{"id":52475,"date":"2015-01-19T12:00:20","date_gmt":"2015-01-19T12:00:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/?p=52475"},"modified":"2015-05-05T21:26:13","modified_gmt":"2015-05-05T20:26:13","slug":"we-are-all-charlie-but-is-that-story-so-simple","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/2015\/01\/we-are-all-charlie-but-is-that-story-so-simple\/","title":{"rendered":"\u201cWe Are All Charlie\u201d \u2013 But Is That Story so Simple?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>Eleven points as a reflection on the terror in Paris and \u2013 not the least \u2013 the reactions to it*:<\/em><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li><strong> What was this an attack on?<\/strong><br \/>\nWas that attack an attack on freedom of speech as such, on democracy, even on the whole Western culture and lifestyle, as was maintained throughout? Or was it, more limited, a revenge directed at one weekly magazine for what some perceive as blasphemy?<\/li>\n<li><strong> Is freedom of expression practised or curtailed for various reasons?<\/strong><br \/>\nHow real is that freedom in the West? Just a couple of days before the Paris massacre PEN in the U.S. published a report \u2013 <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/pen.org\/global-chill\" >Global Chilling<\/a> \u2013 finding that about 75% of writers report that they are influenced by the NSA listening and abstain from taking up certain subjects or perspectives? Self-censorship, in other words. Finally, most of the political leaders marching in Paris on Sunday January 11 have clamped down on media, such as Turkey and Egypt. I must admit that I have experienced limitations in the practise of that freedom in my work with Western media and it is decades ago I draw the conclusion that things like political correctness, ownership, commercial\/market considerations and journalists\u2019 need for good relations with power \u2013 e.g. to obtain interviews \u2013 play a role. I\u2019ve been on the ground in conflict zones and returning home to see reports so biased to tell very little of what I\u2019ve seen myself. And we\u2019ve recently seen lots of cases from the U.S. academic world where there\u2019s been a clampdown on certain views, publications, courses and professors \u2013 not the least in relation to the Israel-Palestine conflict. Or, you look at the proportions between government fund available for peace research and military research in virtually every Western society; free research is a vital element in the self-understanding of the West. But how much of do we have?<\/li>\n<li><strong> Freedom doesn\u2019t mean duty.<\/strong><br \/>\nIs freedom of expression really 100% irrespective of how much the practise of that freedom is hurtful, offending, humiliating or discriminatory against other peoples, religions and cultures? Even if you can express your opinions freely it is not always what we <em>should<\/em> do. I can still abstain from making a remark about somebody\u2019s religious or political beliefs because I see no point in offending that person in regard to something he or she holds dear, even part of the identity. But, sure, I have the right to do so. Using a right to the maximum isn\u2019t necessarily the wisest or most mature thing to do. I draw the distinction between issues that touch personal identity \u2013 e.g. religion, nationality, gender \u2013 and other issues. It is neither fun nor wise to make satire on what people are. One must indeed ask in the \u2013 chilling \u2013 times we live: What happened to words such as solidarity, respect, empathy and to the values of common humanity? There can be no rights without duties as Mohandas K. Gandhi brilliantly expressed it.<\/li>\n<li><strong> Are anti-Semitic cartoons OK now?<\/strong><br \/>\nWhy is it so important to some media people and <em>Je Suis Charlie<\/em> people to accept or practise disdain, blaspheme, ridicule or depict (even naked) Muhamad when we know that that is offending at least to quite a few of the 1600 million Muslims around the world. What \u2013 constructive \u2013 purposes does it serve? Really, why is that OK when anything similar against Jews would immediately be categorized as anti-Semitism and found appalling by the same people \u2013 not the least advocates of the free press. One, after the Muhamad caricatures, shouldn\u2019t we have learnt something \u2013 in Denmark in particular where all main dailies except Jyllands-Posten chose to publish drawings from Charlie Hebdo the day after to manifest their expression of freedom. Two, the West \u2013 spearheaded by NATO countries \u2013 is in violent conflict <em>with<\/em> and <em>in<\/em> a series of Muslim countries \u2013 on their territory, not the other way around \u2013 these years. Much can be seen as rooted in about 100 years of colonialism, interventionism, chopping up empires \u2013 think Sykes-Picot, Balfour \u2013 and the Western press has just said less about the death of more than 2000 Palestinians than about 17 killed in Paris.