Increasing resilience is key to overcoming adversity, author says
Ayaan Hirsi Ali says people who view themselves as victims are holding themselves and society back, and she will make that case in an appearance at the University of Colorado Boulder this month.
Ali will deliver a lecture titled 鈥淭he Market for Victimhood鈥 on Jan. 27 at 7 p.m. in the University Memorial Center鈥檚 Glenn Miller Ballroom on campus. Reservations are recommended and can be obtained by clicking on .
Ali, a former Muslim and now a human-rights advocate who has been named one of Time Magazine鈥檚 鈥100 Most Influential People,鈥 is the author of Infidel and Heretic: Why Islam Needs Reformation Now.
Her appearance at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 is sponsored by The Abbey and Douglas Brown Family Foundation and the Benson Center for the Study of Western Civilization. Recently, she answered questions from the center. The questions and answers follow:
Question: The title of your lecture at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 is 鈥淭he Market for Victimhood.鈥 What is the market for victimhood?
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: In America today, there is a high demand for victims, for members of oppressed groups. There is no end to the supply of outlets that encourage and honor this victimhood mentality, because emphasizing structural victimization signals, for a growing number of people, one鈥檚 virtue. Some have called this trend, and I view this as a critical term, 鈥渢he oppression Olympics.鈥
What is called 鈥渋ntersectionality鈥 has helped create a tremendous market for grievances, victimhood and layers of alleged oppression. One visible result is widely reported claims of oppressive attacks (hate crimes) that subsequently turn out to be hoaxes. Far more damaging, but less visible, however, is the widespread psychological damage done to individuals who feel they are victims, hammered by invisible forces, who become paralyzed or wallow in their perceived misfortune.
In my view, this trend towards victimhood takes agency away from individuals, and encourages them to view themselves as trampled under structural oppressive layers over which they have little to no control. 鈥淓verything is stacked against them!鈥濃攁s it were.
As someone who grew up in Somalia, Saudi Arabia and Kenya, the question should not be, 鈥淗ow much adversity have you encountered in your life?鈥 but rather, 鈥淗ow much resilience do you have, and how can you increase this resilience, to then turn around and help empower individuals who at present need some type of help?鈥
Western civilization specializes in developing solutions to problems. Viewing oneself as a victim鈥攖his does not put someone on the path to greatness. There is also a growing danger in young people in Western countries believing that Western civilization has but little to offer the rest of the world.
Question: If people attending your lecture take away only one message, what would it be?
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Many universities today focus quite meticulously on the mistakes of Western civilization and American history, rather than on its real achievements, such as the abolition of slavery; moving towards ending the subjugation of women; expanding genuine religious tolerance; instituting a separation between church and state; and fostering innovation.
Privately, a not-insignificant number of people in my native Somalia would envy the achievements of Western civilization, not only its material accomplishments but the ability to speak freely, to think critically, to build a professional life as a woman, to trust in a predictable, stable rule of law, to change one鈥檚 religion without being punished. Collective pride may prevent them from admitting this publicly, but it is true nonetheless.
Western civilization has the ability to inspire others by its real freedoms鈥攖hink for instance of the freedom activists in Hong Kong who seek our principled support and our public statements of support in defense of their self-determination. I think this appreciation for what makes Western civilization special, and the goodness inherent in America risks being lost in extreme relativism and extreme self-criticism.
Question: What鈥檚 next for Ayaan Hirsi Ali?
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I will continue to do whatever I can to defend women鈥檚 rights and critical thinking, especially on university campuses. We in America have tremendous resources that can be used to help dissident and reformist Muslims, both in the West and overseas. Many people living in non-Western countries are brave; I do not view them as pitiful or powerless. But they lack in many cases real freedom of expression, a platform, and material resources. That is where we can provide assistance.
For more information about the event, follow this link.