Posted on 08/22/2007 10:11:17 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o
Communion and Liberations annual Meeting in the Italian coastal city of Rimini is sort of a Catholic cross between the Algonquin Roundtable and Lollapalooza one part intellectual discourse, one part rock-and-roll festival. Drawing crowds in excess of 700,000, its perhaps the leading annual forum in Europe for Catholics attracted to a strong sense of religious identity and a challenge to secular culture.
(Communion and Liberation is among the new movements in the Catholic Church, often regarded as fairly conservative. The group's American director, the affable Monsignor Lorenzo Albacete, once laughingly described it as "Opus Dei for lazy Catholics.")
Ironically, one of the biggest draws each year in this robustly Catholic milieu is a secular Muslim Egyptian journalist Magdi Allam, a columnist and vice-director of Corriere della Sera, Italys leading daily newspaper. This years August 19-25 edition of the Meeting has been no exception, as Allams presentation on Sunday attracted an overflow crowd.
Allam, it should be stressed, is no ordinary Muslim. In some ways, he is the heir to Oriana Fallaci as Italys most prominent critic of Islam, someone whose views carry considerable weight in Catholic circles.
His most recent book is titled Viva Israele, in which Allam argues that Israel represents a culture of life, in contrast with militant Islams culture of death. Allam minces no words in making the point. In a recent interview with an Israeli news agency, for example, Allam was asked about Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. His lapidary response: I hope that someday Israel will capture Ahmadinejad and force him to live the rest of his life between the walls of Yad Vashem.
Allam has said that Israel, along with Pope Benedict XVI, represents the residual hope for Western civilization against the Islamic threat.
On Sunday, Allam took part in a session called Lets Save the Christians, devoted to anti-Christian persecution in the Muslim world. He took the opportunity to reiterate a proposal he first made on July 4, during a rally in Rome in favor of persecuted Christians: the creation of a Permanent Observatory to monitor religious freedom worldwide.
Allam described the realities facing Christians in many majority Muslim states.
In Saudi Arabia, all it takes is for the police to find a Bible in the drawer of a bedside table in a private house, for someone to be accused of apostasy, of betrayal, he said. The consequence, Allam said, is that the Bibles owner could be imprisoned and subjected to torture.
Such realities are producing an escalating Christian exodus out of the region. According to the World Council of Churches, the number of Christians in the Middle East has plummeted from 12 million to 2 million in just the last 10 years, the result of a triple whammy of political insecurity, economic stagnation, and harassment at the hands of Islamic radicals.
Allam also pointed to the example of Mohammed Ahmed Hegazy, an Egyptian Muslim convert to Christianity, who has gone into hiding due to death threats after he sued the Egyptian government for refusing to allow him to change his religious affiliation on his national identity card. Allam denounced jurists at Al-Azhar University in Cairo, widely considered the most authoritative institution in the Sunni Muslim world, who have sided against Hegazy.
Among other things, Allam called upon Italian universities that have signed agreements for cultural collaboration with Al-Azhar to renounce them. One of those institutions is the Pontifical Oriental Institute, which is affiliated with the Gregorian University, the Jesuit-run flagship pontifical university in Rome.
His willingness to take such bold public positions has made Allam a sign of division in both the Muslim and Catholic worlds. Among Muslim radicals hes seen as a traitor, one sign of which is that Allam is always surrounded by a phalanx of bodyguards.
Among moderates in both the Muslim and Catholic camps, meanwhile, Allam is often seen as a provocateur, painting anyone who expresses sympathy with the Palestinians or with other Islamic causes as a dupe of the terrorists.
That was the spirit of a letter critical of Allams latest book published in the Italian journal Reset, signed by some 230 writers, academics and activists, both Muslim and Christian, in its July-August issue.
Journalism risks falling into the logic of cheering for one sports team against another, rather than being rational and analytical, above all when its dealing with delicate and sensitive subjects such as religion, it said, accusing Allam of adopting the all-or-nothing logic of totalitarian ideologies.
The appeal was signed by a whos who of center-left Italian Catholic opinion, including Enzo Bianchi, founder of the ecumenical monastery of Bose; Paolo Branca, an expert on Islam and advisor to Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi of Milan; Alfredo Canavero, a scholar who also writes for LAvvenire, the newspaper of the Italian bishops; and Alberto Melloni, a well-known church historian.
In effect, this school of thought believes that Allams hard line actually serves the interests of Western neo-cons and Islamic radicals, both of whom, they say, benefit from polarizing opinion in order to justify unending combat. Meanwhile, a number of leading Italian figures leapt to Allams defense, insisting that his critics are in denial about the realities of radical Islam.
In that sense, Allam incarnates the division between hawks and doves on Islam, between those who emphasize confrontation and those who seek dialogue. Today the winds seem to be blowing in favor of the hawks, a transition reflected in Allams own biography.
In Viva Israel, Allam recounts growing up as a convinced supporter of the Palestinian cause, believing that Israel was a racist state invented by the West as a compensation for the Holocaust. What turned him around, he wrote, was getting to know Yasser Arafat, which convinced him of the bankruptcy of terrorism.
As recently as 2002, Allam was still seen as something of a dove. In his book Diary of Islam, published that year, he wrote, A moderate and tolerant Islam was among the first victims of Islamic terrorism, insisting that Islam is compatible with democracy and pluralism. The hijackers of 9/11, Allam wrote, did not represent the overwhelming majority of Muslims around the world.
The West is in the DNA of Islam, in the same way in which Islam is in the DNA of the West, he wrote in 2002.
In a subsequent piece in Reset critical of Allam, a writer asked rhetorically if the Magdi Allam of 2002 would even have a coffee with the Magdi Allam of today. Yet the distance covered by Allam in those five years has hardly been his journey alone; in some ways it reflects a general trend in Western thought, including senior levels of the Catholic Church, towards ever-greater doubt about the prospects for a moderate Islam ready to make its peace with pluralism.
In that sense, the debate over Magdi Allam raises, in microcosm, one of the central questions of the 21st century making him a very interesting figure to watch indeed.
Mohamed copied the West and Christianity and Judaism into his cult. The west wants nothing to do with islam.
ping
Bookmark for further contemplation, but at first glance, no, Islam is not in the DNA of the West. I cannot give credence to Muslims who say the things this one says, but will not convert or give up Islam.
If the Muslims can have their parade in NY, why not have a Judeo/Christian parade? I can’t see muslims fitting in with our culture.
Islam is a scourge on the DNA of humanity.
If the west wants to survive, it has best inoculate itself against this scourge, otherwise it will be devoured just like the once Judo -Christian lands of the ME were devoured by the evil of Islam.
So, seriously, I don't think you can regard him as a sho-nuff Muslim. The Muslims sho' don't.
An interesting note: in his book Vincere la Paura [Victory over Fear], Allam reports his own experience as a journalist protected by armed escorts, a condition he has had to endure ever since the Islamic movement Hamas allegedly threatened him with death if he did not stop criticizing Palestinian suicide bombers.
He’s helping us develop an immune system.
Bookmarked! Great post and thank you for bringing it to the forum.
mediocre article from NCR. raises some interesting points though.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.