Saturday, August 30, 2008

Victacausa : Jan Goossens tegen Van Istendael

victacausa (appendices): Jan Goossens, zoon van Paul

Jan Goossens is het niet eens met Geert Van Istendael over de islam.
How come I'm not surprised ?

VictaCausa biedt zowel het opiniestuk van Jan Goossens uit De Standaard van 30 augustus, als een korte, gevatte reactie van Marc Vanfraechem.

En ter verdere verlichting van de heer Goossens, voeg ik ook nog mijn stuk toe over de hijab. (Ook verschenen in Streven als 'Hoofddoeken en mistgordijnen', Streven, Jaargang 75, nr 1, pp: 55 - 61)

De heer Goossens ziet dringender problemen voor Brussel en de multiculturele samenleving. Werkloosheid, sociale uitsluiting, etc... Zeer terecht inderdaad. Maar wel verzoek aan zijn adres om zich objectief te bevragen over de mogelijke causale relaties en vicieuze wissels tussen de hoofddoek, religie, en de uitzichtloze socio-economische situatie van grote groepen in de migrantengemeenschap.

De Leuvense sociologie die hem zo bekend is, zal ongetwijfeld onschatbaar bijdragen tot diepere inzichten terzake...

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, June 20, 2008

Hijab on Tatami

Sports and sportswear. It's a hot debate in swimming, but now too in martial arts !The International Olympic Committee has granted the Iranian athlete Fatemeh Barzanooni (taekwondo) the right to wear the hijab during her games in Peking.

The decision is the result of a delicate balancing act between a concern for neutrality (see the Olympic Charter), enhancing female participation in the games, religious and political sensitivities, and case management. The bottom line seems to be that the IOC granted permission because otherwise a reputed athlete would simply stay away from the games.

Annie Sugier, president of the Ligue du Droit International des Femmes, and involved in Atlanta+, a pressure group dedicated to bring more women into the olympic arena, has fiercely condemned the IOC decision. The League's principled position on this issue is here as a downloadable pdf.

For Atlanta+, the decision violates the olympic idea of neutrality. The IOC for its part maintains that the athlete's demand is not ideological and is not serving propaganda purposes. Should Barzanooni not be allowed to wear the hijab, she would simply stay away.

In the now famous words of Donald Rumsfeld it could be said that the athlete's intentions belong to the realm of the 'known unknowns'. There is nothing to be said of them other than they are. So for ease and tranquility, let's assume Barzanooni's intentions are pure and personal so that nothing ideological and malevolent can be held against her personally.

And it's not as if she is a first. There have been precedents. In the past, other (Iranian) athletes have been allowed to wear the hijab; read this informative article on muslim women athletes at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. At least two things stand out from this text.

One is that trouble over dress requirements for female athletes seemingly comes from conservative regimes and (sub)cultures, rather than from islam per se. Indonesia has behaved rather relaxed so far; Algeria, Iran, Afghanistan, Saoudi-Arabia on the other hand have been more petulant.

A second observation is this : the inclination of muslims to turn a sports event into a religious hang-up reveals the near total fusion of public and private spheres inherent in islam. The astonishing market success of the so-called 'burqini' for instance, points in that direction as well. (Aheda Zanetti, Australia, see pic below)

One and two taken together make for a detrimental cocktail. For independent of individual intentions, islam forcefully legitimizes conservatism, which in turn triggers a downward spiral of interiorization and societal enforcement.

Given these negative dynamics, it really doesn't matter what the athelete thinks or hopes or intends. The mere visual presence of islamic garments on the stage of highly publicized events like the Olympic Games marks the conceptual exception and the priviliged status islam claims for itself. It is antithetical by definition, and as such, it IS ideological.

Perhaps the IOC should take care to uphold the glory and spirit of human kind that take center stage at the olympics, rather than preemptively vacating that spot for the sake of an old and obviously testy god ?

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Meer over Barnard, van Istendael, en De Ley

Het verloop van de polemiek rond het 'Bericht aan weldenkend links' van Barnard en van Istendael staat mooi uitgetekend in De Papieren Man

En ook het Nederlandse poezie-zine DeContrabas publiceert het vervolgstuk van gisteren in Opinio, alsook een link naar Kom dichter, dichter, waarin de heren schrijvers streng worden aangemaand om "bij hun leest te blijven."

Intussen heeft in De Standaard van vandaag Walter Zinzen zich als een gepikeerde vader over zijn rebelse intellectuele kroost gebogen, om hen met vermanende vinger terecht te wijzen. Zijn oproep tot beschaafd gesprek staat hier.
De krachtmeting tussen De Ley en Doornaert op dezelfde pagina is eveneens zeer lezenswaardig.

En deze, van Olaf Risee op zijn site in Letterland.net, is mooi, moe en bitter. Maar we kunnen d'r wel af en toe om lachen...

Lezers met het hart op de tong, kunnen op elk van deze sites reacties achterlaten. Het blijft intussen uitkijken naar 'Berichten van weldenkende moslims' op deze fora.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Euro-Islam or Clash of Civilizations ? (E)

An excellent analysis of the position of religion in European society today is offered in Olivier Roy's contribution to Eurotopics.
Roy proposes a reconsideration of the problems related to the radicalization of muslims in the diaspora, as well as born-again christians.
Read the full article here

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,