Two horrific suicide bombings, in two different cities, two hours apart—this is how Egyptian Christians began Holy Week.
Thus writes
Benny Huang, as he seemed to be predicting
the Thursday terrorist attack in Paris.
In the cities of Tawra and Alexandria, Muslim terrorists stormed Coptic churches
where they proceeded to blow themselves to a fine pink mist while
taking 44 worshippers with them. These two attacks followed last
December’s horrific suicide bombing at St. Peter’s Cathedral in Cairo that killed 29.
Does Egypt have a problem with Islamic violence? Not according to
Egypt’s most prominent clergyman, Dr. Ahmed al-Tayeb, who holds the
prestigious title of Grand Imam of al-Azhar. At a conference in Cairo
last month, al-Tayeb said that the incidence of Muslim violence around the world is rather
unremarkable:
“There is an obvious double standard in the world’s
judgment of Islam on the one hand, and [its judgment of] Christianity
and Judaism on the other, despite the fact that all are guilty of one
and the same thing, that is, religious violence and terrorism.”
The point al-Tayeb is trying to make is pretty straightforward: that
people are quick to chide Muslims for terrorism when in fact the terror
problem cuts across religious lines. Clearly all of this talk about
terrorism must be a cloak for bigotry. If people were truly concerned
with eradicating terrorism they would condemn it wherever it’s found.
The fact that they don’t exposes their hypocrisy.
… The “double standard” accusation is a serious one that was likely
intended to disarm Westerners who are notoriously sensitive about
treating others with bias. But is there really a double standard in the
way we perceive Muslim violence compared to other kinds? Yes, there
is—just not in the way that the Grand Imam suggests. Each time a Muslim
terror attack occurs, journalists attempt to lead the public through
what can only be called a coping ritual. The ritual has four stages.
The first of these is the “let’s not jump to conclusions” stage in
which reporters take great pains not to assume that the attacker is a
Muslim just because his name happens to be Abdul or Muhammad or even
because he yelled “Allahu Akbar”
moments before his killing spree began. Then, when it turns out that he
is a Muslim, reporters wonder if his religious affiliation might have
been incidental to the attack—which it rarely ever is. In the second
stage, the shortest of the four, reporters actually acknowledge the
attack and its motive before quickly moving on to the third stage. I’ll
call this the “Muslims fear backlash”
stage, and it’s characterized by stories about hijab-snatchings (that
usually turn out to be hoaxes) or Muslims getting dirty looks in the
street. It isn’t even necessary to find any actual incidents of backlash
after an attack because the fear of a backlash, not the backlash
itself, is the real story. The fourth and final stage is when reporters begin to ask how the right-wing might “exploit” the story. This serves as a warning
that taking action to stave off civilizational demise is somehow letting
the terrorists win.
So yes, there’s a double standard. No other kind of terrorist attack is reported this way.
But that’s not what Ahmed al-Tayeb meant by a “double
standard.” What he meant was that Muslims, Christians, and Jews commit
proportional amounts of terrorism but Westerners seem only to notice or
care about the Muslim variety. This is a truly extraordinary theory and
one that I have often tried to test. Every time there is a Muslim
terrorist attack anywhere in the world—and they’re happening now at a
rate of several per month—I ask myself if there were other attacks
committed in the name of other faiths that the media failed to report or
I failed to notice.
Let’s start with the Palm Sunday attacks
in Egypt. Have there been any comparable attacks carried out by
Christians against mosques? Nope. The only one that I could find
occurred this January not in Egypt but in Canada. The alleged
perpetrator, Alexandre Bissonnette, appears to be an anti-immigrant nationalist and a fan of Donald Trump and Marine Le Pen but not particularly religious.
To be sure, the Canadian mosque attack was
terrorism but it was also anomalous and not religiously inspired. There
is no equivalence between Bissonnette and the suicide bombers who
attacked two churches on Palm Sunday, and even if there were it wouldn’t
begin to balance out the countless other terror attacks that have
occurred in recent weeks.
… Presumably all of these attacks have proportional counterparts
committed in the name of other faiths, right? No, they don’t. Though
Lutherans represent the largest religious group in Sweden, there has
never to my knowledge been a Lutheran terrorist attack in that country
or any other. Likewise there are no Russian Orthodox suicide bombers.
There is no Anglican approximation of ISIS. If the Muslims don’t have a
complete monopoly on religious terror, they’re pretty darned close.
Yet terror-deniers never tire of trying to draw some kind of false
equivalence between Muslim terrorism and other kinds, no matter how much
of a stretch it is. They often deny or downplay Muslim terrorism, or
they assume that every white terrorist is both Christian and religiously
motivated, or they blame Christians for Muslim terrorism.
… The cliché that “Terror Knows No Religion” sums up [the leftists'] vapid sentiment pretty well.
Yes it’s true that not all Muslims are terrorists. And yes it’s true
that not all terrorists are Muslim, though an absurdly high proportion
of the religious variety are. What cannot be denied, however, is that
the overlapping between these two groups—Muslims on the one hand and
terrorists on the other—is very real. Those who choose not to see it are
willfully blind, which isn’t a virtue.
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