Sorry, what is a "myth" in Ali's piece and what parts are you actually showing that make her argument a myth?
The only thing I agree with the author is the following:
Similarly, her use of the word "Christophobia" is divisive, as is its predecessor "Islamaphobia." Phobias are an irrational and extreme fear of something. Hatred and violence based on a person's religious identity is qualitatively different. Indeed, anti-Christian violence and anti-Muslim hatred are more akin to anti-Semitism. Let's name the problem properly and then focus on solutions.
So are you going to take your own author's advice?
No?
That part you disagree.
So basically you pick and choose what you want to claim the author has debunked.
The author "debunked" Ali's article but has not debunked the term Islamophobia.
Why? Because you say so.
But what's really interesting here, as I said before, is the backlash against Ayaan's article. She writes something that is long overdue and previously ignored. The reaction from Leftists and Muslims was predictable.
There are of course no smear attacks from Leftists and Muslims when a Leftist or Muslim claims Israel or the West / United States is committing genocide against the Muslim world - or as Leftist smear merchant, Glenn Greenwald has claimed - waging war against the Muslim world.
These Left smear merchants were silent then. Strange that.
But what I find most illuminating about the article is that the author criticizes Ali for supposedly "cherry-picking" examples of violence against Christians which the author then goes on to do herself in reverse. She selectively cites a handful of individuals who work for supposed interfaith harmony in Pakistan and elsewhere while acknowledging that Pakistani society is intolerant of Christians:
Indeed, in Pakistan, where Christians face state and societal discrimination, solutions to violence can come from within Islam. The International Center for Peace and Diplomacy and Pakistani-American peacemaker Azhar Hussain, for example, engage madrasa leaders in discussions about principles of Islam (like the Golden Rule), moving them to reflect on teaching curricula that values love and respect for the neighbor. The program has been effective in bringing interreligious understanding and human rights into formerly hostile classrooms.
Sorry, Joyce. Didn't you just accuse Ayaan of:
Ali's analysis of the conflicts in Nigeria, Sudan, Egypt, Iraq, Pakistan, Iran and Indonesia is brief, simple and borders on manipulative.
???
So Ayaan is guilty of writing a brief and simple analysis but you aren't?
Sure.
Next our author takes issue that an article on Christian violence and persecution focuses on Christian violence and persecution:
To focus exclusively on one dimension -- violence against Christians -- misses the nuances and complexities at play, few of which are due to religious difference alone.
Imagine writing about "Islamophobia" (a term the author opposes) and being criticized for having the gall to write about anti-Muslim sentiment. Apparently writing about the topic of your paper warrants condemnation and smear attacks. That's liberal logic.
Ali blends this selective research with menacing generalizations and language. She argues, for example, that anti-Christian violence is, "a spontaneous expression of anti-Christian animus by Muslims that transcends cultures, regions, and ethnicities." Her inference? That the collective unconscious of the Muslim world is driving conflict against Christians. But, of course, we know this is not true.
Is this the myth that is debunked? "But, of course, we know this is not true" and then the article fails to follow through with proving Ali's statement as being untrue.
He's against the persecution of minorities and says it is unIslamic
No. Sorry. The author didn't speak out against anything more than Pakistan's blasphemy law in the article you quoted.
Please don't try to manipulate more of what people say to what the didn't say and vice-versa.
Just like your claim that Javed doesn't support blasphemy laws when he clearly supports a blasphemy law for unrepentant blasphemers. It's really admirable to lie in the open like this. Anyone can read the quote I posted and see you're deliberately claiming Javed didn't say what he clearly says.
Gas lighting indeed.
I also see Chike left another poignant comment in the Esposito article:
Chike Chukudebelu wrote:
This is the second of such articles in the Huffington post - an article about Ayaan's article.
The zeal to get Ayaan to shut up is not matched by a zeal to highlight the problem of religious persecution in the Muslim World, and that is worrying.
Speaks volumes.