Post by pieter on May 16, 2006 11:41:42 GMT -7
In my view my country looses on of the few independant thinkers,
Islam critics and a person of international statue, over an immigration
issue. This prooves that she was and is to big for this small country.
America will receive another free thinker from the old world.
Another victory for Mulim lunatics and left conservatives,
and small minded liberals who love rules and legislation.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Ayaan Hirsi Ali (born Ayaan Hirsi Magan 13 November 1969 actual date is in question] in Mogadishu, Somalia) is a feminist and former politician. She was a member of the Tweede Kamer (the Lower House of the Netherlands) for the VVD from January 30, 2003 until May 16, 2006. She is a prominent and often controversial author, film maker and critic of Islam. Although she has received a Dutch passport in the past, Dutch Minister of Immigration Rita Verdonk has stated that Hirsi Ali has not received Dutch citizenship.[1]
In 2002, Hirsi Ali told that she had lied about her name, her age, and the manner in which she came to the Netherlands. According to the newspaper Volkskrant, Hirsi Ali now plans to move to the U.S. and "start working for the conservative American Enterprise Institute in September after reaching a deal with US authorities about her security."[2]
Hirsi Ali has had to maintain a high level of security due to threats against her life for voicing views that challenge Islamic dogma.
Youth
Hirsi Ali was born in Somalia into the Osman Mahmoud sub-clan of the Darod clan. Her father, Hirsi Magan Isse, was an opponent of Siyad Barre, the president of Somalia. Although her father, who had studied in Italy and the United States, was opposed to female genital cutting, a Somali tradition, when Hirsi Ali was five years old her grandmother had the procedure performed on her while her father was abroad.[3]
When she was six, her family left the country for Saudi Arabia, later moving to Ethiopia and then to Kenya, where the family obtained political asylum. In Kenya she attended the English-language Muslim Girls' Secondary School in Nairobi under sponsership of the UNHCR, where, for a brief period she received guest lessons from a fundamentalist teacher called Aziza. Following the invasion by the secular nation of Iraq of the Islamic republic of Iran, she sympathised with Iran, and the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, and wore a head-scarf together with her school uniform. After secondary school she attended a secretarial course at the Valley College in Nairobi (near Yaya center) for one year.
Pre-political career
In 1992, Hirsi Ali's father arranged for her to marry a distant cousin who lived in Canada. In 1992, after living in Kenya for eleven years she traveled to family in Düsseldorf and Berlin, Germany. After a brief stay in Germany, she decided to go to the Netherlands, instead of Canada.
Once in the Netherlands, she requested political asylum and received a residence permit. It is not known on which grounds she received political asylum. Technically, since her first stop had been in Germany, she should have applied for asylum there. In the Netherlands she gave a different date of birth and different name to the Dutch immigration authorities. Until now she is known in the west by that name Hirsi Ali, instead of her real name Hirsi Magan. On the advice of her aunt she told the immigration authorities that she had come straight from Somalia, instead of Kenya where she had been living for eleven years. In Somalia there was a serious famine at that time and a civil war leading to the Operation Restore Hope by the United States. Due to these circumstances asylum seekers from Somalia were routinely granted asylum on humanitarian grounds. Hirsi Ali received a residence permit within three weeks of her arrival in the Netherlands. [4].
After receiving asylum, she held various short-term jobs, ranging from cleaning to mail sorting. During this time she took courses in Dutch and a one-year course in Social Work. Following her initial studies, she studied political science at the University of Leiden until 2000. Between 1995 and 2001, she worked as an independent interpreter and translator, working primarily for the National Migration Service. While working for the NMS, she had access to inside knowledge of the workings of the Dutch immigration system. She was heavily critical of the way the Dutch system handled asylum seekers, favoring highly educated applicants over less educated ones.
