The secret weapon: religious abuse in the 'war on terror'.In Funf Jahre meines Lebens ("Five Years of My Life"), the most powerful memoir yet published by a former Guantanamo detainee de·tain·ee n. A person held in custody or confinement: a political detainee. Noun 1. detainee - some held in custody political detainee , the German Murat Kurnaz remembers an especially disturbing episode that took place while he was in a cage at Camp X-Ray Camp X-Ray was a temporary detention facility located at the Joint Task Force Guantanamo on the U.S. Naval Base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. It was named Camp X-Ray because various temporary camps in the station were named sequentially from the beginning and then from the end : "One time there was a long, tortured cry. I turned around. There was a second and then a third cry, but they sounded different from the cries of people being beaten. It was the long and frightening wail of death. Through the chain-link fencing I could see a guard in the cage of one of the Arab prisoners. I immediately knew what had happened." Reading these lines for the first time, you might imagine, as I did, that these cries signaled some extreme form of physical abuse--electrocution, waterboarding, or rape, something reserved for Donald Rumsfeld's "worst of the worst." I certainly couldn't have guessed what Murnaz actually saw that day: We were searched every day. They even searched the Qur'ans. The guards grabbed the books by their spines and shook them to see if anything was concealed in the pages. This guard must have thrown the Qur'an on the ground--otherwise the prisoner wouldn't have howled like that. I saw the guard trampling on something. Some of the prisoners sprang to their feet. A terrible wailing arose. One by one, all the prisoners were losing their cool. "Allahu akbar!" they yelled. "Don't do that!" I screamed. The guard continued trampling on the Qur'an. It was as though lightning had struck in a 200. This story and similar ones now emerging from Guantanamo and other detention facilities should highlight a crucial problem in the torture debate in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . Amid pyramids of naked bodies, Jack Bauer Jack Bauer is the protagonist of the American television series 24, in which he has trained and worked in various capacities as a government agent, including US Army Delta Force, LAPD SWAT, and finally the Counter Terrorist Unit (CTU) Los Angeles. hypotheticals, and a national debate on waterboarding, we have overlooked the deliberate desecration used to torture devout Muslim detainees. From the perspective of many detainees, this has been the worst kind of torture. At Guantanamo, lightning strikes twice. And more. When I first read about the incident reported in the infamous May 1, 2005 Newsweek expose--a Qur'an in the toilet!--I assumed it was a one-time offense, and I was not surprised when Newsweek later retracted re·tract v. re·tract·ed, re·tract·ing, re·tracts v.tr. 1. To take back; disavow: refused to retract the statement. 2. the report. But according to the detainees' own accounts, before 2005 almost everyone from Kandahar, Bagram, or Guantanamo had witnessed desecration of the Qur'an. The U.S. inspector general's own May 2008 report on FBI involvement in detainee interrogations found that abuse of the Qur'an was one of the most frequently reported offenses. Thirty-one FBI agents claimed to be aware of it. The issue resurfaced recently in Iraq, when news broke that the Qur'an was used by a Marine in Fallujah for target practice. The military was commendably swift with its public apology for that abuse. But desecration of the Qur'an is alleged to have taken many other forms in U.S. detention facilities. Former detainees say it has been handled with disrespect by guards and interrogators--written in, ripped or cut with scissors scissors Cutting instrument or tool consisting of a pair of opposed metal blades that meet and cut when the handles at their ends are brought together. Modern scissors are of two types: the more usual pivoted blades have a rivet or screw connection between the cutting ends , squatted over, trampled, kicked, urinated and defecated on, picked up by a dog, tossed around like a ball, used to clean soldiers' boots, and thrown in a bucket of excrement excrement /ex·cre·ment/ (eks´kri-mint) 1. feces. 