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The
Ramadan Olympics and Islam's "Law of Necessity"
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Because
Islam's "Law of Necessity" fully permits Muslims to find creative
ways to adapt when Sharia Law conflicts with practical life, the argument that
societies are obliged to make concessions to privilege all the demands of
strict Sharia Law is considerably weakened.
Islam Is a flexible religion: religious obligations allow exceptions,
subject to circumstances. Muslim religious scholars balance countervailing
obligations to determine when exceptions apply. Understanding such balancing of
necessities in Islam is not only important for public policy, but also for
understanding how an identical set of religious beliefs can be used to justify
war or peace, terrorism or peaceful coexistence.
Fasting
During a Ramadan Olympics
As the London Olympics are underway, London organizers of the Olympics,
according to
a
report in the New York Times, are supporting the needs of Muslims athletes,
"with more than 150 Muslim clerics on hand to assist athletes, as well as
fast-breaking packs including dates and other traditional foods."
As it is also the month of Ramadan, during which Muslims are obligated not
to eat or drink, even their own saliva, from sunrise to sunset, spare a thought
for the more than 3,500 Muslim competitors, who, if they strictly observed
Ramadan, would be abstaining from food and drink from the first prayer of the
day (Fajr) at 2.44 am through to the dusk prayer (Maghrib) at 8.53 pm (as at
July 29, 2012, see
Islamicfinder.org).
Optimum sporting performance cannot be expected from athletes who go without
food or drink for over 18 hours -- a circumstance which would not be fair to
them.
Many Muslim Olympians now in London will therefore not be fasting. Some may
rely on religious rulings (
fatwas) which exempt sportspeople from the
Ramadan fast, such as a ruling
issued
in 2010 by the German Central Council of Muslims, that Muslim professional
footballers, because they depend upon football for their living, need not fast
during Ramadan.
The United Emirates, using a
different
approach stated that players may omit the fast as long as they do not stay
in one place for more than four days. This is based upon a standard exemption
for travelers during Ramadan (
Sahih
Bukhari, 3:31:167). Another exemption,
following
advice from imams in Morocco, is being used by English Olympic rower Moe
Sbihi, who announced that he will donate 60 meals to poor people in Morocco for
each missed fast day. Many Olympic athletes are postponing their fasts until
their sporting commitments are completed. However,
the
Moroccan football team are fasting and trusting that Allah will help them
to victory. All Muslims agree that fasting is obligatory during Ramadan; they
differ in the exceptions they make.
"Necessity":
Balancing What Is Forbidden with What Is Permitted
There is a powerful principle in Islamic jurisprudence, the "Law of
Necessity," that permits what is forbidden -- the end justifying the
means. If a goal is obligatory, then the means can also be obligatory, even if
otherwise they might be forbidden.
In Islam the universe of possible human deeds is divided into what is
obligatory, permitted neutral, disliked, or forbidden. Then there is the need
to balance the pros and cons of every act. This is a world of choice which can
embrace a necessary evil, or take a pass on a good deed for the sake of a
greater good.
Some "Law of Necessity" exceptions go back to Muhammad; they are
hard-wired into Islamic law. A case in point is the exemption for travelers
during Ramadan, which some athletes rely on. Another exemption for travelers,
which also comes straight from Muhammad, allows Muslims to catch up on prayer
times later than the correct hour.
Life raises many complex challenges, and the balancing of obligations and
prohibitions may require more subtle reasoning, dependent on context. The
renowned medieval Muslim scholar al-Ghazali explained how the principle of
balancing necessities can be used to make lying permitted or even compulsory, according
to the circumstances:
"Speaking is a means to achieve objectives. If a praiseworthy aim is
attainable through both telling the truth and lying, it is unlawful to
accomplish it through lying because there is no need for it. When it is
possible to achieve such an aim by lying but not by telling the truth, it is
permissible to lie if attaining the goal is permissible … and obligatory to lie
if the goal is obligatory . …" (The Reliance of the Traveller,
p.745-46, paragraph r8.2)
Yusuf al-Qaradawy has written extensively about the jurisprudence of
"balancing necessities." He
explains that interests
and pros and cons of any deed must be balanced, one against each other and
weighed carefully.
