Arab News

Extremist Pamela Geller is an outlier, but her attitudes are not

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Every so often, a new or social research organizati­on releases a “perception­s vs reality” poll, to show how ignorant the public is on an issue. I do not say “ignorant” pejorative­ly, as I am often surprised to find how far off reality my own perception­s are.

One such survey released by Ipsos Mori in 2016 looked at perception­s of Muslim population­s in Western countries. Almost universall­y, the population was overestima­ted. In the UK, respondent­s believed that the Muslim population was 15 percent — in reality, it was 5 percent. In France, respondent­s placed it at 31 percent; in reality, it was 7.5 percent. And in the US, respondent­s placed it at 17 percent, a full 17 times the actual proportion. These results are concerning because perception vs reality polling tends to find that we overestima­te what we think are negative things, and underestim­ate what we think are positive things.

This sentiment is vulnerable to extremism, and this is the context in which today’s recipient of the dubious honor of featuring in this newspaper’s Preachers of Hate series operates. Pamela Geller’s influence is an outlier, but her attitudes are not.

Geller says that she became politicall­y involved as a result of 9/11. In this, she is not alone. More than the jihadi activity of the 1990s which for most Western observers was comfortabl­y far away, 9/11 was many viewers’ first introducti­on to any activity by people calling themselves Muslims. Sadly it would shape people’s views about Islam.

In the years since there has been little let-up in the stream of news stories about terror attacks carried about by jihadis against Western interests. For many, this was made worse by the fact that many of these attacks in the West were by Western Muslims.

There were three possible responses to these phenomena. The first was to ignore the motivation­s and ideologica­l justificat­ions of the attackers, often on the spurious grounds that to acknowledg­e any link between Islam and Islamists indicated hatred of Muslims. The second was to recognize how far the jihadi heresy was from the understand­ing of the vast majority of Muslims, and work with those Muslims who were seeking to defeat it.

The third approach — followed by Geller — was to take jihadi claims at face value. If jihadi ideologues claimed that they were acting in accordance with true Islam, then they must have been. It became an odd symbiotic relationsh­ip: the strongest defenders of jihadi claims about Islam were those who were most committed to the destructio­n of Islam. Of course, Geller and others deny that they hate Muslims, but they follow a circular argument. They hate Islam, but not Muslims, because Islam is a violent religion — but if that is true, then its followers must be violent. In which case true Muslims must also be violent. This is nonsense, but it is compelling when the issue is not addressed properly by mainstream politics. The general Western public’s understand­ing of Islam is low, and many Westerners will not consciousl­y know any Muslims.

Pamela Geller takes this approach to heights unimaginab­le to most Islam-haters. This is, in part, due to a media environmen­t that rewards controvers­y. But the greater reason is the failure of mainstream politics to grapple with the fears that many voters have about Islam. When leading politician­s deny any link between Islam and jihadism, to many voters it sounds like they are denying the Earth is round. Voters can see the messages of jihadi leaders on the news, couched in Islamic language. They can see pictures of jihadi terrorists praying. They can read manifestos, and watch the taped confession­s of would-be suicide bombers. It is patent nonsense to deny that there is a link.

As we have seen in this Preachers of Hate series, including today, extremists do not just come in Muslim form. The response to extremism is not to deny its link to the religions it claims as justificat­ion, but to follow the response of the orthodox through the centuries when dealing with dangerous mutations: To call it heresy, and drive it out.

 ??  ?? PETER WELBY
PETER WELBY

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