Letters/Discussion Forums
Reform of Islam a Commie instalment plan
David Lewis
Mandela understood that there was no possibility of winning a conventional war and that the armed struggle itself, was doomed. Instead of fighting for a one-party Marxist state, (or a unity government under a sovereign monarch), he came up with a Constitution and a Bill of Rights in which all South Africans, black and white, Jew and non-Jew, could live side-by-side.
This contrasts strongly with Meshaal and the Hamasist fantasy of a Jew-free Jerusalem.
Like Kemal Ataturk, who abolished the Ottoman caliphate and built a secular country called Turkey, Mandela abolished the Christian theocracy which had ruled South Africa under the National Party and introduced a secular Constitution.
The SA Bill of Rights includes freedom of religion (and freedom from religious rule). It contains 45 rights and freedoms missing in the Hamas Death Charter advocating the destruction of Israel in a “final battle against the Jews”.
If Hamas had been in charge of the South African Struggle, then its leadership too, would have delivered belaboured speeches of reconciliation, but only involving the ANC, PAC and Azapo, while excluding the Afrikaner nation. Leaving out the other side unfortunately, is all part of a heroic religious battle.
“Al Quids (Jerusalem) is our right, our capital, and we will continue until we get rid of occupation,” says Meshaal.
What about everyone else, those religions and sects whose capital Jerusalem also represents, in world history?
Listening to the Hamas spokesman on SABC, was like listening to a salesman offering a major “Reform of Islam on a Communist instalment plan”, an end to “Segregation on the Temple Mount”, coupled with an end to Israeli occupation of Al-Aqsa, and all in keeping with the vaguely Marxist language of Hamas.
In order to capture the jewel of Dar al-Islam from the Zionists, is Meshaal willing to forego general customs and traditions in a reform of Islam in the image of Hamas? All this perhaps, in order to negotiate favour with the country that is perceived to offer the gateway to paradise – South Africa and its readily available Freedom Struggle, offering moral immunity from such democratic questions, as how many rights does it take to make a real constitution, forgetting that Mandela himself, was a secularist and bipartisan, who supported a two-state solution.
“Islam, doesn’t need a Reformation, it needs an Enlightenment”, says Maryam Nemazee writing in the Guardian. A critic of religious zealotry, Nemazee also perceives what is immediately apparent, both in the rhetoric of Hamas and the radicalism of ISIS.
She says: “Islamism must be challenged by an Enlightenment, not a Reformation,” but for this to happen, “the right to criticise religions and the religious right (including the Christian right, Buddhist right, Hindu right and Jewish right) is crucial, as is international solidarity and an unequivocal defence of migrant rights, secularism, equality and citizenship.”
Thus, while one may be moved into solidarity with the oppressed, it makes no sense if we do so while resurrecting the political ghosts of 1976, only to fail even further in our duties, in forgetting that national reconciliation only came about in South Africa via a negotiated settlement – ballots not bullets – certainly not a winner-takes-all victory of war and bloody mayhem.
Thus one may also add, it is crucial here, that we recognise the right to criticise, debate, and engage, what is rapidly becoming yet another conservative backwater in South African politics, the Marxists (and Marxism) of the Gwede Mantashes of this world.
The empty Hamas rhetoric of those who brought us Marikana, Andries Tatane, and so many countless betrayals of Mandela’s democratic dream, are surely empty political promises, made by today’s ruling party elite in the name of ideology and human-made religion.
Cape Town
nat cheiman
October 22, 2015 at 11:34 am
‘The ANC kills its own. Never mind the freedom charter.
SA wants to solve every country’s problems and cannot solve their own. That’s why Africa is what it is. Desolate. Bankrupt. Wars. Poor human rights record. Because of Mugabe, Zuma, al Bashir. Kgame and leaders like them.
Idi Amin was an angel. The best is still to come.
Idiots’