Al-Qaradawy's focus was politics, not sport. He cited an example of the
support given by the Islamist political leader Maulana Maududi to Fatima Jinnah
in the 1965 presidential elections in Pakistan. Previously Maududi had declared
that it was not permissible in Islam for a woman to govern (based on the
teachings of Muhammad). He came, however, to regard Jinnah as the lesser of two
evils, so he commanded his followers to vote for the female candidate, and
against General Ayub Khan.
Understanding such balancing of necessities in Islam is important for public
policy -- to grasp how an identical set of religious beliefs can be used to
justify war or peace, terrorism or peaceful coexistence -- or any other
decision, based solely on the circumstances at the time.
Balancing
Necessities and Public Policy
Consider the issue of the timing of the Olympics: Was
Juan
Cole correct to suggest that the Olympic Games should be rescheduled so
they did not fall in Ramadan?
The fact that the "Law of Necessity" allows Muslims to get around
restrictions suggests that although it might certainly have been thoughtful or
considerate, it would not in any way necessary to reschedule the Olympics for
the sake of Muslim religious sensitivities.
The possibility of balancing necessities needs to be taken into account when
organizations and governments are faced with demands that they make concessions
for the sake of complying with Islamic Sharia Law. Because the Islamic
"Law of Necessity" fully permits Muslims to find creative ways to
adapt when Sharia law conflicts with practical life, the argument that societies
are obliged to make concessions to privilege all the strict demands of Sharia
Law is considerably weakened.
Non-Muslims in particular need to take balancing necessities into account.
Consider Sheikh Ahmed al-Mahlawi of Egypt who accepts that it is not a sin for
Muslim religious scholars to see women in the streets with unveiled faces: the
need for Muslim scholars to get around in public places outweighs the
prohibition against men seeing women's unveiled faces. He
boasted,
all the same, that he had compelled a US consular official to wear the
hijab
[headscarf] when she met with him. If the U.S. official had been better
informed, she might have asked that Sheikh al-Mahlawi take a more moderate,
balanced approach. She might have refused to submit to the
hijab,
pointing out that the Sheikh copes very well with looking at the unveiled faces
of women whenever he goes into the street.
Balancing
Necessity and Terrorism
Al-Qaradawi concluded
that although it is wrong in general for Muslims to participate in non-Islamic
governments or to make alliances with non-Muslim nations, compromises may be
made when such lesser evils are 'balanced' against the greater good of the
Muslim cause.
He also made the observation that many of the conflicts between different
factions working for the success of Islam exist because of different
interpretations about how to "balance" the different
necessities and interests in Islam. Of course, Muslims who agree on their
fundamental principles of faith can have very different views on how to balance
these beliefs in any given situation.
Jihadi [holy war] martyrs make use of theological balancing necessities when
they justify their methods for killing enemies. In Islam, for example, it is
forbidden to kill oneself, but suicide, if it can be justified in the cause of
Allah or furthering Islam, is not only permissible but heroic. Jihadi clerics
are more than willing to write fatwas which ensure that a would-be martyr goes
to his death with a clear conscience.In Islam, it is forbidden to kill women
and children, but "collateral damage" is acceptable if a greater end
is in sight. It is also forbidden in Islam to lie, but it is recommended that a
pious jihadi using
taqiyya [dissimulation] if necessary to achieve, say,
a "martyrdom operation." The Al-Qaeda manual, for instsnce, appeals
to the principle that "necessity permits the forbidden" to justify
criminal acts; and the Indonesian jihad cleric Abu Bakar Bashir argued that
jihadis were entitled to hack foreigner's bank accounts to obtain funds (see
The
Crime-Terror Nexus, New York State Office of Homeland Security). (For a
bizarre example of the extremes to which jihad fatwas can go, see
this report by
Raymond Ibrahim.)