<\/li>\n<li><strong> What is satire? <\/strong><br \/>\nIt is to skewer, to ridicule anything and everyone- even on their identity? To depict naked somebody who is sacred to others? Good political satire kicks upward, at powers that be, not downward on minorities of vulnerable people. It may surely provoke and challenge but it definitely is <em>not<\/em> provocation for the sake of provocation. I happen to think that much of what I have seen now of Charlie Hebdo\u2019s satirical drawings are coarse, rarely funny and more focused on Islam than on other religions.<\/li>\n<li><strong> What purposes does the broad interpretation serve?<\/strong><br \/>\nThe interpretation that this was a strike against freedom of opinion as such and on the Western world \u2013 compelling \u201cus\u201d to stand up together in self-defence \u2013 is unfounded, chosen for convenience and borders on the bizarre. The attack took place at a particular address at a particular journal and that sends a message itself. It was not directed at a major media, at a parliamentary building symbolising democracy or a democratic governments, let alone for instance an MP. A small French satirical magazine also can\u2019t symbolise the European Union or Europe as a whole. Rather, this \u201cbroad\u201d interpretation \u2013 that has hardly been challenged \u2013 is a <em>chosen, convenient interpretation<\/em> not unlike that immediately invented after September 11. That was an attack on the U.S., the physical structures of the empire\u2019s economic, political and military centres. The advantage of using a \u201ctotal\u201d or broad interpretation is, of course, that it helps us all gang up against the enemy now our whole system is, allegedly, being attacked. We are now all potential victims, the threat is huge; we\u2019re innocent and we did not deserve this. We must fight back. Making the threat much larger than there was\/is any empirical evidence of also serves <em>to legitimize an out-of-proportion response;<\/em> in the 9\/11 case to involve everybody in an ill-conceived terror-promoting \u201cwar on terror\u201d the miserable consequences of which we are seeing now 13 years after: One failed war after the other and more terrorism than ever.<\/li>\n<li><strong> The West in denial: Never discuss causes \u2013 Denmark as an example<\/strong><br \/>\nTo this can be added a Western refusal and denial. For instance, the Danish Television chose \u2013 at this occasion but not other conflicts and wars \u2013 to arrange a one-hour party leader debate on January 8. From the left to the right two things were agreed on: Such a horrific act committed by madmen is not caused by anything we have ever done. Two, there is no reason to even analyse or speculate on why it took place because \u2013 if we do so, there is a risk that an explanation will begin to look like a defence of the terror act and the terrorists. We do not want to understand them, they are madmen! Now human beings have motives and needs. By saying that they are irrelevant in this case these party leaders deny the perpetrators a part of their humanity. Secondly, they evidently \u2013 but unwisely \u2013 propagate the view that you can combat or solve a problem without being the slightest interested in that problem\u2019s causes. Third, they thereby conveniently avoid asking questions such as: Has Danish and other Western policies vis-a-vis the Muslim world been wrong in hindsight in even a tiny way? Has the \u2018war on terror\u2019 been a failure to some degree? No, the bottom line and standard answer was and remains: We are not party to this conflict. We have done nothing wrong. Don\u2019t ever say that this is a re-action to anything we in the West did, it was an action directed at us innocents and on our fundamental democratic values. Well, a couple of the Danish party leaders stated, when pressed a little, that of course one could say that this whole drama went back to the wars of religions several hundred years ago and then added that<em> the new thing in this was that the battle was now taking place on European soil.<\/em> It seemingly didn\u2019t occur to anyone in this debate that people in Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Libya or Syria could say that the <em>old<\/em> thing was is that it always took place on <em>their<\/em> territories! Whether there is something particularly Danish in this interpretation can be discussed. Denmark has been at war in Serbia, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya and was willing to bomb Syria and is now bombing IS in Iraq. It was host to the publication of the Muhamad caricatures and then Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (later S-G of NATO) refused to speak with ambassadors from Muslim countries and also to respond to a letter from the <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.oic-oci.org\/oicv2\/home\/?lan=en\" >Organisation of Islamic Cooperation<\/a> which counts 1.6 billion Muslims in 56 countries. In addition, Denmark spearheaded a xenophobic trend in the 1980s through the Progress Party and, from 1995, the Danish People\u2019s Party. Furthermore, the Danish Social Democratic party has long ago dropped earlier program elements such as international solidarity, a strong UN, disarmament, anti-nuclearism etc. and continues Fogh Rasmussen\u2019s policy of allying as closely as possible with the United States\/NATO in all matters. In addition, the traditional left-wing parties have long ago dropped anti-militarism and jumped on the de facto brutalising idea of humanitarian intervention. Thus, the decision in the Folketing \u2013 the Danish Parliament \u2013 to participate in the war on Libya was supported by all parties and no single MP breaking the party discipline either. Perhaps it <em>is<\/em> quite understandable if Danish party leaders agree that causes and history are fundamentally irrelevant and insist with one voice from right to left that their policies are unrelated to anything that happens which involved Muslims, their countries and culture.