Religion of Orwell
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
Islam is a religion of Peace. That is as certain
as the three slogans of the Ministry of Truth; War
is Peace, Freedom is Slavery and Ignorance is
Strength.
These three slogans of the Party in George
Orwell's 1984 are especially applicable to Islam; a
religion of war that claims to be a religion of
peace, whose political parties (such as the Muslim
Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party) use
"Freedom" in their name but stand for slavery, and
ignorance of its true nature creates an illusion of
strength for industrialized nations that imagine
that they are only battling a tiny handful of
outmatched extremists.
The Orwellian world finds its natural expression in
our world of unnamable wars against unnamable
enemies who are peacefully at war with us in the
name of a religion that our leaders assure us is
wholly peaceful and should not be identified with
the people killing us in its name. There is enough
convoluted reasoning in a single press conference
after any act of Muslim terror to have provided
Orwell with material for three sequels.
But in a Doublethink world where everything means
the opposite of what it is, even Orwell isn't immune
from inversion. The popularization of Orwell has
made him ubiquitous. Animal Farm's book cover
appears on reusable shopping bags. Every television
show, from singing competitions to spy shows, will
sooner or later be described as Orwellian.
Orwell is everywhere and his ideas are nowhere.
Instead of censoring him, the Doublethinkers, in the
fashion of the Ministry of Truth, rewrote him and
made him banal.
Dubai, a city in a totalitarian state that practices
censorship and fills jails with political prisoners,
will host its Inaugural George Orwell Lecture under
the auspices of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin
Rashid Al Maktoum; a billionaire ruler with more
wives and yachts than human rights.
Considering Dubai's international reputation as a
glittering city for the wealthy built on the backs
of slave labor, the stark contradiction between its
primitive base and its skyscrapers, a party city
where women have fewer rights than kidnapped child
camel jockeys, there ought to be plenty of material
for an Orwell lecture.
Dubai, like Islam, is slavery masquerading as
freedom.
But His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al
Maktoum is not about to sponsor a lecture critical
of his glittering tyranny. Not in a tyranny where
the son of the UAE president and the brother of its
crown prince was filmed using cattle prods, lighter
fluid and nails to torture a businessman. In a
properly Orwellian statement, the Ministry of the
Interior, whose cops had been involved in the
torture, said that "all rules, policies and
procedures were followed correctly by the Police
Department".
Orwellian tyrannies like the UAE don't allow
lectures on Orwell unless they have been properly
routed through the Ministry of the Interior, which
follows procedures correctly when sticking a cattle
prod into the rectum of a screaming Afghan
businessman, the Ministry of Truth and their useful
Western idiots who do all the Doublethinking on
behalf of their countrymen.
And so instead of an Orwell lecture on the Orwellian
nature of the country it's actually taking place in,
Gavin Esler, a BBC television presenter, which is to
say an employee of a massive media bureaucracy that
everyone must support by law, will claim that 1984
was warning England about the threat of the X-Factor
television singing competition and Wayne Rooney; an
English soccer player.
And that is no exaggeration. That is the actual
preview of his talk.
It is no doubt comforting to believe, as so many
left-wing intellectuals seem to, that the threat of
totalitarianism comes from the Daily Mail and
Manchester United, rather than The Independent and
The Guardian. Talent competition judges don't send
people off to reeducation camps. That is more in the
wheelhouse of left-wing intellectuals. And tabloids
don't send people to blow themselves up in the
London Underground to enforce Islamic law on the
United Kingdom.
There is something undeniably subversive about an
Orwell Lecture that is itself Orwellian, but that no
doubt is not what Gavin Esler has in mind. In
classic Doublethink fashion, he is unaware of his
inversion of reality because his own reality has
been permanently inverted. And so an audience of
Europeans will attend an event in a totalitarian
Muslim country where the royal family casually
tortures people and nod along knowingly to the
revelation that Orwell wasn't writing about the
tyranny of torture chambers and thought police, but
the tyranny of television cliches.
Orwellian lectures on Orwell appear to be the
fashion at the Orwell Trust. The annual Orwell
Lecture has already been delivered by Muslim
Brotherhood scion and stoning apologist Tarik
Ramadan. The topic of Ramadan's lecture was
"Democratising the Middle East: A New Role for the
West".
