It
appears to be a sign that you're doing something abundantly right when
the leaders of the Canadian Arab Federation and the Canadian Islamic
Congress demand that your conference be monitored by the Police Hate
Crime Unit. Which is the case with a Fraser Institute symposium taking
place this week, entitled "On The Front Line of Immigration, Terrorism
and Ethno-Politics."
In an unintentionally amusing joint press
release, the groups speak of "major Canadian bigots, Islamophobes,
anti-Arab and anti-immigrant writers and media personalities." As
opposed, one assumes, to minor Canadian bigots and Islamophobe media
personalities. What it all means, of course, is that they disagree with
their targets. Yet instead of simply debating with the conference
speakers in a quintessentially Canadian manner, they insult them and
try to have them silenced.
In fact, the conference the comrades
find so irksome boasts an extraordinarily impressive and diverse list
of speakers. Columnist Margaret Wente, author Daniel Stoffman, a former
director of CSIS, the retired executive director of the Canadian
Immigration Service, ambassador Marisa Lino from the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security, MPs, numerous university professors, award-winning
writers and decorated diplomats and scholars.
And the
internationally renowned author Bat Ye'or. If the other speakers
provoke certain people, this diminutive, gentle and brilliant
74-year-old lady seems to positively terrify them. They urge
immigration authorities "immediately to bar Bat Ye'or from entering
Canada."
Being deported because of Arab anger would, however, be
nothing new to the author of a host of internationally acclaimed works
on the history of Islam and its treatment of Jews and Christians. She
and her family were forced to leave their native Egypt in 1957, part of
the more than one million Jews who were exiled from Muslim states after
the Second World War and the foundation of Israel. Bat Ye'or's name
roars the horror of it all. It is a pseudonym, meaning "Daughter of the
Nile" in Hebrew.
The persecuted Jews of
the Middle East. The silenced catastrophe. A wave of innocents whose
existence in Arab lands pre-dated the birth of Islam. Their numbers
were greater than those of the Palestinian refugees and they were
frequently treated far more harshly. Yet the world said very little,
and today the Islamic bloc and their allies in the United Nations and
elsewhere pretend this post-Biblical exodus did not happen.
"It
is, I suppose, deeply ironic that I was told that I was not allowed to
live in Egypt when I was a girl and now as a grown woman I'm told, in
part by people from Egypt, that I shouldn't come to Canada either. As
for Israel, they'd like that to disappear," she says, more bemused than
bitter. "Where ought I to go? No matter. The story has to be told, the
true story of how Islam has treated and still does treat its
minorities."
It is her collection of work on the Islamic conquest
of the Christian heartlands of Egypt, Palestine, Syria and North Africa
that have caused so much frustration among Muslim opponents. She writes
in detail of Dhimmitude, the method in which Jews and Christians were
subjugated and humiliated.
"As late as the early 20th century, in
some Muslim countries Jews had to remove their shoes when they left
their own quarter, were not allowed to ride a horse, were treated as
second-class citizens. This idea of equality is nonsense. Their numbers
were restricted, especially in the Holy Land, and the same was true of
Christians. There were periodic pogroms, right up till the 1940s."
A
pause, searching for the right words. "What occurred back then is
history, but history has to be understood and accepted. What we have
now is revision, denial. Muslim immigrants are taking this false idea
of the past to Europe and North America, along with a culture that does
not share the Western notion of tolerance, equality, criticism of
religion and freedom."
This thesis of the spread of such ideas is
discussed at length in what may be her most famous and controversial
book, Eurabia: The Euro-Arab Axis. In it she argues that Islamic
fundamentalism has found its way to Europe because most Muslim
moderates are frightened of speaking out and European intellectuals and
activists have been seduced by its anti-American dynamic.
"There
are courageous Muslims who do resist but it is difficult and dangerous.
There is an underground of Sharia law across Europe, with terrible
treatment of women. This is combined with the threat of violence aimed
at anybody who speaks out against what is going on. Censorship through
fear. We even see this to a mild degree in Canada, an example being the
attempt to stop me entering the country."
The cause of Palestine,
she emphasizes, is at its heart about the triumph of Islam. "Most of
Palestine is in Jordan but we do not hear cries for Jordan to return
land. This isn't about the rights of the Palestinians but about the
refusal to accept a non-Muslim state in the region. Palestine has
become the fashion of the West, without them understanding the deeper
issues of the conflict."
Paradox wrapped around irony packaging
hypocrisy. Untied by a brave and wise woman who wants only peace and
justice but who is still being persecuted for what she is and what she
says. A daughter of the Nile, a teacher for the world.
-Michael Coren is an author and broadcaster.