<\/li>\n<li><strong> Psychological violence may be underestimated.<\/strong><br \/>\nLet\u2019s look at the whole affair from the point of view of violence\/non-violence. We are used to perceive violence as physical directed at individuals or groups. However, violence can also be embedded in drawings, texts and then falls under the category of <em>psychological<\/em> \u2013 or gender, cultural, identity \u2013 violence. The problem here is that since psychological and the other categories of violence are much more difficult to make visual on a TV screen or in a video, this type and its effects on the receiver tend to be underestimated.<\/li>\n<li><strong> The media blowing this up because it is about colleagues.<\/strong><br \/>\nThe media world has not exactly given the death of first 12 and then 5 more people too little attention. The very same days large terror actions happened in both Yeman and Pakistan but received little attention even though killing and wounding many more. The interpretation could easily be that some lives, some victims of terrorism, are more worthy than others of attention. The fact that the killed persons were Europeans and most of them belonged to the media profession are likely to explain why this horrific deed got so much more attention than the more horrific consequences of, say, drones, sanctions, Israel\u2019s mass killing of innocent Palestinians or 6 million dead in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Regrettably, quite a few media in the Western world turned tabloid in those days or began to resemble publications of a journalist professional association. Editors forgot about their duty to strive for multi-perspective, as-objective-as-possible, critical coverage and good journalism. It isn\u2019t compatible with such standards to just publish \u201cJe Suis Charlie Today\u201d on the entire front page.<\/li>\n<li><strong> The Western world\u2019s comparative disadvantage.<\/strong><br \/>\nIt goes without saying that the West, like other cultures, has a right to state and defend its culture. Its comparative disadvantage, however, is that it has done so for centuries around the world and particularly since 1945 to such a degree that its values are perceived as authoritarian, arrogantly insensitive to local cultures, exploitative and bullying. The West itself would not accept another culture practising such dominance with reference to \u201cour values are universal\u201d. One culture among many cultures cannot \u2013 with bible and sword in hand \u2013 expect to be accepted as better or universal by all others and even less use it technological and violence superiority to impose those values. It should expect \u2013 sooner or later \u2013 to be opposed, challenged and even fought against. Perhaps we are living in the era of the boomerangs? Perhaps things have gone sto smoothly for so long that we in the West lost humility and got carried away with hubris \u2013 not the least in our triumphalist interpretation of the end of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact? And is the denial of any co-responsibility for the conflicts throughout the Middle East and the terrorism on \u201cour\u201d parts of the world a clue to a civilisational anxiety \u2013 that the U.S. and Western leadership is gradually getting weaker and others will take over and show humanity that there are other ways of doing it in the next phase of humanity\u2019s history?<\/li>\n<li><strong> We need a new type of response \u2013 a balance between security measures and reconciliation dialogue.<\/strong><br \/>\nYou may not agree with some \u2013 or any \u2013 of the above. But at the end of the day there is only one way ahead: We have to invest in and create spaces for much more inter-cultural education, mutual understanding, perhaps even a truth and reconciliation process between Europe\/the West and the Arab\/Muslim world, the Middle East in particular.We need fierce and open debates, yes, but no provocations \u2013 psychological or otherwise. We need self-critical analyses on all sides and much much less war, interventionism and other types of violence. We also need a West that is willing to listen and learn and not just teach and master. And we need that <em>for our own sake<\/em>.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p><strong>Not a matter of guilt \u2013 it\u2019s a matter of recognising history and shaping a new policy.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m aware that some may interpret my views as apportioning guilt \u2013 something like \u201coh we ourselves just got what we deserved in this Paris attack\u201d. That simply is not so.