Sunday, July 10, 2005

London Bombings 7th July 2005

On 7th July 2005, 4 explosions took place in the heart of London during the city's rush hour. The 3 train blasts occurred almost simultaneously at around 8.50am on a circle line train from Aldgate East heading towards Liverpool Street, a piccadilly train from King's Cross heading towards Russell Square (which is where I normally stop!) and a westbound circle line train from Edgware Road on the way to Paddington. About an hour later at around 9.47am, another bomb exploded on a No.30 Bus from Hackney en route to Marble Arch, near the junction of Tavistock Square and Upper Woburn Place (which is so close to Hare & Tortoise, my regular lunch outlet). It was an event that shocked London but surprisingly people knew that it was inevitable. It was not the question of if, but when, it will take place. Frankly speaking, when I got an MA offer from SOAS, I knew that a terrorist attack will happen in central London during my study. I was so right but I never thought it could happen so close to where my university is, and to the Tube station that I normally stop at. That was shocking. Although it was not as horrific as the Madrid bombings when 191 people were killed mercilessly, the whole idea of targeting innocent civilians is utterly stupid and inhumane. Come to think of it, I am baffled that a fellow human being could actually think of, plan to do something as atrocious as this. We are talking about innocent people, who have lives, families and futures being killed with total disregard of the emotional distress suffered by loved ones.

But having said that, it is inconsiderate to point the finger to just one side of the picture. Yes, the terrorists are evil inhumane people, but the western governments (particularly those behind the US' "benign" war on terror) and their foreign policy should also take the blame. Their careless handling of relations with the Muslim world in general has been an important reason for discontent. The war in Iraq circumventing the powers of the Security Council and a clear disregard of the concerns of the international community, has been seen as a direct attack on Muslim dignity in certain quarters of the Muslim world. The media and the press should also take the blame. Their careless portrayal, their social stigmatization of Muslims as embodying a certain number of traits as radical, extreme, fundamentalists etc (which is of course condoned by their governments) fuels the anger which was already burning. Muslims are lumped into a superficial category and thus treated in this manner. Any deviations from this category is seen, in media rhetoric, as rebels of Islam, people who act against the pure Islamic faith(albeit in a positive light), rather than being treated as proper Muslims themselves. As such, their voices are often unheard, thrown into obscurity, while the limelight shines ever so brightly on the conservative radicals as the bodily manifestation of the Islamic faith. It is only recently, that this trend seems to falter, making way for a more accomodative view of Islam. Since then, many new bright progressive Muslim scholars have shone.

To really tackle the issue of terrorism therefore, we need to take ask a few critical contextual questions. I had a deep discussion with some friends from London concerning the future of terrorism in their city. We all concluded that heightened security is never the real answer for such a deeply rooted problem. All this hype about tougher immigration laws, ID cards and the likes is only practical in the short run. But how do we REALLY tackle terrorism? For this, we need to ask ourselves how we have been treating certain social groups? How has belligerent foreign policy, which might seem insignificant (for the US at least) to terrorism, precipitated the acts of terror? How has the inhumane treatment of prisoners of war, and most shockingly 'possible' terrorists who were deprived of their God-given right to fair trial, in Guantanamo Bay or Abu Ghraib affected the dignity and sovereignty of the Muslim world? We live in a world of difference, which needs to be respected not denigrated. Equally on the other hand, we also need to ask ourselves how did we create such merciless people among our midst. Is there something in how we view our religion that created such a superficial boundary between Us and Them that neccesitates a confrontation? This dichotomy of Muslims and Kafir, do we really know what it actually means or are we just too lazy of thinking for ourselves and rather devolve the power to think to some self-appointed ulamas?

My tribute to the people who have died and suffered in the London bombings of July 7th, 2005. May God accept them.

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