'To combat Islamophobia, Imran Khan bridges East and West'
The following analysis is by Ted Anthony, who covered the aftermath of 9/11 in Afghanistan and Pakistan and has written about international affairs for The Associated Press since 1995, and Aya Batrawy, who covers the Persian Gulf for The Associated Press and has reported from the Middle East for the past 15 years.
He spoke of Islam but used references like Charles Bronson's “Death Wish” movie, Monty Python and Japanese kamikaze pilots during World War II. He built linguistic and pop-culture bridges as he carefully made his points.
Pakistan's enigmatic Prime Minister Imran Khan effortlessly projected his East-meets-West brand from the podium of the United Nations General Assembly on Friday, wearing a navy blazer over a traditional shalwar kameez as he attempted to explain the dangers of Islamophobia and why Muslims are sensitive to attacks on the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
In the end, Khan's speech reached its destination — a political attack by a politician on India's crackdown in Muslim-majority occupied Kashmir. En route, though, he delivered an appeal familiar to many Muslims but somewhat extraordinary for a global forum: a full-throated defence of Islam shaped for a Western audience's ears.
“It is important to understand this. The Prophet lives in our hearts,” Khan said. “When he is ridiculed, when he's insulted, it hurts.”
“We human beings understand one thing: The pain of the heart is far, far, far more hurtful than physical pain,” he said in his speech, which pinballed between his dual identities — sports-star celebrity and his current role as head of state of the world's largest Islamic republic.
In what was his first address to the General Assembly after taking office last year, Khan reached across the gulf to be a translating dictionary for two cultures that find themselves at odds.
Similar to his life, much of it lived out in the tabloids through the 1990s, the prime minister's 45-minute-speech appeared to follow not a script but his own off-the-cuff stream of consciousness.
Even if the messenger was highly political, the message was a humanistic one. It said, in effect, that terrorism, radicalism and suicide bombings belong to no religion or at least not to one religion exclusively.