2. excretion (2). ex·cre·ment n. Waste matter or any excretion cast out of the body, especially feces. . A Russian ex-detainee, Timor Ishmuratov, remembers how it would be laid on the back of a handcuffed, bent-over prisoner, so that it would fall to the ground if he stood up. With just a Qur'an and a pair of handcuffs hand·cuff n. A restraining device consisting of a pair of strong, connected hoops that can be tightened and locked about the wrists and used on one or both arms of a prisoner in custody; a manacle. Often used in the plural. tr.v. , a Muslim detainee could in this way be made to torture himself. Perhaps the word "torture" seems too strong for these offenses. Could they really be as bad as what happened at Abu Ghraib, as bad as waterboarding or sexual violation sexual violation A form of sexual misconduct defined as physician-patient sexual relations, regardless of who initiated the relationship, which includes genital intercourse, oral sexual contact, anal intercourse, mutual masturbation. ? The Moroccan ex-detainee Mohamed Mazouz answers clearly and plaintively plain·tive adj. Expressing sorrow; mournful or melancholy. [Middle English plaintif, from Old French, aggrieved, lamenting, from plaint, complaint; see plaint. in an interview with La Gazette du Maroc: "I regretted the fact that they gave us the holy Book to read. Because they used it as a means of torture afterwards. The same way they used it at Bagram, to push us to madness. For them, it was a game. ... We told them, 'Torture us physically, but do not touch the Qur'an,' but it was no use. Their objective was to get at us with the most precious thing we had." But doesn't the very existence of the Qur'an in U.S. detention facilities attest to our scrupulous respect for religious rights? So Charles Krauthammer argued in a December 2005 Weekly Standard article. Three years later, we know that the opinion expressed by Mazouz is widespread among former derainees: for them, the Qur'an's presence was at best a mixed blessing. Most Americans have interpreted reports of Qur'an desecration by analogy with the Christian Bible. In certain contexts, the Bible is revered as a holy object. But most American Christians do not handle the Bible with delicate devotion. We see careless or even rough treatment of the Bible every week at church. Bibles get tossed around, slid across dirty floors. Covers get damaged, pages torn. The wear-and-tear can even become a proof of piety. For Muslims, the Qur'an is the Word of God, but not in the same way the Bible is for Christians. In fact, the best Christian analogy to the Qur'an is not a book at all; it is the person of Jesus Christ. For Christians, the Word became flesh: in Jesus Christ, God is encountered. For Muslims, the Word became text. In early Christianity, a major theological debate concerned the unity of Jesus Christ with God: Was Jesus Christ eternally one with God, or was he created by God? In early Islamic thought, there were strikingly similar debates about the Qur'an's divine status: Was the Qur'an created, and thus separate from God, or uncreated--the eternal divine Word? In the course of that debate, the reigning Muslim caliph caliph Arabic khalifah (“deputy” or “successor”) Title given to those who succeeded the Prophet Muhammad as real or nominal ruler of the Muslim world, ostensibly with all his powers except that of prophecy. used an inquisition to force his subjects to adopt the view that the Qur'an was not itself divine. Most prominent Muslims capitulated, but one theologian and jurist A judge or legal scholar; an individual who is versed or skilled in law. The term jurist is ordinarily applied to individuals who have gained respect and recognition by their writings on legal topics. jurist n. , Ahmad ibn Hanbal Ahmad ibn Hanbal (born 780, Baghdad, Iraq—died 855, Baghdad) Muslim theologian and jurist. He began to study the Hadith (Traditions) at age 15. He traveled widely to study with the great masters and made five pilgrimages to Mecca. (780-855 CE), remains a hero to this day for refusing to recant his reaching that the Qur'an is indeed divine. For several years, this "imam of Baghdad" was imprisoned im·pris·on tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons To put in or as if in prison; confine. [Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en- and tortured. Today, his influence is most prominent in Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula, but his ideas have been adopted by Sunni Muslims throughout the world. This history should give Americans pause. The United States has used the Qur'an as an instrument of torture Noun 1. instrument of torture - an instrument of punishment designed and used to inflict torture on the condemned person iron boot, iron heel, the boot, boot - an instrument of torture that is used to heat or crush the foot and leg . One of the most celebrated figures in the history of Islam is famous for defending the Qur'an--even when this meant imprisonment Imprisonment See also Isolation. Alcatraz Island former federal maximum security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218] Altmark, the German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist. and torture. If we wanted to inflame hostility to the United States among Muslims, we could hardly have chosen a more effective tactic. Abuse of the Qur'an had already begun at the Kandahar detention facility The United States is known to have run a detention and interrogation facility in Kandahar, Afghanistan.