The Toronto Star whitewashes fanaticism.
Yesterday in Toronto, a fanatical father murdered his own 16 year old daughter, with the help of his son, her own brother, for choosing to shed her Hijab. The hijab is a symbol of misogynistic oppression to some, and an affirmation of spiritual commitment to others, but this is not Afganistan, or Iran, where such dress is enforced by law. Neither is this Pakistan, Gaza or even southern Lebanon where there remains extraordinary social pressure for compliance with Sharia Law, in addition to varying degrees and methods of enforcement.
In Canada we protect the freedoms of religion, expression and choice, yet we were not able to protect this young woman in crisis, from a father, and his respectively indoctrinated son, and their determination to enforce their own brand of cold blooded justice. This young woman had friends who knew that she’d been threatened, and of course, family members, yet there was not one person, not a school counselor or a family member, not social services, no one, to raise an alarm, not until she’d already been strangled nearly to death, by her own father. Today, she died of her injuries.
Filicide is the deliberate act of a parent killing their own son or daughter. In this case, she was killed for having disgraced her family. A so called ‘honour killing’. In this case, the father has, by his own, arguably distorted interpretation of his faith, salvaged the honor of his family, by killing his own daughter. Yet have we not, as Canadians, sacrificed our own honor by failing to protect the innocent and the vulnerable, even when there are clear signs of family crisis?
I would argue that yes, we have, and further, that we have a responsibility as Canadians to remedy this. Why then, is Toronto Star writer Joanna Smith in such a rush to equivocate this issue by first reminding us that such behaviour is in the minority:
“members of the (muslim) community – particularly young Muslim women – say the tension can exist both ways.
Ausma Khan, the editor-in-chief of Toronto-based Muslim Girl magazine, said research into the readership of her publication shows that the decision to wear the hijab – the traditional Muslim headscarf – is almost always a choice the girl makes on her own“
Indeed.
After all, there exist Canadian laws to ensure that such abhorrent behaviour is punished, even when it is not prevented. Yet, how often do we find editorials highlighting the relatively small chances of being assaulted in response to local incidents of rape or battery? What makes this murder different from other crimes? Why are Joanna Smith and the Toronto Star rushing to the preemptive defense of a garment..? particularly one that so often, as in this case, serves the explicit purposes of misogynists, despots and religious fanatics?
Canada continues to protect our freedom of religion, yet in this case, it was not Islam that needed our protection at all, but in fact an innocent girl who needed protecting from a twisted, but sadly not entirely uncommon interpretation of Islam.
For a great many people Islam means peace, and disavows compulsion. Yet there are still very dark ideologies from Salafist, Wahhabist and Baathist schools of thought, being successfully exported to the secular world at a grass roots level. Despite this, and it’s irrefutable consequences for one girl, and very probably others like her, the Star’s response (as well as Ausma Khan’s) is to remind us that in fact, many girls choose for themselves to wear the hijab, some even do so in defiance of their families’ will. There is however, no indication from the article whether this particular struggle bears potentially life threatening consequences.
Should Ms. Smith and the Toronto Star not have trusted us as individual Canadians to avoid painting all Muslims with the same bigoted brush? Should they have presumed, as they have, the need to remind us, as members of an overwhelmingly inclusive and culturally understanding society, that most Canadian Muslim families would NEVER impose such restrictions on their children’s lives, NEVERMIND enforcing such restrictions through threats and acts of horrific violence?
I for one did not need such a reminder. I am personally acquainted with a number of Canadian and American Muslims who I am confident share my horror at this tragedy, and I do not know of a single person, of any religion, who would justify, never mind condone the behaviour of the father in this story. Nor am I acquainted with a single person who would presume this to be the case within the North American Muslim community.
So why then are the Toronto Star, and it’s writer Joanna Smith, so concerned with reminding us of the obvious, that normal reasonable families, regardless of culture, faith or background, simply do not murder their own children? ..or that most Canadian Muslim families, are indeed, both normal and reasonable?
Why sell us on the idea of the Hijab as a garment of choice, when in this case, it was anything but? What does the Toronto star have to gain from obscuring the fact that, all too often, the Hijab is indeed both a symbol as well as a tool of misogynistic oppression?
It is my opinion that as Canadians, we do not need to be reminded of our basic faith in human goodness. It is also my opinion that such an article only serves to obfuscate the real issue, that there are in fact individuals living under religiously motivated oppression, threats and violence, even in Canada, and that in at least some of these cases, such circumstances are facilitated by a distorted but none-the-less prevalent influence of an ideological fundamentalism that we continue to ignore, in hopes that it will just go away.
I believe that both Ms. Smith and the Toronto Star had a moral responsibility to the victim in this tragic story, yet they collectively offered only what the doctrine of political correctness will allow, by rushing to the defense of both a garment and an ideology that, ultimately, combined to form the core threat to the victim in this tragedy.
