Athletics, Olympic competitions, and Australia’s obsessive preoccupation with sport

What are your favorite sports to watch and play?

Firstly, last start with a confession – I am mostly a sports watcher, not a player. My sporting glory days, if you can call them that, are long behind me. Watching other people play sport is actually my main preoccupation these days.

Secondly, being an Australian born citizen, I can see the main sports my fellow countryfolk are obsessed with; cricket, rugby league, Australian Rules Football. None of these are particularly appealing to me. I have tried them, but I just don’t enjoy them. However, watching them is part of the mass culture in Australia, so if people enjoy being spectators, good luck to them.

Indeed, as the traditional churches and collective activities have declined, sport is the one avenue that provides a shared identity. Cheering for the Western Sydney Wanderers, a soccer/football team based in western Sydney, provides an outlet for a shared identity. A region normally marginalised, and where social atomisation is prevalent, the Red-and-Black bloc brings a sense of belonging to something larger than oneself.

Soccer has had to fight long and hard to be accepted as a national sport, beyond its perceived narrow ‘ethnic’ (meaning non-Anglo Celtic) origins. That is a bit strange, because Australia, draws its main Anglophone culture from England, the latter known for its national sport of soccer/football. Soccer clubs in Australia, originally introduced by and sustained by migrant communities, was seen as the ‘wogball’ inferior counterpart to the two Australian football codes.

Athletics is the main sport I play and watch – well, more so watch, now that I too old to be an athlete. In school, running and jumping over things was my main sporting outlet. Sprinting was my bag; long distance running, not so much.

I cheered wildly when Cathy Freeman, the indigenous athlete, won the 400 metres race at the Sydney Olympics. I always cheer for athletes from poorer nations who win in their particular competition. The Olympics, while it is a host to competing nationalist chauvinisms, can also be a place where talented athletes can shine.

Julien Alfred, a native of St Lucia, won the gold medal in the 100 metres sprint at the 2024 Olympic Games. The first gold medallist for her nation, she defeated the heavily favoured runner, American Sha’Carri Richardson. No offence to American readers, but the US can afford to settle for less than gold.

2024 was the first Olympics for Julien Alfred, a black woman. St Lucia, one of the few nations in the world named after a woman, erupted in unprecedented celebrations. No, I have never been to St Lucia, nor do I have any relatives there. But I was ecstatic that they won their first ever gold medal, courtesy of athletics. It was a moment of triumph for athleticism, as well as for the ability of smaller countries to surpass their larger, financially stronger rivals.

Athletics can be a great leveller, bringing nations with grandiose notions of their superiority down to size. In that regard, we have all heard the story of African American athlete Jesse Owens, the black sprinter whose victory in the 1936 Berlin Olympics disproved pseudoscientific claims of Aryan racial superiority in front of Hitler. Except that, this story is largely myth.

True, Owens won his competition, but he was not snubbed by Hitler, but by his own American society. Upon returning to the United States, Owens, along with all the black American competitors, were rejected by the white political and sporting establishment for whom they competed. Excluded from the wider society by legalised segregation, their story is an important one in the larger struggle for civil rights.

This brings me to an issue which is going to be controversial, but necessary to address, even in a short article such as this one – sporting boycotts. There is a systematic effort in western nations to ban Russian (and Byelorussian) athletes and competitors. For instance, in the most recent Australian Open tennis tournament, Russian and Belarusian players participated, but as neutral athletes. No Russian flags or symbols were displayed.

This ban is in line with the decision of international Olympic bodies to sanction Russian sporting teams due to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. That is all well and good, but that raises a number of questions. Should individual athletes be held responsible for the actions of their governments? Israeli athletes have competed internationally, even though there have been calls to sanction them on account of the Israeli military’s genocidal assault against the Palestinians of Gaza.

