The Taliban and Destruction of the
Idols
As expected,
the Taliban decision to destroy statues from the Islamic State has created
a big international uproar. The entire "civilized world", with the UN at
its head, has been jumping up and down to condemn this "great crime
against humanity." The world leaders have been shaking with anger. The
Taliban have been warned by the UN of a "devastating reaction" if they
harm the sacred stones. One pundit even suggested sending an army to
rescue the beleaguered Buddhas.
It is
fascinating to see all these political and cultural champions get all
worked up with "moral indignation." Through their pious pronouncements
they try to persuade us that theirs is a principled stand.
The only
problem is that it is difficult to discern what that principle is.
Is it their
concern for humanity? Well, it is the same UN that has started the project
of torturing and killing the people by the millions in the war-devastated
Afghanistan by imposing sanctions against it. The scheme they are using
--- depriving the little children of milk, the hungry of food and the sick
of medicine --- has been perfected in Iraq where it has killed half a
million people according to the estimates of the UN itself.
The UN
Security Council first imposed sanctions on Afghanistan in October 1999.
They were tightened even more in December 2000, under strong pressure from
the United States and Russia. According to a Global Policy Forum report,
the new sanctions were imposed despite an August 2000 report from the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), which
highlighted the "tangible negative effect" on Afghanistan's populace of
the existing sanctions. Another draft OCHA report has said that "no poor
country has ever been sanctioned the way Afghanistan has." So much for
their concern for humanity.
Is it their
concern for religious freedom? It is important to remember that the
Taliban are not destroying any place of worship or anything belonging to a
place of worship. And although it is not apparent from the heated
condemnations, the Taliban are not doing anything illegal either. The
stone artifacts belong to their country; no body else holds title to them.
If one buys a home and it comes with some statues, he has a right to keep
them, sell them, destroy them or throw them away. Similarly, whether or
not others like it or agree with it, the Afghans have a right to do what
they want with the mountains, stones, and statues in their country, as
long as they do not cause a danger to anybody else.
Things become
more interesting if we begin to check the credentials of the anti-Taliban
campaign itself on the issue of religious freedom. Consider India, a
leader in the current crusade, where the same people are ruling today who
had led frenzied mobs to destroy the historical Babri Mosque just eight
years ago and had killed 2000 people in the ensuing protests. It is
amazing that the butchers have been prompt to display righteous anger over
this "medieval barbarism."
Given that the
record of our beloved "International Community" on humanity and religious
freedom is rather appalling, let us look at something more plausible, like
a concern for universal cultural heritage. The results are no better here.
For one must ask where were our guardians of cultural heritage when
mosques, libraries, schools, historic buildings, and museums ---many of
them great historic monuments ---- were being destroyed in the Balkans.
More than 1200 mosques were destroyed in Bosnia by the European fanatics
known as Serbs. More than 200 were destroyed in Kosova. Of course, unlike
the Taliban they also killed the Imams and the rest of the population with
the historic monuments they were destroying. Of course they committed
other crimes so grisly that their cultural vandalism appeared to be a
non-issue in comparison. And of course, the guardians of cultural
heritage, of religious freedom, and of humanity were happily strolling
through their art galleries when the butchery was going on.
So if there is
a principle behind their "principled stand," we are unable to find it. In
a rare case the Washington Post tried to find an answer to the question as
to why Afghans must keep and preserve the statues: "These old buildings
are Afghanistan's identity. And when you lose your identity, you've lost
your soul." The problem is these artifacts are NOT Afghanistan's identity.
And the assertion is nothing but unvarnished cultural imperialism.
Afghanistan's identity derives from the life and example of the Prophets.
Prophet
Ibrahim, alayhi-salam, destroyed the idols, even though his own father was
the idol maker. He was threatened with the wrath of gods. (Today, his
followers are being threatened with the wrath of the "International
Community," which is the same thing). He did not care. And in the process
he exposed the weakness of the idols and the wickedness of the
idol-worshippers. Later on, in Makkah he said the prayer:
"O my
Lord! Make this city one of peace and security and preserve me and my sons
from worshipping idols. O my Lord! They [the idols] have indeed led astray
many among mankind." [Ibrahim 14:35-36]
When the
pagans later on filled the Ka'ba he had rebuilt with idols, Allah sent
Prophet Muhammad, Sall-Allahu alayhi wa sallam. Again he destroyed all of
the idols there, forever. He did not preserve them as cultural heritage.
Rather, with every stroke of the hammer, he declared, "Truth has come and
falsehood has vanished."
This is the
Islamic heritage. You clean your own life and your own house of the idols.
You do not preserve them as your cultural heritage or as a cherished work
of art. And in doing so you will liberate the world.
So is there a
principle behind the "International Community's" stand? May be there is an
underlying principle, but it is a sinister one. One "expert" summed up the
mood of this commotion while talking to the Los Angeles Times. "I would
send in the army, I really would," Pratapaditya Pal, a visiting curator to
the US, said. "It is of course very difficult to compare [a statue] with a
human life, but don't forget that we [humans] can reproduce. These Buddhas
. . . are destroyed forever."
There it is.
We are living in a world in which animals are more valuable than humans
(In India, for example, men have been slaughtered over the issue of cow
slaughter). And now even the stones are more valuable than the humans. And
to top it off, those who have developed such inverted values are the
self-declared champions of human dignity. And why not? Those who have
hearts of stone are naturally showing their love for stones.
This is
a cruel, self-conceited, arrogant, wicked and ignorant world. It has
incessantly talked about its love of art but the only art at work here is
the art of propaganda. It needs someone who can expose that. It needs the
iconoclasts who would refuse to continue the business as usual; who would
challenge its hegemony and tyranny; and who would rid it of its cruelty,
self-conceit, arrogance, and ignorance. |