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  • From Orhan Pamuk to Oriana Fallaci

    >From Orhan Pamuk to Oriana Fallaci

    Brussels Journal, Belgium
    July 12 2006

    >From the desk of James McConalogue on Tue, 2006-07-11 23:56

    In Turkey, Orhan Pamuk has recently taken to defending a controversial
    female columnist - Perihan Magden - after the Turkish Armed Forces
    pursued a case against the author for objecting and denigrating
    military service. Since the defendant, Magden, is a female supporting
    Mehmet Tarhan, a homosexual citizen, it has become a case not simply
    considering the place of women and homosexuals in Turkish culture, but
    more importantly, a case highlighting the right that all individuals
    have to express themselves, given the intrusive status of religion in
    public life. The cases of these authors demonstrate the very reason(s)
    why it continues to be necessary to defend the freedom of expression
    on religious matters in Europe's transitional democracies.

    In Late December 2005, Pamuk found himself embroiled in a case
    of defending his right to free expression. His homeland of Turkey
    brought charges against him for "insulting Turkishness" after he had
    claimed in a Swiss newspaper, Tages Anzeiger, that 30,000 Kurds and
    one million Ottoman Armenians were killed in Turkey yet nobody would
    dare to talk about it. He attended a court in Istanbul for his trial.
    The case was dropped on 22 January 2006 after the Ministry of Justice
    held that it was not legally viable for the country to intervene. For
    a country desperate for EU entry, and confident on proving basic
    liberal credentials, it was a sensible move. More recently, Elif
    Shafak - author of The Bastard of Istanbul - also faces charges of
    "insulting Turkishness" under the notorious Article 301 of the Turkish
    Criminal Code.

    However, Pamuk's case clearly demonstrates the religious boundaries
    that have to be challenged in order to attain free expression in
    transitional democratic countries. The trial of Pamuk was (rightfully)
    thrown out in January this year. The trial of his Italian counterpart,
    Oriana Fallaci, was due to begin on 12th June this year but has been
    delayed. Italy has encountered similar problems. While Italy, like
    Turkey, is attempting to run a nation by its demos, it still remains -
    in law, electoral politics and political culture - a variant democracy
    in transition.

    A modern Italian journalist whose writing on Islam has tended to cause
    insult is Oriana Fallaci. Perhaps unlike other writers, such as Salman
    Rushdie in Britain and Michel Houellebecq in France, Fallaci's case
    is slightly tainted. It is tainted because the case does not appear
    to offer critique through fiction - rather the essays themselves
    are political essays directly opposing Islam in fairly biting and
    vehement criticisms.

    The Oriana Fallaci controversy

    It seems important to retrace the steps of how, in particular,
    Fallaci's case developed; it is a valuable contemporary lesson on
    how Europe's transitional democratic states ought not to have acted
    following a literary controversy. On 11th September 2001, just under
    three thousand people were horrifically killed, following the intended
    crashing of four aircraft into the central and densely populated
    urban areas within New York City, Virginia and Pennsylvania. It was
    alleged by the American government and accepted by Islamic leader,
    Osama bin Laden - and remains accepted within most ranks of society -
    that a collective of Islamic organizations which operate under the
    name al-Qaeda were the perpetrators of the atrocity.

    Radically different analyses of the situation - most hot-headed
    and intolerant reports by either Western-centric reporters or
    Islamic commentators - have been offered across the world, based
    within a variety of political spectra. The immediate conflict has
    been posed as one of the West versus the Islamic faith, the Western
    value of toleration versus Islamic intolerance, or liberalism versus
    multiculturalism. One popular and vehement critic was the journalist,
    Oriana Fallaci. Her opinion essay, La Rabbia e l'Orgoglio (The Rage
    and the Pride) had been published in Italy, just eighteen days after
    the attacks of September 11 occurred. Two years later, in 2003,
    a brief follow-up book entitled The Force of Reason, formulated a
    similar critique of Islam operating in Europe.

    What it seems important to question is this: what is Islam's opposition
    to Fallaci's essays and books on Muslims? More to the point, how did
    the author ever manage to offend Islam? These questions are important
    since they enable us to then address the impossible sanctions that
    Muslims appear to be imposing upon individuals who seek to express
    themselves on issues relating to Islam.

