Where will Brandeis go to get its respect and honor back?


Jeff Jacoby in the Boston Globe is also annoyed about CAIR’S bullying of Honor Diaries.

‘HONOR DIARIES” might not be coming to a theater near you, at least not if CAIR gets its way. The award-winning documentary about “honor” violence against girls and women in much of the Muslim world was released last month in honor of International Women’s Day, and it didn’t take long for the Council on American Islamic Relations to slap its all-purpose “Islamophobic” label on it. The film has been shown in dozens of venues, but CAIR has raised enough of a stink to get screenings cancelled on several college campuses, including the University of Michigan and the University of Illinois.

He then talks about CAIR’s role in bullying Brandeis into insulting Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

Ali was involved in making “Honor Diaries,” which goes out of its way to convey respect for moderate Islam. It spotlights nine eloquent women with roots in the Islamic world, several of whom are devout Muslims — “Islam is my spiritual journey,” says one — and all of whom are passionate about exposing the terrible abuses women and girls in many Muslim cultures suffer in the name of family honor. None thinks such horrors should be excused or neglected out of a misplaced cultural sensitivity or political correctness.

But CAIR apparently does. Why does it? And why do Brandeis and other universities listen to it? Why don’t they tell it to fuck off?

Efforts by CAIR and its ilk to squelch honest discussion of such grave human-rights issues — and to demonize as “haters” and “Islamophobes” those who do — encapsulate the very perversity “Honor Diaries” seeks to expose: valuing the honor of a community more than a woman’s life or voice. But does CAIR’s shrill protest reflect what average citizens in Muslim countries think of such a documentary? Or does the “Honor Diaries” Arabic Facebook page, with 95,000 “likes” — and climbing?

Why aren’t more progressives passionate about these issues?

I don’t know. I do what I can. I try to get the word out to them.

I put that question to Nazie Eftekhari, an immigrant from Iran and another of the women “Honor Diaries” focuses on. A successful Minnesota health care entrepreneur, Eftekhari unhesitatingly describes herself as a “bleeding-heart liberal” and a longtime Democratic Party voter, loyalist, and fund-raiser. She is as mystified as I am.

“The biggest human-rights crisis of our generation is the treatment of women in Muslim-majority countries, and we’ve applied a gag order to ourselves,” she replies with unmistakable distress. “We won’t talk about it. Where are my fellow liberals? Where are the feminists?”

Right here. Right here. But all too many of them are siding with CAIR instead, yes. It’s appalling.

In theocratic Iran today, Eftekhari says, the legal age of marriage for girls has been lowered to 9. Fathers can legally marry their adopted daughters. “How can President Obama, who has two young daughters, not be making a huge issue of this?” she wants to know. “It’s not marriage, it’s statutory rape.”

Eftekhari can’t understand why so many progressive voices fall silent on an issue she thinks they should be raising the loudest. She has only contempt for anyone who thinks it progressive to snub those — like Ayaan Hirsi Ali — who so bravely speak out: “Ali needs no degree or honor from Brandeis; she is a guiding light for the women who respect and honor her. But where will Brandeis go to get its respect and honor back?”

It will always have CAIR.

Comments

  1. blanche says

    No. It’s not statutory rape. It’s just plain rape. AND pedophilia. It is the sexual abuse of children. No 9 year old girl wants to have some smelly old man old enough to be her grandfather sticking his smelly penis into her body. If she’s been married to him against her will, that part only makes it worse. This should NEVER be legal.

    So CAIR is upset that what these women have to say makes Islam look bad. Well, since they’re telling the truth, it appears that it’s the misogynistic Muslim culture that is making Islam look bad. The days when Islam looked good ended hundreds of years ago, and it’s been centuries of darkness and oppression ever since.

    Two beautiful opportunities to show that it is possible for Islam to return to its glorious history of openness and creativity, back when “The ink of the scholar’s pen is more precious than the martyr’s blood” actually meant something, but instead, CAIR chooses to perpetuate darkness and oppression.

    I don’t think there’s any hope for Islam. Not any more.

    PS – It’s me, Blanche Quizno, and I had to make this blanche ID to get onto another FTB site, and now I can’t figure out how to get back to Blanche Quizno 🙁

  2. Decker says

    CAIR is a very nasty abd threatening organisation,

    Being approached by them is akin to being approached by the mob.

    They use protection racket techniques to silence organisations and individuals from telling the truth about Islam.

    An intervention by the authorities is absolutely necessary to put them out of business because they’re thugs.

    I’m sure CAIR reps will traipse from campus to campus like some dog and pony show every time a screening of Honour Diaries is announced.

    They’re the self-annointed guardians of ‘good taste’, you see.

  3. colnago80 says

    It’s rather tragic that it’s right wingers like Jeff Jacoby, hardly a poster boy for the 1st Amendment, who is pointing to the activities of the CAIR goon squads while leftists like Phillip Weiss bad mouth the makers of the film and Ms. Ali, all the while kowtowing to CAIR. Were I president of a University that planned to show the film or propose an honorary degree for Ms. Ali and the CAIR thugs made a fuss, I would very politely tell them to stick their objections where the sun don’t shine.

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