[1] A number of the captives were later transported to controversial extrajudicial detention in the Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba. in early 2002, before the permanent facilities at Guantanamo were ready to receive prisoners. The Jordanian Khalid al-Asmr reports what happened there "when no visitors were present." In an interview with Roger Willemsen for the recent German book, Hier Spricht Guantanamo ("Here Guantanamo Speaks"), al-Asmr says he witnessed the Qur'an "desecrated des·e·crate tr.v. des·e·crat·ed, des·e·crat·ing, des·e·crates To violate the sacredness of; profane. [de- + (con)secrate. , thrown to the ground, so that the pages were strewn strew tr.v. strewed, strewn or strewed, strew·ing, strews 1. To spread here and there; scatter: strewing flowers down the aisle. 2. everywhere in the camp," "kicked with [the guards'] feet," and "thrown in the bucket for excrement." Because of these events, the detainees at Kandahar tried to give their Qur'ans back to the Red Cross, which had distributed them. But the U.S. officers kept promising the abuses would stop. The Qur'ans remained, and the desecration continued. The effect of similar episodes at Guantanamo cannot be overstated o·ver·state tr.v. o·ver·stat·ed, o·ver·stat·ing, o·ver·states To state in exaggerated terms. See Synonyms at exaggerate. o . Kurnaz, al-Asmr, and Asif Iqbal (one of the "Tipton Three" later repatriated to Britain from Guantanamo) all use instances of Qur'an abuse as time markers in their accounts. The public desecrations became a calendar of collective memory. They occasioned protests--suicide attempts and hunger strikes. "The strikes and all other forms of resistance that took place at Guantanamo originated because they had desecrated our faith and our religious rituals," al-Asmr says. Several detainee accounts agree that the demonstrations of religious disrespect were worst under Major General Geoffrey D. Miller Geoffrey D. Miller (born c. 1949) is a retired United States Army Major General who commanded the US detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and Iraq. Dentention facilities in Iraq under his command included Abu Ghraib prison, Camp Cropper and Camp Bucca. . Gen. Miller took over for Brigadier General Rick Baccus in November 2002, and later became famous for recommending the "Gitmo-izing" of the Abu Ghraib detention facility. The first Qur'an desecration, described by Kurnaz above, had happened while Gen. Baccus was in charge, and Kurnaz reports Baccus's swift response to the incident. He visited the detainee, took off his cap, sat on the ground next to him, and promised it would not happen again, exhibiting the kind of leadership--and decency--most Americans expect from military officers. He later negotiated with detainees on religious issues and, according to Kurnaz, "he kept his word. But this general was replaced, and everything changed overnight." Under Gen. Miller, desecration of the Qur'an and other forms of disrespect allegedly became routine--though not sanctioned in the Standard Operating Procedures standard operating procedure Medtalk A technique, method or therapy performed 'by the book,' using a standard protocol meeting internally or externally defined criteria; a formal, written procedure that describes how specific lab operations are to be performed. (SOPs). In his book For God and Country, Capt. James Yee, the Muslim chaplain assigned to Guantanamo under Gen. Miller's leadership, describes the religious faith of the detainees as "Gitmo's secret weapon." Yee was tasked with developing SOPs for the handling and searching of the Qur'an, and he had these new rules read over the camp's loudspeakers and simultaneously translated in the various cellblocks. But Qur'an abuse continued, unabated and unpunished unpunished Adjective without suffering or resulting in a penalty: the guilty must not go unpunished, such crimes should not remain unpunished Adj. 1. . At the time, British detainee Shaker Aamer told Yee, "General Miller is only playing a game with us. It's clear they hate us and our religion." Fange Pa Guantanamo ("Prisoner at Guantanamo") is the Swedish memoir of Mehdi Ghezali, another former detainee. Ghezali describes the American treatment of the Qur'an as "a great psychological torture," so