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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Re: [ALOCHONA] Re: FW: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World



Gaza don't stand a chance in comparison with Darfur. Gaza situation is at least 5000 times better than Darfur. Gaza is in this shape because of so called palestanian who are nothing but Syrians infiltrators, and Gaza shall continue to be a problematic area for next 100 years, and that's because no one wants PEACE there.  
As far as Darur is concerned, it was a peaceful country till it started getting RAPED at THE WILL OF Sudanese govt. backed JINJAWEET, WHICH MEANS DEATH ON A HORSE --- kind of reminds me of those 7 army of SERONE in Harry Poter. Jinjaweet first started genocide mission with non-muslims and now they moved on to muslims.
Muslims world were ignoring the killings of non-muslims even till last two years but now it has come under the radar screen because Jinjaweet is done with non-muslims..... next in line is muslims.
UN has been a lame duck about it for the last 12 years. The question is who is funding these arms and ammo? Not Russians, not US, not Iran, not Koreans, not Taliban's/Al Queda...then who? Could it be china? Possibility.... there are lots of study out there as this is not a new subject. 
 
Debashish
Live and Let Live!




From: musasarkar <m_musa92870@yahoo.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, May 4, 2009 4:39:09 PM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: FW: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World

The situation in Gaza is indeed very bad, but that doesn't give a light-skinned Muslim race excuse to commit horrendous barbarism on another dark-skinned Muslim race.   Recently in a big gathering of the IMPOTENTS, the heads of all the Arab nations stood firmly behind Sudan 's government.  There was no mention of the Darfur sufferings of the Black Muslims at the hand of Arabized light-skinned Sudanese.  It was utterly shameful.  It can remind us of their inhumane roles in 1971. 

There is no natural resource in Darfur, so we cannot say whoever is trying to alleviate the miseries of Black Muslims are interested in Darfur because of that. 

When there is a fight among the Muslims, we Muslim usually side with the wrong and unjust side, and then we try to blame others.  If we do not take care of our own mess, then the All-mighty will use the others to take care of us.  Just look at Iraq and Afghanistan .  Nothing happens without HIS permission, not even a leaf moves.

