Condemning Islam isn't Racist
By Maryam Namazie
January 16, 2002
Ex-MP Jackie Ballard who recently moved to Iran states it is racist to be
anti-Islam and says it is 'time
"liberal" opinion started to try to understand Islam better and to
learn something about the culture of the Middle East...' (January 7 article in
The Guardian entitled 'Another kind of
freedom'). She further asserts
that women in Iran have 'freedoms denied to many in the west', including that a
friend can breastfeed in restaurants, that Iranian women 'keep their own names
after marriage' and because she feels safer in Iran ['If women dress in a
sexually provocative or attractive way, perhaps it is not surprising that men
respond to them as sexual beings…'].
Ballard's pathetic
examples of so-called freedoms overlook the real and bleak status of women
living under Islamic laws. In Iran,
veiling is compulsory for women in all public places; even children aged nine
to 11 are forbidden from wearing 'flashy hues'. They are subject to harassment,
imprisonment and fines if their dress or behaviour is deemed inappropriate.
They are segregated in public places, including buses, schools and health
care. Women can only work in an
occupation that is not contrary to Islam; the law, for example, prohibits women
from becoming judges since they are believed to be swayed by emotion rather
than logic. Women are not allowed to travel without the permission of their
husbands. In court, the number of
witnesses required to prove a crime is higher if the witnesses are female. A woman's right to divorce and child custody
are limited. The legal age for girls to
'marry' is 9. Any form of friendship or
association between the sexes outside marriage is punishable by flogging,
imprisonment, forced marriage and stoning to death… For Ballard, however, these are merely 'another kind of
freedom'. For her, women living in Iran
and Islam-stricken societies have different freedoms because of their place of
birth and 'their' culture and religion.
Ballard even goes so far as to credit Islam for the facts that 'women in
Iran are in many ways among the most assertive and socially independent' or
that 'more women take engineering degrees in Iran than in the UK' though these
have nothing to do with Islam and everything to do with women's own resistance
and transgressions.
Ballard says
blaming religion for the denial of women's rights in countries like Iran
'disguised as concern for human rights' is tantamount to 'blaming Protestantism
in Britain or Catholicism in Mexico for endemic domestic violence' and to
seeing 'paedophilia as a symptom of a Christian or western culture'. This is
nonsense. Islam is in political power in Iran and many countries of the Middle
East and North Africa and cannot be compared to Protestantism in Britain. The
Bible is not the law of the land in Britain, while the Koran is in Iran; it is
not in the constitution and penal code nor enforced in the courts and by
morality police in Britain, while it is in Iran.
Nonetheless, according to Ballard, to condemn Islam is
racist. Ballard conveniently ignores
the distinction between anti-Islam sentiments and racism against Muslims. While racism is unacceptable, an attack on
Islam and Islamic states and laws is not only permissible but a requisite given
the indescribable violence and misogyny meted out by Islam in political
power. Progressive norms and secularism
are the results of enlightenment and just struggles against this very sort of
reaction. Ballard's rebuke only
attempts to silence those who speak out for civil rights by labelling them as racists.
In fact, however, it is her culturally relativist assertions that are
racist. By justifying and excusing
women's status as cultural, she denies women and people living in the Middle
East and Iran universal rights and freedoms.