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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Interview: No Religion Promotes An Inclusive Society
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Maryam Namazie |
An Interview with Maryam Namazie is an Iranian-born writer and activist based in London
by Nilantha Ilangamuwa-06/30/2019
Courtesy: Daily Financial Times
Courtesy: Daily Financial Times
She is energetic and outspoken. Her creativity on resistance against
repressive regimes has attracted many communities around the globe.
Maryam Namazie is an Iranian-born writer and activist based in London.
She is the Spokesperson for Fitnah – Movement for Women’s Liberation,
One Law for All and the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain. She hosts a
weekly television program in Persian and English called Bread and Roses.
No doubt because of her activities for protecting and promoting human
freedom, she is a top enemy of the country where she born.
Maryam was born in Tehran, but she left Iran with her family in 1980
after the establishment of the Islamic Republic. She then lived in
India, the UK and then settled in the US where she began her university
studies at the age of 17. After graduating, Maryam went to Sudan to work
with Ethiopian refugees. Halfway through her stay, an Islamic
government took power. She was threatened by the government for
establishing a clandestine human rights organisation and had to be
evacuated by her employer for her own safety.
Back in the United States, Maryam worked for various refugee and human
rights organisations. She established the Committee for Humanitarian
Assistance to Iranian Refugees in 1991. In 1994, she went to Turkey and
produced a video documentary on the situation of Iranian refugees there.
The Islamic regime of Iran’s media outlets has called Maryam ‘immoral
and corrupt’ and did an ‘exposé’ on her entitled ‘Meet this
anti-religion woman’. In 2019, the Islamic regime’s intelligence service
did a TV program where Maryam was featured as “anti-God”.
“No religion promotes an inclusive society. Religion is an exclusive
club that sees its set of beliefs as superior to other sets of beliefs,”
she said. “Inequality is a pillar of Sharia courts but this is not just
the case for Sharia courts,” she added.
In this interview I have communicated with her on life in Iran,
consequences of Sharia and religious courts, Easter Sunday’s bombings in
Sri Lanka, and her readings on terrorism and radicalisation.
Following are excerpts from the interview:
Q: Thank you for joining us Maryam! Tell us what is One Law for All
initiative all about? And why is it important to have such an
initiative?
A: One Law for All was established to oppose Sharia and religious
courts because they are inhuman and abuse human rights. This is the
case whether the courts are in Iran and Saudi Arabia or in Britain.
One’s religion or belief is a basic right and a private matter.
Religious courts, however, have nothing to do with the right to religion
and are part of the Islamist project to control and manage women,
minorities and dissenters. We know Sharia’s criminal code includes the
death penalty for apostasy and blasphemy and stoning to death for gay
sex or sex outside of marriage. It is unbelievably brutal.
In Britain, Sharia courts deal mainly with the family code, which some
feel is trivial but the code is highly discriminatory against women and
legitimises violence against women. For example, under Sharia’s family
code, a woman’s testimony is worth half of a man’s, marital rape is not
seen as a crime and child marriage and polygamy are deemed acceptable.
One Law for All argues minority women from Muslim backgrounds should
have the same rights in the family as other citizens.
Inequality is a pillar of Sharia courts but this is not just the case
for Sharia courts. The Jewish Beth Din in the UK, for example, also puts
women in limbo by refusing to grant them divorces without their
husband’s permission. We know also historically about the role played by
ecclesiastic courts. One Law for All argues that it is dangerous to put
the rights of citizens in the hands of mullahs, priests and rabbis.
Secular states, public policy and laws are the best way to ensure the
rights of all citizens irrespective of background and belief.
Q: You were born in Iran and then moved to other places. Tell us
about your childhood and the life in Iran till you left your motherland?
A: My parents are secular Muslims so I never had any religion
imposed on me at home and never felt lesser for being a girl. In fact, I
have always felt supported and loved even after I became an atheist.
I never really felt religion’s influence on my life until the Islamists took power in Iran.
Then things changed dramatically. There were Islamists sent to my school
to separate the boys from the girls in the playground, executions on TV
and the beginnings of compulsory veiling and the rest is as they say
unfolding history. After living under an Islamic state, I realised very
quickly though that religion in the state is heinous and why I campaign
against it.