Political Career
After earning her masters in political science, Hirsi Ali became a fellow at the Wiardi Beckman Foundation, a scientific institute linked to the social-democratic PvdA, of which Leiden University Professor Ruud Koole was steward. Inspired by the Atheist Manifesto (Atheistisch Manifest) of Leiden philosopher Herman Philipse, she renounced Islam and became an atheist. During this period she began to formulate her critique on Islamic culture, which she put to words in a book De Zoontjesfabriek ("The Son Factory"). After the publication of this book, she received the first threats on her life.
In November 2002 she switched to the liberal VVD party, which offered her a position in parliament. She criticized the PvdA for being blind to the negative effects of immigration from Islamic countries. Hirsi Ali was an assistant of the VVD parliamentary party between November 2002 and January 2003. Because of the escalating threats to her life, Hirsi Ali began to receive permanent police protection.
In January 2003 she was elected to the Tweede Kamer. She received a large number of preference votes.
Because of her statements about the prophet Muhammad in a Trouw interview, a discrimination complaint was filed against Hirsi Ali on April 24, 2003. The Prosecutor's office decided not to prosecute her, because her critique did "not put forth any conclusions in respect to Muslims and their worth as a group is not denied."[5].
Hirsi Ali wrote the script for Submission [6], a short, low-budget film directed by Theo van Gogh. The film criticized the treatment of women in Islamic society. It showed women, one of whom was dressed in a semi-transparent burqa, with texts from the Qur'an projected on their bodies. The texts referred to the subordinate role of women. In addition to writing the script, Hirsi Ali also provided the voice-over. The release of the film sparked much controversy, as well as violent reaction, when radical Islamist Mohammed Bouyeri gunned down Van Gogh in an Amsterdam street on November 2, 2004. A letter pinned to Van Gogh's body with a knife was primarily a death threat to Hirsi Ali.
In 2004 the group "The Hague Connection" produced and distributed the rap song "Hirsi Ali Dis" on the internet. The lyrics of this song included yet more violent threats against Hirsi Ali's life. The rappers were prosecuted under Article 121 of the Dutch criminal code, because they hindered the execution of Hirsi Ali's tasks as politician. In 2005 the rappers were sentenced to community service and a suspended prison sentence [7].
After the incident, Hirsi Ali went into hiding in the Netherlands, and even spent some time in New York, a situation which lasted until January 18, 2005, when she returned to parliament. On February 18, 2005, she revealed the location of herself and her colleague Geert Wilders, who had also been in hiding. She demanded a normal, secured house, which she was granted one week later.
On November 16, 2005, Hirsi Ali reported being seriously threatened by the Imam Scheich Fawaz. This Imam, who worked in a mosque in The Hague, announced on the internet that Hirsi Ali would be "blown away by the wind of changing times" and that she could anticipate "the curse of Allah".
In January 2006, Hirsi Ali used her acceptance speech for the Reader's Digest "European of the Year" award to urge action to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and to say that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad must be taken at his word in wanting to organize a conference to investigate objective evidence of the Holocaust. "Before I came to Europe, I'd never heard of the Holocaust. That is the case with millions of people in the Middle East. Such a conference should be able to convince many people away from their denial of the genocide against the Jews." [8] She also said that "so-called Western values" of freedom and justice are universal; that Europe has done far better than most areas of the world at providing justice, because it has guaranteed the freedom of thought and debate that are required for critical self-examination; and that communities cannot reform themselves unless "scrupulous investigation of every former and current doctrine is possible."[9]
In March 2006 a letter she co-signed entitled MANIFESTO: Together facing the new totalitarianism with eleven other individuals (most notably Salman Rushdie) was published in response to violent and deadly protests in the Islamic world surrounding the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.
On April 27 a Dutch judge ruled that Hirsi Ali had to leave her house - a highly secured secret address in the Netherlands. Her neighbors had complained that living next to her was an unacceptable security risk for them.