If we are to go down this path – and banning sporting teams from international competitions is nothing new – then let’s be ethically consistent. Afghani athletes should be banned, because of the horrendous mistreatment of women and minorities under Taliban rule. Saudi Arabian competitors must be banned due to that regime’s continued use of beheadings as punishment for internal dissidents. Let’s ban Morocco for its ongoing and illegal occupation of Western Sahara.

While we are at it, let’s ban the United States athletics team for their nation’s numerous illegal and destructive wars and occupations of Middle Eastern, African and Asian countries.

There is another solution – do not ban any athletes from the Olympics.

There was a time when two pariah states, Israel and Russia, did send their respective athletes to compete. Well, Russia was then still the Soviet Union, and Israel was only a new state. In the 1950s, Yemeni-born Israeli basketballer Zacharia Ofri (1932 – 2018) competed against Soviet Russian athletes, both at the Helsinki Olympics in 1952, and again at the European Cup held in Moscow in 1953.

Ofri, along with his teammates, travelled by train across the Eastern bloc, representing their new state in the USSR. Stalin had died earlier that year, and relations were still cordial, if not exactly friendly, between the two nations. Ofri and his friends squared off against the Soviet basketball team under the watchful portraits of Lenin and Stalin.

Never give up on your sporting ambitions. Physical health is the solid foundation for good mental health, and regular exercise is part of a healthy regimen.

Who knows, I may even take up running again.

Shining a spotlight on the darker sides of Canadian-Ukrainian asylum seeking

The purpose of a good investigative writer is to explore what others ignore. What constitutes newsworthy items is not always determined by the mainstream media. Sure, the latter guarantees widespread exposure for issues it deems important, but also ignores those topics which shed light on the machinations of imperialist-corporate power.

I have deliberately chosen not to write too much about Syria just yet. That is not because the toppling of the former Ba’athist government in Syria is inconsequential, but because there has already been extensive coverage of the topic, accompanied by mandatory celebratory pictures of the downfall of a brutal regime.

I also do not wish to participate in the interminable, emotionally draining inter-Left debate on Syria which only recycles cliches on road trodden by numerous commentators in the past.

The Nazification of Arab nationalism

I never begrudge anyone their release from prison. Opening up the dungeons of the Ba’athist regime is a relief to its victims. Please, let’s stop using the word Assadist – there is no such thing. What I am concerned about, and was waiting for, is the anticipated Nazification of the Ba’athist regime and its leaders, both Hafez and Bashar Al-Assad. It is easy, and lazy, to deploy the Hitler analogy when an authoritarian leader is overthrown, and it plays directly into a view of the world our corporate-managerial masters want us to adopt.

Alois Brunner (1912 – 2001 or 2010) was an Austrian SS officer responsible for the deaths of thousands of European Jews. After the defeat of Nazi Germany, he fled accountability for his crimes, and settled in postwar Syria. The Ba’athist government gave him sanctuary, and he spent the rest of his life in that nation. He is buried in Damascus.

Our toadying corporate media, sensing an opportunity to kick the Ba’athist party while it is down, gave publicity to this sordid episode. Making the Arab-Nazi connection even more explicit, Al Jazeera claimed that Brunner advised Syrian security forces in setting up prisons and torture techniques.

Making the Arab-Nazi connection serves to further the false claim that Arabs – and Palestinians in particular – oppose the Israeli state on the basis of irrational antisemitism. The Ba’ath party advocated a pan-Arab nationalism which respected the rights of non-Arab ethnic minorities. It proposed the building of a socialist economy, not Soviet nor Marxist. Its ideological mix of pan-Arabism and ethnic inclusivity made it inhospitable to the racialist, ethnically paranoid hypernationalism of the Nazi party.

One wonders what the reaction of the mainstream media would have been if Syria, or another Arab nation, had provided sanctuary for thousands of Nazi war criminals. Actually, we do not have to look too far for such a scenario. Canada provided safe haven for thousands of Ukrainian (and Eastern European) wartime Nazi collaborators, who were the recipients of Ottawa’s considerable largesse.