    Fallaci's book, The Rage and the Pride, heavily criticizes many
    aspects of Islam and is vulgar, to say the least, in the manner
    in which it achieves its degrading criticism. Unlike Houellebecq's
    and Rushdie's novels, the text is a critique of Muslims in America
    and Europe. Her intolerance at the presence of Muslims in Italy,
    following the terrorist attacks in America, is immediately apparent.
    She writes: "I'm telling you that we have no room for muezzins,
    for minarets, for false teetotalers, for their fucking Middle Ages,
    for their fucking chador."

    The grounds and basis of its critique can be found in its hot-headed
    reactionary journalism, populist armchair philosophy, obsessive
    patriotism, ill-considered "atheism" with a large residual respect
    for Christian values, and a religious separatist outlook towards
    individuals in Muslim and non-Muslim cultures. Fallaci confesses her
    extreme Italian and American patriotism - the two countries in which
    she has lived. Of course, she finds that eternally divided Italy has
    no such modern patriotic blessing and the country has surrendered
    itself to what she refers to as Islam and its "sons of Allah". The
    mere "presence" of Muslims in the world is too much for Fallaci, and
    as for the presence of Muslims in Italy, it "was not an immigration,
    it was more of an invasion conducted under an emblem of secrecy." The
    "war of religion", we are warned, "is in progress." Consequently, "if
    we don't oppose them, if we don't defend ourselves, if we don't fight,
    the Jihad will win." (Interestingly, many well-respected academics,
    particularly in the United States, had already begun to pit Islam
    against the West in their accounts of global political conflicts,
    such as Sam Huntington's The Clash of Civilizations, 1993).

    For Fallaci, those who did not see the subsequent war in Iraq
    approaching are those who allowed Muslims, "the sons of Allah get
    away with a little too much." The essay quite clearly labels Muslims,
    "birdbrains", "scoundrels", "terrorists", inherently lazy people,
    welfarists and "idiots". As with the Theo van Gogh controversy in
    Holland, the criticisms were not of a wildly intellectual nature. The
    author often confesses her ignorance at the understanding of the
    Islamic faith, in addition to claiming the West to have the hold on
    rationalism, and Islam (and its associated states) to have the claim
    on arbitrary womanizing and countless murdering and wars.

    The Italian courts are still embroiled in the Fallaci controversy
    and the case is far from resolved. The courts have recently decided
    to pursue the trial of Fallaci, by trying her case on the Italian
    defamation laws. It is claimed that Fallaci defamed Islam. If this
    case were to win, it would challenge a largely common response of
    Western liberal states: to not intervene in cases of free expression,
    especially when those cases relate to religion. A state can be brought
    to its knees through intervention in the sphere of free speech.

    Why free expression?

    A basic tenet of a modern European society is that each individual is
    free to enjoy certain basic and personal freedoms, including that of
    expressing oneself freely. In its history, that sense of expressing
    oneself freely is often felt to be most sincerely represented when
    it comes to defending free expression with respect to religion.

    In the doctrine of John Stuart Mill's On Liberty, published in 1859,
    the right to freedom of expression and its conditions are stated
    clearly. The most fundamental principle of a freely operating liberal
    society is the right to the "freedom of opinion". This "independence
    is, of right, absolute." The only exception in which Mill conceived
    such freedom to be limited was if it were to impose severe harm onto
    others - he declared this to be a rare thing. The intervention in
    a literary controversy is no longer an option for a modern European
    government.

    In the Fallaci controversy, the right to freedom of expression
    currently prevails. Despite the fact that Fallaci had written a
    derogatory essay claiming that Italian Muslims are "birdbrains"
    and "idiots", it still remains important to proceed to defend the
    freedom of expression - publishing it freely and imposing no ban. The
    statements expressed here, by themselves, are decontextualised from
    the remainder of the text. Therefore, pithy extracts offer us little
    insight into the argument - just as the pamphleteering of Rushdie's
    extracts by Muslims on the streets of Pakistan meant very little,
    since they are not merely name-calling texts.

    Within the confines of the law, Fallaci's essay itself does not
    harm others. The harm or offence caused by the text could only,
    at the very most, be understood as a breach of racial and religious
    hatred or the blasphemy laws. In modern society, the breach of those
    principles should rarely qualify for harm or strong offence-related
    arguments in cases of free expression. It is certain that we live in
    a multicultural society and that the notion of multicultural society,
    and Muslims within that society, are constantly changing. However,
    it is just as certain that we live within a liberal society - in
    which its basic architecture requires that we do not remove or alter
    certain fundamental freedoms, including that of free expression.

