Quran burning amid Qurban Bayram and Erdoğan's message to the West
Sweden made headlines in Türkiye again this week by permitting yet another Quran burning under police protection on the first day of Qurban Bayram, also known as Eid al-Adha. That heinous act took place near a mosque in Stockholm, as had another burning in January, and had absolutely nothing to do with freedom of expression. Quite the contrary, it was a hate crime targeting Muslims and an obvious act of provocation.
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Sweden made headlines in Türkiye again this week by permitting yet another Quran burning under police protection on the first day of Qurban Bayram, also known as Eid al-Adha. That heinous act took place near a mosque in Stockholm, as had another burning in January, and had absolutely nothing to do with freedom of expression. Quite the contrary, it was a hate crime targeting Muslims and an obvious act of provocation.
Before addressing what that development means for the West’s relations with Muslims, let us touch upon the relations between Türkiye and Sweden. The Turkish government has criticized the Swedes for allowing members of two terrorist organizations, the PKK and the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ), to organize, raise funds and hold demonstrations on Swedish soil. Accordingly, Ankara expects Stockholm to keep its promises regarding the fight against terrorism before approving Sweden’s NATO membership. Having failed to make due progress on that front, the Swedish authorities have been allowing PKK demonstrations and Quran burnings under police protection. In truth, both were either reckless or acts of provocation and raised questions about Sweden’s commitment to NATO membership altogether.
The Islamophobic dimension of that heinous act was no less concerning. Indeed, Europe’s problematic approach to Muslim values against the backdrop of worsening Islamophobia attests to the contemporary crisis of Western civilization. It suggests that the West’s double standards on counterterrorism measures, refugees, war criminals and the environment spill over to the question of values.
The reason why hardly anyone believes in the West’s discourse on liberties, democracy and human rights anymore is that Westerners allow themselves to engage in the same acts that they would condemn others for committing. Moreover, the question of respecting the values of others remains an area where the West faces a crisis yet insists on making impositions on others.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been among the most vocal leaders regarding such contradictions in recent years. The Muslim world responded to the latest Quran burning, starting with Morocco. Yet, the Turkish leader’s following comment was most noteworthy: “Sooner or later, we will teach the Western embodiments of vanity that insulting the values of Muslims is not freedom of thought.”
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