Posted by
John David Powell on Friday, May 04, 2007 3:25:39 PM
The appearance on the
Internet this week of a video showing the stoning to death of a teenage Kirdish
girl in Iraq underscores this writer’s long-held contention
that “they are not like us.”
Here’s what happened
as reported by London’s Daily Mail.
Hardline relious leaders and male family members of Du’a Khalil Aswad condemned
the 17-year-old girl to death by stoning because of her relationship with a
Sunni Muslim boy. Aswad’s family belongs
to Yezidi, a Kurdish religious group in Iraq. The religious
leaders and family members claimed she dishonored the family by failing to
return home one night. Other reports
suggest the “honor killing” had a lot to do with her apparent conversion to
Islam.
Regardless of the
reason, on or about April 7 of this year, eight or nine men dragged the girl
into the street and stoned her for half an hour until she died, as a large crowd
stood around and watched in the predominately Kurdish town near Mosul.
Reports say the
boyfriend is in hiding for fear he will meet the same cold, hard fate.
The British arm of
Amnesty International condemned the murder and called for the arrest of those
responsible (http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news_details.asp?NewsID=17351).
This is not the first
time someone filmed or videotaped a stoning.
Below is an excerpt from a column from this writer carried by various
online sites in June of 2003.
+ + +
The May 5 edition of New Zealand's Timaru Herald carried a story of the stoning
to death of four ducks by four boys the previous weekend. The newspaper quoted an unidentified man who
said that when he tried to stop the boys, one of them responded, “But we're
only killing them with rocks.”
These boys are not like the boys I knew while growing up in a small Illinois town where the worst thing one did with stones
was to toss them through greenhouse windows or at streetlights . . .
Nigeria is one of seven countries, all Muslim, that either engages in
state-sponsored stoning or allows it as part of shariah law. The others include Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, and Sudan. As
late as February of this year, a 13-year-old Pakistani girl was mutilated and
stoned for dancing at a wedding
(www.pakistanlink.com/Opinion/2003/Jan/03/11.html).
U.S. lawmakers agree that these people are not like
us. The House of Representatives in
March, by a 416-0 vote, passed a resolution sponsored by Rep. Betty McCollum,
D-Minn, that denounces stoning as a gross violation of human rights.
This issue is not new to Capitol Hill. On
Feb. 25, 1998,
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., and Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-NY, showed a
smuggled video of a public stoning in Iran (www.house.gov/ackerman/press/iran2.html). A copy of the 15-minute tape is online at
www.apostatesofislam.com/media/stoning.htm. It is a gruesome account, and should not be
viewed by the merely curious or those easily sickened by terrifying images of
torture.
About five minutes into the tape we see a group of men carrying an individual
in a sheet to the center of the plaza, and we watch as they transform the sheet
into a death shroud. They carefully
place the mummy-like figure into a hole as if transplanting a tree in someone’s
yard.
At about seven minutes into the tape, handlers place a second person into
another hole. This raw video shows us the backs of people as the photographer
walks around looking for a clear view of the gruesome scene of death. About 30 seconds later, hundreds of men,
mostly members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, crowd into a circle around the condemned. Then the stoning begins, seemingly
spontaneously.
We watch the eerie site of two white figures writhing as stones hit them. A man walks up to one shroud and pelts it with
rocks. The camera zooms in on the
bloodied lump surrounded by stones. The
camera pans to the other individual. The
cover is knocked off, he is face down, his head is bathed in blood.
The tape jumps to the scene of a third person brought in, shrouded. He stands stock still as ghastly gardeners
plant him in the hole.
Dirt is shoveled into the hole around the fourth individual, who bends at the
waist. Feet tamp the dirt around him, making sure all is snug.
The circle of death reforms as the man with the shovel makes his final tamps. The crowd chants in agitated anticipation.
The stoning begins with lusty yells. It
is a frenzied scene devoid of humanity. Scores
of stones fly quickly and strike horribly. The shroud around one head explodes into red. The two ghostly figures totter. One falls forward only to be pelted backward.
The camera zooms in. The man on the
right writhes as his shroud comes loose. We see his bloody torso struck by stones. We see him struggle as the pile of stones grows
around him. We see the circle contract slowly until fewer than five feet
separate the murderous men from the objects of their execution.
Stone throwers stand close enough to caress their victims. But they do not. Instead, they pick up more stones and fling
them with all their might.
The condemned continue to writhe, to fall over, to sit back up, to fall back
over. One goes suddenly still. The other
rises, almost defiantly in the face of hard death.
Now the crowd stands within inches. Men
pick up rocks as quickly as they can, in some macabre competition to see who
will cast the last stone in the deliverance of Allah's justice.
Both figures are still. The crowd
disperses. I recall the New Zealand boys who justified their actions by saying
they only killed them with rocks. These
Muslim men would appreciate the sentiments, because they are not like us.
Mundus vult decipi