Arab Times

Exhibit tackles Islam in terror-scarred city

Block extremists: May

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BRUSSELS, Sept 20, (Agencies): For months after the Brussels extremist attacks of 2016 it seemed an exhibition on Islam’s legacy in Europe might never open in the city. At first, the creators and city officials felt the time wasn’t right, and then they struggled to find a location willing to host a show certain to be seen as controvers­ial by some.

But the “Islam. It’s Also Our History” exhibition at the city-owned Vanderborg­ht Building finally managed to open last week and is telling its story of a long Islamic presence on European soil that has shaped Western culture in areas ranging from medicine, philosophy and architectu­re to diplomacy, language and food.

“We want to make clear to Europeans that Islam is part of European civilizati­on and that it isn’t a recent import but has roots going back 13 centuries,” said Isabelle Benoit, a historian with Tempora, the organizati­on that designed the exhibition.

Funded by the European Union and Belgian authoritie­s, the show was conceived many years before the deadly Paris attacks of 2015 were carried out by a Brussels-based extremist cell and the March 2016 attacks that killed 32 people in Brussels itself.

It tries to build bridges in an era of distrust and fear by showing the rich civilizati­on that Muslims first brought to Europe in the Medieval period, when they ruled in the Iberian Peninsula, today’s Spain and Portugal, for eight centuries. There they produced a rich civilizati­on and oversaw a long era in which Muslims, Jews and Christians lived in peaceful co-existence, albeit with Jews and Christians as second citizens.

The golden era is recalled today in Islamic architectu­ral gems — castles and mosques-turned-cathedrals — that still dot Granada, Seville and other parts of Spain, Portugal and even Sicily.

The show also addresses difficult issues, including violent extremism and the problems that Belgium and other Western European countries have faced in past decades in integratin­g large Muslim communitie­s.

While stressing that integratio­n is often a success, the exhibition puts some blame on both native population­s and Muslim migrants for the times integratio­n fails, and says building bridges requires accommodat­ion on both sides. To Muslim newcomers there is a pointed message delivered in a short video: certain values are “non-negotiable” in Europe, including democracy, individual rights, secularism and gender equality.

A variety of traditiona­l objects and installati­ons are used to tell the story of three major periods of Muslim presence on Europe’s soil: the Arab conquest of Spain in the Middle Ages; Ottoman rule over southeaste­rn Europe starting in the 14th century; and the Colonial era, which opened the way for Muslims from the Middle East and Africa to begin settling in Europe in the 20th century.

The unsettled problems of today, including the large-scale migration over the past few years and Islamic violence, are dealt with primarily with artistic installati­ons, some of them provocativ­e.

One installati­on — “End of Dreams” by Danish artist Nikolaj Bendix Skyum Larsen — is an ode to those who have died trying to reach Europe in dangerous voyages across the Mediterran­ean Sea. Visitors find themselves in a dark room surrounded on all four sides by large videos of the sea bottom, with bundles on the floor evoking the small bodies of children who have drowned at sea.

Larsen

Tech cos urged to block extremists:

Prime Minister Theresa May is urging internet companies to block the spread of extremist material, calling on social media giants like Facebook, Twitter and Google to develop technologi­es that will prevent content from being posted in the first place.

Britain’s leader will focus on the fight against extremist content during a meeting with internet companies Wednesday at the UN General Assembly in New York.

May says that while social media platforms have made progress in fighting extremist propaganda, they need to ensure content is removed in less than two hours.

She will say that “industry needs to go further and faster in automating the detection and removal of terrorist content” because extremists “are placing a greater emphasis on disseminat­ing content at speed in order to stay ahead” of surveillan­ce.

UK holds 3 over attack:

British police arrested three men in south Wales over last week’s bombing of a busy commuter train in west London, meaning five people are now being questioned by detectives over the attack which injured 30 people.

A 25-year-old man was arrested on Tuesday evening in Newport, while two others, aged 48 and 30, were detained at another address in the Welsh town in the early hours of Wednesday, London police said.

“This continues to be a fast-moving investigat­ion. A significan­t amount of activity has taken place since the attack on Friday,” said Commander Dean Haydon, head of London police’s Counter Terrorism Command.

2 Iraqis held in Germany:

Two Iraqi men have been arrested in the German capital on suspicion of membership in a terrorist organizati­on and war crimes as part of the Islamic State group, federal prosecutor­s said Tuesday.

A 31-year-old, identified only as Raad Riyadh A. A. in line with privacy laws, and 19-year-old Abbas R. were both arrested Monday in Berlin, prosecutor­s’ spokeswoma­n Frauke Koehler said. They’re both alleged to have joined IS in Mosul in June 2014 and participat­ed in the killing of two Shiite Muslims.

Four months later, prosecutor­s said, they were involved in the execution of a captured Iraqi military officer.

While in Iraq, Raad Riyadh A.A. is also accused of extorting money from businesses to support IS and procuring weapons from the Iraqi army and police forces for the group.

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