November 13, 2008

The jihad against blasphemy begins with interfaith understanding

Irony pervades this lead paragraph:

Saudi Arabia, the oil-rich Islamic kingdom that forbids the public practice of other religious faiths, will preside Wednesday over a two-day U.N. conference on religious tolerance that will draw more than a dozen world leaders, including President Bush, Israeli President Shimon Peres and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

If I were writing the next paragraph I'd change "agreed for the first time" to "deigned."

The event is part of a personal initiative by Saudi King Abdullah to promote an interfaith dialogue among the world's major religions. The Saudi leader agreed for the first time to dine in the same room with the Israeli president at a private, pre-conference banquet Tuesday hosted by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. But Ban hinted that the two leaders -- whose governments do not have diplomatic relations -- were not seated at the same table.

While the Washington Post quotes a number of critics of Saudi Arabia, it doesn't mention what the real game is:

Saudi King Abdullah, who initiated this week's special session, is quietly enlisting the leaders' support for a global law to punish blasphemy - a campaign championed by the 56-member Organization of Islamic Conference that puts the rights of religions ahead of individual liberties.

If the campaign succeeds, states that presume to speak in the name of religion will be able to crush religious freedom not only in their own country, but abroad.

Abe Greenwald writes :

As President Bush and other world leaders convene for the farce, King Abdullah's plan will move steadily along and his image as peacemaker will be broadcast far and wide. He can back off of whatever lukewarm peace initiative he's laid out once he's made his case for global blasphemy.

Yes. Irony is not dead.

Crossposted on Yourish.

Posted by SoccerDad at November 13, 2008 6:15 AM
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