I am discouraged that Toronto’s largest Newspaper is more concerned about protecting the reputation of a religious symbol than the life of a human being. I am equally disappointed that Joanna Smith, as a woman, (as well as Ausma Khan as a female representative of the Toronto Muslim Community), could muster only politically correct platitudes at a time when they had a duty to lend their voices to the support of a young girl who needed them, and many others who still do.
Finally, I am deeply insulted that the Toronto Star deems us, the Canadian public, to be so blinded by bigotry, indeed, so very ignorant, that they need first to protect the reputation of an ideology, in this case, Islam, and it’s sacred Hijab, from our ignorant, racist preconceptions, before they need to protect innocent lives from the fatal flaws of this self same ideology.
December 12th, 2007 at 9:32 pm
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December 12th, 2007 at 10:52 pm
The ideology behind this tragedy needs to be clearly identified, discredited and shamed.
Note – there have been other honor killings of Canadians (e.g., several Sihk women in BC) The common thread is a culture obsessed with honor and reinforced with strict religious devotion.
It should be made clear to immigrants that if mainstream Canadian culture is not good enough for them, then in return we as Canadians don’t want them.
Also, we should not waffle on moderates vs. extremists. If the core religious texts feed the extremists, then maybe the whole religion is corrupt. (e.g., kill apostates, women are tilth, duality in treatment of followers vs non-followers,…)
December 12th, 2007 at 11:24 pm
[...] The Toronto Star whitewashes fanaticism. [...]
December 12th, 2007 at 11:45 pm
I’m in full agreement here. If anyone reading this from Canada would like to start a media watchdog specifically for Canadian journalistic malpractice, please get in touch with me.
sukisawa@yahoo.com
December 13th, 2007 at 3:13 am
A father who murders his daughter with the connivance of other family members may justify his acts as the defense of the family’s honour in upholding traditions and – grotesquely – of acting morally. I imagine the experience is one of horror as his daughter transforms into something non-human that he must kill if his is to defend his own authority. I can only pray that men who do this have some love of their own children and some horror at themselves for what they do; I am not convinced this is the case.
But this is only to consider such murders as individual tragedies are at the level of “the family”, the primary social unit in the minds of many religious fundamentalists. At a wider level, such acts serve to terrorize society as a whole and as a warning to other girls lest they consider disobeying familial authority. Young Muslim girls are taught from the day they are born that women have a particular place in the world and must yield to familial authority or bring down upon themselves the wrath of God and an unforgiving, homicidal malice from those closest to them in all the world.
This is true not only for medieval backwaters without the law in the “tribal areas” of north-western Pakistan or ten minute’s drive beyond the Kabul city limits. This is true of suburban Toronto with its shopping malls and multi-lane highways and CNN; its parliamentary democracy, Charter of Rights and Freedoms and a countless titled faculty at women’s studies and sociology departments. What lesson can Muslim girls take from this than that tribal law applies to them here as surely as it is does for hundreds of millions of other girls around the world? Their own fathers will not protect them; their fathers may be their murderers. Worse yet, their friends, their teachers and a small army of police will not anticipate such crimes, perhaps because none can imagine a father strangling his own daughter to death over a supposed religious edict.
Worst of all, even when we have the proof before our eyes, the Canadian media establishment will excuse the act and cry crocodile tears for the imaginary suffering of teenage girls more fundamentalist than their own parents. “Submit” they are told or die and there is nobody prepared to help them. Today I am ashamed to be Canadian.
December 13th, 2007 at 4:18 am
Excellent post. One of the great mysteries of the 21st century is the failure of any mainstream media outlet to “connect the dots.” That is, no one has tied together the misogynistic behaviors, the attacks on innocents in every land over the past three decades, the threats of continued murders, and the stated desire for a single world government… all under the aegis of a single religion.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:01 am
Just one correction:
You write:
“For a great many people Islam means peace, and disavows compulsion. Yet there are still very dark ideologies from Salafist, Wahhabist and Baathist schools of thought, being successfully exported to the secular world at a grass roots level.”
The Baathist ideology is anything but an Islamic school of thought. Heck, it was founded by a Christian…..
The Islamist view the Baathists as their mortal enemies, since the Baath is a secular nationalistic movement. As a proof for this you can see what happened to the followers of the Islamic brotherhood in the town of Hama, Syria in 1982 by the hands of the Syrian Baath regime (Hint – think Dresden and Sir Arthur “Bomber” Harris).
Cheers,
Harta.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:31 am
Excellent write-up of the situation. Toronto is not Taliban run Afghanistan nor should any of this be tolerated. I’m sure that this girl who was murdered is not only one out there who needs help leaving her family.
December 13th, 2007 at 9:36 am
Very well written. Kudos to this article!