Following your line of reasoning, would it be fair to condemn Catholicism for the actions of Catholics during the troubles in Ireland? Of course not.
What? This isn’t my reasoning at all. This is what you read, but apparently we are not on the same page at all, and since I wrote the post, I believe I know my reasoning at least a bit better than you do.
Please notice that what I am against is the reliance on
feelings as a defense of horrible deeds, in this case mentally-disabled child murder. Should there be many Muslims that would defend the child over the book (or really, the charges that stem from Islamic societies’ view of the book, which, yes, is intimately tied to their religion), I would not call them anything other than Muslims. And in fact, I hope they’re out there. The Islamic world needs such people. But reality is, as in the murder of Shabbaz Bhatti (sp.), the Christian representative who has murdered for publicly speaking out against the blasphemy laws (and he wasn’t the only one; there were others of various religions, too), that the feelings of Muslims are worth more than the lives of anyone. That’s reality. It is not wise to bring up N. Ireland, not only because I am not a Catholic or a Protestant (so their examples don’t work with me), but also because if anything it adds to my point: We cannot live in peace in this world when the feelings of one group are appealed to in justifying the continued murder or oppression of their neighbors. That’s as true in N. Ireland as it is in Pakistan. In this particular case it comes down upon Islam (as it often does; I do not believe that such atrocities just happen to follow Islam around the globe for 1400 years, as though it’s all one big coincidence) because Pakistan is an Islamic society. Yet I’m the one who is unfairly blaming Islam? Get out of here with that. Either it’s wrong when Pakistanis and Irish do it, or everybody should be able to murder everybody else essentially because they
feel like it. Well that’s not a world that I want to live in, whether you call it Islamic or Catholic or Buddhist or whatever.
And I would remind everyone here that the issue of this thread is how to engage in dialogue with Islam, not to bring up all the issues everybody can think of with Muslims.
What of this discussion does not belong in the thread? I’m sorry, maybe you have a different idea as a Buddhist, but particularly for me as a Coptic Orthodox person,
these are the issues that MUST be discussed with Muslims if we are ever going to discuss anything else. I am not interested in photo ops where the Christian leader reiterates that Islam is a religion of peace (when it’s not), and the Muslim leader talks about how much Islam respects and loves Jesus (when they don’t), and then everybody goes home feeling warm and fuzzy…until things like
this happen, in complete conformity with the approach to the law engendered in Islamic (or, in Egypt’s case, rapidly Islamicizing) societies, and we all come back down to earth and look at how things are REALLY being run.
As a Christian, and as someone who cares about the rights of all people as creations of God, I cannot accept this. Don’t tell me that first I need to look at the teachings of Islam, as though we don’t know enough from 1400 years under it. Theory is theory, and it is valuable to the jurists, but practice is practice and
it, not the peaceful verses you can cherry-pick from the Qur’an, is what is going to murder this little girl, all while the sycophants tell us that Islam is really peaceful, and Muslims clamor on about how they don’t feel that their feelings and sensibilities are respected.
We’re not dialoguing our way out of this one, people. There was a great deal
more dialogue that went on in past eras (see Hoyland’s excellent “Seeing Islam As Others Saw It” for a compendium of translated primary source texts dating back to the very beginning of Muslim/non-Muslim engagement for a little taste of how our forefathers
used to approach this idea, before the errors of popular monotheism and “interfaith dialogue” caused so many to turn their back on our traditions), and yet here we are. It’s not a coincidence.