Prior to it, Iran was under the Shah’s dictatorship and for a time, the
revolution gave everyone hope for real change but the Islamists took
hold of it, slaughtered a generation and 40 years on, people have been
living in a theocracy in the 21st century.
Q: What went wrong in Iran?
A: If you have fundamentalists in power, things will deteriorate
very quickly, even for believers, as a believer is not the same as a
fundamentalist. This isn’t a theoretical discussion. We can see the
effects of a theocracy on the lives of freethinkers, women, LGBT,
religious minorities and especially young people in countries like Iran
or Saudi Arabia but we can also see what happens when even secular
societies are run by theocrats.
Look at Modi’s India where Muslims can be killed for eating beef. Look
at the situation for abortion rights, for example, in the US with the
rise of the Christian-Right. Or the situation of Muslims in Myanmar and
so on. In Sri Lanka, too, you have extremist Sinhala Buddhist groups
like Bodu Bala Sena which have had a detrimental effect on religious and
other minorities and women.
Those killed in Sri Lanka could be any of us. We could be next. We must all take an unequivocal stand against all forms of fascism and hate. We must not allow the conflation of the religious-Right with ordinary believers, victim blaming, and the dehumanisation of the ‘other’ to legitimate a politics of terror and hate
This is the problem with identity politics everywhere. It reduces masses
of people to just one religious or cultural identity though people are
much more complex than that and have countless characteristics that
define them. Identity politics reduces 21st-century citizens into
warring tribes.
Which is why after the horrendous Easter Sunday terrorist attack in Sri
Lanka, ordinary Muslims going about their lives are collectively blamed
and we see Muslims being run out of their homes (including some
ex-Muslims I know in Sri Lanka) or Muslim shops are burnt down. Also,
refugees from Pakistan who have fled to Sri Lanka because of Islamist
persecution become displaced again when they are run out of their homes.
How can terrorising innocent people be a solution for terrorist attacks
against other innocent people?
Q: Some of the reports indicated that you are ex-Muslim. Is that true?
A: I am an ex-Muslim and work with ex-Muslims in Sri Lanka and
elsewhere too. Of course, our atheism is our private affair, it’s a
matter of conscience and belief, but when people can be killed for
apostasy and blasphemy, we feel the need to say we are ex-Muslims
publicly to challenge the status quo and defend the right to expression
and conscience without fear of persecution or discrimination.
Q: Why are you against Sharia Law?
A: As I mentioned, all religious laws are discriminatory. The
problem with Sharia and other religious laws is that they are coercive.
If religion is a personal belief, then why do you need laws to enforce
it? For example, some Muslims in my family fast during Ramadan and
others have never fasted. This is the personal choice of adults.
However, in Iran or Saudi Arabia because of Sharia law, one will be
flogged or imprisoned for eating during Ramadan. Examples abound such as
in the case of compulsory veiling. If an adult doesn’t want to wear the
veil, why do you need morality police to beat a woman, arrest her? Or
if someone doesn’t believe in Islam, well that is their freedom of
conscience.
Why must the state execute someone for atheism? Religious law is
fundamentally unjust as it forces people to do not what they believe but
that which the mullahs and clerics in power tell them. Coercion and
violence go hand in hand with Sharia courts.
Q: Sri Lanka is the latest victim of self-proclaimed Islamic State. What is your reading on the attacks in Sri Lanka?
A: We at Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain along with other
atheist groups (including the Council of Ex-Muslims of Sri Lanka)
expressed our outrage at the terrorist attacks and also mourned the many
killed.
In our statement, we said:
“We are outraged at the Islamist attacks on churches and hotels in Sri
Lanka. Our hearts go out to the survivors and victims – hundreds killed,
including at least 45 children, and more than 500 wounded. We mourn
them with the people of Sri Lanka and the world.
“The terrorists claim to have killed innocent Christians and others in
order to ‘avenge’ innocent Muslims killed in Christchurch; the
Christchurch terrorist also feigned to kill innocent Muslim worshippers
as an act of ‘vengeance’. What should by now be very clear to everyone
is that these terrorist attacks have nothing to do with addressing
grievances – real or imagined – and everything to do with using terror,
hate, supremacy and violence as a tool to impose the ideology and
dominance of the religious-Right.