The ramifications can be momentous for Muslims and non-Muslims alike:
consider the difference in opinion between the Saudi leaders and Usama Bin
Ladin concerning the presence of American soldiers in the Kingdom after the
invasion of Kuwait. Bin Ladin
opposed
this infidel 'occupation'. In his 1996
fatwa
declaring war on America he counted the presence of US soldiers as
"one of the worst catastrophes to befall the Muslims" since the death
of Muhammad.
Saudia Arabia's Grand Mufti and supreme religious authority Sheikh Ibn Baz,
however, allowed American troops into Saudi Arabia, although in another fatwa
he had stated that Christian servants could not be employed in Arabia:
"It is not allowed to have a non-Muslim maid. It is not allowed to have
a non-Muslim male or a non-Muslim female servant, or a worker who is a
non-Muslim for anyone living in the Arabian peninsula. This is because the
Prophet Muhammad ordered the Jews and Christians to be expelled from that land.
He ordered that only Muslims should be left there. He decreed upon his death
that all polytheists must be expelled from this Peninsula. (Islamic Fatawa
Regarding Women, p. 36 compiled by Abdul Malik Mujahid).
Both Usama Bin Ladin and the Saudi authorities agreed on the principle that
infidels could not be permitted to live in Saudi Arabia. What they disagreed on
was how to balance this against other requirements, such as the need to
safeguard the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This difference was enough to trigger
Bin Ladin's war on America.
What distinguishes a jihadi terrorist from a more peaceful Muslim,
therefore, may not be any fundamental difference in belief, but, as in the
West, merely in a given instance, how the religious legal principles of his
faith should be applied.
Mark Durie is an Anglican vicar in Melbourne, Australia, and an Associate
Fellow at the Middle Eastern Forum.
Germany
Tackles Islamic Radicalization
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"The
long-term strategic objective of these Islamist organizations is to destabilize
and democratically and liberally elected states and to influence political
decision-making." — Report, German State of Lower Saxony
The German state of Lower Saxony has published a practical guide to
extremist Islam to help citizens identify tell-tale signs of Muslims who are
becoming radicalized.
Security officials say the objective of the document is to mitigate the
threat of home-grown terrorist attacks by educating Germans about radical Islam
and encouraging them to refer suspected Islamic extremists to the authorities.
The move reflects mounting concern in Germany over the growing assertiveness
of Salafist Muslims, who openly state that they want to establish Islamic
Sharia law in the country and across Europe.
The document states: "The threat posed by Islamic terrorist
organizations continues apace, and the risk of radicalization and recruitment
by Islamists continues unabated. Young Muslims are being courted by Islamist
propaganda. The threat level in Western countries has escalated to a higher
level. A particular risk increasingly stems from self-radicalized individuals
or small groups without formal networks of connections. This poses special
problems for law enforcement. The long-term strategic objective of these
Islamist organizations is to destabilize democratically and liberally oriented
states and to influence political decision-making."
The document continues: "Islamist terrorism poses a significant threat
to the internal security of Germany. National security authorities have
identified at least 235 Islamists with German citizenship who have sought or
received paramilitary training in places such as Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Somalia. It is assumed that more than half of these individuals have returned
to Germany. Of these, approximately ten are currently in prison. There is a
very real danger that these individuals have returned to Germany with the aim
of committing acts of terrorism."
According to the report, German security agencies estimate that
approximately 1,140 individuals living in Germany pose a high risk of becoming
Islamic terrorists. The document also states that up to 100,000 native Germans
have converted to Islam in recent years, and that "intelligence analysis
has found that converts are especially susceptible to radicalization…Security
officials believe that converts comprise between five to ten percent of the
Salafists."