Worthy refugees

When Yaroslav Hunka, a Ukrainian man who served in the Waffen SS (Galician) was given two standing ovations in the Canadian Parliament in September 2023, it was inadvertently providing the tip of an iceberg. Thousands of Ukrainian SS troops were quietly provided sanctuary by successive Canadian governments after the Second World War. One of the Trudeau government’s most prominent figures, Chrystia Freeland, is herself a grandchild of Mykhailo Chomiak, a propagandist for the Ukrainian Nazi administration during the war.

No, we cannot hold the grandchildren responsible for the sins of the grandparents. Freeland, who has used her ethnic background as a platform to climb the ladder of Canadian politics, has never distanced herself from her white supremacist grandfather. Indeed, Chomiak helped a white supremacist regime massacre the grandparents of today’s Holocaust survivors.

Trudeau and Freeland should face the consequences of the Hunka affair. They should admit the ethical bankruptcy of Canadian foreign and domestic politics – turning away Jewish refugees from Europe during the war, but then providing sanctuary for their white supremacist killers, is the height of moral decrepitude and cynical political expediency.

Both Trudeau and Freeland are intelligent, articulate politicians. Trudeau specifically has marketed himself as a reasonable centrist, removed from the rancorous, divisive Left vs Right paradigm. He should have known better than to sweep criminal and shameful episodes of Canadian history under the carpet.

We must highlight the words of Judi Rever, journalist from Montreal who wrote that:

Freeland knows full well that soldiers from the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) collaborated with the Third Reich and took an active part in the Holocaust in Ukraine and Poland. She would also know that the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), a paramilitary group, carried out massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia, and hunted down and killed several thousand Jews during that period. More than any other Canadian politician today, Freeland knows this history. Canadians should ask what was going through her mind as she bestowed praise on a man who fought the Russians during that pivotal time, a man we now know was part of the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS whose troops were involved in the mass murder of Jews, Poles and Ukrainians in the 1940s.

Canadian politicians, including whomever replaces Trudeau and Freeland, should read a new book that explores this underreported chapter.

Published in 2024, Peter McFarlane is the author of a new book called Family Ties: How a Ukrainian Nazi and a living witness link Canada to Ukraine today. The author elaborates the history not only of Ukrainian Nazis, but their Jewish victims as well. For instance, traveling to the Eastern European town of Brody, a city in Western Ukraine, McFarlane found that out of a prewar Jewish population of 10 000, only 88 Jewish persons survived.

There is a museum in Brody today, which does commemorate the Second World War. No, not the Holocaust victims – the Holocaust is not even mentioned. It is a memory lane for the Galician Division; its history, uniforms, insignia, Nazi-aligned personnel and conduct. The government in Ottawa provided refuge for these personnel, but subjected Jewish refugees to bureaucratic obstacles and official resistance.

War crimes trials are something we regard as quite remote, from the Australian perspective. Indeed, our direct experience of war crimes relates more to the cruelties inflicted upon Australian and British soldiers by Imperial Japanese troops. We are more likely to remember the Burma death marches and the thousands of died building the Thai railways, rather than Auschwitz.

We are reasonably free in liberal democratic Australia, and I can do what I want in my front garden. How would it be if I erected a statue to former Japanese emperor Hirohito, in my front yard? Am I not exercising my right to free speech?

I raise this hypothetical example to highlight the similar kinds of issues being debated by antifascist Canadian communities today. No single person can be an expert on every historical issue. We do expect our political leaders, however, to exhibit better conduct and be held to a higher standard. The foreign and domestic policies of Anglophone nations are allegedly motivated by respect for the law, and not by manipulative and deceitful political calculations.

Lack of accountability is a poor lesson to pass on to future generations, especially when covering up shameful episodes from recent history.