In May 2006 the Dutch television program "Zembla" [10] rekindled interest in the fact that in her asylum request, Hirsi Ali lied about her real name, her age and the country she arrived from. She had informed the public about these facts as early as September, 2002 in an interview in the political magazine HP/De Tijd.[11][12][13] Media speculations arose that she could lose her Dutch Citizenship because of this 'identity fraud', rendering her ineligible for Parliament. In a first reaction Minister Rita Verdonk [14] said she would not look into the matter, but after Member of Parliament Hilbrand Nawijn insisted, she declared that she would investigate Hirsi Ali's naturalisation process. This investigation took three days. The findings were that Hirsi Ali never received Dutch citizenship after all, because she lied about her name and date of birth. She stated that she was Ayaan Hirsi Ali, born in 1967, but she's actually Ayaan Hirsi Magan, born in 1969. Therefore the Dutch government's position is that Hirsi Ali's Dutch citizenship is invalid and declared null and void. She does however still have her residency permit, which was granted in 1992. It is unlikely that her permit will be taken away from her. On May 16, Hirsi Ali resigned from Parliament after admitting lying on her asylum application.
Post-political career
On May 15, 2006, after the broadcast of the "Zembla"-documentary, news stories erupted saying that Hirsi Ali is likely to move to the United States in September 2006. There she will work on finishing her book Shortcut to Enlightenment and working for the conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute.[15] In a reaction, old VVD-minister Hans Wiegel stated that her departure "would not be a loss to the VVD and not be a loss to the Tweede Kamer".[16] Wiegel said that Hirsi Ali was a brave woman, but that her standpoints were polarizing. Former parliamentary leader of the VVD, Jozias van Aartsen, was more positive about Hirsi Ali, saying that it is "painful for Dutch society and politics that she is leaving the Tweede Kamer".[17]
Hirsi Ali is currently working on a successor to "Submission", which will probably deal with the position of homosexuals in Islam.
Political Views
Hirsi Ali's political views are for the most part inspired by her personal change from a fundamentalist Muslim to an atheist. Hirsi Ali is very critical of Islam, and especially of the prophet Muhammad and the position of women in Islam.
Islam
Hirsi Ali is very critical of the position of women in Islam and the punishments demanded by Islamic scholars for homosexuality and adultery.
Circumcision
Hirsi Ali is an opponent of the practice of circumcision for both men and women. Female circumcision is a part of certain cultures in some Islamic countries, including Kenya and Somalia, where she lived. Female circumcision is not part of the Islamic religion and is part of traditions that have existed for centuries even before the beginning of monotheist religions including Islam.[citations needed] Islamic scholars note that Islamic law prohibits clitorodectomy (partial or complete) or infibulation, or any genital mutilation which impairs the woman's ability to enjoy sexual relations.
Freedom of Speech
Hirsi Ali is a proponent of free speech. In a 2006 lecture in Berlin, she defended the right to offend, following the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy. She condemned the journalists of those papers and TV channels that did not show their readers the cartoons as being "mediocre of mind" and of trying to hide behind those "noble sounding terms such as 'responsivity' and 'sensitivity'." She praised publishers all over Europe for showing the cartoons and not being afraid of what she interpreted as the intolerance of some Muslims.[18]
Muhammad
Her criticism of the Islamic prophet Muhammad mainly concerns his moral stature. In January 2003 she told the Dutch paper Trouw, "Muhammad is, seen by our Western standards, a perverse man". She referred particularly to the marriage between Muhammad, who was 52 years old, and Aisha, who was nine years old, according to the Hadith. There is a debate, however, on how old Aisha was when she married Muhammad.
Prizes
In January 2004, Hirsi Ali was awarded the Prize of Liberty by Nova Civitas, a classical liberal thinktank in the Low Countries.
On November 20, 2004 Ayaan Hirsi Ali was awarded Denmark's Liberal Party’s Freedom Prize (largest party of Denmark and part of the ruling coalition) "for her work to further freedom of speech and the rights of women". Due to threats from Islamic fundamentalists she was not at the time able to receive it personally; however a year later, November 17, 2005, she travelled to Denmark to thank Anders Fogh Rasmussen, leader of Denmark's Liberal Party and prime minister of Denmark, for the prize.
