quicklink

Islamic Charter For Germany

I had not heard about this before – “Advocates of the Charter consider the declaration to be a milestone on the road to integration. The Islamic Charter is supposedly the first document within Europe that strives for a societal and interreligious dialogue, according to the Chairman of the Central Council, Nadeem Elyas … The Charter has met positive responses to date, especially from representatives of political parties and the Christian Church. However, several Islam experts have criticized it. Even though the document contains a Muslim declaration of intent in the form of a personal obligation towards German law, it is not concise in many points and the formulation isn’t watertight, according to Ursula Spuler-Stegemann, an Islam academic in Marburg. Central issues and sensitive matters, such as the significance of the Sharia, have been deliberately ignored in it.”

Standard
almost a diary, quicklink

Israel endorses road map.

Deutsche Welle reviews the European newspapers’ reaction to Israel’s endorsement of the latest plan for peace in the Middle East. For one, The Independent wryly notes that “[p]eace may be on the horizon, but it is not yet around the corner.”

A personal note – in early 1993, I interviewed the late Ignatz Bubis, then head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, for a school paper I had to write about the Middle East conflict. To my question what he thinks would be the outcome of the rumours about the “Oslo process” that were emerging at the time he said something like “there will be peace eventually … in 25 years or so.” The horizon may well be some 15 years down the road (map). Does *anyone* believe there will be a Palestinian state in 2005?

Standard
Allgemein

Welcome back, Lenin. Apparently, some

Welcome back, Lenin. Apparently, some people have started yet another discussion about West German colonialism in East Germany after the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989 led to a reunification process that took less than a year and thoroughly abolished reminders of the former GDR. At the time, East Germans were not too hung up on reminders of the socialist regime they had just liberated themselves from, but as time went by, many seemed to develop a certain Nostalgia regarding all things labeled \”GDR\” that was – as far as I know – rather unique in the former communist Eastern Europe. Now some people apparently want to reerect a statue of Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, aka Lenin. I think it is ok to have a statue of Marx in Berlin. He was wrong in many respects, but he was an important social thinker and not really responsible for the horrors others have read into his texts. Lenin was one, albeit not the worst, of them. It’s ok, even fun, to have GDR-motto parties – but not to reerect statues of the first communist dictator. It’s just as if there weren’t any other problems to deal with.

Standard
cinema, compulsory reading, US Politics, USA

Bowling For Criticism

A Canadian article criticising Michael Moore’s film “Bowling For Columbine” has made to the top ranks of the MIT’s blogdex today. It’s easy to see why given the linking-power of anti-Moorians on the web. But they, like most of those getting at Moore miss a rather important point:

Bowling For Columbine” isn’t a documentary. The film is essentially a sort-of fact based cinematographic, cleverly positioned, political pamphlet. It is a well done, important film – but it is hardly a documentary in the classic sense of that term. It is well worth ciriticising that Moore continually claims it is. But that’s about it.

Moore’s main points are important even if, as the Canadian newspaper Star reports among other points,

“[a]ctor Charlton Heston, the head of the National Rifle Association, did not callously go to Denver 10 days after the shootings simply to proclaim to cheering fellow NRA members that he was going to keep his gun until it is pried ‘from my cold, dead hands.'”

This simply doesn’t matter for the film’s fundamental messages.

Moore claims that there is a much higher (physical, not economic) risk aversion in the US than in Europe which is responsible for a lot of paranoid behavior. I have to say, the highly emotionalised American discourse regarding the dangers of rogue states post 9/11 probably underscores this claim – if you want to see it that way.

Moreover, Moore claims that this higher risk aversion is a consequence of what he claims is the central social cleavage in the US – an unresolved racial conflict based on ritualised and inherited slave owner vs. slave identities. A possible conclusion, which I really cannot really say a lot about. But his claim is – here in the realm of social policy – supported by important allies, as for example this paper by Alesina, Glaeser, and Sacerdote indicates. To them, racial animosity is the principal answer to the question “Why Doesn’t the U.S. Have a European Style Welfare System?”. Charlton Heston somehow made the same point in the film – and, if I remember correctly, that section was not even cut in a particularly distorting manner.

Bowling For Columbine” is not a scientific elaboration. It is an opinionated, scary, but also entertaining film that expressed some of the fundamental anxieties a non-negligeable part of Americans seems to have with regard to the society they live in as well as an attempt to explain some of the fears the rest of the world recently developed with respect to the former land of unlimited opportunities. And – being cleverly marketed by a director who increasingly presented himself as the bearer of truth in a time when people readily swallowed everything that would “verify” their gut felt opposition to the Texan way of life – the film was turned into a huge commercial success.

Again. It is an important film. It is film whose message deserves to be taken seriously. It is a non-fiction film. But is hardly a documentary in the classic sense. Moore deserves criticism for telling the world it is, but again – that’s about it.

Standard
almost a diary

In Search Of Lost Time

Gentry Lane reminds me that football might be more than a game sometimes. But it will never be one of the more important things in life. She has decided to take a break from blogging to care for her possibly terminally ill fluffy cat Kipper.

I will clearly miss her almost daily injections of superficially shallow wit. But she is right to remind her readers that there is a backlog of 1242 episodes – equivalent to two volumes of “In Search Of Lost Time” – for all those who tuned in later.

Although browsing Freud’s Fave’s adventures probably won’t be lost time for you. I for one certainly enjoyed it.

Standard
almost a diary, compulsory reading, Fußball, photoblogging, Sport

Sometimes Football Is More.

On Sunday, the definition of “tragedy” was rewritten. Mainz 05, the local football team lost the race for the third promotion spot to Germany’s premier league, Bundesliga, by a single goal, and a single second, to local rival Eintracht Frankfurt. Both teams had scored 59 points in 33 games. Befor the last, and decisive, game, they were separated only by goal difference: Eintracht Frankfurt’s was one goal better.

The race was too close to call. At half-time, Frankfurt led 3:1 and Mainz led 2:0 against their respective opponents. Nothing had changed. But then Mainz scored twice while Frankfurt got two goals. Frankfurt would have to score four goals now – or three, should Mainz get one. A rather improbable scenario 80 minutes into the games.

Nonetheless, this is what happened. After Mainz got the 4:1 Frankfurt scored three goals in seven minutes, the 6:3 literally in the last second of the game’s extension leaving Mainz’ players and supporters (like myself) in a numbed state somewhere between disbelief and denial.

 It was heart-breaking to see so many people burst into tears – again. Pretty much the same thing happened about a year ago in Berlin. It just was not fair.

But life often isn’t – despite our Hollywood inspired tendency to believe in happy ends. In life, we have to fight the obstacles without guaranteed success. But if we’re lucky, we have someone who fights with us. And I suppose the team of Mainz 05 is lucky.

They will never walk alone.

Standard
Allgemein

Born Blogging? Some things are

Born Blogging? Some things are better left unsaid. What use is it to blog the birth of one’s child as this guy did? Is this – \”10 centimeters dialated, and SW’s water just broke\” – something the wider public should be told about, even when being wildly optimistic about its interest? No. And certainly not at this point of time – \”I should probably call my parents at some point.\” Oh my, I can already hear this guy’s `wife say. So, while I was in agony giving birth to our child you were more interested in telling the world about the state of my vagina than in supporting me. And if he told he about the blogging before and she did not say anything – this is probably what she thought. And rightly so. The link (from instapundit) reminds to read a book that has been sitting on my shelf for some time without being openend – \”Der Wert des Privaten\” – the value of privacy – by Barbara Roessler.

Standard