The Whitewashing of Soraya M.
by Mark TapsonWhile Iranian-American protesters packed streetcorners in Westwood last Saturday afternoon in support of the revolution currently playing out in the streets of Tehran, an historical drama about stoning in Iran got underway at the Los Angeles Film Festival mere blocks away.
For the few who don’t know by now, The Stoning of Soraya M. is based on French-Iranian journalist Freidoune Sahebjam’s bestselling book, which relates the true story of a woman in a remote Iranian village, in the years after the 1979 Khomeini revolution, who is falsely accused of adultery and stoned to death by a mob desperate to cleanse themselves of this affront to their collective honor and to their religion. It’s not only a gripping story in its own right, but it shines a harsh spotlight on the almost unimaginable reality that the barbaric punishment of stoning still exists in the Iranian law code, despite a largely nominal 2002 moratorium, the result of pressure from Western human rights groups.
(Full disclosure, even though I’m not reviewing the film here: I’m close friends with the filmmakers Cyrus and Betsy Nowrasteh, I provided Mpower Pictures with a bit of research on the project, I’m friends with other cast and crew and producers associated with the film, and I think stoning is bad. So don’t take my word for it when I say Soraya will be the most important, affecting film you’ll see all year. Instead seek out the multitude of reviewers who recommend the film, including Big Hollywood’s John Nolte and then see it for yourself.)
Following Saturday’s screening was a panel discussion, not so much moderated as simply hosted by Iranian novelist Khaled Hosseini, author of the bestselling The Kite Runner, who personally selected the film for the L.A. Film Festival. The panel also included Soraya’s writer-director Cyrus Nowrasteh, starring actress Shohreh Aghdashloo, and Dr. Reza Aslan, billed as an Islamic scholar.
Heading off any concerns about possible Islam-bashing in the movie, Mr. Nowrasteh noted at the discussion’s outset that Soraya is actually a pro-Muslim film, because it shows how a few hypocrites can hijack a religion for personal reasons, not to mention that the story’s victim is herself Muslim. He went on to discuss his personal attraction to the story and the process of bringing it to the big screen. Ms. Aghdashloo eloquently responded to a couple of questions about her personal passion for the role and for addressing the real-world issue of stoning.
The Q & A was shorter-lived than many including myself would have liked, or at least less focused; one question, for example, was directed to Mr. Hosseini about his novels rather than the movie. But the focus really got blurry when Reza Aslan took the mic.
“Well,” he started, “I guess it’s up to me to put this into some sort of historical context.” If only he had, then people might better understand why the outrage of stoning still exists, and why it exists today only in territories in the grip of Sharia, or Islamic law. Instead Aslan proceeded to so dilute any context at all that people told me at the reception later, which he did not attend, that they either had no idea what he was talking about or simply tuned him out. What he did do, in several obfuscating turns at bat, was utterly whitewash Islam, its prophet Mohammed, and Iranian lawmakers past and present of any responsibility whatsoever for the practice of stoning.
He began by asserting that “many cultures” struggled with the issue of stoning. I nearly interrupted him right there to ask, “Really? Which cultures besides those under the thrall of Sharia law? Do Laplanders stone adulterers? Peruvian Indians? The Watusi? Minnesotans?” Aslan clouded any potential for understanding by claiming that culture, not religion, is responsible.
Dr. Aslan, an assistant professor of creative writing at UC Riverside with degrees in religion, is such a professorial rock star that he has a MySpace fan page (“Even though he’s the greatest smartie-pants ever he’s a living doll and exceedingly cool,” the site gushes). Not unusually for professors, he seemed to revel in regaling his captive audience with rambling answers devoid of much actual meaning. At one point the answer meandered so tortuously that when Aslan was done I turned to friend and fellow Big Hollywood contributor Charles Winecoff and said, “What was the question again?” “Question?” Charles replied. “What was the answer?”
The gist of his message was this: not only is religion inseparable from culture, but the words of, say, the Bible or Quran are utterly devoid of meaning in and of themselves, blank slates upon which we impose our own biased interpretations. Thus, to use one of Aslan’s own examples, if you’re a “misogynistic prick,” you’re going to view the Quran through that woman-hating lens and impose your own meaning upon it, regardless of what Mohammed, supposedly transcribing directly from Allah, actually wrote. Hence, Islam and Mohammed are not responsible for their followers’ misinterpretations, their patriarchal culture is.