On February 25, 2005 she was given the Harriet Freezerring by Cisca Dresselhuys, editor of the feminist magazine Opzij, "for her work for the emancipation of Islamic women".
According to the American Time Magazine of April 18, 2005 she was amongst the 100 Most Influential Persons of the World. She was put in the category "Leaders & Revolutionaries".
In June 2005, Hirsi Ali was awarded by the Norwegian Political Think Tank, Human Rights Service (HRS) [htpp://www.rights.no], with the annual Price, This Years European Bellwether. According to HRS, Hirsi Ali is “beyond a doubt, the leading European politician in the field of integration. (She is) a master at the art of mediating the most difficult issues with insurmountable courage, wisdom, reflectiveness, and clarity [1] * On August 29, 2005, Hirsi Ali was awarded the annual Democracy Prize of the Liberal Party of Sweden "for her courageous work for democracy, human rights and women's rights."
Hirsi Ali was voted European of the Year for 2006 by the European editors of Reader's Digest magazine. At a ceremony in The Hague on January 23, Hirsi Ali accepted the Reader's Digest award from EU Competition Commissioner, Neelie Kroes. [2].
The Norwegian member of parliament Christian Tybring-Gjedde has nominated Hirsi Ali as candidate for Nobel Peace Prize of 2006.
Trivia
Her first name, Ayaan, means "lucky person" or simply "luck" in the Somali language.
Hirsi Ali speaks 6 languages: English, Somali, Arabic, Swahili, Amharic and Dutch.
Bibliography
De Zoontjes fabriek over vrouwen, islam en integratie (English: the Son factory - about women, islam and integration) is a collection of essays and lectures she held before 2002. It also contains an extended interview originally published in Opzij, a feminist magazine. The book specifically focuses on the position of Moslems in the Netherlands.
The Caged Virgin : An Emancipation Proclamation for Women and Islam is a translation of the Dutch book De Maagdenkooi. It is a collection of Hirsi Ali's essays and lectures from the period 2003-2004, combined with her personal experiences as a translator working for the NMS. The book specifically focuses on the position of women in Islam.
Islam critics and a person of international statue, over an immigration
issue. This prooves that she was and is to big for this small country.
America will receive another free thinker from the old world.
Another victory for Mulim lunatics and left conservatives,
and small minded liberals who love rules and legislation.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Ayaan Hirsi Ali (born Ayaan Hirsi Magan 13 November 1969 actual date is in question] in Mogadishu, Somalia) is a feminist and former politician. She was a member of the Tweede Kamer (the Lower House of the Netherlands) for the VVD from January 30, 2003 until May 16, 2006. She is a prominent and often controversial author, film maker and critic of Islam. Although she has received a Dutch passport in the past, Dutch Minister of Immigration Rita Verdonk has stated that Hirsi Ali has not received Dutch citizenship.[1]
In 2002, Hirsi Ali told that she had lied about her name, her age, and the manner in which she came to the Netherlands. According to the newspaper Volkskrant, Hirsi Ali now plans to move to the U.S. and "start working for the conservative American Enterprise Institute in September after reaching a deal with US authorities about her security."[2]
Hirsi Ali has had to maintain a high level of security due to threats against her life for voicing views that challenge Islamic dogma.
Youth
Hirsi Ali was born in Somalia into the Osman Mahmoud sub-clan of the Darod clan. Her father, Hirsi Magan Isse, was an opponent of Siyad Barre, the president of Somalia. Although her father, who had studied in Italy and the United States, was opposed to female genital cutting, a Somali tradition, when Hirsi Ali was five years old her grandmother had the procedure performed on her while her father was abroad.[3]
When she was six, her family left the country for Saudi Arabia, later moving to Ethiopia and then to Kenya, where the family obtained political asylum. In Kenya she attended the English-language Muslim Girls' Secondary School in Nairobi under sponsership of the UNHCR, where, for a brief period she received guest lessons from a fundamentalist teacher called Aziza. Following the invasion by the secular nation of Iraq of the Islamic republic of Iran, she sympathised with Iran, and the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, and wore a head-scarf together with her school uniform. After secondary school she attended a secretarial course at the Valley College in Nairobi (near Yaya center) for one year.
