Confronting Terrorist Gangs and Their Apologists
by Lee Harris
Tech Central Station
August 22, 2003
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/1218
http://www.techcentralstation.com/1051/techwrapper.jsp?PID=1051-250&CID=1051-082203A
For many weeks now, I have pondered the significance of the
controversy over President Bush's nomination of Daniel Pipes to
the U.S. Institute of Peace, but I have been puzzled over what I
could write about it that had not already been said by men much
more eloquent than I, including
Charles Krauthammer,
David Frum, and the editors of The New Republic.
What, in view of Dr. Pipes's many more able defenders, could I
possibly have to add that might be of interest or value to
anyone else?
Then, while I was turning this question over in my mind, I
thought about the town I live in, and its not very distant past,
and all at once I realized what it was that I could say about
the Pipes controversy that is different, and -- let us hope --
not entirely irrelevant.
About eighty years ago and only a few miles from my home, the
Ku Klux Klan was reborn in an explosion of fiery crosses on top
of the massive granite outcropping known as Stone Mountain. The
men who attended this celebration were convinced that they
represented what was finest in southern culture, and that their
newly resurrected organization would be dedicated to preserving
the heritage of the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant values that had
been so integral in the creation of the United States.
What is more, the hooded men on top of Stone Mountain were by
no means alone in thinking of themselves in this way, since at
the time there were many other Americans who would have agreed
with this flattering self-assessment, fellow travelers of the
KKK and their apologists all across the United States, as well
as many of the leading politicians of that not terribly distant
epoch, including, of course, distinguished Senators.
Were they right? Did the men on top of Stone Mountain truly
stand for what they claimed? Did they indeed speak for all
white southerners?
This was a difficult question to determine at the time,
because any white southerner who happened to speak out openly
against the KKK would almost certainly face some form of
retaliation from the Klan itself, administered in varying
degrees of severity.
The Klan, after all, wore those hoods and sheets for a reason
-- in fact, for two reasons.
First, they wore them to make identification of individual
Klan members impossible by those whom the Klan chose to
intimidate, black or white, thereby permitting Klan members to
perform criminal acts with complete impunity.
Second, to transform a collection of moderately respectable
men into a gang of ruthless thugs collectively capable of
committing acts that, as individuals, they would not have
countenanced. In short, the hood and the sheet were talismans
for magically changing run of the mill dentists, commonplace
salesmen, and ordinary farmers into terrorists.
And yet, despite the intimidation and despite the terror,
some white southerners did speak out against the KKK. Not many,
but enough to raise the question: Who truly spoke for southern
culture? The Klan and their apologists? Or those who denounced
them both?
Now what, you ask, does all of this have to do with Dr.
Daniel Pipes, and the current controversy about President Bush's
nomination to the U.S. Institute of Peace?
To answer this question, substitute Arab culture for southern
culture, Islam for Protestantism, and Islamic terrorists for the
KKK; and then ask yourself: Who today is the true defender of
Muslim culture and the ethos of Islam -- those who commit
terrorist outrages, and their apologists? Or those who, like Dr.
Pipes, denounce the actions of such ruthless thugs, and who
point steadily to those aspects of the Islamic tradition that
are life-affirming, moderate, and humane?
Merely to ask such a question is to reject the paradigm of
culture that has come to dominate so much contemporary academic
and pseudo-liberal thinking, namely the naןve multiculturalist's
simplistic concept of a culture as a single monolithic entity,
homogeneous and immutable. Instead, it presupposes a far more
sophisticated concept of culture as a locus of conflicting
values, from the perspective of which Islamic culture, like
southern culture, is a living, changing organism, riddled with
deep divisions and fraught with dialectic tensions, punctuated
with lacerating periods of internal conflict in which two
different interpretations of one and the same culture have
struggled for dominance, with one side often intent on
destroying every trace of its opponent.
Precisely such a struggle for cultural dominance was fought
out in the American south during the course of the twentieth
century; and precisely such a struggle for cultural dominance is
being fought out today in the Islamic world. Indeed, Islamic
culture, in this respect, is no different from southern culture,
and indeed, like every culture known to us. It has its better
angels, but it has its demons as well; and the eternal question
is, as always, Which shall be allowed to triumph?
Daniel Pipes's mission has been to restate this universal
truth in terms of the contemporary struggle between the better
angels of Islam, on the one hand, and the demons of ruthlessness
represented by al-Qaeda and Hamas, on the other -- organizations
that, like the KKK, falsely claim to represent an entire
culture, but which are in fact only pathological and
self-serving distortions of a fragment of this culture.
Today there are no crosses burned on Stone Mountain, and it
is inconceivable that any will ever burn there again, so that,
in retrospect, it is tempting to conclude that the KKK did not
truly stand for southern culture, after all. But this facile
conclusion is only possible because there were in our past a
handful of men and women who fought heroically against the KKK's
pretensions to represent southern culture -- men, like the great
newspaper editor, Ralph McGill, who insisted on seeing the KKK
as a kind of cultural pathogen whose spread and success could
only end by destroying whatever was most valuable and worthy in
the culture of the American South.
If one day our children, or our children's children, can look
back at this epoch in history, and facilely conclude that al-Qaeda
and Hamas did not "really" stand for Islamic culture, it will be
thanks to yet another handful of courageous men, both in the
West and in the Muslim world itself, who, like Dr. Pipes, have
insisted that Islamic culture could not be reduced to the
pretensions of terrorist gangs and their apologists.
But if, tragically, such a day should never come, it will be
in no small part because of those men and women who today are
attacking Daniel Pipes and his work, as well as those
politicians -- like Senators Kennedy, Harkin, and Dodd -- who
permit hysteria and slander to guide where reason and judgment
should rule.
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