that most of the detainees "wished they had never accepted [copies of the Qur'an] in the first place." Finally, the detainees tried to return their Qur'ans, but that was not allowed. Religious freedom at Guantanamo did not include the freedom not to possess a Qur'an in one's cell. Capt. Yee does not believe that the policy of forcing prisoners to keep Qur'ans was conceived maliciously, but ex-detainee Ishmuratov describes how it seemed to him and others: "At the moment [when we tried to give back the Qur'ans], the soldiers realized that they had lost a means of influence and had the Qur'an distributed again, whether we wanted it or not." Mandatory possession of the Qur'an meant that detainees could be tortured at any time without even being touched. In A Question of Torture, historian Alfred McCoy has chronicled how such "no-touch torture" techniques have been rigorously developed by U.S. interrogators, especially in the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). . The power to torment Muslims by abusing the Qur'an was not discovered accidentally by Gen. Miller or a clumsy guard at Guantanamo. Bill Dedman of MSNBC MSNBC Microsoft/National Broadcasting Company has reported how the Qur'an has been used by the U.S. Army as a tool for intelligence gathering. When asked about an "interrogation interrogation In criminal law, process of formally and systematically questioning a suspect in order to elicit incriminating responses. The process is largely outside the governance of law, though in the U.S. scenario" called "Fear Up," one intelligence officer offered Dedman this example of the technique: "Disrespect for the Qur'an." Middle East historian Juan Cole has argued, using the testimony of a former U.S. military officer, that desecration of the Qur'an was modeled on the kind of desecration of the Bible anticipated in the U.S. military's SERE sere 1 also sear adj. Withered; dry: sere vegetation at the edge of the desert. [Middle English, from Old English training program (SERE stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape). SERE prepares U.S. personnel to withstand torture in case they are captured by an enemy. The reverse-engineering of SERE methods for use at Guantanamo was later confirmed in Jane Mayer's book The Dark Side and by governmental sources, such as retired Rear Admiral Don Guter, judge advocate general judge advocate general (J.A.G.) n. a military officer who advises the government on courts-martial and administers the conduct of courts-martial. The officers who are judge advocates and counsel assigned to the accused come from the office of the judge advocate of the Navy from 2000 to 2002. This real-life enactment of SERE scenarios--with U.S. personnel in the role of the torturers rather than the tortured--was a foolish policy with disastrous effects. Why have Americans missed these stories ? Most are scattered in legal motions, government reports, or long nanatives, and many of them come only from foreign media outlets. But we have also been misled, We have been told by our elected officials that religion is respected in U.S. detention facilities, and this reinforces our self-image as the world's great hope for religious freedom. In some ways, we still are that hope, but Guantanamo is where hope goes to die. Even seasoned prisoners found Guantanamo's treatment of religion to be uniquely bad. In an interview with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the Russian ex-detainee Airat Vakhitov said, "Guantanamo Bay was not the first prison in my life," hut "I haven't seen this any other place ... namely, the kind of purposeful humiliation of human dignity, mocking religious feelings and the Qur'an." Congressional hearings presented a very different picture. On June 2, 2004, Phil Gingrey (R-Ga.), a member of the bipartisan delegation from the House Armed Services Committee The term Armed Services Committee could refer to:
Indeed, in each and every cell, there was an arrow pointing to Mecca, to the east. There were prayer beads, there were prayer caps, there was a Qur'an, and each of these detainees was treated in a very humane fashion. So I would say this to my colleagues, that, indeed, if we are "Gitmo-izing" the operation in Iraq, amen. Of course, official visitors saw only what they were allowed to see. From backstage, Kurnaz was furious at the elaborate raise en scene: Nothing is the way the U.S. Army says it is and as it has been reported, filmed, and photographed by journalists. There are cages and interrogation rooms specially constructed for the media. ... The fake cells were their attempt to convince people that they respected our faith. The media have not been allowed to see what Kurnaz calls a "fantasy