Pre-political career
In 1992, Hirsi Ali's father arranged for her to marry a distant cousin who lived in Canada. In 1992, after living in Kenya for eleven years she traveled to family in Düsseldorf and Berlin, Germany. After a brief stay in Germany, she decided to go to the Netherlands, instead of Canada.
Once in the Netherlands, she requested political asylum and received a residence permit. It is not known on which grounds she received political asylum. Technically, since her first stop had been in Germany, she should have applied for asylum there. In the Netherlands she gave a different date of birth and different name to the Dutch immigration authorities. Until now she is known in the west by that name Hirsi Ali, instead of her real name Hirsi Magan. On the advice of her aunt she told the immigration authorities that she had come straight from Somalia, instead of Kenya where she had been living for eleven years. In Somalia there was a serious famine at that time and a civil war leading to the Operation Restore Hope by the United States. Due to these circumstances asylum seekers from Somalia were routinely granted asylum on humanitarian grounds. Hirsi Ali received a residence permit within three weeks of her arrival in the Netherlands. [4].
After receiving asylum, she held various short-term jobs, ranging from cleaning to mail sorting. During this time she took courses in Dutch and a one-year course in Social Work. Following her initial studies, she studied political science at the University of Leiden until 2000. Between 1995 and 2001, she worked as an independent interpreter and translator, working primarily for the National Migration Service. While working for the NMS, she had access to inside knowledge of the workings of the Dutch immigration system. She was heavily critical of the way the Dutch system handled asylum seekers, favoring highly educated applicants over less educated ones.
Political Career
After earning her masters in political science, Hirsi Ali became a fellow at the Wiardi Beckman Foundation, a scientific institute linked to the social-democratic PvdA, of which Leiden University Professor Ruud Koole was steward. Inspired by the Atheist Manifesto (Atheistisch Manifest) of Leiden philosopher Herman Philipse, she renounced Islam and became an atheist. During this period she began to formulate her critique on Islamic culture, which she put to words in a book De Zoontjesfabriek ("The Son Factory"). After the publication of this book, she received the first threats on her life.
In November 2002 she switched to the liberal VVD party, which offered her a position in parliament. She criticized the PvdA for being blind to the negative effects of immigration from Islamic countries. Hirsi Ali was an assistant of the VVD parliamentary party between November 2002 and January 2003. Because of the escalating threats to her life, Hirsi Ali began to receive permanent police protection.
In January 2003 she was elected to the Tweede Kamer. She received a large number of preference votes.
Because of her statements about the prophet Muhammad in a Trouw interview, a discrimination complaint was filed against Hirsi Ali on April 24, 2003. The Prosecutor's office decided not to prosecute her, because her critique did "not put forth any conclusions in respect to Muslims and their worth as a group is not denied."[5].
Hirsi Ali wrote the script for Submission [6], a short, low-budget film directed by Theo van Gogh. The film criticized the treatment of women in Islamic society. It showed women, one of whom was dressed in a semi-transparent burqa, with texts from the Qur'an projected on their bodies. The texts referred to the subordinate role of women. In addition to writing the script, Hirsi Ali also provided the voice-over. The release of the film sparked much controversy, as well as violent reaction, when radical Islamist Mohammed Bouyeri gunned down Van Gogh in an Amsterdam street on November 2, 2004. A letter pinned to Van Gogh's body with a knife was primarily a death threat to Hirsi Ali.
In 2004 the group "The Hague Connection" produced and distributed the rap song "Hirsi Ali Dis" on the internet. The lyrics of this song included yet more violent threats against Hirsi Ali's life. The rappers were prosecuted under Article 121 of the Dutch criminal code, because they hindered the execution of Hirsi Ali's tasks as politician. In 2005 the rappers were sentenced to community service and a suspended prison sentence [7].
