By Kola Animashaun
“First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out because I was not a communist. Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist. They came for the trade unionists and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist, Then it was the turn of the Jews and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew, Then they came for me and there was no one left to speak for me” – Martin Niemoller
On July 22, 2011, the world watched in horror as a heinous crime was committed by one person to many others in Norway. While the horror was unfolding with the immediacy of the media, there were many voices who lent their views to a culprit or culprits who could be the Asian youths in Norway or the usual suspect being the Al Qaeda. After all, it was a bomb in the centre of town and there were fatalities. This person or persons then travelled to carry out more massacres on Utøya Island. Utøya Island is situated in a lake about 26 miles north-west of Oslo where the Labour Party was hosting its youth camp.
The news came that it was a native Norwegian, Breivik, who claimed to be a Christian fundamentalist, starting a one-man revolution due to the government’s leniency on multiculturalism and pro-Islamisation.
Later on, a Norwegian website provided a link to a 1,500-page electronic manifesto and a book which Breivik was said to have written. In it, he stated: “Once you decide to strike, it is better to kill too many than not enough, or you risk reducing the desired ideological impact of the strike”.
Breivik’s lawyer, Geir Lippestad, said: “He has said that he believed the actions were atrocious, but that, in his head, they were necessary.”
This is not a mere protest that ordinary people will seek as a dialogue but a cold blooded massacre of the country’s brightest, youngest ,promising and socially conscientious youths who had taken their participation for the future of Norway seriously. There was no justification for what Breivik did. Breivik appears to have developed a pathological hatred for the Norwegian establishment and, particularly, the political class symbolised by the ruling Labour Party, whose youth camp on Utøya he attacked.
An ethnic Norwegian, he was strongly opposed to government policies favouring multiculturalism. Although an apparent racial supremacist and Islamophobe, he adopted the language of Muslim jihadists. The 32-year old Breivik, at his court appearance, said his motive for the attacks was to save Europe from a Muslim take-over.
The gunman said his operation was not aimed at killing as many people as possible but that he wanted to create the greatest loss possible to Norway’s governing Labour Party, which he accused of failing the country on immigration.
In addition to the 76 killed, similar numbers were injured in the attacks.
The killer was said to have meticulously planned his attacks over nine years, for what he felt was an intolerable changes occurring in the Norwegian society. He did not accept the multicultural country that was emerging. It threatened his identity and he felt alienated from it. He was in contact with other extreme groups who increasingly saw Islam as a danger and the enemy.
Comparisons have been drawn with Timothy McVeigh, who killed 168 people with a truck bomb in Oklahoma City in 1995.
Like McVeigh, Breivik saw his country’s political establishment as the real enemy. So the target that formed in his mind was not immigrant groups, but the government itself, and young people who were attached to the ruling left-leaning Labour Party.
Breivik appears to have been a loner with few friends. He was described by the Norwegian media as a right-wing fanatic. His father, once a diplomat, who lives in France, said he had had no contact with his son since 1995.
The judge said Breivik had argued that he was acting to save Norway and Europe from “Marxist and Muslim colonisation”.
In a society where anti-Islamic sentiment and isolation were tolerated naturally on the margins of society, there will be crazy people, who feel legitimized in taking harder measures.
It was difficult to comprehend that a trend towards xenophobia and nationalism in the region had fostered the attacks in Norway.
Norwegians have been one of shock that such a tragedy could occur in a traditionally peaceful country where crime rates are low – and that the perpetrator was one of their “own”. The sense of national disorientation increased when assumptions that Middle Eastern terrorists or Islamists were responsible proved wrong.
The prime minister, Jens Stoltenberg, said he was determined Norway would maintain its liberal and progressive traditions. “It’s too early to say how this will change Norwegian society,” he said. He added that he hoped Norway could maintain its open and democratic society. “Those who try to scare us shall not win.”
The consensus was overwhelming, the debates focused primarily on the best means for achieving the goals that had been agreed upon by everyone from the right-wing to the left.
Norway, prior to 22 July, 2011, was a nation of calm, idyllic place; a nation, up to 40 years ago consisted largely of people of the same ethnic and cultural background. It embraced multiculturalism, assimilated its new citizens and made provisions including new places of worship, debates on wearing of Hijab and so on. This, it seems, was not to everyone’s ideal.
On 25 July, 150,000 of Oslo’s 600,000 citizens gathered in grief clutching roses and to pay their respects to the departed and the injured and to make their message loud, clear and plain: that they refused to be fearful and refused to hate and take heed of this evil man. They all stand shoulder to shoulder across race, religion and creed.
The date, 22 July, 2011, will forever be etched in the minds of Norwegians just like 9/11 and others. The attack is not only about Norwegians and their way of life but for every decent human being working towards the pursuits of peace, stability and tolerance.
•Voice of Reason will be on Ramadan break, will be back in September.
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