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June 12, 2009 Obama's Address to Muslims misses the PointBy Richard L. BenkinThose
same people have been engaged in a deliberate program of ethnic
cleansing against Bangladesh's Hindus. Hindus were almost one in
five Bangladeshis when the nation broke from Pakistan in 1971.
Today, after decades of murder, rape, and forced conversion, they are
less than one in ten. Using demographic models and other data,
Professor Sachi Dastidar of the State University of New York, Old
Westbury, estimates that 49 million Hindus are "missing" from the
Bangladeshi population; that is more people than most nations
have. Islamists
and their pernicious ideology might drive this, but "just plain folk"
carry it out. On March 23, I was near Bangladesh's northern
border when a young teacher asked me to meet a Hindu family that had
made its way into India only 22 days earlier. We followed him and
a local political leader along the main road until they ordered us to
stop and get out of the car. At their behest, I got on the back
of a motorcycle and was taken along a narrow, winding path through
farmland to an area covered by banana palms and other growth; and
finally to a clearing with a few ramshackle huts. The
family's story was by now a familiar one. Muslims came to their
small farm in Bangladesh and ordered them off their land; when the
father protested, they beat him severely. They all witnessed
other violent acts and told of Bangladeshi police refusing to help them
and supporting their attackers. But it was their young daughter
who made the strongest impression. At first silent at her
parents' direction, she insisted on speaking and said "the Muslims...
chased" her; but it was clear that there was more to it than
that. The more she spoke, the more she looked down and away, and
was even more reticent when I asked what they said "when they were
chasing you." She was clearly uncomfortable with my camera even
though, by agreement, I did not show faces or give away our location;
so I turned it off. It was then she said that they "caught [her
and] did bad things." Perhaps
it was her tragedy and her courage. It could have been her
parents; for most of these young rape victims are shunned by their
families and consigned to live with their attackers to be victimized
again and again. For while Obama spoke so easily, I thought about
them all but especially about the young girl; because if he considered
her or the countless others like her, he would have realized that the
problem is not the "violent extremists." History's dustbin is
littered with their like. They come and go causing death and
destruction, but ultimately disappear. They become dangerous only
when their less extreme cohorts afford them legitimacy, which is why I
thought of that young rape victim. For
her attack was possible only because of the people to whom Obama was
pandering. The "moderate" Bangladeshi government allows it to
happen and refuses to punish the perpetrators. It continues to
support a Nuremburg-type law enacted 35 years ago that rewards them
with their victims' property. And her attack was possible because
average Muslim citizens took part in and benefited from it. These
are the people to whom Obama spoke without even suggesting they examine
their actions and culpability, and the critical role they have to play
if there is ever a chance of genuine peace. That
is the danger in Obama's Cairo University speech and his policy of
"outreach" to the Muslim world. Peace is nice; frank discussions
are needed. But refusing to demand equal soul searching on the
part of those who are in reality radical Islam's lifeline will produce
neither and insure that his speeches will keep peace at a distance and
create more victims.
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