    The harm done to others, in cases where it is felt the text will
    incite mass religious hatred - with the preconditions of tyrannical
    governments and a homogenous citizenry - should only be executed
    on rare occasions, since it does little justice to the cultural
    diversity and critical discussion said to underpin free expression
    itself. That is to argue that a ban, based on harms incurred, assumes
    the individual to be unreflective, lacking in spontaneity and often,
    incapable of reason. If that is to be every Muslim's subject of
    defence, then it might be asked if it is a subject worth defending.
    In fact, the texts themselves rarely represent harm, or offence, and
    the calls for bans based on offence are often premature reactions
    of the unnervingly dogmatic representatives of Islam, clearly set
    against the West in politics, economy and individual values.

    It is certain that free expression on matters pertaining to Islam
    will prevail. It is through recourse to dated Catholic-centric
    Italian laws that Muslims have sought to legitimize their claims to
    offensiveness. This legally enables the right to intervene in the
    publications of Fallaci's anti-Islamic writings. However, since the
    harm done to others did not signify a physical injury, or anything of
    that magnitude, to any individual or group, there were few grounds for
    rightful interference. The most coherent legal route to preventing
    the offence was through the prosecution of Fallaci, with reference
    to the defamation laws.

    In Italy, a unique history, embroiled in changes under the Italian
    constitution during Mussolini's regime, meant that Catholicism occupied
    a primary place in considerations of the state. It is certain that
    the Italian constitution, in its first three articles sets out to
    protect all citizens and accord them the freedom to speech until it
    sacrifices "public morality". The third article of The Constitution
    of the Italian Republic of 1947 states that "All citizens have equal
    social dignity and are equal before the law, without distinction
    of sex, race, language, religion, political opinions, personal
    and social conditions." Yet, only in the past twenty years, have
    significant changes in Italian society brought about toleration of
    free expression towards religion. The Constitution also states that
    "Religious confessions other than Catholic have the right to organize
    in accordance with their own statutes, in so far as they are not in
    conflict with Italian laws." Therefore, there are cases in which
    the law does impinge upon the freedom to organise and express oneself
    on religious matters, when it contravenes Italian law; a law already
    heavily skewed by the solidarity of Catholicism.

    As elsewhere in Europe, in Italy it is clearly illegal to incite
    discrimination on religious grounds. However, rather than argue for
    offence through incitement to religious hatred laws - which Fallaci's
    Muslim prosecution still remain eager to pursue - the most successful
    and quickest way of suppressing free expression in Italy is through
    claims to defamation. This is the current claim that has been made in
    the Muslim prosecution against Fallaci. It is claimed that her writings
    "defame" Islam. Italy's own government often use the defamation
    laws to bring critics of ministers, and antagonists of the state,
    to justice, and it has been claimed that it is rare (and possibly the
    first case in Italy) for free expression to be challenged by Muslims
    through recourse to the defamation laws. At the time of writing,
    the case for Fallaci has not finished. One would, however, hope for
    Italy that what has happened in the rest of Europe for many centuries,
    will continue to happen and that free expression on matters pertaining
    to Islam will prevail. That is to say, Fallaci should be acquitted.

    The only imaginable case in which this would no longer hold would be
    as follows. Since Fallaci offers perhaps the strongest and prejudiced
    "hate" article against Muslims - against a national (Italian) and
    global community - there is a possibility that it could be proven to
    incite religious hatred. The case for incitement to religious hatred
    would have to prove that there was a threat to physical existence, or
    harm done to others, of such significance that this piece of literature
    should no longer be available in society, and the author sentenced
    accordingly. Her trial has yet to begin this month in Bergamo.

    Europe could well do with laying down a red carpet for authors such as
    Fallaci rather than trying them - after all, it is freely speaking and
    writing individuals that make European society such a vibrant platform
    for the free exchange of ideas. If you remove the artistic and literary
    freedom to express, through the bizarre invention of corrupt laws,
    then there is very little left in the essence of modern society -
    constitutional or cultural - that is still worth defending.

    http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/11 74
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