ONCE UPON A TIME in a happy place
called The Netherlands, there was a little Dutch cherry-picker named Geert
Wilders. After growing up in the land of Rembrandt and tulips, Geert one day
decided that he wanted to become a politician and help the people of Holland by
becoming one of their elected leaders.
While his friends became doctors
and lawyers, our cherry-picker Geert one day found himself a member of the Dutch
parliament. Instead of representing the multicultural and diverse Dutch
population, he decided one fine day that he wanted to be the political leader of
the most right-wing, anti-immigrant nationalistic party that has ever graced the
halls of The Hague, which is also, fittingly, the judicial seat of the
International Criminal Court (also known as the ICC or War Crimes
Tribunal).
Alas, it seems that our
cherry-picker has never been fond of dark-skinned Muslims who have made their
homes in the cities of Holland over the years.
According to Statistics
Netherlands, an autonomous Dutch agency that provides statistics to the
government, Muslims living in the Netherlands totaled almost 920,000 in 2003,
with almost 6 percent of the total Dutch
population.
In the greater Amsterdam
metropolitan area, Muslims now represent over 12 percent of the city’s total
population.
Aghast that those who were not
blond (like himself) were going to somehow erode Dutch culture and tradition,
our cherry-picker Geert decided that he was going to produce a movie about the
Quran — the holy book for over 1.3 billion Muslims
worldwide.
His movie, Fitna (Arabic for
“division” or “strife”), is a 15-minute Internet movie dedicated to defaming
Islam by juxtaposing cherry-picked Quranic verses over incendiary sound-bites
and graphic images of terrorist acts and their aftermath.
The cherry-picker’s movie begins
with the ominous “ticking clock” sounds and the cartoon image of the Prophet
Muhammad with a “bomb turban,” which sparked the Danish cartoon controversy in
2005.
As the movie clock ticks down, you
can see the fuse on the “bomb turban” lit as the rest of the movie focuses on
“quoting” chapter and verse from Islam’s holy book to show the true “violent”
nature of Islam.
Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter
Balkenende rejected the film, saying, “The film equates Islam with violence. We
reject this interpretation. The vast majority of Muslims reject extremism and
violence. In fact, the victims are often also
Muslims.”
Our Dutch cherry-picker should be
afforded the full protection of the law to express his beliefs without any fear
of violence. As for his silly film, it should be held to the standard set by
Dutch law, which has certain restrictions on speech that is defamatory, libelous
or insults a group of people on the basis of their race or religion. Prime
Minister Balkenende has also publicly stated that if the film is judged to have
violated Dutch law, then his government has the duty to enforce its legislation.
Anyone who knows anything about
our cherry-picker Geert and his geopolitics (like the Danish cartoon
controversy) knows that this film is a direct attempt to incite violence by
Muslims and help fan the flames of Islamophobia. Any reasonable person can see
that this movie was meant to rabidly spit in the face of Muslims and blatantly
insult Islam.
Nonetheless, the main difference
between this and the Danish cartoon controversy is that history has taught us
that cooler heads should prevail this time. For many people, the global
community learned a stark lesson from the Danish cartoon fiasco.
Both Muslims and non-Muslims alike
know that this silly exercise by our right-wing cherry-picker should be used to
springboard the next generation of interfaith and global human dialogue and not
fall prey to his xenophobic and sophomoric movie
bait.
Going back to our Dutch fairy tale
story, our cherry-picker Geert found it very difficult to find an audience for
his bait-filled ignorant movie because the Dutch government understood that
Geert had perhaps picked one too many cherries this time. A testament to public
diplomacy and interfaith dialogue; this storyteller’s sympathies go out to the
Dutch people.
The majority of them, both Muslim
and non-Muslim alike, are good, hard-working people who get along with their
neighbors and just want to go about their lives in peace. These people are
caught between the extremists on both sides who are out to stir up angst and
mistrust to springboard their own silly political agendas.
Despite being filled with hurtful
and demeaning messages to his own fellow citizens that he sadly represents in
parliament, it’s truly a testament to the strength of a democracy when people
can freely share their opinions in the public arena. Unfortunately, our Dutch
cherry-picker had his fingers crossed for a negative response by purposely
disrespecting others simply because of their religion. By doing so, our dear
cherry-picker is ignoring the core democratic values of freedom and justice dear
to all of us; Muslims and non-Muslims alike.
After the dreadful response by
some Muslims over the Danish cartoon controversy, it has become abundantly clear
where the cherry-picker’s movie should be placed within our global priorities.
With an infinite abyss of death in
Iraq, the dreadful human suffering of Darfur and other human-rights atrocities
occurring around the world, the global Muslim community knows that right-wing
knuckleheads like our little Dutch cherry-picker should not even be given the
time of day.
For only when our global community
denounces every form of racism and intolerance in existence today can we make
extremist dinosaurs like Osama bin Laden or right-wing cherry-picker extremists
like Dutch MP Geert Wilders, completely and utterly
obsolete.
And on that glorious and fine day,
we will finally be able to live happily ever after.
Arsalan
Iftikhar is an international human-rights lawyer and
contributing editor for Islamica magazine, in Washington,
D.C.