The document provides a frank assessment of political Islam. It describes
Islamism as "a political ideology that disputes the constitutional order
of the Federal Republic of Germany. Unlike secular extremist ideologies like
Communism or National Socialism, which are not based on religious ideas,
Islamism is based on the religion of Islam. At the core, Islamists advocate a
politicized form of Islam. Religion for them is not only an individual matter
of faith, but Islam is seen as a comprehensive political-religious societal
concept. Islamist organizations and movements, despite their differences, all
seek to create societies based on the legal system of Sharia. This law divides
people according to their beliefs, their gender and their relationship to the
Islamic state in different legal categories. It rejects the idea of
democratically legitimized governance, particularly by non-Muslims over
Muslims, because only Allah is recognized as a sovereign. Thus Islamism, with
its strict commitment to Sharia, is directed against the Constitution and the
rights and freedoms guaranteed therein, equality and respect for human rights.
The Islamic idea of a theocratic state and social system is also opposed to the
principle of popular sovereignty and the separation of powers."
The document also includes a list of 26 "possible characteristics of
radicalization processes" to help German citizens identify potential
radicalization.
Some of the items on the list include: "critical questions about Islam
are viewed as an attack on the addressed person or group; questioning certain
views on the interpretation of Islam is interpreted as a betrayal of the group;
increasingly stringent interpretation of religion; rejection or aggression
against anything "Western;" Islam is the solution, the so-called
Western world is seen as the cause for all the problems; dualistic worldview,
applying a strict friend-foe schema; repeating Islamist slogans; religious
strictness is required of the entire society; Muslims with different
orientation (that is, Shiites) are called infidels."
Other items on the list include: "visiting radical mosques or Islamic
or preachers; participating in religious seminaries with radical preachers;
solidifying contacts with other radical extremists and individuals; visiting Islamist
websites; watching films that promote violent jihad; increasing willingness to
aggressively and violently enforce religious or religiously colored political
claims on others (possibly by also increasing interest in weapons); potentially
criminal activity against property and persons with reference to the
inferiority of the so-called infidels and/or committed to harm the alleged
enemies of Islam; implementation of survival training, combat training or
similar paramilitary activities; frequent and/or lengthy trips to countries
with majority Muslim populations, particularly language classes, visits to
paramilitary training camps; preoccupation with life after death or martyrdom;
changes in financial position (no verifiable income or sudden debt)."
Not surprisingly, the document has been greeted with outrage by Muslims, who
have accused the government of Lower Saxony of "scare-mongering." The
opposition Social Democratic Party (SPD) has described it as "absurd"
and "
outrageous."
Interior Minister Uwe Schünemann has
rejected
the criticism; he says he has no intention of withdrawing the document,
which is part of a concerted strategy by German officials to step up their
monitoring of Salafist groups after a series of violent clashes with police.
The clashes erupted when around 30 supporters of a conservative political
party, PRO NRW, which is opposed to the further spread of Islam in Germany,
participated in a campaign rally ahead of regional elections in the western
state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW).
Following the fights -- in which 29 police officers were injured, two of
them seriously -- a video surfaced on the Internet by a known terrorist, the
German-born
Yassin
Chouka, a member of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan in the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border region.
In the
German-language
video, Chouka calls for members of PRO NRW and German media to be killed.
He also urges the Salafists to move away from street confrontations, where the
risk of being arrested is great, and instead to target PRO NRW members in their
homes and workplaces.
In
nation-wide
raids on June 14, over 1,000 German police searched about 70 Salafist
homes, apartments, mosques and meeting places in seven of Germany's 16 states
in search of evidence that would enable the German government to outlaw some of
the dozens of Islamist groups operating in the country.
Announcing the crackdown, Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said he had
banned a Salafist group called
Millatu
Ibrahim, based in the western city of Solingen. "The Millatu Ibrahim
group works against our constitutional order," he said, "and against
understanding between peoples." Among other things, Millatu Ibrahim
teaches its followers to reject German law and to follow Islamic Sharia law,
and that "the unbelievers are the enemy."
Friedrich also said that the raids in Bavaria, Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg and
North Rhine-Westphalia, among other locations, may unearth evidence that would
allow outlawing two other Salafist groups, the
DawaFFM
and "
Die Wahre
Religion" [DRW, "The True Religion"].
