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The document summarizes and responds to an article about morality police in Saudi Arabia enforcing strict Islamic dress codes. It makes three key points:
1) The author feels upset about the oppression of personal liberties in Saudi Arabia but lacks true empathy for their situation.
2) The article highlights how Islamic faith can be distorted and used as a tool for discrimination, hatred and war, which the author finds disgusting.
3) The author is coming to the conclusion that Islam itself may provoke more misinterpretation and violence than other religions, due to some of its teachings that include subjugating women and accepting war.
The document summarizes and responds to an article about morality police in Saudi Arabia enforcing strict Islamic dress codes. It makes three key points:
1) The author feels upset about the oppression of personal liberties in Saudi Arabia but lacks true empathy for their situation.
2) The article highlights how Islamic faith can be distorted and used as a tool for discrimination, hatred and war, which the author finds disgusting.
3) The author is coming to the conclusion that Islam itself may provoke more misinterpretation and violence than other religions, due to some of its teachings that include subjugating women and accepting war.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Als DOC, PDF, TXT herunterladen oder online auf Scribd lesen
The document summarizes and responds to an article about morality police in Saudi Arabia enforcing strict Islamic dress codes. It makes three key points:
1) The author feels upset about the oppression of personal liberties in Saudi Arabia but lacks true empathy for their situation.
2) The article highlights how Islamic faith can be distorted and used as a tool for discrimination, hatred and war, which the author finds disgusting.
3) The author is coming to the conclusion that Islam itself may provoke more misinterpretation and violence than other religions, due to some of its teachings that include subjugating women and accepting war.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Verfügbare Formate
Als DOC, PDF, TXT herunterladen oder online auf Scribd lesen
One attributes of the article grabbed my attention on my first read-through of it:
the great injustice of the morality police’s actions, and even of their existence. I cannot imagine how oppressed Saudi Arabians must feel under their regulation; having never been so deprived of liberty, any attempt for me to empathize with their situation would be pretentious and ineffective at best. However, I still feel upset that such a regime has control of any body of people, though this emotion is subdued, partly because, again, I lack true empathy for the lifestyle the regime creates, and partly because Eltahawy’s statements that the Saudi prince and the journalists have begun to take action against the mutawwi’in keep me fairly hopeful. Upon reading closer, however, I realized that the actions of and reactions to the mutawwi’in were not the only important aspects of the article. A subtle and sinister undercurrent in the article centered around the abuse of Islamic faith. This doctrine, the one that the morality police claimed to act upon, is the same that Al-Qaeda followers and radical Iraqi insurgents manipulate to serve their own goals. To see a faith Eltahawy describes as “cherish[ed] for its teachings of compassion and justice” distorted into an arbitrary tool of discrimination, hatred, and even war is absolutely disgusting. However, the question I believe is raised by this seemingly frequent abuse of a single religion is: could it be that Islam itself provokes misinterpretation? This is the conclusion I am beginning to come to: of the hundreds of religions in the world, the most controversial due to its violent followers (currently – Hinduism and its caste system once held this dishonor) is Islam. No other religion seems to have the warped following that Islam has – there have been Christian Cults, Hindu Hellraisers, Buddhist Belligerents even – but Islam alone seems to incite violence in every culture it enters. Of course, this could be due to other factors in said cultures, but several factors make this an unlikely possibility: if premises of a religion include the subjugation of women, the acceptance of war if it is “holy”, and the following of a frequently violent, temperamental figure claiming divine inspiration, then it may not be the most peaceful set of beliefs. I do not mean to insult or degrade Muslims – most seem to grasp the best and most enriching principles of the religion, and use them to sow peace and kindness in their lives and the lives of others. However, I take issue with the assertion that Islam is by nature a peaceful religion, as my knowledge of some of its teachings and the actions of great multitudes of its followers, albeit obvious zealots, specifically those mentioned in the article. Yes, I took it there.
Connivance by Silence: How the Majority’S Failure to Challenge Politically Motivated [Mis]Interpretation of the Qur’An Empowered Radicals to Exploit Islam and Propagate Radicalism