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N. 62, June 2005
On Holy books
OK, so Newsweek made (probably) a mistake in reporting, based on an
anonymous source, that US interrogators at the infamous base in
Guantanamo Bay have desecrated the Koran, allegedly by flashing it down
the toilet. Bad journalism, though no worse than what the American
media have accustomed us to for the past several years. Even the use of
anonymous sources is neither unusual nor necessarily a bad idea
(Watergate might not have happened without the anonymous source
famously referred to as "deep throat").
What is most interesting about the Newsweek debacle is the reaction of
the US government, and perhaps even more so the underpinning of the
widespread outrage at what the American weekly has allegedly caused as
a result of its mistake.
Take the reaction by US government officials. The attack on Newsweek
was all-out, with allegations of damaging American reputation with
Muslims across the world. As if that needed any help since the Bush
administration has gone to war on the basis of what turned out to be
false information about alleged weapons of mass destruction;
information, of course, provided by an anonymous source ("curveball"),
and that former Secretary of State Colin Powell shamelessly paraded as
"fact" in front of the United Nations.
It is in fact astounding, and more than a little worrisome, that the
Bush administration is so eager to attack the press and use it as a
scapegoat for its own foolish foreign policies. It is downright scary
when so many right-wing media pundits are ready to jump on Newsweek for
being "unpatriotic" (code word for doing or saying anything they don't
like). It is funny (in a dark humor sense) when the magazine is labeled
as part of the "liberal media conspiracy" (a convenient rhetorical
fiction invented by the extreme right), even though Newsweek has ran
plenty of stories that favorably covered the war on Iraq and the
actions of the US military. It is dangerous when almost everybody
(except an op-ed piece in the New York Times) ignored the statements of
an American general (a member of the same military that Newsweek has
allegedly purposely bashed and engendered) to the effect that the riots
that killed several people in Pakistan had nothing to do with the
publication of the incriminated article.
But let us consider the broader picture for a moment. Suppose for the
sake of argument that the short, inaccurate, article in Newsweek really
was the spark that led to murderous riots half a world away. In what
reasonable sense are the author of the piece and editor of the magazine
responsible for such a sad outcome? The reasoning behind the
accusations raised against Newsweek is that we actually expect people
to become violent because a book they care for has been flushed down
the toilet. We may not (at least officially) condone such reaction, but
we put the responsibility square on the shoulders of the journalists,
rather than on the people who so easily resort to violence. You see, if
not OK, it is at least understandable when religious zealots riot or
kill to defend their twisted understanding of their faith. It must have
been a similar feeling that prompted the former Pope, John Paul II (the
one now being considered for fast-track to sainthood) to refuse to
apologize for the Catholic Church's killing of Giordano Bruno in 1600.
You know, Bruno may have been right about the fact that the earth is
not the center of the earth, but after all, he was a heathen...
But wait! Isn't precisely this sort of religious intolerance that
brought about the attacks on the US on 9/11 2001? There may have been
reasons why the terrorists did it, and these reasons surely had
something to do with American foreign policy in the Middle East during
the past several decades. But reasons are not the same as
justifications. The terrorists who attacked the twin towers in New York
and the Pentagon were fully to blame for having decided that the way to
resolve cultural and political conflicts is to kill innocent people.
Similarly, the only culprits in the Pakistani riots are those religious
bigots and overzealous security forces who went ahead and did the
rioting and killing, regardless of what real or imaginary "offense" to
their religion they may have used as an excuse for their senseless
actions.
Here is another way to put the point. Imagine the headlines:
"Creationists flush a copy of Darwin's Origin of Species down the
toilet. Dozens killed in the resulting riots on university campuses."
Of course, you will never see such a headline, except perhaps in The
Onion. The reason is not just that not even the most ardent secular
humanist actually regards Darwin's writings as sacred, but that the
whole ethics of science and humanism is about tolerance for other
people's views. To paraphrase Mel Brooks, a sense of humor is the
humanist's best defense against the universe. Unfortunately, the one
thing religious zealots seem to sorely lack is precisely a sense of
humor. Yet surely God, the most perfect of all beings, appreciates a
laugh here and there, even at Her own expense. After all, didn't she
create the Platypus? |