Dhimmitude: Today: Georgetown
Georgetown University Incident
With little notice Bat Ye'or and David G. Littman were each asked by three student associations to give
a 30 minute talk on October 22, 2002 at Georgetown University, on the theme: The Ideology of
Jihad, Dhimmitude and Human Rights. The student associations were: Jewish Student
Association, Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship, Georgetown Israel Alliance, The Lecture Fund.
Bat Ye'or based her address on a one hour lecture she gave at Brown University, October 10, 2002. (See
under "Debate on History"). David G. Littman enlarged his former
testimony to the US Congressional Human Rights Caucus on February 8, 2002.
Jihad and dhimmitude are loaded subjects. They cover the whole spectrum of Muslim
relations to non-Muslims in the theological and political field, since both are united in Islam. From
the 8th century, these subjects induced countless treatises, analyses, and comments in theological,
legal and political publications. For a millennium they have determined Islamic rules and policy related
to these specific fields: at the local level toward non-Muslim communities, and also in the
international
domain. In contemporary Muslim states, this legacy of the past still influences collective behavior and
law.
Non-Muslims also have reacted to Muslim views and policies toward them, as they are the very target of
jihad and of dhimmitude. So one finds differing views of a conflictual relationship,
rather than a unilateral, monolithic, dogmatic opinion.
Since the 1960s, certain Muslim countries have restored some traditional constraints concerning the
dhimmis, causing grave concern regarding universal human rights standards. As the field of human
rights is an important part of international relations, it is also affected by the traditional Islamic
view toward non-Muslims, and to the principles of secularism, modernization, and the universality and
equality of human rights. The conflict of opinions and values related to human rights issues is
particularly evident at the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva. David G. Littman, an experienced
NGO representative at the Commission, has analysed the consequences of diverse and conflictual human
rights declarations, often labeled "Cultural Relativism."
The lectures were vehemently opposed by Muslim students, more than half of the 70 to 80 present. They
were requested by the moderator to ask questions rather than make long comments, but few questions were
asked. Instead noisy arguments were voiced on the accuracy of the facts and the sources, although the
names of the Muslim jurists were provided. A firm tone was necessary to stop the ongoing discourses of
these students, in place of questions. Some Jewish and Christian students joined the protesting Muslim
students to whom they apologized profusely.
The situation at Georgetown University was developing according to the classical dhimmitude
pattern, but it was not in Cairo nor in Riyadh, but in Washington, DC, the capital of the United States.
The history and contemporary manifestations of jihad and dhimmitude were censored in an
American university by Muslim students, who imposed their monolithic version of Islamic perfection. Some
non-Muslim students were remorseful for having involuntary provoked an historical account that was
sacrilegious to Muslim ears. They humbly apologized then and later for an Islamic system of war and
oppression against Jews and Christians. In their dhimmi terror, they even vilified the lecturers
in letters later published in the university newspaper, The Hoya. They reproached the speakers
for having "made offensive implications regarding Islam" and having omitted to stress "pure, harmonious
Islam" - a form of devotional plea for daring to examine forbidden subjects.
Thus, a curtain was lifted at Georgetown - unveiling the conditioning to dhimmitude on an
American campus - since only dhimmis could praise the jihad ideology that destroyed and
still despises them.
The texts below written by Muslim students illustrate two major and important points inherent to Muslim
negationism:
- the refusal to accept the legitimacy of the historical testimony given by the victims of the
jihad/dhimmitude system, whose liberty to judge their own history is totally negated. Muslim
negationism obliged them to praise a policy that aims - under the label of tolerance - their own
dispossession and oppression, thereby gaining from the victims, its own moral self-justification.
- In her lecture, Bat Ye'or stressed that the ideology and rules of jihad constitute a
specialized domain of Islamic civilization. Accusations by Muslim students that their religion has
been abused by a historical account amounts to a recognition that they themselves have rooted these
institutions in their religion, not the lecturer. Such a censorship aims at neutralizing the defence
of those targeted by jihad, forcing them to praise a system that denies their liberty.