In a
June
8 interview with the newspaper
Die Welt, Interior Minister Friedrich
said: "Radical Salafism is like a hard drug. All of those who succumb to
her become violent."
Friedrich also said the recent Salafist attacks on German police show
"that the threshold for violence has decreased in an alarming way. There
can be only one answer: The government must make it clear with all the force of
the law that our democracy is fortified. Salafists fight the liberal-democratic
legal system and in its place want to introduce their radical ideology in
Germany. But we will not let that happen. We will defend our freedom and our
security with all our might."
Soeren Kern is a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute. He
is also Senior Fellow for European Politics at the Madrid-based Grupo de
Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies Group. Follow him on Facebook.
The
Circumcision Debate in Germany, Austria and Switzerland
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Medical
researchers have affirmed that circumcised males are less susceptible to
sexually-transmitted diseases and to penile cancer; yet only 11 percent of
German males are circumcised.
A German regional court held at the end of June that circumcision of males,
practiced by Jews and Muslims, is a "bodily injury" of the child and
punishable as a crime. German political leaders reacted against the opinion,
and the probability that it would portray today's Germany in a negative light.
The court order will likely be nullified definitively by the German parliament
and constitutional court, but anti-circumcision policies have spread to
Switzerland and Austria as well.
A month later, on July 20, the German federal parliament, the Bundestag,
passed a resolution calling for the protection of the rights of Jewish and
Muslim parents to circumcise of their male offspring with medically-qualified
personnel. A draft law guaranteeing these religious liberties has been proposed
for introduction this autumn.
The action by German politicians was followed, however, by news that two
medical institutions in Switzerland, the Children's Hospital in Zurich and the
St. Gallen teaching hospital, decided temporarly to suspend circumcision of
infants unless medically necessary.
Then, on July 24, came an order by Markus Wallberg, governor of the western
Austrian province of Vorarlberg, also prohibiting the circumcision of males for
non-medical reasons in all public hospitals, pending clarification of the
German situation.
The Cologne case originated in November 2010, when a four-year old Muslim
boy was circumcised at a clinic in the city, on the request of his parents.
After two days, because the child was bleeding, the parents took him to the
emergency room at the University Hospital of Cologne.
The public prosecutor in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia filed a
complaint against the doctor who performed the procedure. The lower, district
court determined in June 2012 that the doctor was blameless, and the doctor was
acquitted. The district court held that circumcision was a form of "bodily
injury," but was justified by the approval of the parents, the cultural
prevalence of circumcision among Muslims, and evidence of medical advantages
among circumcised males.
Medical researchers have affirmed that circumcised males are less
susceptible to sexually-transmitted diseases and to penile cancer. Der
Spiegel acknowledged that "It remains undisputed that circumcision
leads to better hygiene and can also be helpful in preventing some forms of
cancer," but noted that while common in the U.S., Israel, Muslim
countries, and elsewhere, male circumcision is less widespread in Europe.
Currently, about 55 percent of newborns in the U.S. are circumcised. Only 11
percent of German males are circumcised.
The public prosecutor in North Rhine-Westphalia appealed and the case was
moved up to a regional court. The regional court also rejected the charge
against the doctor in the matter, ruling that the "grey area" of
legal uncertainty about male circumcision left the practitioner innocent. The
judges, however, reaffirmed that, as a precedent for the future, circumcision
was a form of "bodily injury" that was not justified by the parents'
wishes, and was unnecessary for the health of the child.
The regional court determined that the child's "right to physical
integrity" was more important than the constitutionally-guaranteed
religious rights of the parents. The judges held that the religious freedom of
parents, and their right to decide how to raise their children, would not be
restricted if they were compelled to wait until the child himself decided
whether he wanted to be circumcised. As described by the German weekly Der
Spiegel, the court concluded that "a child's right to
self-determination should come first."
The regional court opinion did not apply to the whole of Germany. But the
Berlin Jewish Hospital announced that in accord with the law, it would suspend
circumcision for religious purposes.
