Posts tonen met het label The Wall Street Journal. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label The Wall Street Journal. Alle posts tonen

zaterdag 2 april 2011

Bernard Lewis over Egypte

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The Wall Street Journal publiceerde vandaag een interview met Brits-Amerikaanse historicus Bernard Lewis, onder meer bekend van zijn boek What Went Wrong?: The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East (een boekrecensie is te vinden op Liberales). Hieronder vindt u een passage van het interview, waaraan ik relevante links heb toegevoegd.

Egypt is a (...) complicated case, Mr. Lewis says. Already the young, liberal protesters who led the revolution in Tahrir Square are being pushed aside by the military-Muslim Brotherhood complex. Hasty elections, which could come as soon as September, might sweep the Muslim Brotherhood into power. That would be "a very dangerous situation," he warns. "We should have no illusions about the Muslim Brotherhood, who they are and what they want."

And yet Western commentators seem determined to harbor such illusions. Take their treatment of Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi. The highly popular, charismatic cleric has said that Hitler "managed to put [the Jews] in their place" and that the Holocaust "was divine punishment for them."

Yet following a sermon Sheikh Qaradawi delivered to more than a million in Cairo following Mubarak's ouster, New York Times reporter David D. Kirkpatrick wrote that the cleric "struck themes of democracy and pluralism, long hallmarks of his writing and preaching." Mr. Kirkpatrick added: "Scholars who have studied his work say Sheik Qaradawi has long argued that Islamic law supports the idea of a pluralistic, multiparty, civil democracy."

Professor Lewis has been here before. As the Iranian revolution was beginning in the late 1970s, the name of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was starting to appear in the Western press. "I was at Princeton and I must confess I never heard of Khomeini. Who had? So I did what one normally does in this world of mine: I went to the university library and looked up Khomeini and, sure enough, it was there."

'It" was a short book called "Islamic Government"—now known as Khomeini's Mein Kampf—available in Persian and Arabic. Mr. Lewis checked out both copies and began reading. "It became perfectly clear who he was and what his aims were. And that all of this talk at the time about [him] being a step forward and a move toward greater freedom was absolute nonsense," recalls Mr. Lewis.

"I tried to bring this to the attention of people here. The New York Times wouldn't touch it. They said 'We don't think this would interest our readers.'

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zondag 25 juli 2010

Update 'Journolist'-schandaal


Recent publiceerde ik een blogpost over het
Journolist-schandaal, waaruit blijkt dat sommige Amerikaanse journalisten in 2008 samenspanden om zeer negatief nieuws over de presidentskandidaat Barack Obama zo veel mogelijk in de doofpot te houden (het betrof nieuws over Obamas nauwe band met de racistische haatprediker Jeremiah Wright). Ondertussen heeft het Journolist-schandaal zich door verdere onthullingen uitgebreid. The Washington Post publiceerde een artikel waarin het Journolist-schandaal vanuit een links ("liberal") perspectief wordt besproken. The Wall Street Journal publiceerde daarentegen een artikel waarin het schandaal vanuit een rechts ("conservative") perspectief wordt besproken. De onderstaande video is ook van The Wall Street Journal. In het eerste deel van deze video bespreken James Freeman en John Fund het Journolist-schandaal.



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