Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Culture arabe. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Culture arabe. Afficher tous les articles

dimanche 6 juillet 2014

Adolescents juifs et arabe tués: comparez les funérailles et le mode de deuil

On peut aussi évoquer le comportement pacifique et dénué de haine de la communauté juive lors de la tuerie du Musée juif de Bruxelles perpétré par le Franco-algérien Mehdi Nemmouche, de la mise à mort d'Ilan Halimi par le gang des barbares, de l'assassinat de Sébastien Selam par Adel Amastaibou et de la tuerie perpétrée par Mohamed Mehra.

@ Shilo Musings: Compare the Funerals, And The Mourning

Here's a picture I took at the funeral of Gilad Shaar and Naftali Frenkel, both 16, and Eyal Yifrach, 19, HaYa"D, at the Modiin Cemetery where they were buried.
The mourners were quiet and stoic. And here's one from an angle I couldn't take.
Oren Ziv/Activestills.org
Compare the body language with these from the funeral of the Arab teen Mohammed Abu Khudair*:
REUTERS/FINBARR O'REILLY

Here is how Jews mourn:
 Israelis light candles in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square on Monday as they mourn the news
of the death of three abducted Jewish teenagers. Credit: Tomer Neuberg/Flash90
And here's how the Arabs are mourning:
Photo Credit: Flash 90
All of this is something to think about...  Suite.

jeudi 3 juillet 2014

Pour un Juif qui hurle 'Mort aux Arabes' il y a des centaines d'Arabes qui hurlent 'Mort aux Juifs'

"Ce que nous savons c'est que pour un Juif qui ignominieusement hurle "Mort aux Arabes," il y a des centaines d'Arabes qui hurlent "Mort aux Juifs"."  C'est là effectivement la grande différence culturelle entre Palestiniens et Israéliens.  En effet, Les Israéliens ne fêtent pas, par des cris de joie et la distribution de friandises, la mort du jeune Palestinien Mohammed Abu Khdeir ni d'autres Palestiniens.  Comme l'explique si bien Richard Landes dans la culture arabe, Israël est un affront à l'Islam, à l'honneur, à la virilité par de la part de dhimmis juifs.

Elder of Ziyon: At this time, no one knows who killed Mohammed Abu Khdeir, or why. Different media are spinning the story differently [...]  

There is plenty that we don't know.  But we do know is that no Israeli openly celebrated the death of Mohammed Abu Khdeir. And no one will.

This is in marked contrast to this cartoon from Arabic social media  that was captured by the Terror Watch Facebook page (h/t Yoel):



We do know that for every Jew who shamefully shouts "Death to Arabs," there are hundreds of Arabs who shout "Death to Jews."


We do know that there will be no headlines about Arab threats to Jews, but there will be headlines about Jews threatening Arabs, precisely because the first is pervasive and the second is so unusual.

We do know that thousands of Israelis rallied against racism today, and we have never ever seen a similar Arab rally against racism.



Plenty of irresponsible people are rushing to report what they don't know. But no one is reporting what we do know.

lundi 30 juin 2014

Dans la culture arabe, Israël est un affront à l'Islam, à l'honneur, à la virilité par des dhimmis

"The threat to Arab honor did not come from a worthy foe, like the Western Christians, but by from Jews, traditionally the most passive, abject, cowardly of the populations over which Muslims ruled. [...]  the prospect of an independent state of should-be dhimmis struck Arab leaders as more than humiliating. It endangered all Islam. Thus Rahman Azzam Pasha, the head of the newly formed Arab League, spoke for his “honor group” when he threatened that “if the Zionists dare establish a state, the massacres we would unleash would dwarf anything which Genghis Khan and Hitler perpetrated.” As the Armenians had discovered a generation earlier, the mere suspicion of rebellion could engender massacres. [...] The loss in 1948, therefore, constituted the most catastrophic possible outcome for this honor-group: Seven Arab armies, representing the honor of hundreds of thousands of Arabs (and Muslims), were defeated by less than a million Jews, the surviving remnant of the most devastating and efficient genocide in history. To fall to people so low on the scale that it is dishonorable even to fight them—nothing could be more devastating. And this humiliating event occurred on center stage of the new postwar global community, before whom the Arab league representatives had openly bragged about their upcoming slaughters. In the history of a global public, never has any single and so huge a group suffered so much dishonor and shame in the eyes of so great an audience."

Pour comprendre le rejet d'Israël par les Arabes il faut essayer de comprendre dans quel cadre mental ils opèrent.  C'est ce qu'a entrepris Richard Landes.


