Free
speech is not absolute
Shad Saleem Faruqi ; ( No description )
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The
StarANN-JAKARTA POST, 23 Januari 2015
The massacre by Muslim gunmen of a dozen employees of the
satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris on January 7 was an abomination, an
outrage, an atrocity and “an evil deed without a name”. It was a savagely
disproportionate act of revenge.
However, it must be recorded that some Muslims had indeed
moved the French courts to prohibit the magazine from committing vile acts of
blasphemy but had lost in the courts. It is a matter of speculation how
things would have worked out if the admirable French (and European Union)
apparatus against discrimination, racism and anti-Semitism had been extended
equally to give shade to the Muslim minority.
Europe is in the throes of Islamophobia. Geert Wilders,
Theo van Gogh and Pim Fortuyn of the Netherlands, Marine Le Pen and French
Southern League, Northern League of Italy, Democrats of Sweden, People’s
Party of Denmark and Freedom Party of Germany are in the forefront.
How “the heroic Enlightenment-inspired West” must react to
this affliction is a matter for Europeans to decide. Outsiders like me can
only react with concern to how educated and otherwise wonderful people can
delink Islamophobia from racism so that today in Europe it is possible to be
both anti-Islam and anti-racist.
For eight years, the irreverent, sadistic, rogue editors
and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo used the delightful art of cartooning not
for humouring but for hurting and humiliating. The journalists defiled the
sanctum sanctorum of all religions and pursued a warped passion for blasphemy
despite being told that they were offensive to the faithful and risked danger
to their innocent workers.
As we pray for the souls of those murdered, I hope that
this tragedy will lead to fundamental rethinking on a number of issues:
Western values: It is argued by some that Charlie Hebdo
represented free speech and, by extension, the value system of the West. To
hold up the magazine as the standard bearer of Western civilisation is to
sully the West. Charlie Hebdo was a bigoted, incendiary and racist
publication. It specialised in Muslim baiting. It banalised Arabs and Islam.
Surely these are not “Western values”.
An absolute right: Many Westerners assert that freedom of
speech is an absolute, non-negotiable right. This view is not supportable
morally or intellectually. Rights per se have no value. It is what rights are
for; it is the use to which they are put; it is the restraint and responsibility
with which they are exercised that is important.
The assertion that speech is an absolute right is a legal
lie. No nation adopts an “all or nothing” attitude. Everywhere, freedom of
speech co-exists with laws against defamation, contempt of court, privacy,
confidentiality, public order, national security and terrorism. Nowhere does
one have the right to shout “fire” in a crowded cinema hall.
A Council of Europe Convention outlaws “public provocation
to terrorism”. Edward Snowden tells us that state surveillance of information
is widespread in the West.
Public order laws are used regularly in the United Kingdom
and Germany to criminalise pro-Nazi ideas and any analysis that departs from
the officially sanctioned version of the holocaust. In February 2006, Austria
jailed British historian David Irving for three years for denying the
holocaust. Across Europe there is legislation against hate speech, racism,
anti-Semitism and against defamation of whole groups.
The existentialist reality is that in the West, overt and
covert censorship is widespread. Only that it is more refined,
non-governmental and decentralised.
For example, Israel’s barbarous treatment of the
Palestinians is censored out of the public domain. Any journalist, professor,
activist, public official or clergy who dares to speak critically of Israel
or report accurately the brutalities of its illegal occupation is made to pay
a heavy price.
Spiritual aspect: Human beings are not merely physical
creatures. There are also the spiritual, emotional and psychological facets
of our personality. Just as we have no right to violate the physical person
of another, we should have no right to injure the spiritual, emotional side
of another’s personality.
No advocate of free speech should have the right to
denigrate our religion, our prophets, our mother, father and other objects of
our devotion to such an extent that our mind, heart and soul find it
difficult to bear the hurt and humiliation.
If the free speech advocate pushes us beyond the precipice,
he should expect some reaction. His Holiness the Pope said it plainly in
Manila: “You cannot provoke, you cannot insult other people’s faith, you
cannot mock it.”
Concept of the sacred: What is missing in Western
commentary on this Paris tragedy is lack of understanding of “the sacred”.
Even in this day and age many people feel reverence towards their religion.
Those who have lost this sense of the sacred have no right to humiliate and
caricature those who still have it.
False attribution: There is a general tendency in the
Western media that whenever wrongs are committed by Muslims, their religion
is immediately given the blame. But a similar attribution is not made, and
rightly so, when atrocities are committed, of a hundred-fold magnitude, by Christian
leaders of the North Atlantic nations.
Selective condemnation: While we mourn the innocent who
were brutally murdered in Paris, we should also express indignation at
genocide and war crimes elsewhere. Day in and day out, innocent families are
being butchered in Gaza. A 65-year-old genocide is in place in occupied
Palestine. United States and Israeli drones knock out homes and mosques and
extinguish lives regularly, mercilessly and in total defiance of law.
Compared to the Paris massacre (17 dead), several million
have been killed in US-EU initiated and financed military expeditions in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, Libya and Syria. No bells toll for them.
While
condemning the perfidy at the Charlie Hebdo office in Paris, we should be
consistent in our commemorations and condemnations. As Martin Luther King
once said: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” ●
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