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30/05/05
Television Creates Terrorists
Dr Patrick Sookhdeo
Spectator
Potential suicide bombers among British Muslims are getting most of their
news from Asian satellite TV.
The West is in danger of losing a crucial propaganda war.
Driving through the streets of Baghdad last week, I was struck by the number
of satellite dishes for sale everywhere. After years in which the appliances
were banned by Saddam, freedom is sprouting all over the skyline. There is still
an almost total absence of local media, so that Iraqis know nothing of what is
going on in their own country except by rumour. But those who can afford a dish
are eagerly beginning to learn about the world. They can get the BBC, CNN and
even the Fox Channel; though these are not, alas, the only ones they are
watching. Unless we are careful, we are about to lose a crucial propaganda war.
I myself flicked through the channels on the rather antiquated television set
in my room at the Baghdad Sheraton and found broadcasts from Abu Dhabi and from
Iran. I watched footage of ayatollahs in southern Iraq and images of the
Palestinians suffering at the hands of the Israelis. I sat there captivated by
the repeated, stylised pictures: a boy throwing stones at an Israeli tank; the
Israelis moving in and shooting; the bulldozing of Palestinian homes. Then there
was the Arabic-language news from the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera and from its new
Dubai-based rival, Al-Arabiya. If Hezbollah’s channel is not yet bringing Iraqis
its regular shots of black-clad marching soldiers of Allah, it cannot be long.
What we too often fail to grasp is that these and similar channels are also
on offer in the UK, and are widely watched. Whatever we may think of the merits
of Western television, we must accept that, in many Muslim minds, it is tainted,
in Britain as much as in Iraq. They may see the odd black or Asian newscaster;
but every time an expert opinion is canvassed, the face of that expert is white.
Like it or not, there is a prejudice that our channels are just propaganda for
whites, or even under Zionist control. I speak as an Asian, the son of Muslim
parents from India and Pakistan. I may be an Anglican priest, but a large
proportion of my immediate family support bin Laden, and I hope I speak with
some authority.
We cannot shirk the influence of television in trying to answer the question
that arose recently: how two decent, middle-class young men of the Muslim faith,
regarded as moderates by those who knew them, could leave the shores of Britain,
travel to Israel with the intention of becoming martyrs, and in the process kill
and injure many people whom they had never met and who had done them no wrong.
To most non-Muslim Britons it seems incomprehensible as well as abhorrent.
For mainstream Muslim spokesmen, it is a denial of authentic Islam, which they
claim condemns violence and the taking of innocent life. For Muslim radicals,
however, there is clear justification in that Jews are held to be enemies of
Islam. For the Muslim majority in Britain, who knows?
No one knows either how many other potential suicide bombers there are among
the British Muslim community. Tens? Hundreds? Thousands? It is certain, however,
that whatever motivated Asif Mohammed Hanif and Omar Khan Sharif, they are not
the only Muslims in Britain to feel that way.
Suicide bombers act in concert with others who share their values and
ideologies, shaping and reinforcing each other’s attitudes. Passions are
aroused, anger fuelled, and energies directed towards a given end. For this to
happen an enemy must be created — a target for the hatred — who will later be
crushed and destroyed.
For Hanif and Sharif, the cause was Palestine and the enemy was ‘the Jew’.
Although these two appear to have been radicalised and groomed for martyrdom
while visiting Damascus, the seeds of hatred could have been sown at home in
Britain. Suleiman Chachia, chairman of the trustees of the mosque in Hounslow
which was attended by Hanif, has pinpointed the role of television news in
stirring up Muslim passions, even to the point of creating suicide bombers.
‘[Muslim] people are very much concerned about Palestine. We see the killings on
television, and to us a Palestinian death and an Israeli death is the same. But
why are the United Nations resolutions not applied to Israel? This is a burning
issue that has to be settled. Otherwise there will be other young men like this.
What I know about Asif Hanif is that his nature was not aggressive.’
In thousands of Asian British homes the choice of viewing is normally
determined by the older generation, who in Asian culture make all decisions of
any consequence in the home. These older family members, usually first- or
second-generation immigrants, feel strong ties to their homeland. Their identity
and their empathies lie there, not in Britain. They may find the English
language difficult — some older women speak very little English despite having
lived here for decades. Naturally they prefer to watch Pakistani and other Asian
channels. Though the younger generation may like to watch British television
when they are allowed to, most of what they hear and see in the home — even if
unwillingly — emanates from Asia. It is these programmes which are discussed at
meal times, or with friends, and thus attitudes are formed.
The national television station of Pakistan plays an important role in
creating opinion among Asian Muslims in Britain. Launched in 1964 with the
motive of enabling the government to communicate with the largely illiterate
masses, it is still very much controlled by the Pakistani government. News and
other programmes from Pakistan television are broadcast on the satellite
channels Prime TV and ARY, which are watched by many British Asians. This
programming deliberately creates and nurtures an image of ‘the enemy’, which is
communicated to viewers every day, as described by I.A. Rehman, director of the
Pakistan Human Rights Commission, in his 2001 paper ‘Enemy Images on Pakistan
Television’.
The principal enemy, as presented by Pakistan television, is India, with
virtually every news bulletin focusing on the Kashmir issue. The enemy image is
communicated by means of crude stereotypes that are almost caricatures — the
cowardly, devious Indians versus the courageous, upright Pakistanis. The
secondary enemy are the colonial masters who ruled south Asia for two
humiliating centuries, i.e. Britain. The same message is conveyed in films.