Alexander Oparin, abiogenesis, the culture wars, and the public understanding of science

Scientific literacy is a skill to which all of us nonscientists can aspire. I was good at science and mathematics at school; but not so outstanding as to consider a career as a scientist. As we age, we regard science as something for students, children and boffins at universities. This is rather disturbing, because all of us are impacted by the findings and applications of the sciences.

If you regard scientific issues as outside the purview of the general public – think again. It is true that scientific research is nonpolitical – the physicists examining the nature of subatomic particles are far removed from the everyday thrust-and-parry of parliamentary politics. Nuclear power, however, is not.

Be that as it may, let’s focus on a recent and worrying development. The new authorities in Syria, from the fundamentalist organisation Hayat Tahrir Al Sham (HTS) have revised school textbooks and curricula by removing all references to evolutionary biology, and the Big Bang, the current paradigm for the origin of the cosmos. The new HTS regime wants to repudiate the more secular platform advocated by the previous ruling party in Syria, the Ba’ath organisation.

It is their country, to be sure, and the Education ministry can modify the curricula at all levels of education if it so decides. However, there have been strong protests by ordinary Syrians against this revision of the curricula. This measure, deleting evolution and Big Bang, places the HTS authorities squarely in the same camp as the fundamentalist religious right in the United States, who intend to replace scientific theories in biology and cosmology with creationism and its modernised cousin, Intelligent Design.

Of course there is debate about evolutionary biology. Charles Darwin was extremely worried about the reception of his theories by the scientific community. The most preeminent paleontologist of his time, Louis Agassiz (1807 – 1873), world-renowned expert on the natural history of life, strongly opposed evolution. When Agassiz spoke, people listened. Darwin and his supporters in the scientific community responded to all the objections launched at evolutionary biology. Agassiz, the ‘great man’, was proven wrong, back in the nineteenth century.

The material, natural causes of the biological and geological worlds has been a sore point for many religions since then. Darwin was not the first, nor the last, to navigate what is broadly termed the culture wars.

Being a materialist, in the philosophical sense, does not automatically make you correct. There is currently a strong materialist explanation for the origins of human behaviour – DNA. The claim ‘it’s in the genes’, has become a standard explanation for every aspect of human social behaviour, from war-making to mathematics. As we can all see, attributing human and animal behaviour to genes is seductively simple, yet wrong. Ok, if the word wrong is too strict, let’s say simplistic instead.

The late Stephen Jay Gould (1941 – 2002), American paleontologist and historian of science, wrote regular science and natural history columns which, among other things, attacked the genetic reductionist view of human nature. Originally called sociobiology, and now repackaged as evolutionary psychology, Gould heavily criticised his fellow scientists, such as Konrad Lorenz, for falling into a genetic determinist trap.

The sociobiology trend went against the rising demands for gender and social equality advocated by the Left in the 1970s and 80s. Sociobiology’s proponents, such as the late great Edward O Wilson (1929 – 2021) responded to critics by suggesting that they were motivated by preconceived political prejudices, not pure science. Gould demonstrated that the practice of offering supposedly scientific rationales for existing inequalities goes back centuries.

Gould’s approach to science could hardly be labeled anti-scientific. He helped to communicate biology and natural history to the public.

Abiogenesis, the origin of life itself, is not part of evolutionary biology. It is however, a growing topic of interest to biologists and geologists. While the first materialist, nonsupernatural explanations for the origins of life go back to Ancient Greece, it is the work of Soviet Russian biochemist Alexander Oparin (1894 – 1980) that must be singled out here.

Working on the origins of life from chemical processes, he was the pioneer in formulating a scientific approach in explaining how pro to life forms could arise in the conditions of life in the Earth’s early history. Amino acids formed from the chemical and highly volatile conditions prevalent on Earth – the prebiotic soup – was the theory formed independently by Alexander Oparin in the Soviet Union, and J B S Haldane, a British scientist investigating the same topic. Known as the Oparin-Haldane theory, it blazed the trail for other scientists to follow.

