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Everybody's Business (Shariah in Aceh, Indonesia)
National Review Online ^ | August 01, 2006 | William F. Buckley Jr.

Posted on 08/01/2006 5:21:09 PM PDT by neverdem







Everybody's Business

By William F. Buckley Jr.

The old injunction about minding your own business has always been a little problematic, because carried to formal lengths it distresses other laws, laws that have to do with being one's brother's keeper. From large-scale national perspectives, there are the laws that translate into maintaining balances of power. You can try to ignore it when you hear that Hitler has ultimate solutions about how to deal with Germany's Jews, but meanwhile it makes sense to maintain your fleet in good condition, never mind if regulating German Jews is other people's business.

Itchy stuff. In the 19th century moral realities hardened on the subject of slavery. That too had been thought of as other people's business for a long time, even when the "other people" were your neighbors. After a while, it was felt that slavery was other people’s business only if the practice of it was removed at least by regional boundaries. And then after a couple of generations, it was resolved that slavery was not a business to be tolerated anywhere within the nation’s territory; and so on.

The problem of which communities’ practices continue to be sheltered as other people’s business is lightly touched on in a huge story in the New York Times on Tuesday about what they are taking to be their own business in a province of Indonesia. Aceh is a strait-laced part of the Muslim community. The big photo shows a man standing in a long white shirt looking down. On his left is a man dressed in black whose face is shrouded by a mask. He is holding what looks like a long stick. In fact it is a rattan cane, about a meter long and 0.75 centimeters thick.

The photo depicts one stroke laid on by the "executor"—that is what the Wilayatul Hisbah are called, the enforcers of  Shariah, or Muslim law. The camera caught the swing of the cane because the prisoner was still standing. The story says that on the seventh stroke, he fell down in a faint.  His sentence was 40 lashes of the cane, and the eager crowd was promised that when the man came back to life, he would receive the balance due of his sentence, another 33 strokes.

One is permitted to pause in cosmopolitan surprise that seven strokes of the rattan cane, inflicted on a man's back, would cause him to pass out. Old Etonians must be especially skeptical, though their own Wilayatul Hisbahs aimed at buttocks, not backs, but often went on past a seventh stroke, with not much evidence of students fainting.

But the point here being made is that there is in Aceh a revival of Muslim fundamentalism. “Aceh," the reporter tells us, "is undergoing a profound transformation that is likely to have considerable impact on the nature of Islam in Indonesia, the most populous Muslim country."  We learn that there are over 40 prisoners arrested for thievery, and it is being deliberated whether to chop off their hands. We are reminded that this remains the practice in Saudi Arabia, and one is left to suppose that it is routine. If it were spectacularly unusual, it would presumably have rated a photo, and  a story in the New York Times. But engines of the news cannot be alert to mundane torture. If somebody is going to be hanged every morning at Tyburn, after a while one loses interest, and that, really, is the point of this essay.

Much hangs on the development of Muslim practice in the 21st century. It can't remain somebody else's business exclusively if organized communities take to chopping off people's hands. The Times article describes the arrest of three women in Aceh. Their crime? They were sitting in a secluded section of a hotel corridor without their headscarves. Inasmuch as the Shariah is being developed, restored, revived, evolved, it matters greatly in what direction it is developing. We know that cheek by jowl in the Middle East we have had developments along the lines of the Taliban, with torture and death, and along different lines, as in Turkey and Egypt. It is precisely an urgent moral concern what practices will govern life and law enforcement in Iraq—and Lebanon and Syria.

It has been a matter of huge reluctance even to think of, let alone refer to, a great religious-moral collision approaching, setting Islam against the Judaeo-Christian world.  The old counsel is to be permissive about what other people do, especially if they are self-governing.  But, in present circumstances, these do not consolidate as purely local matters. What happens in Aceh, when Islam is reviving throughout Indonesia, is exactly as reported, a matter of profound international concern. 



TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: aceh; indonesia; religionofpieces; shariah; wfb

Oki Tiba/Imaji, for The New York Times
An man caught drinking at a beachside stall was sentenced to 40 lashes. The caning was televised nationally, and he fainted on the seventh stroke.

Indonesian Province Embraces Islamic Law Here's the printer friendly version.

1 posted on 08/01/2006 5:21:11 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem
This is the province that was heavily hit by the 2005 Tsunami, to which enormous amounts of aid were sent.

Perhaps some disasters truly are Acts of God.

2 posted on 08/01/2006 5:37:01 PM PDT by happygrl
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To: neverdem

Presumably WFB has read the Quran. Whose business it is, is beside the point. Muslims are living according to the word of Allah as written in the 7th century. They're not going to make any changes.


3 posted on 08/01/2006 5:44:38 PM PDT by Graymatter (Don't like the PC, the lies, of the MSM? Don't watch TV.)
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To: neverdem

Another reason I am glad that I never gave a dime (willingly) to any of the Tsunami relief efforts.


4 posted on 08/01/2006 6:42:07 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: neverdem

The only way to end barbarism is to kill the barbarians.


5 posted on 08/01/2006 6:52:44 PM PDT by MrBambaLaMamba (Buy 'Allah' brand urinal cakes - If you can't kill the enemy at least you can piss on their god)
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To: MrBambaLaMamba; neverdem; Graymatter; Rodney King; happygrl; SJackson
I have tried and tried to make sure I am seeing a bigger picture whilst using patience and reason to form my opinions. I have prayed and prayed that God will help me not to rawly hate Islam.

I have failed.

I think these people are totally f!!cked and they can all go straight to hell.

I don't want them as neighbors. PERIOD. And yet we know they are here and here and here and here. (Find the one's that haven't made news yet here: IslamicFinder.com)

Moreover, I don't really want them on the planet at all. And yet they are here and there and every-freeking-where. Heck, there are even pretty dhimmis with big titties here.

I think my beliefs may possibly make me less of a man in God's eyes. Fine. I'll take my chances with God. What I am not prepared to take chances on is America. Hating Islam makes me a better American. So, now, I pray more Americans will learn to hate Islam.

6 posted on 08/01/2006 7:20:50 PM PDT by FreeRadical (That's no "open container" officer. That's my beer.)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; MomofMarine; radar101; RobbyS; isaac32; RedWhiteAndBlueBlood; ...
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.

High Volume. Articles on Israel can also be found by clicking on the Topic or Keyword Israel.

also Keywords 2006israelwar or WOT [War on Terror]

----------------------------

7 posted on 08/01/2006 8:34:59 PM PDT by SJackson (The Pilgrims—Doing the jobs Native Americans wouldn't do!)
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To: SJackson

bumping for later updated comment


8 posted on 08/02/2006 12:14:07 AM PDT by expatguy (http://laotze.blogspot.com/)
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To: neverdem

bttt, because 248 page views is no where near enough --- that creepy photo needs to be seen every day by every american.


9 posted on 08/03/2006 1:45:26 PM PDT by FreeRadical (Discriminating against Muslims is an American Duty.)
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