paradise" room, to which he was once taken. It had "carpeted walls covered with Qur'anic verses. There was even a prayer rug on the floor," in addition to comfortable seats and tasty treats--everything a detainee wanted. It was a trick, designed to build rapport for interrogation, and Kurnaz sniffed it out right away. Yet another way to use the faith of the detainees against them. Another common form of abuse has been the interruption or prevention of prayer and other observances. This kind of technique began as an accident. Or so it seemed to Adil Kamil al-Wadi, from Bahrain, who was one of the first detainees at Kandahar in December 2001. In a recent interview with McClatchy Newspapers, al-Wadi said that many of the American soldiers guarding him had never seen a Muslim pray. The soldiers merely smirked at first. But later they laughed, heckled, shouted obscenities, and sometimes punched the detainees as they were praying in their cages. At Gen. Miller's Guantanamo, expressions of disrespect for religious practices grew into a kind of regimen. To interrupt prayers, guards made noise by striking things against the holding cages or playing loud rock music. Every morning and evening, just as the detainees were being called to pray, "The Star-Spangled Banner" blared over the loud speaker. Observance of Ramadan was respected somewhat, but other Muslim holidays were not to be celebrated. On the contrary, they became an occasion for taunting. Eid, the Muslim holiday that concludes Ramadan, is a festive time of gift-giving, unity, and abundance. In Mahvish Rukhsana Khan's My Guantdnamo Diary, Abdullah Wazir Wazir may refer to:
In addition to mockery and systematic distraction, professional interrogators used grotesque methods of sexual harassment sexual harassment, in law, verbal or physical behavior of a sexual nature, aimed at a particular person or group of people, especially in the workplace or in academic or other institutional settings, that is actionable, as in tort or under equal-opportunity statutes. to impede religious observances. For Muslims, impurity im·pu·ri·ty n. pl. im·pu·ri·ties 1. The quality or condition of being impure, especially: a. Contamination or pollution. b. Lack of consistency or homogeneity; adulteration. c. prevents prayer. In Inside the Wire, former Army translator Erik Saar recounts a shocking exploitation of Islamic rules about ritual impurity. Saar was translating for a female Army intenogator who was having trouble getting information out of a young Saudi detainee named Fareek. She told Saar that she wanted to break the strength of Fareek's relationship with God: "I think we should make him feel so fucking dirty that he can't go back to his cell and spend the night praying. We have to put up a barrier between him and his God." So she did a striptease. When Fareek wouldn't look at her, she walked behind him and "began rubbing her breasts against his back." According to Saar, she told Fareek that his sexual arousal sexual arousal Horny/horniness, randy/randiness Physiology A state of sexual 'yellow alert' which has a mental component–↑ cortical responsiveness to sensory stimulation, and physical component–↑ penile sensitivity, neural response to stimuli, offended God. Then she told him that she was having her period, and showed him her hand covered in what he thought was menstrual blood (it was red ink red ink Health administration A popular term for financial losses. Cf in the Black. ). She cursed him and wiped it on his face. As she and Saar left the room, she informed Fareek that the water to his cell would be shut off that night. Even if he managed to calm himself down, he would be too defiled de·file 1 tr.v. de·filed, de·fil·ing, de·files 1. To make filthy or dirty; pollute: defile a river with sewage. 2. to pray. As for Saar himself, he writes that "there wasn't enough hot water in all of Cuba to make me feel clean." That episode is not the only documented example of such torture. The Bahraini detainee Jumah al-Dossari suffered a darker, more explicitly religious adaptation of the method in late 2002, according to a legal motion filed in U.S. District Court (District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States). ) by Joshua Colangelo-Bryan and others on his behalf. During al-Dossari's torture, a female interrogator had his clothing cut off, then removed her own and stood over him. Just before wiping what she said was menstrual blood on his face, she kissed the crucifix on her necklace and said, "This is a gift from Christ for you Muslims." According to a 2005 Department of Defense report, "lap dances" and the smearing of fake "menstrual blood" were "authorized" interrogation techniques that only required "advanced