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by Denis MacEoin • February 15,
2019 at 5:00 am
- Courts and
government bodies still find it hard to make useful
distinctions between gratuitous, racist, or violent speech
about Islam and Muslims on the one hand, and reasoned argument
that questions aspects of Islam, or even the religion overall,
from the point of view of human rights, on the other.
- The situation in
Europe is even more ambiguous. Most European states have laws
that purportedly support free speech, yet accusations of hate
speech and Islamophobia often lead to trials and sentencing
can lead to imprisonment. This skewing of facts is one crucial
reason why free speech needs to be defended.
- It is more than ever
necessary to educate the public and many of its leaders about
both the benign and troubling facts of Islamic history,
doctrine, and culture. Those leaders who must require a more
solid grounding include the ones who deny that terrorism has
genuine links to issues such as jihad warfare -- and who are
constantly told that "real" Islam is above rebuke.
- We must indeed paint
a positive picture of what so many Muslims contribute to their
host societies. We should, for example, celebrate the way in
which Muslim-Americans in Philadelphia launched an appeal that
raised over $100,000 to help repair two Jewish cemeteries that
had been vandalized. Or the Muslim veteran in Arkansas who
volunteered to stand guard with others at any Jewish site that
was threatened with attack.

Even
fair-minded and non-racist authors, websites, members of the media
and others who present a rational critique of Islam end up being
condemned as malicious racists and "Islamophobes." (Image
source: iStock)
Speaking and writing about Islam today requires
discretion, sensitivity, and a good grasp of facts. Doing this is
harder in most European countries than it is in the United States,
where the First Amendment insists on powerful free speech rights.
The need for sensitivity stems from the almost universal
condemnation of "Islamophobia", a mainly good-hearted
response to democratic worries that innocent Muslims may be
targeted with violence or hate speech, even as many (but far from
all) seek to integrate themselves and their families into Western
society.
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