After the incident, Hirsi Ali went into hiding in the Netherlands, and even spent some time in New York, a situation which lasted until January 18, 2005, when she returned to parliament. On February 18, 2005, she revealed the location of herself and her colleague Geert Wilders, who had also been in hiding. She demanded a normal, secured house, which she was granted one week later.
On November 16, 2005, Hirsi Ali reported being seriously threatened by the Imam Scheich Fawaz. This Imam, who worked in a mosque in The Hague, announced on the internet that Hirsi Ali would be "blown away by the wind of changing times" and that she could anticipate "the curse of Allah".
In January 2006, Hirsi Ali used her acceptance speech for the Reader's Digest "European of the Year" award to urge action to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and to say that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad must be taken at his word in wanting to organize a conference to investigate objective evidence of the Holocaust. "Before I came to Europe, I'd never heard of the Holocaust. That is the case with millions of people in the Middle East. Such a conference should be able to convince many people away from their denial of the genocide against the Jews." [8] She also said that "so-called Western values" of freedom and justice are universal; that Europe has done far better than most areas of the world at providing justice, because it has guaranteed the freedom of thought and debate that are required for critical self-examination; and that communities cannot reform themselves unless "scrupulous investigation of every former and current doctrine is possible."[9]
In March 2006 a letter she co-signed entitled MANIFESTO: Together facing the new totalitarianism with eleven other individuals (most notably Salman Rushdie) was published in response to violent and deadly protests in the Islamic world surrounding the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.
On April 27 a Dutch judge ruled that Hirsi Ali had to leave her house - a highly secured secret address in the Netherlands. Her neighbors had complained that living next to her was an unacceptable security risk for them.
In May 2006 the Dutch television program "Zembla" [10] rekindled interest in the fact that in her asylum request, Hirsi Ali lied about her real name, her age and the country she arrived from. She had informed the public about these facts as early as September, 2002 in an interview in the political magazine HP/De Tijd.[11][12][13] Media speculations arose that she could lose her Dutch Citizenship because of this 'identity fraud', rendering her ineligible for Parliament. In a first reaction Minister Rita Verdonk [14] said she would not look into the matter, but after Member of Parliament Hilbrand Nawijn insisted, she declared that she would investigate Hirsi Ali's naturalisation process. This investigation took three days. The findings were that Hirsi Ali never received Dutch citizenship after all, because she lied about her name and date of birth. She stated that she was Ayaan Hirsi Ali, born in 1967, but she's actually Ayaan Hirsi Magan, born in 1969. Therefore the Dutch government's position is that Hirsi Ali's Dutch citizenship is invalid and declared null and void. She does however still have her residency permit, which was granted in 1992. It is unlikely that her permit will be taken away from her. On May 16, Hirsi Ali resigned from Parliament after admitting lying on her asylum application.
Post-political career
On May 15, 2006, after the broadcast of the "Zembla"-documentary, news stories erupted saying that Hirsi Ali is likely to move to the United States in September 2006. There she will work on finishing her book Shortcut to Enlightenment and working for the conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute.[15] In a reaction, old VVD-minister Hans Wiegel stated that her departure "would not be a loss to the VVD and not be a loss to the Tweede Kamer".[16] Wiegel said that Hirsi Ali was a brave woman, but that her standpoints were polarizing. Former parliamentary leader of the VVD, Jozias van Aartsen, was more positive about Hirsi Ali, saying that it is "painful for Dutch society and politics that she is leaving the Tweede Kamer".[17]
Hirsi Ali is currently working on a successor to "Submission", which will probably deal with the position of homosexuals in Islam.
Political Views
Hirsi Ali's political views are for the most part inspired by her personal change from a fundamentalist Muslim to an atheist. Hirsi Ali is very critical of Islam, and especially of the prophet Muhammad and the position of women in Islam.
Islam
Hirsi Ali is very critical of the position of women in Islam and the punishments demanded by Islamic scholars for homosexuality and adultery.
