Opinion | One woman makes the news, another one doesn't



 
Two women were killed in two distant countries: Neda Agha Soltan was shot during a protest in Iran, while Marwa El Sherbini was stabbed 18 times inside a courtroom in Germany. Each death, of these women who stood up for what they believed in, tells a larger story. Neda in Iran became a world icon, Marwa in Germany was simply disregarded.
 
By WALID EL HOURI
 
europe islamophobia Carlos Lattuf cartoon
Islamophobia © Carlos Lattuf

BEIRUT, July 8, 2009 (MENASSAT) — On June 20th 2009, Neda Agha Soltan was shot dead during the post-election protests in Iran. The protests occupied the largest news segments around the world, with analysts and commentators predicting the fall of the Iranian regime and the dawn of freedom breaking in “the axis of evil.”

Neda’s death became an icon of the Iranian opposition and a symbol for millions of people of the injustice of the Iranian regime and the defiance of the protesters. Neda’s death was put in context. It was taken from the personal realm of the death of an individual to the public realm of the just cause of a whole society. 

On July 1st Marwa El Sherbini, an Egyptian researcher living in Germany, was stabbed to death 18 times inside a courtroom in the city of Dresden, in front of her 3-year-old son. She had won a verdict against a German man of Russian descent who had verbally assaulted her because of her veil. Her husband, who rushed in to save her when she was attacked in the courtroom, was shot by the police. Marwa’s death was not reported by any Western news media until protests in Egypt erupted after her burial. The reporting that followed focused on the protests; the murder was presented as the act of a “lone wolf,” thus depriving it of its context and its social meaning. 

The fact that media are biased and choose what to report according to their own agenda is not the issue in this case. What the comparison of the two murders shows, is that European and Western societies have failed to grasp the significance and the importance of the second murder in its social, political, and historical context.

The “lone wolf” who stabbed Marwa 18 times inside the courtroom is the product of the society he lives in. If anything, the murder of Marwa should raise the discussion about the latent (perhaps not so latent anymore) racism against Muslims that has been growing in European societies in the last few decades, and noticeably so since the mid-90s.

It would be difficult to avoid relating the crime to the discussions about the banning of the Niqab, or the previous discussions about the wearing of the veil. These issues and others pertaining to the Muslim immigration in Europe have been occupying large parts of the public debates in several European countries. It would also be difficult not to notice the rapid rise of right wing populist parties to power in several European countries in the last decade, all of which have built their discourse on the fear of Islam and the “immigration problem.”

The absence of reporting, or adequate reporting of the murder, and the alarm bells that did not ring after this murder, reflect the denial in which European societies and public discourse are immersed. While Europe preaches freedom of expression and the need to accept otherness, and while Europe preaches about the dangers of racism and sectarianism in third world countries, and while Europe warns about hate speech and anti-Semitism, we see race-driven crime, prejudice, and hate speech gaining both legitimacy and power in France, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Denmark and other democracies in the old continent. Race-driven crimes are constantly presented as exceptions within a tolerant society. However, the recurrence of exceptions puts in question their exceptional nature. 

The absence of Marwa’s story from the mainstream media and the failure to start a debate about the immediate dangers of present European anti-Muslim racism shows the depth of the problem and draws us to expect a gloomy future for Muslims in Europe. Muslims like Neda only get to the news if their story serves the dominant narrative that presents Islam as the primary threat to freedom, while Muslims like Marwa who expose the pervasive racism of the West and challenge the existing stereotypes fail to get their story told.

What is significant to note is that in Neda’s case the media accused the Iranian regime as the authority responsible for the context in which the crime was committed rather than looking for the person who actually shot her. The accused is the establishment or the institution rather than the individual shooter. However, in the case of Marwa’s murder the media were persistent in stressing on the individuality of the murderer, calling him a “lone wolf”, implying that he is a social outcast who holds no ties to the society he lives in. The murderer was given a name “Alex W.” and the institution, the society, and the establishment he lives in were taken away from the picture.

While Neda’s death enjoyed wide arrays of interpretations and readings in context, Marwa’s death was deprived of its context and was presented as a personal tragedy, featuring a madman and his victim. Meanwhile Europe keeps shifting to the right at an accelerating pace, and cultural stereotypes, failure to integrate (read: social and political alienation), miscommunication, and a growing financial crisis only nourish this trajectory and support the populist and chauvinistic discourse of various newborn and resurrected right wing parties.