No one would deny that religion and culture aren’t closely intertwined (though I would argue that religion influences culture more than the other way around), but puh-leeze – it’s beyond absurd to say that there is no substantive difference between Mohammed’s message and Jesus’, that there is no meaning inherent in their words, or that the massive edifices of their religions have not been built, shakily or not, upon the foundations of those words. It’s also disingenuous to suggest that present-day stoning has nothing to do with a seventh-century religious directive. It’s true that stoning is a pre-Islamic practice not mentioned in the Quran; but the tenets of Islam are based not solely on the Quran, but derive also from the hadith, or the tales of Mohammed’s life, and Dr. Aslan neglected to mention that Mohammed does command stoning as a punishment for adultery in the hadith.
Nonie Darwish, the Egyptian-American author of, most recently, Cruel and Usual Punishment: The Terrifying Global Implications of Islamic Law, and someone who knows a thing of two about women under Islam, stood in the audience and challenged Aslan at length about Mohammed and misogyny. He acknowledged one minor, innocuous point, but then dismissed her flatly with “Everything else you said is wrong” and handed the mic back to Mr. Hosseini. Not “That’s a common misconception,” or “Let me quote chapter and verse of the Quran to clarify things.” Just “Wrong.” End of discussion.
(Yet more disclosure: I personally know Ms. Darwish and can attest that she is an affecting, enlightening speaker precisely because she speaks truth plainly and without the kind of empty circumlocutions Dr. Aslan relies on to befuddle the uninformed and to absolve religion of any responsibility for the actions of its believers.)
After implying that Islam has simply been distorted by lots of misogynistic pricks, Dr. Aslan cheerily reassured us that Islamic scholars through the ages got around their discomfort with the whole stoning embarrassment by making it “impossible” to convict anyone of adultery, thanks to a legal formula of required witnesses that stacks the deck in favor of the alleged adulterer. Sounds good, except that people get convicted of it and stoned anyway, and he doesn’t explain why, if Mohammed/Allah never sanctioned it, Islamic scholars ever had to wrestle with the practice in the first place or why they don’t simply ban it as un-Islamic.
To be fair, Dr. Aslan did cut through the fog with a couple of straightforward declarations, but even these raised more questions than they answered. One such jaw-dropping assertion – “There is no such thing as Sharia” – will come as thrilling news to those awaiting lashings, amputations, beheadings, and stonings in communities from Somalia to Nigeria to Afghanistan to Saudi Arabia, etc. where Sharia is in full effect. Another Aslan stunner: “Mohammed was a seventh century feminist.” Surely, I thought, this outrageous soundbite would elicit guffaws from the audience!
But the audience sat guffaw-less. Instead, applause greeted almost every one of Aslan’s opaque, vaporous commentaries. I’d like to believe that this was because he had finally finished talking, but the disappointing reality is that he was simply affirming things that many in the audience, Iranian and otherwise, desperately wanted to believe: that there is no connection between Islam and the Sharia-sanctioned brutality we’d just seen dramatized onscreen, and that Iranian authorities actually disapprove of it.
A much-comforted Iranian woman next to me stood up and, after insisting on being called upon by Mr. Hosseini, gushed “Reza, I love you!” She neglected to express such love for Cyrus Nowrasteh, the director of this extraordinary film; maybe Mr. Nowrasteh needs to rev up his own MySpace fan page.
Overall, Dr. Aslan breezily downplayed stonings in general - Hey, they almost never happen and only in outlying areas out of reach of the rule of big city law, so what’s the big deal? Irrepressible radio host and documentary filmmaker John Ziegler, sitting behind me at the screening, let out a sardonic “Besides, it’s not like it’s as bad as waterboarding, right?” But that wasn’t any solace to a 13-year-old girl sentenced by a Sharia court and stoned to death for adultery in Somalia just last October (after going to the authorities herself and reporting she was gang-raped).
Admittedly, that wasn’t in Iran. Okay, so let’s look at the recent record there: an Iranian woman’s conviction of adultery was upheld just last November and her sentence of stoning confirmed. In January of this year, two men were stoned to death in Iran for adultery, and in May of this year, yet another man was stoned to death (the woman involved repented and presumably got her lashings instead). At least ten more men and women await death by stoning around the country.