approval." The military brass would no doubt prefer their interrogators to avoid allusions to the blood of Christ The Blood of Christ in Christian theology refers to (a) the physical blood actually shed by Jesus Christ on the Cross, and the salvation which Christianity teaches was accomplished thereby; and (b) the Eucharistic wine used at Holy Communion Salvation Many detainees perceived their incarceration Confinement in a jail or prison; imprisonment. Police officers and other law enforcement officers are authorized by federal, state, and local lawmakers to arrest and confine persons suspected of crimes. The judicial system is authorized to confine persons convicted of crimes. as a general attack on Islam. Al-Wadi said that the early days at Kandahar were "like a religious war between Muslim prisoners and American soldiers who seemed to hate Islam." The sense of a religious war intensified at Guantanamo, where the Bahraini detainee Abdulla Majid al-Noaimi wrote these lines: "The book of God consoles me, / And dulls the pains I have suffered. / The book of God assuages my misery, / Even though they declared war against it." Other events have bolstered this perception. During the trial of Abu Ghraib's Specialist Charles Graner, ex-detainee Amin al-Sheikh reported that he had been compelled to eat pork and curse Allah. A Guantanamo detainee informed Capt. Yee that a group of prisoners had been forced to "bow down and prostrate pros·trate tr.v. pros·trat·ed, pros·trat·ing, pros·trates 1. To put or throw flat with the face down, as in submission or adoration: " themselves inside a makeshift "satanic" shrine, where interrogators made them repeat that Satan, not Allah, was their God. Others told of being draped drape v. draped, drap·ing, drapes v.tr. 1. To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds: draped the coffin with a flag; a robe that draped her figure. in Israeli flags during interrogation, a claim corroborated cor·rob·o·rate tr.v. cor·rob·o·rat·ed, cor·rob·o·rat·ing, cor·rob·o·rates To strengthen or support with other evidence; make more certain. See Synonyms at confirm. by the FBI, while one interrogator explicitly told al-Dossari that "a holy war was occurring, between the Cross and the Star of David on the one hand, and the Crescent on the other." Sometimes the defamation of Islam has seemed to slide into Christian proselytism pros·e·ly·tism n. 1. The practice of proselytizing. 2. The state of being a proselyte. pros . Capt. Yee has described his struggle to remove an anti-Muslim missionary tract from the Sunday service for personnel at Guantanamo. According to a January 2007 FBI report, one interrogator even bragged that he had "dressed as a Catholic priest and baptized bap·tize v. bap·tized, bap·tiz·ing, bap·tiz·es v.tr. 1. To admit into Christianity by means of baptism. 2. a. To cleanse or purify. b. To initiate. 3. la] detainee in order to save him." Earlier this year in Fallujah, a U.S. Marine was caught handing out coins with texts from the Gospel of John For other uses, see Gospel of John (disambiguation). The Gospel of John (literally, According to John; Greek, Κατά Ιωαννην, Kata Iōannēn translated into Arabic. The front read, "Where will you spend eternity?" On the hack appeared the famous verse of John 3:16. Mohammed Jassim al-Dulaimi, a resident of Fallujah, summed up the coins' effect: "The claims that the occupation is a Crusader War make sense now." Apologists for U.S. personnel, including President George W. Bush, have used the term "bad apples" to explain away the various abuses. It is perhaps not the best choice of expressions: had apples, after all, "spoil the bunch." But however U.S. officials justify these actions to themselves, the judgment of the Muslim detainees will he more important in the future. Even isolated instances of religious torture can have a profound effect on collective memory. Does it really matter how many soldiers used the Qur'an for target practice? Such events are iconic. What is important to the Muslim detainees themselves and the global audience that hears their reports is that a clear pattern of disrespect for Islam has emerged. The United States has desecrated what most Muslims consider God's presence on earth (the Qur'an), drowned out the call to prayer with the American anthem and rock songs, used grotesque sexual assaults to undermine piety, mocked religious holidays, and engaged in freelance proselytism. How long can we expect the memory of such abuse to endure? Does it qualify as torture according to the definition offered in John Yoo's famous Justice Department memo--"significant psychological harm of significant duration, e.g., lasting for months or even years"? History suggests that the collective