Swiss ban on minarets was a vote for tolerance and inclusion
By AYAAN HIRSI ALI - CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
Added: Wed, 09 Dec 2009 00:00:00 UTC
Thanks to Stefan for the link.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/1205/p09s01-coop.html
Washington - The recent Swiss referendum that bans construction of minarets has caused controversy across the world. There are two ways to interpret the vote. First, as a rejection of political Islam, not a rejection of Muslims. In this sense it was a vote for tolerance and inclusion, which political Islam rejects. Second, the vote was a revelation of the big gap between how the Swiss people and the Swiss elite judge political Islam.
In the battle of ideas, symbols are important.
What if the Swiss voters were asked in a referendum to ban the building of an equilateral cross with its arms bent at right angles as a symbol of the belief of a small minority? Or imagine a referendum on building towers topped with a hammer and sickle – another symbol dear to the hearts of a very small minority in Switzerland.
Political ideas have symbols: A swastika, a hammer and sickle, a minaret, a crescent with a star in the middle (usually on top of a minaret) all represent a collectivist political theory of supremacy by one group over all others.
On controversial issues, the Swiss listen to debate, read newspapers, and otherwise investigate when they make up their minds for a vote.
What Europeans are finding out about Islam as they investigate is that it is more than just a religion. Islam offers not only a spiritual framework for dealing with such human questions as birth, death, and what ought to come after this world; it prescribes a way of life.
...
Continue reading
http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/1205/p09s01-coop.html
Tweet
RELATED CONTENT
Will Self - BBC News Magazine 100 Comments
We chase "fast culture" at our peril - unusual words and difficult art are good for us, says Will Self.
Annie Murphy Paul - New York Times 24 Comments
New support for the value of fiction is arriving from an unexpected quarter: neuroscience.
The spectre of militant secularism
Nick Cohen - The Spectator 40 Comments
If you turn on the news tonight and hear of a bomber slaughtering civilians anywhere from Nigeria to the London Underground, I can reassure you of one point: the bombers will not be readers of Richard Dawkins.
A brutal price still paid for daring to...
Amol Rajan - The Independent 39 Comments
Their assault illustrates the extent to which defenders of religion still dominate our press, the brutal retaliation exacted on clever opponents of faith and the incorrigible stupidity of Sayeeda Warsi's claim about "militant secularism" last week.
The Sins of the Fathers [Also in Polish]
Richard Dawkins - RichardDawkins.net 341 Comments
I can’t help wondering at the quality of journalism which sees a scoop in attacking a man for what his five-greats grandfather did.
The Devil, the internet, Richard...
Stephen Bayley - Telegraph blogs 138 Comments
Which, talking of dissimulation, brings me to Richard Dawkins, a fanatic disguised as a scientist.
MORE BY AYAAN HIRSI ALI
Ayaan Hirsi Ali & The Big Ideas...
Ayaan Hirsi Ali - ABC FORA 46 Comments
Defend the Individual and So the West
Ayaan Hirsi Ali 51 Comments
Ayaan Hirsi Ali 275 Comments
Ayaan Hirsi Ali 33 Comments



















Comments
Comment RSS Feed
Please sign in or register to comment
View Comments Page