BY TAREK FATAH
Something is rotten in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. But let me
come back to that later. In December 1992 a mob of 1,50,000 Hindu nationalists
attacked a 15th-century mosque in the Indian city of Ayodhya. Within hours, the
mosque was reduced to rubble and in the weeks to follow, thousands of Indians
died in Hindu-Muslim riots.
The Muslim world reacted in outrage. Among the countries that
expressed anger at the destruction of the centuries-old Indian mosque by Hindu
extremists was Saudi Arabia. Here in Canada, imams gave fiery sermons and
urged congregations to protest.
Although more than a dozen years have passed since the
destruction of the mosque, there is still bitterness in the air. Muslims
worldwide feel a sense of betrayal and impotence at not being able to control
their own destiny and protect their historical religious sites.
However, a Muslim site far more significant than the Babri
mosque is facing destruction, but there is barely a murmur in protest. The site
is none other than the home of Prophet Muhammad in the city of Mecca.
The demolition of the prophet’s 1,400-year-old home is not going
to take place at the hands of non-Muslims or some occupying western army, but by
the very people who have taken the title as protectors of Islam’s two holiest
mosques in Medina and Mecca: the Saudi royal family.
What makes this demolition worse is the fact that the home of
the Prophet is to make way for a parking lot, two 50-storey hotel towers and
seven 35-storey apartment blocks; a project known as the Jabal Omar Scheme, all
within a stone’s throw of the Grand Mosque.
Yet despite this outrage, not a single Muslim country, no
ayatollah, no mufti, no king, not even a Muslim Canadian imam
has dared utter a word in protest.
Such is the power of Saudi influence on the Muslim narrative.
The question is this: Why is it that when the Babri mosque was
demolished, hundreds of thousands of Muslims worldwide took to the streets to
protest, but when Saudi authorities plan to demolish the home of our beloved
Prophet, not a whisper is heard?
Is it because Muslims have become so overwhelmed by the power of
the Saudi riyal currency that we have lost all courage and self-respect? Or is
it because we feel a need to cover up Muslim-on-Muslim violence;
Muslim-on-Muslim terror; Muslim-on-Muslim oppression?
However, in this climate conducive to cowardice, there still are
a few giants that stand tall. Dr. Sami Angawi is one of them.
An eminent Saudi architect, he is a brave man in a country where
courage is scarce. Today, he leads a one-man campaign to save the home of
Muhammad.
He told the London newspaper, The Independent, "The house
where the Prophet received the word of God is gone and nobody cares... this is
the end of history in Mecca and Medina and the end of their future."
The cultural massacre of Islamic heritage sites is not a new
phenomenon. It is said that in the last two decades, 95 per cent of Mecca’s
1,000-year-old buildings have been demolished. In the early 1920s, the Saudis
bulldozed and levelled a graveyard in Medina that housed the graves of the
family and companions of Muhammad.
Today the religious zealots in Saudi Arabia are not alone.
Commercial developers have joined hands with them and are making hundreds of
millions in profits as they build ugly, but lucrative high-rises that are
shadowing the Grand Mosque known as the Kaaba.
The Muslim Canadian Congress has strongly condemned this outrage
and called it a cultural massacre of Muslim heritage for the sake of profit. In
a letter to the Saudi ambassador in Ottawa, Niaz Salimi, president of the MCC,
has demanded an immediate stop to these demolitions and the placing of a
moratorium on all future destruction of Muslim heritage sites.
She writes, "The sacred places of Islam, regardless of where
they are located, belong to the Muslim community worldwide. The countries where
they are located are simply trustees and have no right to destroy them."
Today Saudi petrodollars have the ability to silence even its
most vocal critics, but when all is said and done, history will render a harsh
judgement on those who try to wipe out its footprints and steal the heritage of
all humanity.
In the words of Lady Macbeth,
Here’s the smell of blood still:
All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand.
Oh! oh! oh!