Dutch exile slams militant Islam's war



By DEROY MURDOCK
SCRIPPS HOWARD NEWS SERVICE
NEW YORK -- "When I first came to a Western country I was astonished to find men who said, 'Ladies first,' " Ayaan Hirsi Ali recently recalled. "I was amazed because I was born and raised in a culture that put me last because I was born a girl."
The former Dutch parliamentarian captivated about 1,500 guests at the Congress of Racial Equality's 23rd annual celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during which Ali received CORE's International Brotherhood Award.
As a woman who radical Muslims have marked for death, her message deserves every American's attention.
Ali, 39, was born into a Muslim family in Mogadishu. Her father's opposition to Somalia's then-president, Siyad Barre, led him to move his family to Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and then Kenya. When she was about 25, her father arranged for her to wed a stranger. En route to meet this distant cousin in Canada, Ali deplaned in Germany and instead absconded to Holland by rail. She secured asylum and changed her name from Hirsi Magan to Hirsi Ali.
Ali prospered. She learned Dutch, studied politics at Leiden University and served in several think tanks. In January, 2003, she won a seat in the Tweede Kamer, Holland's lower house of parliament.
In 2004 Ali wrote Dutch director Theo Van Gogh's "Submission," a provocative film about Islamic-fundamentalist misogyny. That Nov. 2, Dutch-Moroccan citizen Mohammed Bouyeri assassinated Van Gogh -- the great-grand nephew of the 19th Century Impressionist painter -- on an Amsterdam street. After shooting him and slitting his throat, the radical Muslim used another knife to bury a five-page letter into Van Gogh's lifeless chest.
"You will break yourself to pieces on Islam," read the communique, addressed to Ali. "Be warned that the death that you are trying to prevent will surely find you."
Bouyeri also carried with him "Baptized in Blood." The poem reads, in part: "Wherever in the world you go / Death is waiting for you / Chased by the knights of DEATH / Who paint the streets with Red."
Fatwa
Since then, Ali has labored under a fatwa. Scheich Fawaz, an imam in The Hague, said Ali would be "blown away by the wind of changing times" and would suffer "the curse of Allah."
After going into hiding, Ali fled yet again, from Holland to America. Though still protected by bodyguards, she now thinks and speaks freely in Washington, D.C., primarily at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
"Because the culture the U.S. leads and stands for is under threat," Ali tells me, "it would help a great deal if the Democrats and the Republicans were less polarized, if they understood that they are under threat, and that fighting for what America stands for is far more important than all the small differences that we have on a domestic level."
First and foremost, Ali argues, the West should champion a culture that is superior to militant Islam, which has civilization itself in its crosshairs. As she puts it: "Human beings are equal; cultures are not."
"A culture that holds the door open to her women is not equal to one that confines them behind walls and veils," Ali told CORE. "A culture that encourages dating between young men and young women is not equal to a culture that flogs or stones a girl for falling in love. A culture where monogamy is an aspiration is not equal to a culture where a man can lawfully have four wives all at once."
Such candor has won Ali high praise on either side of the Atlantic. Time magazine in 2005 named her one of the 100 Most Influential Persons of the World. In 2006, Reader's Digest dubbed her its European of the Year. Also last year, Norwegian legislator Christian Tybring-Gjedde nominated Ali for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Ali is grateful for what the West has done for her and the many others it shields from radical Islamists. She despairs, however, for the West's wavering self-confidence.
"Unfortunately, it is this culture that is under threat today," she told CORE's guests. "Many of those born into it take it for granted or, worse, apologize for it."
As Ayaan Hirsi Ali asked: "Let's join together to protect this culture of life, this culture of liberty, this culture of ladies first."
New York commentator Deroy Murdock is a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace at Stanford University.