Back to
family matters. Mr. Hurd interviews a woman called Gina Kahn, who left an arranged marriage and now lives in hiding for
fear of her life. As Ms Kahn notes, whenever radical Islam gets the upper hand in a neighborhood one sees more polygamy,
more domestic violence, more forced marriages, and more honor killings.
Memo to the Lord Chief Justice: this is what the application of “Islamic legal principles” to family arguments means: more
dead women.
As it happens, Gina Kahn is (so far) among the more fortunate victims of Islamic legal principles. Not so lucky was another
women portrayed in “Can Britain Survive multiculturalism?” Mr. Hurd shows a clip of the woman speaking from her hospital bed
after the first time her father and uncle tried to kill her for refusing an arranged marriage. She went to the British police
and begged for their help. “They ignored her,” Mr. Hurd notes, “because the police thought they should respect ethnic
diversity and not get involved.” Well, the police do not have to worry about that particular troublemaker any longer. If
at first you don’t succeed, try, try again: that was her father and uncle’s motto, and eventually they succeeded in murdering
her, stuffing her body into a suitcase and burying it in the back yard.
(...)
If it is to be successful, though, that struggle will have to encompass not only the negative fight against the Islamic
enemies of Western civilization. It will also have to involve the reanimation of the central principles of Western
civilization: virtues like patriotism, public affirmation of the rule of law, and an outspoken allegiance to the
formative values of Western democratic society: values like freedom of religion, respect for individual initiative, and
equality before the law.
# Kathy Shaidle : 2008-08-04
08:53:20
EDT