These creations are not just singing, dancing and romance; many also contain
much violence and often an anti-colonial, anti-British stance.
These issues are expanded by Pakistan television to embrace the whole Muslim
cause. Britain is depicted as the enemy that extinguished the Muslim Mogul
empire whose successor is considered to be Pakistan. Historical features examine
the collapse of the Mogul empire, the attempted defence of the Turkish
caliphate, the Pakistan movement, the origins of the Kashmir issue, etc. Even
the Crusades and the expulsion of the Muslims from Spain in the 15th century are
included in the general theme of the Christians versus the Muslim community
worldwide.
This has further developed into what is now seen as a war against Islam and
the development of an Islamic identity and consciousness. The enemy is portrayed
in many different contemporary forms. In the Palestinian context, tyrannous
enemy Jews are depicted oppressing Muslim brothers and sisters. In the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq and the war on terrorism, the enemy has become the USA,
Britain and the West in general. In every war of secession where Muslims seek
independence, in any area where Muslims are seen to suffer, in any place where
Muslims are said to be oppressed, a new enemy image can be discovered.
There is little or no attempt to analyse causes or to be guided by reason
rather than by emotion. The enemy has no personality or identity, but is
completely dehumanised so as to be crushed like an ant under foot without
compunction.
During the Iraq war, Al-Jazeera used the same method. Coalition troops were
portrayed as inhuman enemy invaders, the camera lingering with apparent delight
on coalition dead and gloating over prisoners of war. Long, drawn-out shots of
wounded Iraqi children underlined the message that ‘the enemy has done this’ and
is to be treated mercilessly in return.
One of the features of Islamic television is the video of the suicide
bomber’s last prayers. Like the Western wedding video, this has some formulaic
elements: the bomber will be seen at prayer; he will be dressed in white; there
will be a message for his family; and then, once he has done his work, there
will be the shots of brutal Israeli reprisals. Never do such channels call him
and his kind suicide bombers; they are shahid, or martyrs. Nor is there any
condemnation offered in the commentary.
It is but a small step from this kind of material to the training of
terrorists and suicide bombers, a large part of which is concerned with
increasing their hatred and rage towards the enemy. Al-Qa’eda training videos
portray the injuries and sufferings of Muslims, especially children. Suicide
bombers are never sent to reconnoitre their targets, for fear that they would be
touched by compassion for those they are to kill.
While south Asians comprise the largest grouping within the British Muslim
community, there is plenty of television for other Muslims also. Arabs can
choose between news channels with varying stances. Al-Jazeera goes for comment
and controversy, while Al-Arabiya aims to present the news straight and
factually. So-called ‘music videos’ are often screened, glamorising the
Palestinian conflict with slo-mo footage, or a montage of images shown to
stirring music. Hezbollah’s programmes are similar, cleverly reinforcing in the
viewer’s mind and heart the message of Palestinian suffering which must be
avenged.
For Iranians in Britain, there is the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting
(Irib); most of its programmes are in Farsi but there is also one in Arabic,
thus increasing its potential audience many-fold (to include for example the
Shias of southern Iraq). The international version of Irib is slightly different
from what is broadcast within Iran itself. Much of Irib’s airtime is devoted to
Islamic teaching, upholding Islamic values and showing the corruption and
immorality of the infidel West. Without actually urging Iranians to take up
arms, the channel leaves no doubt as to who the villains are. Sermons at Friday
noon prayers can be somewhat more explicit with, say, senior Islamic clerics
exhorting Iranians to do what the Palestinians have done. An Iranian businessman
in the UK told me that young Iranians in the West are fairly immune to this kind
of propaganda as they basically prefer the freedoms of the West to the
restrictions of the Islamic Republic of Iran. But what of the next generation,
those who will have grown up here without even knowing life in Iran? They are
likely to be seeking to return to their roots, based on their historical and
religious identity. Will television teach them to despise the West and seek a
solution in Islam?
Today’s emphasis on multiculturalism, which regards all histories, cultures
and religions as equal within the British context, poses an increasingly serious
problem. Modern multiculturalism defines ethnic identity very much in terms of
its history and religion. Thus it encourages the rediscovery of historical
background, culture and religion. The attitudes of Muslim young people born and
bred in Britain are being shaped by influences from outside which affect their
identity and their ultimate loyalties. Television is increasingly being used to
reinforce this and to sell a message of repression and liberation. If they are
taught to consider the land in which they live as the enemy, what future do we
have?
Those who exploit the effect of the visual image on susceptible young people
are well aware of how powerful it is, in that ‘seeing is believing’. While we
may have laws governing what is shown on terrestrial television, there is no way
to limit what is beamed in from elsewhere. Even here in leafy Wiltshire I could
view all these programmes if I chose to subscribe. Prime TV costs only £10 a
month. Free and unrestricted airwaves can communicate not only pornography and
hedonistic materialism, but also religious radicalism. Ultimately the control
will lie with those who hold the television remote-control in their hand —
usually the older family members. How far will the average Muslim grandparent
now take responsibility for that control?
If there is one step we should take urgently, it is to set up a Muslim
station to broadcast sense and moderation to Iraq. One day, with any luck, that
station will also be picked up in Britain.
Dr Patrick Sookhdeo is director of the Institute for the Study of Islam
and Christianity.
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