In the 1930s, following the big economical crisis of the 1920s, a young populist right wing party suddenly rose to power in Germany and few predicted what was to follow. There is no realistic proof to say that Europe is a more tolerant society than any other, or to say that people necessarily learn from their history, or even that some societies are exempt from racist behavior. All the evidence points to the end of the European myth of post-war tolerance; and the media have yet to connect the dots before history repeats itself.



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these cases to compare is

these cases to compare is absolutly nonsense! one was shot by governement and the other one was protected by the governement! sometimes I ask myself, whether the muslims like the feeling of beeing victim? what is the main message of the article? "There is no realistic proof to say that Europe is a more tolerant society than any other, or to say that people necessarily learn from their history" are you able to follow yourself, mr. el houri??? or did you just like to enjoy another dirty little war??? you are muslim? so say "alhamdolillah" in our days they try to protect us in europe from the criminals, not always sucsessfully, but there is justice - not terror, dictatorism and demogigics as in other - mostly islamic - countries! pax vobiscum!

NIQAB or HIDJAB it is innate hetrad to ISLAM

Marwa was not putting NIQAB or even REAL HIDJAB that covers the head and the upper part of the body altogether. She simply put a head cover as any lady ,in any place in the world do, according to her customs. Of course she is a good Muslim. Also,she is the following : 1) Sports-woman; she played in the Egyptian Handball National Team, when she was a girl. 2)Highly educated, and accompanying her husband for his Ph.D. 3)Keen mother, taking her son to public park to play on a swing. All these are definitely reflected on her decent ethics and polite behaviors. Any normal person would notice that influence on her intellectual way in dealing with others, including that killer. She kindly asked him, as a grown up man ,to let her child to swing. May be she also thought that he might be happy to do so as humanbeings normally do,particularly if they are negihbors.

Marwa El Sherbini

Very good article.. need to expose the denial of the Westerners and their dual standards in dealing with stuff. This clearly is a war against Muslims, which they deny in open, but admit in private. Thanks Abd Al Khadeer http://bigakhi.blogspot.com

Marwa and Neda

Both Marwa and Neda were killed for a cause. whether they meant to stand for it or simply bystanders. It is a classic case of international hypocrisy al all levels. Politicians, media, governments, international bodies and even the so called human rights activists and it's a;; about interest and not about anything else. We would be naive if we expect the international community would stand for us and support our cause simply because we are the victims or because that's, in the name of so many things, what they should do! Neda just came to serve the purpose that serves the interest. We must clearly understand that no one will stand for us if our cause does not serve any interest and Marwa will not be a symbol unless we make her so. We should not also expect much from our sad officials. The 1340 victims of Elsalam ferry are just yesterday. However, embarrassing them, the local and the international ones, is the best thing we can all do. We must uncover the hypocrisy and the weakness. this is for the sake of the cause of racism. But for Marwa, we the few left, should keep pushing online, on news. on the streets and every where possible till the trial of the killer. We must not drop the ball until we see if embarrassment will lead to justice or not. And of course we must expect that most probably that the German government will play on the time factor. Call all the talk shows (90 mins etc) and ask them not to drop the ball. let's all do this. go to #Marwa on twitter and keep posting even if repeated texts about Marwa. it takes only a minute. let's all do that. Go to BM opinion and post a comment. let's all do that. Many other links are found in both twitter and BM. It takes one to move another.

while you make a valid

while you make a valid point, you go off base in the following: "Neda’s case the media accused the Iranian regime as the authority responsible for the context in which the crime was committed rather than looking for the person who actually shot her. [...] in the case of Marwa’s murder the media were persistent in stressing on the individuality of the murderer, calling him a “lone wolf” [...] who holds no ties to the society he lives in. The murderer was given a name 'Alex W.'" the differences are rather easy to make, no? Neda: a (unknown?) soldier commanded by the authorities kills in the middle of a riot. Marwa: a person of his own volition kills. avoiding discussions on the individual soldier's responsibility, it's overall understandable to initially point to the regime in one case and the individual in the other. it's the lack of second-level investigation that shreds the tolerance veil.

Same western double

Same western double standards, If you trust western countries than you are doomed.
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