The controversy brought universal condemnation of Germany by Jewish and
Muslim representatives, who were joined by Christian religious leaders in
condemning the court action. Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that the
criminalization of circumcision could make Germany a "laughing-stock"
of the world. Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle pointed out that it would harm
Germany's efforts to present itself as a tolerant country. Many commentators
agreed that the court opinion was especially problematic because of Germany's
history of anti-Jewish genocide during World War II.
Religious leaders were more severe in their comments. Rabbi Pinchas
Goldschmidt, President of the Conference of European Rabbis, called the court
decision the worst attack on Jews in Germany since the Holocaust. Noting that
the opinion was based on the ostensible rights of the child, Rabbi Goldschmidt
warned that "the language of the human rights" is a new medium for
anti-Jewish prejudice.
The Central Council of Muslims in Germany denounced the regional court
decision as a "blatant and inadmissible interference" with parents'
rights. It stated, "Freedom of religion is highly valued in our
constitution and cannot be the plaything of a one-dimensional case law which,
furthermore, consolidates existing prejudices and stereotypes."
Among German Christian religious authorities, the Roman Catholic archbishop
of Aachen, Heinrich Mussinghoff, described the regional court ruling against
male circumcision as "contradicting basic rights on freedom of
religion," adding that the court argument about "the well-being of
the child" was "not convincing." A legal affairs official of the
German Evangelical Church, Hans Ulrich Anke, said the ruling did not
"sufficiently" take into account the religious importance of the
ritual.
The case opened many areas for contention, including the belief that
children have a "right to self-determination," what the limits of
such "self-determination" would involve, and whether parents have a
right to raise their children in the religious traditions parents choose. In
addition, Catholic, Protestant and some Muslim exponents viewed the decision as
reflecting growing disregard for religious sensibilities rather than as an
expression of anti-Jewish or anti-Muslim prejudice. Finally, the link between
Jews, numbering about 200,000 in Germany, for whom circumcision is a religious
obligation, and Muslims, numbering at least four million in the country, among
whom circumcision is required or recommended, according to different Islamic
interpretations, raises questions about the security of both minorities, and
potentially of others, in maintaining their religious practices.
Rabbi Goldschmidt, in an address to a conference of European Orthodox rabbis
in Berlin, called on them to defy the German law and to continue circumcising
newborn boys. He told the group that if the law is enforced, "it would
mean that a large part of the (Jewish) community does not have a future in
Germany."
Similarly, Serkan Tören, a Turkish-born representative of the centrist Free
Democratic Party, which governs Germany in a coalition with the larger
Christian Democratic Party, warned that "a ban on circumcision would be
the clearest signal to the Muslims in our country that they are not part of
Germany, that they are not even welcome."
Legal obligations and guarantees of human rights should be universally
applied – but these should include mutual respect between religious and
non-religious people, and members of differing religious communities. Germany
would do well to examine thoroughly, respectfully and seriously, the beliefs of
its Jewish and Muslim citizens about the circumcision of their sons, not to
mention the unquestionable medical advantages. In favoring the freedom of
parents to choose circumcision, Germany will rid itself of an absurd and
unnecessary diversion at a time of much greater political and financial
responsibilities both in Europe and the world.
A
Truly Heroic Sportsman
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Gino
Bartali was a modest man who, during World War II, helped save 800 Jews from
death.
Gino Bartali, the legendary Tuscan Italian cyclist who died in 2000 and is
acclaimed in his home country of Italy, but less well known internationally, is
a heroic figure, not only in his sport, but even more outside of it, as
documented in a recent biography.
Bartali's greatest sporting feats as a cyclist were to win the Tour de
France twice, in 1938 at the age of 24, and in 1948, and the Giro d'Italia
three times. His skill as a cyclist was widely admired, especially for his
winning three consecutive mountain stages of the Tour in 1948, a feat that
remained unequalled until Mario Cipollini's four consecutive sprints in 1999.