<\/p>\n<p>A few desperate, extremist people with Kalashnikovs cannot be interpreted as speaking on behalf of culture, religion or 1,6 billion people, 99,9 of whom cannot be called extremists or fundamentalists. But there are individuals who feel humiliated historically and whose situation at the bottom of society adds to their anger, rootlessnes and normlessness \u2013 to their violent impulses.<\/p>\n<p>The important thing now is that this horrific act in all it cruelty and sorrow should be seen as a welcome opportunity for us all to re-think today and tomorrow what we thought was so simple and evident yesterday.<\/p>\n<p>It simply must not lead to more hatred, confrontation, denial and more wars, neither big nor small. It must not lead to more curtailing of democracy and more surveillance of everything and everybody.<\/p>\n<p>The only way we can achieve such a constructive dialogue within ourselves and with the others is by being open to look at the West\u2019s long-term and contemporary history in the Middle East. NATO countries are at war or in deep conflict with all and everything, except perhaps a few such as Israel, Saudi-Arabia and Bahrein.<\/p>\n<p>And neither the U.S., NATO nor the European Union has a single sensible, overarching idea of where we want to be in that region in, say, 2020 or 2025. No idea. The agenda at the moment is \u2013 \u201cwe kill people who kill people because it is wrong to kill people\u201d and thus we bomb IS, fight terrorist groups we have nurtured to quite an extent ourselves and move from one crisis (mis)management to the next. And leave ravaged countries behind such as Iraq and Libya.<\/p>\n<p><em>If the West shall have any leadership in the future world, it will have to pass the exam called the Middle East and do so in the light of the last good 100 years of our colonial paradigm and \u201cOrientalism\u201d. Even if you think everything the U.K., France, Italy and the U.S. did has been right be sure of one thing: It no longer works and will not in the future.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>So: No to Islamophobia and discrimination! No to Muslim terrorism and Europhobia. Yes to future countries and regions with mixed cultures, empathy and respect and a recognition <em>through education and dialogue<\/em> that we will all be enriched by celebrating diversity instead of nationalism and other parochial isms.<\/p>\n<p>And what if the others won\u2019t go down that road?<\/p>\n<p>Take the first courageous step and show you are not weak. Stop doing what creates hateful, traumatised and very angry people \u2013 recognise that a-symmetric colonial-style wars do just that. Don\u2019t mirror their fears! Don\u2019t use them as an excuse because then you submit to their game. Start your own more constructive game and you\u2019ll be applauded and get followers.<\/p>\n<p>And so: No I am not Charlie. I cannot be. Instead I believe that at the end of the day we are all human beings.<\/p>\n<p>Einstein was right, unconditionally right, when he said farewell to a Danish visitor I happen to have known with these words: Remember your humanity, remember Gandhi and forget the rest!<\/p>\n<p><strong>NOTE:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>* <em>This article builds on two I wrote in Danish on the 7th and 8th of January. So many have asked for a translation of them and I thought the best would be to make a series of changes to fit them into one and for all my readers outside Denmark.<\/em> Find them here <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/janoberg.wordpress.com\/2015\/01\/09\/partilederdebatten-om-attentatet-pa-charlie-hebdo\/\" >Partilederdebatten om Charlie Hebdo<\/a> and here <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/janoberg.wordpress.com\/2015\/01\/08\/vi-er-alle-charlie-er-den-historie-nu-ogsa-sa-enkel\/\" >Vi er alle Charlie \u2013 men er d\u00e9n historie nu s\u00e5 enkel?<\/a><\/p>\n<p>___________________________<\/p>\n<p><em>TFF Director Prof. Jan Oberg is a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace, Development and Environment.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/blog.transnational.org\/2015\/01\/tff-pressinfo-300-%E2%80%9Cwe-are-all-charlie%E2%80%9D-%E2%80%93-but-is-that-story-so-simple\/\" >Go to Original \u2013 transnational.org<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>U.S., NATO and EU\u2019s agenda at the moment is \u2013 \u201cwe kill people who kill people because it is wrong to kill people\u201d and thus we bomb IS, fight terrorist groups we have nurtured to quite an extent ourselves and move from one crisis (mis)management to the next.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[40],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-52475","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-transcend-members"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/52475","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=52475"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/52475\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=52475"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=52475"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=52475"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}