
make ready your strength to the utmost of your power,
including steeds of war, to strike terror into the enemy
of Allah and your enemy.” The jihad ideology Marwan
reflects is rooted in the Qur’an and Islamic tradition.
The longer we postpone confronting that fact, the worse
the problem will grow.
Yet both liberal
and conservative media analysts do not want to face
this. They think that by speaking about the Islamic
roots of jihad violence they will undercut moderate
Muslims. But in fact, no reform in Islam can ever take
place without an acknowledgment of what needs to be
reformed. The near-universal refusal to provide that
acknowledgment is just one reason why that reform is
virtually certain not to be forthcoming. The
contemporary problem of global Islamic terrorism will
never be solved unless people are willing to speak
forthrightly about the nature of the challenge we face
and work to find positive solutions. Ignoring or
distorting the true nature and source of the problem
will only postpone the crisis, and make its ultimate
resolution more difficult.
The media is
failing the American public on this issue. But the truth
will out, if in other venues. It’s time for the direct
approach. One organization is taking the truth about
jihad terrorism directly to the people: The People’s
Truth Forum. On September 21 I will be participating in
a symposium on terror, sponsored by the Forum, entitled,
“The Radical Islamist Threat to World Peace and National
Security.” This symposium will challenge media bias
head-on by exploring forthrightly such unexamined dogmas
as the idea that regionalized economic conditions and
American injustices are the real cause of terrorism, not
any imperative derived from Islamic theology. We will
explore the mindset of people like Marwan Abu Ubeida who
think that terror is commanded by God, providing a
profile of the slaughterers of innocents that is
urgently needed — and has not been provided by the media
in almost four years since 9/11.
Other speakers include the renowned
terrorism expert Harvey Kushner, author of Holy War
on the Home Front; Brigitte Gabriel, a former anchor
for world news in the Middle East and a prominent
Arab-American journalist; and Judith Jacobson,
vice-president of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East
(SPME) and the coordinator of the Columbia University
SPME chapter. This promises to be one of the few places
in modern-day America where you will be able to hear the
truth about what we're up against. Get more information
about how you can attend at
www.peoplestruthforum.com.
The People’s Truth
Forum was organized to heighten public awareness about
the issues that matter most. The Forum hopes to host
similar events around the country in the future and
thereby to circumvent the information stranglehold of
the mainstream media — a stranglehold which, with its
cavalier refusal to face the facts, leaves us all that
much more vulnerable.
Robert Spencer is the director of
Jihad Watch; author of
Onward Muslim Soldiers: How Jihad Still Threatens
America and the West (Regnery), and
Islam Unveiled: Disturbing Questions About the World’s
Fastest Growing Faith (Encounter); and editor of
the essay collection
The Myth of Islamic Tolerance: Islamic Law and
Non-Muslims (Prometheus). He is working on a new
book,
The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam (and the Crusades)
(coming August 8 from Regnery). |