“Whether Islamist or white nationalist, whether in Sri Lanka or
Christchurch, these far-Right movements have no respect for human life
and rights: Christian, Muslim, ex-Muslim, believer or non, white, black
or brown, young or old; no amount of murder or mayhem is too heinous for
their hateful cause. Always anti-those deemed ‘other’; always relying
on hate, religion, violence, misogyny, homophobia, tribalism,
xenophobia, anti-Semitism and terrorism to sow fear and division.
If you have fundamentalists in power, things will deteriorate very quickly, even for believers, as a believer is not the same as a fundamentalist. This isn’t a theoretical discussion. We can see the effects of a theocracy on the lives of freethinkers, women, LGBT, religious minorities and especially young people in countries like Iran or Saudi Arabia but we can also see what happens when even secular societies are run by theocrats
“For too long and still far too many continue to excuse one side over
the other depending on where they stand. Some will defend the Islamists,
others will defend the Christian-Right, both sides saying there are
‘legitimate grievances’ even if they claim to abhor terrorism. Many will
even go so far as to blame the victims, especially in the case of
apostates and blasphemers like Charlie Hebdo or the Bangladeshi
bloggers. What these apologists fail to see is that there is no
legitimisation for murder.
“Those killed in Sri Lanka could be any of us. We could be next. We must
all take an unequivocal stand against all forms of fascism and hate. We
must not allow the conflation of the religious-Right with ordinary
believers, victim blaming, and the dehumanisation of the ‘other’ to
legitimate a politics of terror and hate.“Sooner than later, we must
recognise that we are all in this together against the far-Right and in
defence of our common humanity. Our lives and our rights are interlinked
irrespective of our backgrounds and beliefs.
“It is a matter of urgency that governments stop appeasing theocracies
and the religious-Right, including via faith schools and child
indoctrination, religious courts and faith-based policies. This only
strengthens divisions and the religious-Right.
“Defending secularism, citizenship and universal rights is the only way forward.”
IS has killed Yazidis, Kurds, Syrians, Christians, Muslims, ex-Muslims,
Atheists, young and old, women and men… From IS, Taliban, the Islamic
regime in Iran to Boko Haram and Al Shabaab, no one is safe. From London
to Madrid to NY to Colombo and Kabul no one feels safe. The whole point
of terrorism is to target innocent civilians indiscriminately to instil
hate and despair and fear. That is why courage and hope and love are so
important for all of us. They want to divide us; we must insist on our
common humanity.
Q: What are your suggestions and recommendations to prevent the IS’ influences?
A: It is important that we treat everyone equally as citizens and
not members of some religious or cultural ‘group’. That will help focus
on terrorists and criminals rather than placing collective blame on
everyone who is Muslim, for example. Islamism is a political far-Right
movement like the white supremacists in the US. You cannot weed out
white supremacist terrorists in the US by collectively blaming all
Christians or all white people. It is a political movement; you need to
target it politically and also ideologically.
Also, an insistence on secularism is key. Separation of religion from
the state – any religion – is crucial to bringing about lasting change.
We shouldn’t have religious schools, religious indoctrination in
schools, religion in the law or public policy or in the state’s dealings
with citizens.
Also, I think we need to look at rights from a universalist perspective –
we all have inalienable rights no matter what our background. And most
importantly, we all share a common humanity. We are in this together –
Muslim, ex-Muslim, Buddhist, Jew, Christian, atheist… - against the
fundamentalists and fascists of all stripes who kill with impunity and
have no regard for human rights or lives.
Q: Would you say Islam does not promote an inclusive society?
A: No religion promotes an inclusive society. Religion is an
exclusive club that sees its set of beliefs as superior to other sets of
beliefs. In any religion, the apostates, heretics, witches and
blasphemers within the religion are imprisoned and killed. Those who are
not part of the religion are seen to be lesser.
To include citizens in a society, you must exclude religion to some
extent from the public space. People, of course, have a right to
religion and belief but it cannot be part of the state or law or public
policy or the educational system if we want to ensure that religion has
its rightful place in our societies and world – as a personal matter.
Q: What is your message to those who undermined and side-lined your
basic rights when you were under repressive governments, as we as to
those who joined and planning to join the terrorist outfit like Islamic
State?
A: My message to those who join IS or other terrorist groups and
repressive governments are the same: we will never bow down. There are
many more of us than there are of you. Also, hate can never kill love
and hope and that is our strongest weapon against the fundamentalists of
all stripes.