A Serious Matter

That's how the UN is viewing the global rise of what it likes to hysterically call "Islamophobia".
United Nations, 10 December 2004 -- A deep misunderstanding of Islam is fueling anger, hatred, and fear about one of the world's great religions.

Scholars and diplomats from around the world gathered in New York on 7 December to discuss the rising wave of anti-Muslim sentiment. Secretary-General Kofi Annan kicked off the daylong seminar at UN headquarters.

"When the world is compelled to coin a new term to take account of increasingly widespread bigotry -- that is a sad and troubling development," Annan said. "Such is the case with 'Islamophobia.' The word seems to have emerged in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Today, the weight of history and the fallout of recent developments have left many Muslims around the world feeling aggravated and misunderstood, concerned about the erosion of their rights and even fearing for their physical safety."

Annan rejected widely held views that Islam is incompatible with democracy or irrevocably hostile to modernity and women's rights. He said stereotypes also unfairly depict Muslims as anti-Western despite a history of commerce and interaction in the arts and sciences.
That's right, while Muslims are busily slaughtering Christian Africans in Sudan (and the UN doing nothing to stop it), and around the globe anti-Semitism is drastically increasing, the UN thinks we ought to remember that the real victims here are the Muslims.

You remember them. They're the folks who really aren't too sure if butchering civilians is in line with their faith or not.

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