Georgetown University
Theme: The Ideology of Jihad, Dhimmitude and Human Rights
(Moderator: Prof. Alan Parra - Human Rights Law)
Links to Documents
- Report by Rod Dreher, Dhimmitude in
America, National Review Online (NRO), The Corner, Posted 5:28PM, Oct. 24, 2002
- Report by Rod Dreher, Dhimmitude in America,
Part 2, National Review Online (NRO), The Corner, Posted 5:39PM, Oct. 24, 2002
- Report by Rod Dreher, The Ivory Tower As
Minaret, National Review Online (NRO), The Corner, Posted 1:04AM, Oct. 25, 2002
- Report by Rod Dreher, Self-Hatred At
Georgetown, National Review Online (NRO), The Corner, Posted 2:25PM, Oct. 25, 2002
- Letter to the Editor,
Poor Behavior at Lecture Unacceptable
by Scott W. Borer-Miller, The Hoya, Oct. 25, 2002
- Letter to the Editor,
Students Apologize for Offensive
Speakers by Julia Segall, President, Georgetown Alliance and Daniel Spector, President, Jewish
Students Association, The Hoya, Oct. 25, 2002
- Special to The Hoya, Organizers Unhappy with
Speakers' Portrayal of Islam by Nick Timiraos, The Hoya, Oct. 25, 2002
- Damned If You Do: Historians dare to
criticize Islamic dhimmitude at Georgetown and pay a price, by Rod Dreher, National
Review Online (NRO), October 29, 2002
- State of 'dhimmitude' seen as
threat to Christians, Jews, by Julia Duin, The Washington Times, October 30, 2002
- Bat Ye'or. Speakers Respond to
Controversy. Tell Their Story. The Hoya, Nov. 5, 2002
- David G. Littman. Speakers Respond to
Controversy. Tell Their Story. The Hoya, Nov. 5, 2002
- Letter to the Editor,
Students' Denial Cannot Change Historical
Facts by S.M. Stirling, The Hoya, Nov.5, 2002
- Letter to the Editor,
Be Informed, Prepared Before Inviting
Speaker by Alexander Ignatiev, The Hoya, Nov. 5, 2002
- Letter to the Editor,
Student Clarifies Misquotes in
Article by Salomon Kalach-Zaga, Director of Communication, Georgetown, Israel Alliance, The
Hoya, Nov.5, 2002
- Comment on letter by Samer Oweida:
This letter illustrates the typical reaction of the negationist trend. Bat Ye'or only quoted the
definition of the laws of jihad by Muslim jurists. The very fact of exposing them in a lecture
provoked a violent reaction, not about the laws and the rules of dhimmitude, but against the lecturers
who broke a taboo.
- Comment on the letter by David Kahane:
A poor knowledge of jihad and dhimmitude appears in this letter. It is not the lecturers but
the Muslim theologians who rooted these two institutions and justified them by references to the
Qur'an and the hadiths. A lecture on this subject must give the references provided by Muslim
theologians and jurists.
- Comment on viewpoint by Spector, Segall and Kalach-Zaga:
A typical attitude which required an apology for exposing historical facts, abundantly described in
theological, legal, historical and literary Muslim books, without any complex.
- Comment on letter by Shadi Hamdi:
The accusation of having attacked Islam because one describes jihad and dhimmitude,
constitutes a censorship on history.
- Letter to the Editor,
Speaker Believes Truth is Powerful, Will
Prevail by David G. Littman, The Hoya, Nov. 12, 2002
- Letter to the Editor,
Clarifying Islamic Law is not hate
speech by Alexander Ignatiev, The Hoya, Nov. 15, 2002
- Comment on Viewpoint by Maryam Mohamed:
The student implies that jihad and dhimmitude depend on specific regimes. Yet they are
perennial institutions regulating international relations and governance. One also finds here, a
modern historical falsification which consists in inculpating the Jews of Medina for their own
expulsion, enslavement and slaughter, by pretending that they requested to be judged by their own law,
which mandated these sentences. This fabrication is contrary to the hadiths on this subject,
the biography of the Prophet, and the commentaries of every Muslim theologians, jurists and historians
who wrote on this subject.
- Letter to the Editor,
A Quest for Truth. Speaker Clarifies
Facts by David G. Littman, The Hoya, Nov.19, 2002
- Comment on Viewpoint by Andrew Carlon:
Although Carlon's comment on Bat Ye'or is based on rumours, since he admits he was absent, he has
interesting arguments on Islam being a taboo subject at Georgetown.
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