--- In alochona@yahoogroup s.com, Jamil Ahmed <jamil_dhaka@ ...> wrote:
>
> I am not an expert on Darfur but when  Israel is shading tear for darfur makes me think.
> Situation in Gaza is worse then Darfur but one one talking about it.
> Is there any natural resource in Darfur?
> They are not shading tear because Muslims are killing Muslim for sure.
>
>
>
> --- On Thu, 4/23/09, Farida Majid farida_majid@ ... wrote:
>
> From: Farida Majid farida_majid@ ...
> Subject: [ALOCHONA] FW: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World
> To:
> Date: Thursday, April 23, 2009, 5:42 PM
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> To: From: tarekfatah@. ..: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 10:11:26 -0400
> Subject: From Bangladesh to Darfur: Racism leads to Genocide in the Muslim World
>
>
>
> Tuesday, April 21, 2009
>
> From Bangladesh to Darfur: 
>
> How internalised racism has permitted lighter skinned
>
> Muslims to slaughter their darker skinned co-religionists.
>
> Speech by Tarek Fatah
>
> The Durban Review Conference
> Geneva, Switzerland
> http://www.facebook .com/note. php?note_ id=164051190246
>
> Dear NGO colleagues and delegates,
>
> I speak to you deeply disappointed that my colleague Milly Nsekalije, a survivor of the Rwandan massacre could not share her story with all of you because in the eyes of some since she is not 100% Tutsi, she cannot have been a victim of the Genocide. 
>
>
>
> With Milly Nsekalije, a mixed-race survivor of the Rwadan Genocide, who was denied the right 
> to speak by Tutsi activists as she was "not 100% pure Tutsi."
> What does it say about the state of racism in our world when the victims of a genocide practise exclusion on the basis of the so-called purity of blood lines and ethnicities.
>
> Worse than her exclusion from today’s event is the fact that it has happened at a conference meant to combat racism, when it fact, in my opinion, whether it was yesterday’s speech by Mahmood Ahmadenijad or this afternoon’s barring off Ms. Nsekalije, we have turned the concept of racism upside down.
>
> Having said that, please allow me to dwell on how racism plays out its dirty game, not just as a Black-White divide, but also as a cancer that affects relations between people of colour, often sharing the same religion, but different shades of brown or black skin.
>
> When the issue of racism comes up, the internalised racism that devours the people of the developing world in Asia and Africa, from within, rarely comes up for discussion.
>
> This afternoon I would like to shed some light on two genocidesâ€"one in 1970-71 and the other that continues as I speak. In both instances the root of the problem lay in how one group of Muslims felt they were racially superior to their victims, who also happened to be Muslims. In both cases the doctrine of racial superiority and the practise of institutional racism went unchallenged even after the horrible consequences of such racism was evident and for all to see.
>
>
> Bangladesh
> The first genocide took place in then East Pakistan, now Bangladesh and second is taking place in Darfur. Let me dwell on the Bangladesh genocide first.
>
>
>
>
> In 1970 in Pakistan, my country of birth was divided between two wings; an eastern part that is today known as Bangladesh and the western rump that survived a subsequent war with India as the state we know as Pakistan.
>
> East Pakistan was inhabited by the darker skinned Bengali people who happened to be the majority community of the country, but found themselves ruled by a lighter skinned minority from what was known as West Pakistanâ€"separated by a 1,000 miles.
>
> In the first 25 years of the country, the racist depiction of the darker skinned Bengalis as an inferior and incapable people became the unquestioned dogma among the ruling minority. In addition to the racist depiction of the darker-skinned Bengalis, their culture was portrayed as unislamic and being influenced by Hinduism. Their music, cuisine and attire were mocked while their language was banned and led to widespread protests and deaths in 1952.
>
> In 1970, after suffering under the minority rule of West Pakistan for 25 years, the people of East Pakistan voted to elect a party based in their region and gained a clear majority in the country’s national parliament.
>
> However, the racist view that Bengali people were incapable of ruling the country or that they were traitors to the fair-skinned minority of West Pakistan, led to a military intervention and widespread massacres in which one million people were killed in a ten-month period.
>
> The killing of the Bengali people by the West Pakistan army stopped only when India intervened and defeated the Pakistan Armed forces, but not before hundreds of Bengali intellectuals, professors, poets, authors, musicians and painters, were rounded up and massacred in the final act of mass murder that started with the tolerance of racism as an act of faith.
>
> One million Muslims were murdered by fellow Muslims in an orgy of hate that defied the teachings of Islam and the very Prophet Muhammad who was being invoked by the Pakistan Army. At the root of this sad blot on Islamic history and all of humanity lay the view that people of darker skin are inferior to those for geographic reasons have for no fault of theirs, a lighter skin colour.
>
> One would have hoped that the lessons of 1970-71 would have been learnt in the Muslim World, but the sad fact is that the ubiquitous racism that resides inside the Islamic world has faced no opposition. On the contrary there is near universal denial about this cancer, not just among the governments that rule with oppressive instruments of power, but also many NGOs and civil society groups in the Muslim world.
>
>
> Darfur
> The latest manifestation of racism leading to a genocide is in Sudan where the Arab Janjaweed militia and the Arab government in Khartoum has resulted in the killing of 500,000 Darfuri Muslims whose only fault is that they are Black and thus considered as inferior to the ruling classes of that country.
>
>
>
>
> The mistreatment of Black Muslims by those who feel they are superior because of their lighter skin colour has been historical. Only in the Middle East can one get away by addressing a Black man as “Ya Abdi�, which translates to the horrible words, “Oh you slave�.
>
> The acceptance of racism among the dominant community in the Arab world has today resulted in not just the genocide of Darfuris, but also the celebration by the Arab League of the man charged by the International Criminal Court, President Bashir of Sudan.
>
> It is time that the medieval doctrine of the inferiority of non-Arab Muslims to Arab Muslims is laid to rest. It is necessary that Arab countries and leaders of Arab NGOs denounce this doctrine that has led to the discrimination of darker skinned Muslims by Arab governments in counties as far apart as Dubai to Darfur.
>
> Behind the genocide of Bengal and Darfur, separated by 30 years, is the unchallenged doctrine of racial superiority of one ethnic group over another that has gone unnoticed and unpunished by any institution anywhere in the world.
>
> This doctrine of racism has brought untold misery on the victims of this cancer, but this becomes worse when such racism is given a religious validation. In this day and age, we have fatwas from contemporary Islamic scholars who maintain that a non-Arab Muslim like me would be committing an act of sin if I considered myself equal to an Arab. 
>
> Fatwas from the 14th century have been dusted off the shelves, re-furbished and published on on-line Islamist forums to justify the superiority of one group over the other. This has provided the moral justification to the mass murder being committed on the Black Muslims of Darfur, which unfortunately, has gone unmentioned even at this conference.
>
>
> Conclusion
> Let me conclude by suggesting that if racism is a mountain that we all need to conquer, then we have not yet come to a place where we can see this mountain in the horizon, let alone be at base camp. 
>
> Ladies and gentlemen, sisters and brothers, if we cannot allow a woman to speak here because she is of mixed blood or the fact that untouchability in India is not on the agenda in Geneva, or that nations of the OIC seek the right to restrict free speech, or a demagogue from Iran with blood on his hands has the audacity to lecture us on human rights, then all I can say is that in the words of Robert Frost, we have miles to go before we sleep…
>
>
>
> Rediscover Hotmail®: Get quick friend updates right in your inbox. Check it out.
>




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