by Bruce Bawer
28th November, 2012
First of all, let me make it clear that I’m no fan of Yasmin
Alibhai-Brown. Born in Uganda, she’s a British Muslim columnist who
contributes regularly to the left-wing Independent, supports
the Liberal Democrats, and has a habit of saying unpleasant things about
white men. Her opinions on the issues of the day are, by and large,
pretty much what you’d expect them to be given her religious,
professional, and political affiliations. (Example: she complained on Question Time that Osama bin Laden hadn’t been given a proper burial.)
Still, I had to give her a cheer – not two or three cheers, mind you, but one – for an article that ran in the Daily Mail on
Thursday. It was occasioned by a new report from the British
government’s Office of the Children’s Commission (OCC) summarizing the
results of an investigation into the sexual abuse of young girls by
gangs and groups. The report, noted Alibhai-Brown in her Daily Mail piece,
“concludes that agencies that should have helped” many of these abused
girls either “didn’t hear their stories or look after them as they
should have.” Yet the OCC itself, Alibhai-Brown charged, was burdened by
its own version of the same hear-no-evil affliction: as she put it, the
authors of the report, headed up by Deputy Children’s Commissioner Sue
Berelowitz, “try hard to side-step some difficult facts and even warn
the rest of us from going where they have chosen not to tread.”
Alibhai-Brown illustrates her point by zeroing in on this sentence by
Berelowitz & co.: “Perpetrators come from all ethnic groups, and so
do their victims – contrary to what some may wish to believe.” In
response to which Alibhai-Brown offers this comment: “Yes, we know they
come from all backgrounds. But that rather cutting second line is
directed at people like me who believe that in some British cities –
especially in the North of England – circles of sexual hell for young
girls are run by gangs of Muslim men (most of Pakistani or Bangladeshi
heritage) who mostly prey on white girls….To generalise their crimes,
and lump them in with all the other abusers across the country, is to
deny what the victims of these men and their families are saying about
the abuse that has gone on.”
Indeed. Of course, the OCC’s statement about perpetrators coming
“from all ethnic groups” is yet another example of the handy PC dodge
whereby the link between Islam and pretty much any of its more horrific
aspects can be swept away by means of a simple rhetorical formula. For
example: “Honor killings occur in a wide range of religions.” Or:
“Female genital mutilation is not an exclusively Islamic phenomenon.”
Or: “The practice of forced marriages is not restricted to Muslim
families.” All true – and all cynically designed to avoid the
uncomfortable statistical reality, and to protect the speaker from being
accused of racism or Islamophobia. (It’s no surprise that ITV’s brief
online account of the OCC report actually made that insipid truism its headline: “Report: Child exploiters ‘come from all ethnic groups.’”)
“The report,” notes Alibhai-Brown, “points out that 28 per cent of
the victims they found were of black and Asian background. But it
doesn’t state what it should have: that some of the worst long-term
abuse is carried out by mainly British Pakistani men targeting lost
young white girls, often from troubled or poor families….The children
are neglected and hungry for love. The men offer treats, car rides and
kebabs, then drugs and alcohol; and then they corrupt them.”
Alibhai-Brown argues that while authorities fear “that the racial
aspects of child sex gangs will be hijacked by groups such as the
English Defence League,” it is important to “confront some of the values
that drive such men to prey on white females” and to look squarely at
“some Asian cultural assumptions that make the paedophiles feel no guilt
or shame about what they do.”
Exactly which “values” and “Asian cultural assumptions” is
Alibhai-Brown talking about? Alas, she doesn’t say. That’s where her
article ends: with a gutsy-sounding call to face up to “values” and
“Asian cultural assumptions” that, it appears, she would prefer not to
identify at the present juncture.
What to say about this? Well, first of all, anyone who is genuinely
interested in facing up to the truth of these matters needs to stop
talking, as Alibhai-Brown does incessantly in her article, about race.
This is not about race but about religion – not about black and white
but about Muslim and infidel. Alibhai-Brown wants to be seen as bravely
pulling back a curtain on an ugly reality, but her repeated reference to
dark-hued men and “white girls,” and her use of that cowardly,
dishonest (and, alas, ubiquitous) British euphemism “Asian” is nothing
more than a way of skirting the truth – namely, that the “cultural
assumptions” at work here aren’t “Asian” – aren’t Japanese, Chinese,
Vietnamese, Mongolian, or Thai – but Islamic. As she and most of her
readers well know, countless Muslim boys are brought up to view infidel
females as little more than whores whose “immodest” attire makes them
legitimate targets for physical assault. Most Westerners who are
seriously concerned about these matters have long since learned that the
Koran itself condones such conduct, and that in cases of rape it is the
victims, not the perpetrators, who are considered the guilty parties.
These repulsive facts have been widely known in Europe for many years
now.
For heaven’s sake, as long ago as September 6, 2001 – I’ve cited this article before, and I’ll cite it again – the social anthropologist Unni Wikan told the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet that
it didn’t surprise her that 65 percent of rapists in Oslo were
“non-Western men” (that’s the Norwegian version of “Asian”), because, as
she explained, “many immigrants” (that’s another euphemism – she’s not
talking about immigrants from Canada) “think that Norwegian women are
sending them signals that they want sexual contact.” Wikan, while
serving up a rather pro forma-ish acknowledgment that rape is
“never acceptable,” went on to make it sound, well, pretty darn
acceptable. Noting that “rapists in most Muslim countries are hardly
punished” and that most people in those places “feel that women are
responsible for the rape,” she argued that “it’s reasonable for
immigrants to bring such attitudes with them when they move here.” Their
misunderstandings, in short, are “understandable.” By contrast, the
naivete of many Norwegian women about Muslim views on rape is not understandable
but, contrarily, “startling”; those women, Wikan insisted, “must
realize that we live in a multicultural society, and adapt themselves to
it.”
Wikan’s position – she actually declared that Western women raped by
Muslim men are partially responsible for their own fate – may have been
reprehensible, but in retrospect, at least, one has to admire her
frankness about the Islam-rape nexus. But then, that Dagbladet article
appeared before 9/11 – a full five days before. Since that fateful day,
the willingness of Westerners in the public eye to connect these
particular dots has declined significantly. Back in 2007, for instance,
the London Times reported that a number of “Asian” men in
Britain were forcing their attentions upon perhaps hundreds of “white
girls as young as twelve,” but that the police weren’t doing anything
about it because they feared “upsetting race relations.” “Asian,”
“white,” “race”: how stubbornly determined the Times was to
avoid the topic of Islam! Then, in 2010, as Alibhai-Brown herself points
out, a police report noted that “gangs of Asian males” were “exploiting
young white females,” one of whom told the Daily Mail at
the time that most of these gangsters “are Asians of Pakistani origin.
But very few of the authorities will say this.” And in this context,
needless to say, virtually none of them would breathe the word Muslim.
So it goes, year after year. All that changes is the incidence of
these crimes, which continues to climb along with the population of
European Muslims. And year by year the government reports keep coming
– providing a pleasant illusion that something is actually being done,
even as they persist in delicately sidestepping the one little detail
that explains everything.