However Bartali is even more worthy of admiration for his heroic wartime
activity. More deadly than the Italian cycling rivalry between Bartali and
Fausto Coppini -- with the country divided into "bartalini" and
"coppini" adherents -- was the wartime division between fascists and
partisans. Bartoli, an active member of Catholic Action and a Tertiary of the
Carmelites, kept his distance from Fascist authorities and refused to dedicate
his cycling triumphs to Mussolini as the Duce expected.
Bartali was a modest man who helped save 800 Italian Jews from death. After
Nazi Germany had occupied Italy in the fall of 1943, Bartali was asked by the
Archbishop of Florence, Cardinal Elia Dalla Costa, to help supply local Jews
with food, shelter, and false identity papers. Bartali's Jewish friend Giacomo
Goldenberg, just outside Florence, in Fiesole, informed him about the Holocaust
that was under way, and the danger to the Jewish community. The Nazis at the
time were deporting 10,000 Italian Jews to death camps.
Bartoli, though aware of the danger; with a wife and two year old son, and
as a member of the Assissi underground resistance, distributed funds to Jewish
families hiding in Florence, and helped Jewish refugees escape through the
Swiss Alps.
Wearing his racing jacket with his name on it, he made over 40 cycling trips
between Florence and Assisi -- a trip of 110 miles – and carried false
documents in the tube of his cycle as far as Rome. He took photos and paper to
the Resistance's clandestine printing presses, which produced the forged
documents by which Jews could conceal their identity. It was revealed only in
December 2010 that Bartoli had also saved the lives of a Jewish family by
hiding them in a cellar in Florence.
Although Bartali was often stopped on his trips by the Fascist police force,
he managed for some time to avoid arrest. At last he was questioned by the
notorious and brutal Major Mario Carita, head of the Florentine secret police
who, with his gang o 200 fascists, pursued Jews and anti-fascists, imprisoned
for over a month, but was never tried and was later released.
For his deeds and courage as a man who dedicated himself to saving others,
Bartali has been honored by a tree planted in his name in his hometown of
Florence, and has been nominated as one of the Righteous among Nations at the
Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem.
By contrast, a man who has no claim to be honored is Jacques Goddet, the
French sports journalist and director of the Tour de France from 1936 to 1986,
years in which Bartali won twice. At best, Goddet's record during the Vichy
regime in World War II can be viewed as ambiguous. He protected the Tour de
France from collaboration with the Nazis; President Jacques Chirac called him
one of the inventors of French sport. At worst, however, he can be seen as a
personal collaborator in the most despicable event in France.
As a journalist, Goddet, at least in the first years of Vichy, expressed
strong support for Marshal Petain. The Marshal, he wrote, was giving France a
purifying bath. Goddet, more of a right wing traditionalist rather than a Nazi
or Fascist, claimed to be upholding the true patriotic intentions of the old
soldier.
Goddet will, however, always be infamous for having handed over the keys to
the Velodrome d'Hiver ( "Vel d'hiv"), the Parisian cycling stadium,
when the Nazis wanted to intern thousands of Jews there. Goddet never clearly
explained his behavior on this occasion. This concession can be regarded as the
single most appalling even in the story of Vichy. On July 16, 1942 the French
police, together with French fascists and the Nazi SS, arrested 13,000 Jews in
Paris. About 8,000 of them were confined to the Vel d'hiv before being sent,
via Drancy, to Auschwitz and other camps.
After the war Goddet was charged with collaboration, but through the
intervention of friends, especially Emilien Amaury, he was not punished. The
bitter end of this story is that on July 16, 2012, the Amaury Sports
Organization (ASO), which now runs the Tour de France, refused to commemorate
the event which had discredited France seventy years earlier at the Vel d'hiv,
the stadium which was torn down in 1959.
It is good to remember, therefore, that other people displayed such
surpassing courage, such as the hero, Gino Bartali.
Michael Curtis is author of Should Israel Exist? A Sovereign Nation under
Attack by the International Community.
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