[Regular commenter DeusExMacintosh has been noting with some interest commentary around the intertubes on the relationship between Islam, the disabled and - most important - disabled people who need Assistance Dogs to help with independent living. This is something about which she is uniquely well qualified to comment. DEM lives in the UK, where British dogliness and Islamic intransigence are clashing in all sorts of ugly ways. This post offers a few of her thoughts on the issue - SL].
WHY SHOULDN’T IT HAPPEN TO A MUSLIM?
The normally excellent Channel 4 ‘Dispatches’ strand of documentaries recently featured one called “It Shouldn’t Happen to a Muslim”.
Three years after the July 7 bombings in London, Peter Oborne reports on whether the attacks, combined with fears of terrorism, have fuelled the rise of violence and intolerance towards the Muslim community in Britain. Oborne meets British Muslims who live in fear of being attacked, and investigates whether press coverage of terror incidents has had the side-effect of portraying Islam and British Muslims in a negative fashion.
Had you asked me earlier, I’d have agreed that he might have a point. But then SkepticLawyer pointed me to an article in The Daily Mail:
A postcard featuring a cute puppy sitting in a policeman’s hat advertising a Scottish police force’s new telephone number has sparked outrage from Muslims… The advert has upset Muslims because dogs are considered ritually unclean and has sparked such anger that some shopkeepers in Dundee have refused to display the advert. Dundee councillor Mohammed Asif said: ‘My concern was that it’s not welcomed by all communities, with the dog on the cards… They (the police) should have understood. Since then, the police have explained that it was an oversight on their part, and that if they’d seen it was going to cause upset they wouldn’t have done it.’
For those familiar with the UK media scene this sounds suspiciously too good to be true (like the unfounded story of Lambeth council renaming their Xmas celebrations “Winter Festival” to appease the Muslim community in particular) but having checked around the interwebs it seems Tayside police have indeed apologized for not thinking it was necessary to seek diversity advice when putting their star police pup Rebel on a postcard. It’s fifty-fifty on which sector of the public is more offended – those Muslims who have complained about the ad or the wider British community who love their dogs. (Message to Scottish Muslims: If you thought you were a minority before…)
A cringing trustee of the local Dundee mosque quickly pooh-poohed the idea in a local paper.
“I’ve not heard anything about that from members of the community,”… Mr Sarwar said that religious sensitivities would prevent him from displaying the postcard on a building of religious significance but there was nothing to stop them being displayed in shops. “There is not a dog—it is just a picture,” he said.
No real story, then. No great surprise.
The funniest feature of “It Shouldn’t Happen to a Muslim” was Peter Oborne’s outrage that parts of the British media might deliberately distort and misrepresent Muslim views. (No, really? Unlike their typical dedication to accuracy and fairness, you mean?). Personally, I think Mr Sarwar protests too much. As someone who gets around town in the company of a large black Assistance Dog I know that an overwhelming number of Muslims have a genuine revulsion when it comes to even the professional canine corps. I know this because I regularly get full grown adults doing the ‘girl germs’ cringe with sound effects even when we’re metres away which, incidentally, I find bloody offensive (though admittedly useful when faced with a crowded pavement during the Edinburgh Festival – it’s like the parting of the Red Sea). One of the reasons I find this so offensive is because I am very much identified with my dog and can never be entirely sure the disgust is entirely due to him.
Having done a little research it doesn’t appear that Islam is another of the Hoddlesque ‘disability is a curse from God’ school of medievalism – at least officially. That said, the fact that Sikhism officially gives full rights to women hasn’t prevented honour killings in that community either. There are some pretty rank cultural traditions that have managed to survive the imposition of religious principles, and in the case of Islam I do know that lameness can be grounds for divorce under Shariah law. Teacher friends have also told me how many disabled Muslim children, whilst loved and well treated, are kept home and away from public gaze rather than being sent to school. Is that in shame?
Before I had an assistance dog, being disabled hadn’t seemed much of a problem in itself. Using a mobility scooter meant passing by the local mosque down a street dominated by Muslim families and I’d play with the kids – they’d pretend to block the pavement until I gave them money, I’d pretend to run them over. It was very good-natured until the London bombings. The last boy I saw (months later, after acquiring my Assistance Dog) was about six and had seen me coming. He darted out the front door to taunt me “You’re not a mother, you’re not a wife!” before his mother shooed him back indoors. I never saw any of the children again, though I continued to use that route every week for two years. How do I know whether this was due to a fear of reprisals post 7/7, or because their parents didn’t want them mixing with the disabled girl? If my dog is ‘untouchable’, am I?
Last year it was finally declared acceptable for a non-salivating Guide Dog to accompany his blind master into a UK Mosque (though not the prayer hall) but blind people are regularly being refused service by Muslim taxi drivers the world over despite formal advice to the contrary. (At least in Australia they’ve been fired for it).
British women resent being generalized as drunken ‘slags’ as much as Muslims resent being generalized as terrorists but given time both communities will have to come to an accommodation. It has already happened with the Jewish community, who were amongst the first wave of immigration into the UK early last century. Their Orthodox community also has some religious beliefs that don’t sit easily with secularism but it’s been almost a century since Jews were considered an alien and potentially hostile presence in Britain.
Muslim extremists made a mistake in assuming that terrorism would have the same effect in the UK as it had in the US – as local boys who’d grown up during the 30 years of ‘Troubles’ with Northern Ireland you’d think the London 7/7 bombers could have explained this to their Afghan trainers. Perhaps the sorry state of British education explains why they thought suicide bombing for religious reasons was something novel in a country that has been burning Guy Fawkes in effigy most Novembers since 1606. On 7/7 the resigned reaction of a London friend was typical. “So who was it this time?” she sighed. “The rag-heads or the bog-trotters?”
The major fault in the Dispatches documentary was its refusal to acknowledge that there are genuine points of cultural incompatibility between British secular law and Islamic cultural practice. Abuse and vilification of Muslims is a fact, but so is abuse and vilification by Muslims. Hostility seems to be part of the accommodation process for any large group of immigrants; in this case, however, a goodly part of the hostility is coming from the immigrants themselves, apparently in the expectation that the host culture will make all the changes and do all the accommodating.
Why shouldn’t it happen to a Muslim? It happens to me.





