Bill Warner
The jihadists -- on this occasion the Indian Mujahadeen -- are at it again. On a Sunday in July nine bombs went off in Buddhism's most sacred place, Bodh Gaya
in India. The jihadists said the bombing was in retaliation for the
Buddhists resisting jihad in Myanmar. This would be the equivalent of
bombing the Wailing Wall, St. Paul's Cathedral, Bethlehem or the Kabbah.
But, since Buddhists are the least political of all religions, the
media barely noticed.
This jihad attack may have long term consequences for jihad, due to
favorable attitudes toward and perceptions of Buddhists, and who
Buddhists are. Buddhism is the pet religion of the media, Leftists,
Progressives and Liberals, and even those who are right of center find
it hard to dislike Buddhism. Buddhism is truly the religion of peace,
not like that other "religion of peace" with the jihad doctrine and 1400
years of conquest.
But the Left and Liberals are also the apologists for Islam, and one
of the ways apologists deny the brutality of Islam is to attack its
victims as somehow deserving of the jihadist attacks. When Christians
are killed every week by jihadists, the leftist types justify it because
of the Crusades and other wars by nations that are primarily Christian.
When 30 Christian children are murdered in Nigeria, it is considered
payback for the Crusades. (The Crusades lasted for 300 years and the
last one was 800 years ago.) And any Jews killed are payback for the
purported Israeli persecution of the so-called Palestinians. Put another
way, the apologists for Islam figure that most of those who are killed
in jihad deserve it.
So, the apologists for Islam are in a quandary. Jihad is hurting
Buddhists, but it would be bigoted to complain about it. The denial
machine is set to spin -- those jihadists were not real Muslims or else
they were just a few crazies.
A second problem for the apologists is their theory that if Muslims
are treated right, they won't be violent. This is the "treat the
Palestinians right and they will do right" theory of dealing with Islam.
This gets expanded to the theory that all Islamic violence is due to
how the Palestinians are treated. Well, bombing Buddhists in India has
no connection to Palestine.
Many Buddhists are absolute pacifists who hold to the "if you do
good, good will come to you" school of politics. The problem is that
such Buddhists usually cannot figure out why Muslims believe that being a
Buddhist is evil. They may be ignorant of Islamic doctrine that says
that the only good that can come out of a Buddhist is submission to
Islam.
Buddhist doctrine holds that we need both compassion and wisdom. But
the wisdom aspect does not seem to be highlighted when the Dalai Lama
says that the attacks are "very sad" while noting that it could be an
act of a "few individuals" and "shouldn't be considered something
serious."
If the Dalai Lama would pick up the clue phone, he would hear this:
"Hello, the Buddhism that you practice, Vajrayana Buddhism, came from
the Swat Valley in Afghanistan and where is Buddhism now? It has been
annihilated from Afghanistan by jihadists. That same doctrine of jihad
is annihilating Buddhists in Thailand today. Is that sad enough for
you?" Jihad seeks to annihilate all religions in the territory that
Muslims enter. And that should be considered as something serious.
But bombing Bodh Gaya has a down side for the jihadists. A few of the
usual apologists may decide that if jihad means bombing Buddhists, then
maybe, just maybe, there is something fundamentally wrong with Islam.
Islam's apologists have a lot more trouble in justifying the justice of
jihad against Buddhists since the jihad is against their own political
alliance.
So bombing Buddhists may be a tactical victory, but it could a
long-term strategic error but, only if the Buddhists and the apologists
pay attention to murder of their own.
Published in American Thinker
No comments:
Post a Comment