memory of this abuse will last far longer than that. Millenia ago, another religious group with strict codes of ritual purity and devotion to God underwent physical and religious torture at the hands of occupying forces, prompting insurrection. More than two thousand years later, the events accompanying that revolt are still commemorated annually. The people are the Jews, and the holiday is Hanukkah. At the end of the Hellenistic era, the inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. of Judea were occupied by the Seleucids. There was internal strife within the Jewish community between traditionalist conservatives and moderate assimilators. One Seleucid king, Antiochus IV Epiphanes Antiochus IV Epiphanes (born c. 215—died 164 BC, Tabae, Iran) Seleucid king of the Hellenistic Syrian kingdom (175–164 BC). Son of Antiochus III, he was taken hostage in Rome (189–175), where he learned about Roman institutions. (175-164 BCE BCE abbr. 1. Bachelor of Chemical Engineering 2. Bachelor of Civil Engineering BCE Abbreviation for before the Common Era. ), forced the issue by interrupting or forbidding Jewish religious practices. He profaned the Jewish Temple--the place of God's presence on earth--with an altar to a foreign god. He filled its courts with non-Jewish women. Jews could not observe their religious holidays or even confess themselves to be Jews. The second book of Maccabees includes two martyrdom narratives from this era, in which the protagonists, later called the "Maccabean Mattyrs," are compelled to eat pork. One of them replies, "What do you intend to ask and learn from us? For we are ready to die rather than transgress the laws of our ancestors." When they will not capitulate ca·pit·u·late intr.v. ca·pit·u·lat·ed, ca·pit·u·lat·ing, ca·pit·u·lates 1. To surrender under specified conditions; come to terms. 2. To give up all resistance; acquiesce. See Synonyms at yield. , they are tortured and killed. Finally, Judah the Maccabee leads a band of insurgents Insurgents, in U.S. history, the Republican Senators and Representatives who in 1909–10 rose against the Republican standpatters controlling Congress, to oppose the Payne-Aldrich tariff and the dictatorial power of House speaker Joseph G. Cannon. that liberates Jerusalem. Behind Hanukkah, then, are stories of forced apostasy apostasy, in religion: see heresy. Apostasy See also Sacrilege. Aholah and Aholibah symbolize Samaria’s and Jerusalem’s abandonment to idols. [O.T. , religious torture, and guerrilla warfare. As Peter Steinfels suggested in a December 4, 2004, column in the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times ("The Truth about Torture"), these stories prefigure pre·fig·ure tr.v. pre·fig·ured, pre·fig·ur·ing, pre·fig·ures 1. To suggest, indicate, or represent by an antecedent form or model; presage or foreshadow: our current situation. The attitude of the Maccabean Martyrs was echoed by al-Wadi in his standoff with American soldiers at Kandahar. After interrupting the Muslim detainees' prayers, the soldiers said, "We will teach you a lesson." Al-Wadi responded, "If you want to do something, you will be sorry. We are not afraid to die for our religion. If you want to stop us from praying, we will fight you to the death." Meanwhile, as American forces remain in Iraq, a guerrilla insurgency in Afghanistan has had some success. As in the Maccabean revolt, these insurgents are fighting against moderates of their own religion as well as the occupying forces. The story of the Maccabees thus serves as a cautionary tale. Religious torture genetates determined resistance and long-lasting resentments. What has been a mere footnote for us may be the main story for the Muslim world. The U.S. military knows that desecration of the Qur'an leads to hunger strikes and suicide attempts, that playing "The Star-Spangled Banner" over the call to prayer is demoralizing de·mor·al·ize tr.v. de·mor·al·ized, de·mor·al·iz·ing, de·mor·al·iz·es 1. To undermine the confidence or morale of; dishearten: an inconsistent policy that demoralized the staff. . But they seem not to have considered the long-term effects of such tactics. According to Professor Muqtedar Khan of the University of Delaware [3] The student body at the University of Delaware is largely an undergraduate population. Delaware students have a great deal of access to work and internship opportunities. , the abuse at Guantanamo has been "far worse than Abu Ghraib"--because it affects the communal body of Islam. Such torture may break the will of one man, but it could also be turning thousands more against us. Michael Peppard is a PhD candidate in religious studies at Yale University. |
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