The Stoning of Soraya M. is too important a film, and the issue of stoning under Sharia law (oops, I forgot – Sharia doesn’t exist) is too critical to allow an apologist like Dr. Aslan to whitewash Sharia with vague deflections and rude dismissal of debate. Lives are still at stake; men and women are still facing death in this grotesque manner (did I mention that it is specified in Iranian law that the stones to be hurled must not be too small to inflict significant damage nor too big to kill the victim immediately?). If we do not debate honestly the medieval ideology that lies behind this cruel practice, it will never end, and there will be more Sorayas.
This just in, even as I write: The Iranian judiciary is claiming they’ve decided to eliminate stoning. Call me skeptical, but I’ll believe it when it’s officially enshrined in law, when those awaiting death by stoning have their sentences commuted (to lashings, which will certainly result in very muted cellblock celebration), and when no more stonings happen, even in remote villages. In any case, considering that The Stoning of Soraya M. was on a list released in March of Western films that Iran finds objectionable and insulting, and considering the widespread international media focus on Soraya and its relevance to the current unrest in Iran, there’s no doubt that the growing awareness of the film has pressured the Iranian authorities to at least look like they’re doing the right thing.







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65 Comments
Hmmm… I think we can negotiate with these people?
I don't care for Nowrasteh's politics, but I expected as much from an audience who believes that theocratic fascism is shrouded in shades of gray.
(sarcasm)
Remember, America and only America can be brutal, since equality of result is not upheld.
(/sarcasm)
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Mark, I was at that screening and panel discussion on Saturday and couldn't believe that guy's double-talk. Especially when he stated that "Sharia law doesn't exist". I was sitting by myself in the audience and let out a loud "HUH??!!" I was also telling a friend of mine afterward that I found it extremely noteworthy that there was no mention of the word "evil", in the discussion of what causes or allows the practice of stoning to continue. Only, as Mr. Aslan called it, "cultural" differences.
This was the second time I'd seen the film, I was also at the Westside Pavillion screening a couple of weeks ago, but made a specific point to attend this one because I wanted to hear the POV of an "Islamic scholar". Thought there might even be a mullah on the panel. What a disappointment!
I also couldn't believe it when he arrogantly dismissed that other questioner's well-thought out comments with "Everything else you said is wrong".
Anyway, was so gratified to read your spot-on account this morning. We must call a spade a spade if we ever hope to combat evils like this in the world.
Thanks for bringing this to light in such detail, Mark! Not only was Dr. Aslan shockingly rude to the kindly (and experienced) Ms. Darwish, he also hogged the microphone like no one else on the panel. Typically, the person with the least to say had the biggest mouth. Where is the academia factory that cranks out these intellectual self-parodies? That aside, if 'Soraya M' is top of an official Iranian list of 'offensive' films, then we all have a duty to run out and see it.
Thanks, Margot, I certainly agree. Somehow we've reached the point where naming evil is considered impolite.
Interesting, because a blogging heads debate alluded to Mr. Aslan being summoned to the White House to "consult" on Iran. Just what Obama needs, another smoke blowing denialist giving him advice that conforms to his own "rainbows and lollipops" view of Iran. Perhaps he can suggest the best mustard to serve at the 4th of July parties this weekend too.
Hey Dr. Aslan…..
Denial ain't a river in Egypt….
What are Nowrasteh's "politics"?
yet another clueless academic posing as an 'expert'- Aslan is a propogandist and not a particularly good one, as both Mr Tapson and Mr Winecoff point out. Islamic fascism, like all other totalitarian constructs, will not allow honest debate. Obfuscation and red herrings will always be the rule of the day, for if honest people really knew the agenda they would recoil in horror.
There needs to be an honest debate on this- perhaps the freedom movement in Iran will provide it…
Sadly, when a woman is being stoned she will choose any "port in the storm." We must be wise in choosing our political bedfellows and be loud in making a distinction about what we believe.
In my opinion Islam, at its best, is correctly referred to as a "towel slapping religion."
So where was Mr. Nowrasteh during this ridiculous traducement of fact and truth? He took risks to make a grave and important movie on a subject too few people now about and then sat silently in the face of this surely predictable nonsense? I don't get it.