To the Muslim Brotherhood, democratization means the
same thing that a plane ticket does to their Al
Qaeda splinter group. A Muslim Brotherhood Supreme
Guide was once quoted as saying, "Democracy is like
a pair of slippers that we wear until we reach the
bathroom, and then we take them off." The
Brotherhood was booted out of power because it
decided that Egypt was already in the toilet and
that it could take off its democracy slippers
prematurely.
Democracy, to the Freedom and Justice Party of the
Muslim Brotherhood, which offered neither freedom
nor justice, was another word for tyranny. And that
made Tarik Ramadan's talk title an actual embodiment
of the Party's three slogans in 1984.
Tarik Ramadan has described the Muslim Brotherhood
as a "legalist, anti-colonialist and nonviolent
movement that claimed legitimacy for armed
resistance in Palestine against Zionist expansionism
during the period before World War II." That's a
rather roundabout way of saying that it was an
Anti-Western totalitarian movement that drew support
from Nazi Germany because of their common goal of
exterminating the Jews.
"Al-Banna's objective was to found an "Islamic
state" based on gradual reform, beginning with
popular education and broad-based social programs,"
Ramadan writes. But he neglects to mention that
Hassan al Banna was his grandfather
or that his Islamic state would "regulate every
aspect of life", conduct "surveillance of theaters
and cinemas", confiscate "provocative stories and
books that implant the seeds of skepticism",
criminalize the mingling of men and women and
restore the Caliphate.
If this sounds like an Islamic Oceania, that makes
it all the more outrageous that his grandson should,
in thoroughly dishonest terms, promote the creation
of this Caliphate, where men and women will be
flogged, books will be burned and the Freedom and
Justice Party will watch everyone all the time, at a
memorial lecture for the writer who warned that
Oceania was coming.
It was the very rise of this burgeoning Caliphate in
Egypt that turned the Tahrir Square protesters
against Muslim Brotherhood rule. Just as it provoked
youthful uprisings in Turkey, a despotism that
Ramadan promoted as the Brotherhood's ideal model.
But according to Ramadan, the overthrow of the
Brotherhood, the mobs in the street chanting for
Morsi to join Mubarak, was a Zionist conspiracy.
Unlike Machiavellian, Orwellian was never meant to
characterize George Orwell as a supporter of the
totalitarianism that he wrote about. But the Orwell
Trust has perversely embraced the very same
totalitarianism depicted in 1984; the distortion of
language into Doublethink and the advancement of
slavery, war and ignorance under the guise of
freedom, peace and justice.
Consider Orwell book prize judges like Arifa Akbar,
who has spent a good deal of time claiming that the
UK isn't the victim of Muslim terrorism, but that
Muslims are rather the victims of UK
counter-terrorism, a proper inversion of the truth
worthy of the Ministry of Truth, and winners like
Raja Shehadeh for Palestinian Walks; the
former director of a group that supports
terrorism.
In a Harold Bloom edited collection of essays on
Orwell's Animal Farm, one essay suggests that the
writer was drawing on Islamic themes when describing
Napoleon's four sows, matching the number of
permitted wives in the Koran, and writing that
Sugarcandy Mountain, the fictional afterlife
propounded by one of Napoleon's stooges was derived
from descriptions of Islamic paradise.
Commentary of this sort however has grown rarer and
rarer. Instead of using Orwell's work to shine a
critical light on distortions of language that
enable totalitarianism, the deceased writer has been
recruited to distort language to enable the
totalitarian fantasies of Islam.
The Orwell Trust has become Orwellian in the worst
sense. Its descent into collaboration with
totalitarian states and ideologies is the very sort
of conduct among the left that Orwell had been
writing about.
George Orwell struggled to publish Animal Farm
because no one wanted to hear anything negative
about Stalin and the Soviet Union. Today, Islam and
the Caliphate have taken the place of Communism and
the Soviet Union. The new Doublethinkers of the left
have drafted Orwell into their Ministry of Truth
that claims Islam is a religion of peace, that the
Freedom and Justice Party of the Muslim Brotherhood
does not stand for the enslavement of half the
population and that ignorance of these things is not
a weakness, but a strength.