Enfant embrigadé par
le Hamas
Why the Arab World Is Lost in an Emotional Nakba, and How We Keep It There. By ignoring the honor-shame dynamic in Arab political culture, is the West keeping itself from making headway toward peace? @ Tablet, par le Prof. Richard Landes


[...] Arab political culture, to take one example—despite some liberal voices, despite noble dissidents—tends to favor ascendancy through aggression, the politics of the strong horse,” and the application of “Hama rules”—which all combine to produce a Middle East caught between prison and anarchy, between Sisi’s Egypt and al-Assad’s Syria. Our inability, however well-meaning, to discuss the role of honor-shame dynamics in the making of this political culture poses a dilemma: By keeping silent, we not only operate in denial, but we may actually strengthen these brutal values and weaken the very ones we treasure.
Few conflicts offer a better place to explore these matters than the Arab-Israeli conflict.
In order to understand the role of hard zero-sum, honor-shame concerns in the attitude of Arabs toward Israel, one must first understand the role of the Jew in the Muslim Arab honor-group. For the 13 centuries before Zionism, Jews had been subject to a political status in Muslim lands specifically designed around issues of honor (to Muslims) and shame (to Jews). Jews were dhimmi, “protected” from Muslim violence by their acceptance of daily public degradation and legal inferiority. Noted Chateaubriand in the 19th century: “Special target of all [Muslim and Christian] contempt, the Jews lower their heads without complaint; they suffer all insults without demanding justice; they let themselves be crushed by blows. … Penetrate the dwellings of these people, you will find them in frightful poverty.”
For more than a millennium, Arab and Muslim honor resided, among other places, in their domination and humiliation of their dhimmi—and when the occasional reformer equalized their legal status, he struck a heavy blow to Muslim honor. Noted a British envoy on the impact of Muhammad Ali’s reforms: “The Mussulmans … deeply deplore the loss of that sort of superiority which they all & individually exercised over & against the other sects. … A Mussulman … believes and maintains that a Christian—& still more a Jew—is an inferior being to himself.”
To say that to the honor-driven Arab and Muslim political player, in the 20th century as in the 10th century, the very prospect of an autonomous Jewish political entity is a blasphemy against Islam, and an insult to Arab virility, is not to say that every period of Muslim rule involved deliberate humiliation of dhimmi. Nor is it to say that all Arabs think like this. On the contrary, this kind of testosterone-fueled, authoritarian discourse imposes its interpretation of “honor” on the entire community, often violently. Thus, while some Arabs in 1948 Palestine may have viewed the prospect of Jewish sovereignty as a valuable opportunity, the Arab leadership and “street” agreed that for the sake of Arab honor Israel must be destroyed and that those who disagreed were traitors to the Arab cause.
Worse: The threat to Arab honor did not come from a worthy foe, like the Western Christians, but by from Jews, traditionally the most passive, abject, cowardly of the populations over which Muslims ruled. [...]
So, the prospect of an independent state of should-be dhimmis struck Arab leaders as more than humiliating. It endangered all Islam. Thus Rahman Azzam Pasha, the head of the newly formed Arab League, spoke for his “honor group” when he threatened that “if the Zionists dare establish a state, the massacres we would unleash would dwarf anything which Genghis Khan and Hitler perpetrated.” As the Armenians had discovered a generation earlier, the mere suspicion of rebellion could engender massacres.
The loss in 1948, therefore, constituted the most catastrophic possible outcome for this honor-group: Seven Arab armies, representing the honor of hundreds of thousands of Arabs (and Muslims), were defeated by less than a million Jews, the surviving remnant of the most devastating and efficient genocide in history. To fall to people so low on the scale that it is dishonorable even to fight them—nothing could be more devastating. And this humiliating event occurred on center stage of the new postwar global community, before whom the Arab league representatives had openly bragged about their upcoming slaughters. In the history of a global public, never has any single and so huge a group suffered so much dishonor and shame in the eyes of so great an audience.
So, alongside the nakba (catastrophe) that struck hundreds of thousands of the Arab inhabitants of the former British Mandate Palestine, we find yet another, much greater psychological catastrophe that struck the entire Arab world and especially its leaders: a humiliation so immense that Arab political culture and discourse could not absorb it. Initially, the refugees used the term nakba to reproach the Arab leaders who started and lost the war that so hurt them. In a culture less obsessed by honor and more open to self-criticism, this might have led to the replacement of political elites with leaders more inclined to move ahead with positive-sum games of the global politics of the United Nations and the Marshall Plan. But when appearances matter above all, any public criticism shames the nation, the people, and the leaders.
Instead, in a state of intense humiliation and impotence on the world stage, the Arab leadership chose denial—the Jews did not, could not, have not won. The war was not—could never—be over until victory. If the refugees from this Zionist aggression disappeared, absorbed by their brethren in the lands to which they fled, this would acknowledge the intolerable: that Israel had won. And so, driven by rage and denial, the Arab honor group redoubled the catastrophe of its own refugees: They made them suffer in camps, frozen in time at the moment of the humiliation, waiting and fighting to reverse that Zionist victory that could be acknowledged. The continued suffering of thesesacrificial victims on the altar of Arab pride called out to the Arab world for vengeance against the Jews. In the meantime, wherever Muslims held power, they drove their Jews out as a preliminary act of revenge.

mercredi 25 juin 2014

Caricatures dans la presse arabe sur l'enlèvement des trois adolescents israéliens

L'enlèvement de trois adolescents israéliens par des terroristes palestiniens inspire les caricaturistes arabes...

Source: Shawarma News

Al-Araby Al-Jadid, Qatar/United Kingdom (Jun 24, 2014) (détournement du table d'E. Munch "Le Cri")


Al-Madina, Saudi Arabia (Jun 24, 2014)
Les adolescents deviennent des "soldats".

Woman: "Sir...we searched Hebron house by house..home by home..inch by inch..alleyway by alleyway, we could not find any trace of the three soldiers...what to do ?!"
Benjamin Netanyahu: "We bomb Gaza"

Source: Shawarma News

Al-Arab Al-Yawm, Jordan (Jun 18, 2014)