Thanks for your post Mark. I had recently gone to a weekend seminar called Jesus in the Qur'an. The audience was primarily Christians, with two Muslim men attending. It was a very interesting seminar, but most interesting was a question at the end of the program. A woman in the audience asked the Muslim men about Sharia law and what the Qur'an said about it. Without missing a beat, matter of factly, the men said it is a part of Islam. And not only is Islam a religion but a culture, thus accepted. The woman asked how they could condone such violence and the two men were genuinly shocked by the question. As they started to respond the hosts gently took over and thanked everyone for coming to the workshop.
THAT pissed me off! We need to hear what any Muslim believes about Sharia law. This was a workshop in the midwest and if Muslim's here accept Sharia as part of Islam, I would think it's more widely practiced than is even recognized. You have Dr. Aslan stating dishonestly "there is no such thing as Sharia", and these two random midwest Muslim men from the Mosque down the street stating it's part of Islam. Hmmm. . .
I apologize if this appears naive but what makes stoning "barbaric"?
After reading the post above I did a quick search of articles for information on the current usage of stoning as a punishment/death penalty and most of them cite the discriminatory use of stoning against women as the reason for it being wrong. In that regard I can agree. If a particular method of punishment is to be used, it should be used equally for both men and women. But how does that make stoning as a punishment "bad"?
Punishments are not meant to be pleasant. Why do we seem to believe that making the death of the guilty as painless as possible makes us a more advanced or civilized people?
Raven, he was there on the panel, but it was not predictable. Mr. Nowrasteh didn't know Aslan was going to take the stance he did. I don't want to speak for the Nowrastehs, but it was their intention to tell a good story that needed to be told, to promote the movie while letting it speak for itself, and to leave the theological debate to others more eminently qualified, like Nonie Darwish.
Toddes: first, stoning IS used against both men and women. Second, I agree that punishment shouldn't be pleasant, but um, stoning is a bit more than just unpleasant. It's monstrous and exrcuciating. Perhaps you don't understand what's involved and need to read around a bit more. As I wrote above, the stones are purposefully chosen to inflict as much pain and damage as possible while not allowing for a quick death. The depiction of the stoning in this movie is not nearly as gruesome as the description in the book, much less in reality. I'm not sure how you can fail to see how shockingly brutal death by stoning must be, or why you think it's not "bad."
I'm sorry, but banning stoning as a punishment DOES make us more civilized.
[...] The Whitewashing of Soraya M. by Mark Tapson [...]
Mark — First, I'm not sure how at least the potential for Aslan's remarks could not have been predicted by moderately socially aware people given all the factors: Aslan's own history, the tedious track record of performance of academic leftists in such venues, and the political issues the film raises. As a simple, moderately socially aware screenwriter, I would have been acutely aware of the possibility. And prepared. I appreciate that Nowrasteh's primary mission is to tell a story, but in view of his previous outspokenness in essays in such places as the Wall Street Journal, I assumed he would have risen to challenge the ahistorical moral scumblings taking place on the very subjects he tried — and doubtlessly dedicated more than a year of his life — to define with such heartbreaking clarity. Of course that too is his choice. But it would not have been mine. These are extraordinary times. More is required of the artist, certainly of the counter-cultural ones. Finally, it doesn't sound to me like it was much of a theological debate, but rather an instance of sloppy and smothering apologias for evil. Which, under any circumstances, need to be confronted.
Thank you for your reply though I don't believe I wrote that it was NOT used against men only that the articles I read indicated that it was used more often against women than men.
I had missed your description of the stoning in the next to last paragraph. Thank you for pointing out that you did provide the description which forced me to read more carefully what you wrote.
And I agree that stoning, as you describe it, is a barbaric practice. It seems more vengence than justice.
(cont.)
The method of stoning I was thinking of can be found at
Stoning in practice.
