First Andrea and then the Islamist Problem...
Writing once more from a paracetamol induced twilight
zone. The blasted cold has returned in
force today because last night Baba and I had to go on a rescue mission at
sunset and into the night on our motorcycles looking for my friend Andrea, the
Brazilian Amazon who went riding on Petit Bandit at 4.30 last night: by 6.15
pm she had not yet returned.
Baba and I went
crashing through the bush almost as far as Diabolo as night was rapidly
falling, asking every stray person we met: women carrying faggots home to
prepare for their evening meal or home ward -bound Fulani shepherds with their
flocks: ”Have you seen a Toubabo Muso
on a horse?” Noone had. In my mind I was
already making plans as I was bumping along the path behind the great
clouds of dust from Baba’s motorcycle: one for how to proceed if if she turned out to be dead: I would contact the Brazilian ambassador straight
away and he would have to sort it ; I would get the telephone number through Eva (my friend the Swedish
ambassador). Another plan was forming
simultaneouly for if she wasn’t dead but badly injured. In that case Ace and I
would bundle her into the old Mitzubishi
pick- up and take her to Mopti hospital.
I decided that it would not matter that there were no papers for the pick -up
and that normally we can’t travel anywhere where we might be stopped by
gendarmes asking annoying questions such as: where is your Carte Grise? (The ownership papers. There are none, but that is
another long story for another time...) I have always thought that in an
emergency such as the one last night it would still be possible to travel to
the hospital in Mopti or Bamako in the old pick- up: if we were stopped I
would just bark-“let us through! There is a dying Toubab in the back!” In my
opinion the gendarmes would not put up any resistance...
Since our search was proving fruitless and since darkness
was profound by then, we eventually turned back.
When we arrived at the hotel we found the blasted girl
sitting in the bar quite safe and sound
sipping a ginger juice! “Oh, I was
having such a nice time! We went so far into the bush in one direction that at
sunset I realized that it would take at least three quarters of an hour to
return! And I forgot to bring my telephone...”
Of course; maybe I shouldn’t have worried too much. I knew
Andrea had grown up in the saddle on a large farm in the south of Brazil after
all. So we became friends again and even started to plot: why doesn’t Andrea
buy a mare and then we can go riding together and also see if there might not
be a foal by Petit Bandit? My donkey family seems to be multiplying but however
lovely Betty the donkey foal is, it is not quite the same thing... I would love
to have a real foal at Hotel Djenné Djenno after all these years and all these
horses!
All the above was just a pre-amble actually in order to
explain why I am writing in a state of feverish semi-stupour. Therefore it may
well be that I am not going to be able to express exactly what I would like to
say. But it needs to be said today so I will have a go...two things, really:
I have not had either time or a connecton good enough to follow
exactly the debate that is raging at the moment in the news and in the social
media regarding the shocking Charlie Hebdo event. Therefore what I am about to
say may well have been said already. I know for instance that there was an
article in the Times (which I have not read) but the gist of which seems to be:
this would never have happened in the UK because British journalists and
cartoonists would never have gone that far in their provocation of the Muslim
radicals. Now this is an interesting question: Should this be regarded as
cowardice or simple good manners, not wanting to offend? Did the cartoonists perhaps go too far? I have not made up my mind of what I think about this...
Nevertheless; all educated liberals
of the world stand united in our condemnation, and this must be so and it is
good. Everyone is falling over themselves trying to make the differentiation between ‘proper Islam’ and
these murderous ‘Islamists’. I too in my
little way here in Djenné have decreed that the theme for the calligraphy
competition at the library next week (sponsored by MaliMali) is “Islam: a
Religion of Peace”; and the texts that have been chosen for the calligraphy
have been chosen in the Koran to reflect this theme.
The Muslim communities of the world have spoken their
condemnation of this event via many religious leaders and via their imams in
many cities of the world. But I don’t think that it is enough! The “real “ Muslims
of the world, all those that abhor the behaviour of the Taliban; Al-Quaida ; Isis ; Boko Haram et al need to
form an energetic movement for peace in order to show the world that their
Islam has been hi-jacked. It cannot be left to the liberal masses of agnostic
post-Christians to fight the politically correct battle for Islam! Get yourself
together and save the face of your own religion- we may help you as well as we
can in the name of peace and understanding but if you want to save the
reputation of your religion it is YOUR duty to do so with more vigour than you
do now!
5 Comments:
Your calligraphy competition theme is a beautiful response to the situation. I am glad Andrea came home safely, too.
Both the step you're about to take with the calligraphy competition and the one you propose are infinitely better than most of the guff I've read in the papers. Now I'm off to read Karen Armstrong's book in Islam. It's high time.
Thank you both dear Susan and David!
When you have read the Armstrong book; let me know if its worth it...
Sophie!!! Thank you from my heart for your demanding call: ...the "real" Muslims of the world...
I desperately wish they would listen and act.
and here is Lassana Bathily, the brave young Malian, heroe of the Jewish supermarket attack in Paris http://youtu.be/fq_FgSkoiS0
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