Ivan Strenski
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Ivan Strenski
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Filed under Al Qaeda, arab regimes, cultural transmission, historical interpretation, Indian religions, Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, life stories, LTTE, martyrdom, military strategy, patriotism, politIcal discourse, power politics, Saivism, suicide bombing, Tamil Tiger fighters, terrorism, vengeance, war reportage, world events & processes, zealotry
Ameen Izzadeen , courtesy of The Daily Mirror, 20 March 2015, where the title reads: “ISIS: The mystery behind the monster”
“… when you see them pray, you will look to them and think they are better than you; when they fast, you will think that they are better than you; they will recite Qur’an very well but it will never reach their throats, and they will leave the deen (the religion) like the arrow from the bow…” This was a warning from Prophet Muhammad about a group who were to come at a later time.
In early Islamic history, there was a group called Khwarij who fitted this description. They were zealots, but apparently failed to comprehend the spirit of Islam. Yet, hordes of youths lured by the Khwarij’s fanaticism left their homes to join the group. Ali, Islam’s fourth Caliph, declared war against them fearing their harmful ideology would destroy Islam. Continue reading →
David Kilcullen, in the Weekend Australian, 17-18 January 2015, where the title is ” Remote Control Terror” … See ttp://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/terror/new-terror-paradigm-after-charlie-hebdo-raids/story-fnpdbcmu-1227187609376 for web version where there are lively blog exchanges
LAST week Islamist terrorists killed 17 people in a horrifying raid on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, and in a siege at a Paris kosher market. The attacks were a direct assault on free speech in one of the world’s oldest democracies, exacerbated fears of Muslim anti-Semitic violence in Europe and prompted a global response. The attacks particularly resonated in Australia, of course, after December’s deadly Martin Place siege.
Charlie Hebdo attackers kill policeman–AFP
Fears of follow-on attacks have roiled Europe and America. Police evacuated Belgian newspaper Le Soir after a bomb threat, the French Army increased patrols at public sites and in Germany competing pro- and anti-immigration marchers rallied under heavy security. Continue reading →
Filed under Al Qaeda, authoritarian regimes, cultural transmission, Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, life stories, martyrdom, military strategy, politIcal discourse, power politics, self-reflexivity, suicide bombing, Taliban, terrorism, the imaginary and the real, vengeance, world events & processes, zealotry
Raymond Ibrahim, 7 January 2015, http://www.raymondibrahim.com/islam/the-significance-of-sisis-speech/
Speaking before Al-Azhar and the Awqaf Ministry on New Year’s Day, 2015, and in connection to Prophet Muhammad’s upcoming birthday, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, a vocal supporter for a renewed vision of Islam, made what must be his most forceful and impassioned plea to date on the subject.
SEE http://www.raymondibrahim.com/islam/video-sisis-remarkable-speech-on-dangers-of-islamic-thinking/ for the video of Egyptian President Sisi discussing how Islamic “thinking is antagonizing the entire world”
Among other things, Sisi said that the “corpus of [Islamic] texts and ideas that we have sacralized over the years” are “antagonizing the entire world”; that it is not “possible that 1.6 billion people [reference to the world’s Muslims] should want to kill the rest of the world’s inhabitants—that is 7 billion—so that they themselves may live”; and that Egypt (or the Islamic world in its entirety) “is being torn, it is being destroyed, it is being lost—and it is being lost by our own hands.” Continue reading →
Michael Roberts, reprint of an article written in May 2003 and published in the International Journal of The History of Sport , 2004, vol. 21, no. 3-4, pp. 650-663. This article remains substantially the same as the original draft in May 2003, but has been embellished by additions in April 2004.[1] …. It is further embellished with hyperlinks that embrace subsequent processes and events, including the ISIS phenomenon and its repercussions. Insofar as lone wolf or lone cell extremism has embraced Australia as well (e.g. Man Haron Monis and Numan Haider) our reflections can be guided by the thoughts penned recently by Alan Dupont (2014) and yours truly (2014 and 2013).