"The Talmudic method of how stoning is to be carried out differs from mob stoning such as implied by the story of Jesus and the woman taken in adultery in the Gospel of John. According to the Jewish Oral Law, after the Jewish criminal has been determined as guilty before the Great Sanhedrin, the two valid witnesses and the sentenced criminal go to the edge of a high place. From there the two witnesses are to push the criminal off. After the criminal has fallen, the two witnesses are to drop a large boulder onto the criminal – requiring both of the witnesses to lift the boulder together. If the criminal did not die from the fall or from the crushing of the large boulder, then any people in the surrounding area are to QUICKLY [emphasis mine] cause him to die by stoning with whatever rocks they can find."
[...] story is about "stoning". Overall, Dr. Aslan breezily downplayed stonings in general – Hey, they almost never happen [...]
Hey, hot dogs anyone?
Explain, please. What do you mean by your first comment?
It's hard for me to grasp that you would need an explanation on that.
The method he describes is not the method of stoning I was familiar with. There is a second portion to my reply (that seems to be lost in moderation) which provides a link and a description of the method I thought was being referenced.
Google on "Cruel and unusual punishment" and "United States Constitution" to see how we view this issue round these parts.
Raven, as you say, that's his choice. Let me remind you though, that the very making of this film was a more courageous act than the vast majority of "artists" are up to these days, certainly in Hollywood. The Nowrastehs have literally put their lives on the line for this story, so I certainly think that qualifies as the "more" that is "required."
All I said was that I didn't care much for them. My comment was directed at the audience of the event, not at him.
I'm chastened for not noting his courage (moral and physical) which, along with the dedication that I did note, is required to make such a film, and likewise was required for the Path to 9/11. Mr. Nowrasteh and his occasional collaborator Marc Platt have in fact been something of inspirations to me. As such, I was sorry to hear that the event to discuss his film was intellectually vandalized by one more of the academic idiots unshakeably associated with the modern day "liberal" public forums, and wish this poseur been challenged by the filmmakers. I tend toward the notion that in these interpretive events so dominated by liberals there exists another and perhaps even more important responsibility and opportunity for the artist to confront the cultural clergy of liars. The work is all part and parcel, in my view. But that is just me, and perhaps an unfair standard.
I wish I'd been there.
Mohammad – the original cult leader – had a dream about flying to some city he couldn't name. Some people who had been to Jerusalem said that was the city in his dream.
Thus Islam put a claim on the city that continues to this day.
Idiots. Dangerous, double-talking, evil, bloody border idiots.
I personally agree with you about confronting the clergy of liars, as you call them (nice one). I don't think it's an unfair standard, but sometimes things are more complicated than it might appear, and this event was one of those times. For example, there was supposed to be another panel member, Irshad Manji, who is a reformist Muslim woman who has debated Aslan on a number of occasions, but she couldn't make it; her presence might have tipped the scales. And there are other considerations – as I say, it's complicated, but the point is that from the outside it might appear bewildering and be frustrating. Anyway, that's why I wrote this piece – to recover the opportunity to confront Aslan's perspective in an ordered, articulate and public way.
I'd support stoning…if it applied to murderers, rapists, and pedophiles!…especially if the crimes were gruesome. But the Iranians are stoning people who have affairs, for chrissakes!
Ha! I recognize the "Islam has bloody borders" reference. . . Yes, the claim on Jerusalem is ridiculous.
Unfortunately the great majority of Mideast "experts" in US academia are acolytes of the malignant fraud Edward Said.
Who dominated Columbia at the time Barry H. O-S. was majoring in poly sci there….
I mean that the Moslem women don't seem to have a real choice in finding a good guy to stand up for them. I am saying in U.S. , we have to be careful who we are calling a good guy over there.
And, I guess you understood my last comment. It was a personal statement about what I believe. I want to be loud and clear that I personally believe in Jesus Christ~ the story goes that He wrote down the sins of the would-be stoners in the sand and said "ye who are without sin, caste the first stone." I think I get His drift.
Sorry I was not clear. Just sharing one American woman's take on this situation (IMHO)
We must call a spade a spade
RACIST
I read the reviews for this movie at Rottentomatoes.com. While it is now in the red with 60% positive reviews, this particular negative review is a must-read:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/stoning_of_soraya...
The quote:
…there is something condescending and judgmental in the filmmaker's subtext that seems to exonerate Western culture as somehow less complicit in the atrocious murders that it commits against innocent and guilty citizens alike.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable but unsurprising, and typical anti-American leftist idiocy. As if a movie about stoning in Iran should somehow find the West to blame.
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