Circumcision
Hirsi Ali is an opponent of the practice of circumcision for both men and women. Female circumcision is a part of certain cultures in some Islamic countries, including Kenya and Somalia, where she lived. Female circumcision is not part of the Islamic religion and is part of traditions that have existed for centuries even before the beginning of monotheist religions including Islam.[citations needed] Islamic scholars note that Islamic law prohibits clitorodectomy (partial or complete) or infibulation, or any genital mutilation which impairs the woman's ability to enjoy sexual relations.
Freedom of Speech
Hirsi Ali is a proponent of free speech. In a 2006 lecture in Berlin, she defended the right to offend, following the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy. She condemned the journalists of those papers and TV channels that did not show their readers the cartoons as being "mediocre of mind" and of trying to hide behind those "noble sounding terms such as 'responsivity' and 'sensitivity'." She praised publishers all over Europe for showing the cartoons and not being afraid of what she interpreted as the intolerance of some Muslims.[18]
Muhammad
Her criticism of the Islamic prophet Muhammad mainly concerns his moral stature. In January 2003 she told the Dutch paper Trouw, "Muhammad is, seen by our Western standards, a perverse man". She referred particularly to the marriage between Muhammad, who was 52 years old, and Aisha, who was nine years old, according to the Hadith. There is a debate, however, on how old Aisha was when she married Muhammad.
Prizes
In January 2004, Hirsi Ali was awarded the Prize of Liberty by Nova Civitas, a classical liberal thinktank in the Low Countries.
On November 20, 2004 Ayaan Hirsi Ali was awarded Denmark's Liberal Party’s Freedom Prize (largest party of Denmark and part of the ruling coalition) "for her work to further freedom of speech and the rights of women". Due to threats from Islamic fundamentalists she was not at the time able to receive it personally; however a year later, November 17, 2005, she travelled to Denmark to thank Anders Fogh Rasmussen, leader of Denmark's Liberal Party and prime minister of Denmark, for the prize.
On February 25, 2005 she was given the Harriet Freezerring by Cisca Dresselhuys, editor of the feminist magazine Opzij, "for her work for the emancipation of Islamic women".
According to the American Time Magazine of April 18, 2005 she was amongst the 100 Most Influential Persons of the World. She was put in the category "Leaders & Revolutionaries".
In June 2005, Hirsi Ali was awarded by the Norwegian Political Think Tank, Human Rights Service (HRS) [htpp://www.rights.no], with the annual Price, This Years European Bellwether. According to HRS, Hirsi Ali is “beyond a doubt, the leading European politician in the field of integration. (She is) a master at the art of mediating the most difficult issues with insurmountable courage, wisdom, reflectiveness, and clarity [1] * On August 29, 2005, Hirsi Ali was awarded the annual Democracy Prize of the Liberal Party of Sweden "for her courageous work for democracy, human rights and women's rights."
Hirsi Ali was voted European of the Year for 2006 by the European editors of Reader's Digest magazine. At a ceremony in The Hague on January 23, Hirsi Ali accepted the Reader's Digest award from EU Competition Commissioner, Neelie Kroes. [2].
The Norwegian member of parliament Christian Tybring-Gjedde has nominated Hirsi Ali as candidate for Nobel Peace Prize of 2006.
Trivia
Her first name, Ayaan, means "lucky person" or simply "luck" in the Somali language.
Hirsi Ali speaks 6 languages: English, Somali, Arabic, Swahili, Amharic and Dutch.
Bibliography
De Zoontjes fabriek over vrouwen, islam en integratie (English: the Son factory - about women, islam and integration) is a collection of essays and lectures she held before 2002. It also contains an extended interview originally published in Opzij, a feminist magazine. The book specifically focuses on the position of Moslems in the Netherlands.
The Caged Virgin : An Emancipation Proclamation for Women and Islam is a translation of the Dutch book De Maagdenkooi. It is a collection of Hirsi Ali's essays and lectures from the period 2003-2004, combined with her personal experiences as a translator working for the NMS. The book specifically focuses on the position of women in Islam.