Kabir Ali of Lancashire -elder brother of Moeen
Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale – killers of Lee Rigby, 22 May 2013
Adebolajo’s declamation after the assassination
Man Haron Monis
NumanHaider–www.adelaidenow.com.au
In interpreting the reasons that induce a handful of Sri Lankan cricket fans within the migrant diaspora to indulge in confrontational abuse that extends even to members of the Sri Lankan cricket team, I suggested recently that a condition of marginalisation and alienation may be one of the factors promoting such excesses.[2] This analysis was informed by my experience in the Australian setting. Here, however, I focus on Britain and England. This land now hosts a number of migrant peoples, each internally diverse, but present in sufficient numbers to provide voice. As such, Britain is a sociological laboratory for comparative studies. Within this terrain I extend my hypothesis to link migrant marginalisation and alienation not only to cricketing fervour, but also to Islamic fervour of the sort recently expressed by the suicide bombers Omar Khan Sharif and Asif Mohammed Hanif. This thesis is speculative and does not have the support of substantial empirical research on my own part.
Sharif & Hanif in A Gaza lat before their suicide operations in 2003- from Hamas release later – see http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/3543269.stm Continue reading →
Filed under Al Qaeda, arab regimes, atrocities, cultural transmission, Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, life stories, martyrdom, photography, politIcal discourse, power politics, religiosity, suicide bombing, terrorism, the imaginary and the real, unusual people, war reportage, world events & processes, zealotry
SEE her response to the Question from law student Saba Ahmad at http://ozziesaffa.blogspot.com/2014/06/i-bet-she-regrets-asking-her-question.html ,,,
….. a question which replicated the simplistic, seemingly deep but quite obtuse and totally impractical point-of-view that was ALSO embodied in the question from Ursula — another law student — selected by TONY JONES of Q and A on Australian Broadcasting Channel’s popular Monday night show yesterday 27th October. This question was taken seriously by Geoffrey Robertson, HR Lawyer, and given a a partial nod of approval.
Brigitte Gabriel also took it seriously … and then tore it to shreds. Continue reading →
Filed under Al Qaeda, democratic measures, historical interpretation, Hitler, Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, law of armed conflict, Left politics, life stories, military strategy, politIcal discourse, power politics, propaganda, security, self-reflexivity, slanted reportage, terrorism, the imaginary and the real, tolerance, truth as casualty of war, unusual people, violence of language, women in ethnic conflcits, world events & processes, zealotry
Larry Pickering: “Obama avoids paying his Bin Laden Bill,” 20 October 2014, at http://pickeringpost.com/story/obama-avoids-paying-his-bin-laden-bill/3971A
Alternative Title: “Who Shot Osama?” — “WE ALL did it” says the Navy Seal Shooter
There is little sympathy for the Pakistani who fingered Osama Bin Laden in return for a $US25 million bounty. He still sits rotting in a Pakistani jail with no hope of ever seeing day light, let alone his reward. Meanwhile the US Administration continues to slip billions in foreign aid into the voluminous pockets of recently elected President Hussain and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and their corrupt Administration.
US Navy SEALs risked their lives intruding on Pakistan’s sovereign territory in the dead of night to take out the West’s most wanted man and within the shadow of a Pakistani military base. Needless to say the Navy SEALs were not entitled to overtime rates. Continue reading →
Filed under accountability, Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, atrocities, Islamic fundamentalism, landscape wondrous, life stories, martyrdom, military strategy, patriotism, performance, politIcal discourse, terrorism, the imaginary and the real, trauma, unusual people, vengeance, violence of language, wild life, world events & processes, zealotry
SEE Iraqi Parody of ISIS = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBNbH-FpnnsI
An Iraqi state television station is now airing a nationally televised parody series that directly mocks Islamic State militants and acts as an anti-ISIS propaganda tool, hoping to prevent more people from joining the jihadist movement. The first episode of the 30-part comedy series “State of Myths” aired last weekend on the Iraqi owned al-Iraqiya television station. Set in a fictional Iraqi town that has been seized by ISIS, the show makes fun of the militants and their followers and symbolizes the Islamic State as if it had spawned from the devil.
The show’s chief supervisor, Thayer Jiyad, said that the show’s aim is to alleviate the widespread fear surrounding the group. “[The show’s goal] is to remove this phobia that has taken root in a lot of people’s mind[s],” Jiyad told Agence France Presse.
The television station released a three-plus minute video trailer earlier this month that had been playing multiple times a day on Iraqi television leading up to the debut on Saturday. The trailer is essentially in the style of a music video and ridicules ISIS followers as being town drunks or fools. The Telegraph reports that the melody of the music video is a parody of the Islamic State’s anthem.
However, the trailer also feeds into a widely held belief that the U.S., Qatar and Israel are secretly behind the creation of ISIS.
The music video features a Satanic character in a devil suit leading an army of other devil-suited characters into the fictional town. An American cowboy is there with his horse to excitedly greet Satan and his brigade. The cowboy then leads Satan to marry a Jewish bride who has a star of David wrapped around her neck to show her connection to Israel. At the wedding celebration is a woman wearing a bright green suit and sunglasses representing the first lady of Qatar, Sheikha Mozah.
According to Middle East Media Research Institute translation of the Arabic song lyrics, Satan sings after the wedding “we will name our child ISIS.” “Summon him. Tell him to slaughter the people. Summon him. Tell him to toy with religion,” the devil sings.
An egg hatches and a character dressed as ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi emerges. The scene ends with al-Baghdadi shooting and killing everyone with a handgun.
But with the U.S. and its international coalition conducting airstrikes to help defeat ISIS, Thaer al-Hasnawi, deputy manager of the Iraqi Media Network, told The Washington Post that the show will no longer be taking shots at the U.S. and Arab allies. “The relationship with the Gulf countries and others became better and we didn’t want to do anything to affect that in a negative way,” al-Hasnawi said.
Ali Al-Qassem, the show’s director, told AFP that the show provides an outlet for him and the rest of the artists involved to contribute toward the defeat of the Islamic state. “We all have a duty to defend this country,” al-Qassem said. “We are not good at using weapons but we can also help defeat ISIS through our work.”
Given the nature of the show and real and present threat that ISIS militants hold having beheaded and tortured those they captured, the scriptwriter and many of the actors and actresses on the show have chosen to remain anonymous. “We encountered many difficulties, notably when some of the artists were too afraid to take part in the shooting out of security concerns,” al-Qassem said.
One actor on the show told The Washington Post that his reasoning for joining the show was because he had already lost two children to extremist violence. “For me, it’s personal,” actor Taha Alwan said. “It might be dangerous, but we need to send a message of how ugly these people are.”
Michael Roberts, presenting an item drafted on 22 September and circulated to Australian news agencies without receiving any takers; but drawing a pertinent response from an Aussie cricket buff with political interests — one which indicated that my NOTE was shallow and inadequate because it did not recognise the degree of hostility to the secular state and its institutions that resided within the thinking of the Islamic jihadist extremists, something that was not integral to either Serbian, Croatian, Sinhalese or Tamil extremists who got at each other’s throats. This note is presented below under the pseudonym Ibn Wirriq.
When some Australian Islamic extremists developed intentions of beheading a random Australian victim in the heart of an Australian city, they were not only affirming their faith in a symbol of militant Islam on the march, viz., the scimitar, but also pursuing a blitzkrieg upon the ‘Western mind’. The thought of beheading by sword arouses primeval fears in the West. Most people residing in the West today have moved beyond the era not so long ago in the 19th century-and-before when the guillotine, beheading by axe and hanging were standard forms of state punishment in their own heartlands. Today, moral revulsion is expressed at such a form of execution. Continue reading →
Filed under Al Qaeda, cultural transmission, democratic measures, immigration, Islamic fundamentalism, life stories, LTTE, politIcal discourse, power politics, security, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil migration, tolerance, vengeance, violence of language, world events & processes, zealotry
Alan Dupont, courtesy of The Weekend Australian, 27-28 September 2009, where the title is “The New War for Hearts and Minds”… Note that IS = ISIS = ISIL rre sused interchangeably .. Also see http://tv.unsw.edu.au/026648C0-C0EF-11E1-87A00050568336DC
Australians are understandably transfixed and repulsed by the barbaric excesses of Islamic State. But it would be a mistake to believe that the demise of IS will be rapid, easy or bring to an end the global turmoil that has accompanied its dramatic rise. This is because the caliphate jihadism of IS is not your run of the mill terrorism, but a virulent mutation of a broader revolutionary movement which has much in common with the totalitarian ideologies of the 20th century.
Communism, nazism and fascism sprang from a common source – dissatisfaction with the existing international order and a rejection of the tenets of liberal democracy. All were deeply authoritarian and aggressively expansionist, ruthlessly suppressing any opposition and justifying their excesses by claiming to represent a higher moral purpose and authority. Continue reading →
Filed under accountability, Al Qaeda, atrocities, australian media, authoritarian regimes, democratic measures, disparagement, Fascism, fundamentalism, governance, historical interpretation, Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, life stories, martyrdom, politIcal discourse, power politics, Taliban, truth as casualty of war, vengeance, world events & processes, zealotry