Oparin’s initial findings got a recent boost, when researchers recreated the high levels of radiation and electrical energy conditions of the early Earth in a laboratory. The gradual changes of lifeless chemicals into self-replicating nucleotides, combined with enzyme catalysts, has been reproduced by researchers.

American scientists from the 1950s were able to recreate the spark of life – the famous Miller-Urey experiment. Recreating the conditions that gave rise to the earliest organic molecules is no longer in the realm of science fiction. Scientists are now looking for life in places which we would initially consider too hostile for organic matter to form. Hydrothermal vents, located at the bottom of the ocean, are a place where mineral-rich fluids bubble up and interact with CO2, and that combination forms long chains of fatty acids.

When examining science news, it is important to remember that no single person can be an expert in every branch of scientific endeavour. We can however, aim for a scientifically literate population, and make ourselves immune to rampant misinformation circulating in the toxic ecosystem of social media. No one person possesses the gateway to an ultimate truth. All of us must come together with the scientific community for the purpose of reaching greater understanding.

The politics of memory, genocide and the ongoing attack on Gaza

When examining the Holocaust, a recurring and important question arises; ordinary Germans knew what was occurring in the death camps, so why did they do nothing? The full horrors of the industrialised mass slaughter in the camps were publicised by scholars, escapees, journalists and other anti-Nazi figures. Why did ordinary people remain complacent?

That question acquires contemporary importance and relevance when we examine the details of the Israeli government’s genocidal violence against the Palestinians of Gaza. While the criteria of what constitutes genocide may be subject to debate, there is no question that Israeli actions amount to genocide.

Amnesty International is just one of numerous human rights organisations that has used the description of genocide to reflect what West Jerusalem and its Zionist supporters are committing in Gaza. Indeed, multiple statements by current Israeli government politicians reveal the genocidal intent of Zionism with regard to Gaza. Threatening to cut off water, food, electricity and medicine to the Palestinian population in Gaza is a very clear statement of genocidal intent.

The very suggestion that the Israeli military is carrying out a genocide in Gaza prompts a furious reaction from Zionist supporters across the world. Indeed, Zionism’s partisans have become effective Holocaust deniers, excusing and rationalising the crimes of Israeli forces in a manner reminiscent of traditional Holocaust revisionists of old.

The late Raul Hilberg (1926 – 2007), the great Viennese-born historian and pioneering scholar in the field of Holocaust studies, examined this politics of memory in his 1996 memoir. Denouncing those who persisted in Holocaust denial, he engaged in documenting the sophisticated bureaucratic machinery of mass killing in Nazi Germany.

Yet, Zionism’s fervent supporters, including their followers in Australia, respond with vitriolic fury at the mere comparison of Israel’s genocidal violence in Gaza and the Holocaust.

Susan Abulhawa, a Palestinian American scholar and writer, travelled to Gaza to write an on-the-ground report about what was happening there. She described Israel’s scorched earth tactics as comparable to the Holocaust of World War 2. Her article, originally commissioned by The Guardian US, was denied publication. The main objection of the Guardian’s editors was Abulhawa’s use of the Holocaust as a comparison with Israel’s ongoing attack against the Palestinians of Gaza.

Here is where I get a bit confused. Hilberg made quite clear, in his magisterial books on the Holocaust, that the industrialised mass killing of people involved numerous and meticulous bureaucratic measures, without which mass murder of an ethnic group would be impossible.

In covering the issue of Beijing’s policies towards the Uyghurs in China, the imperial governments of Washington, Ottawa, London and so on quickly and forcefully made clear their contention that Beijing is guilty of genocide. Why? Beijing is accused of carrying out forcible sterilisation of Uyghur women. Whether that is true or not, I do not know.

What I do know is that Washington, Ottawa and London immediately accused Beijing of genocide. No, Uyghurs are not being rounded up, stripped of their clothes, force-marched and shot, such as the Israelis are doing to the Palestinians in Gaza.

Yet, the imperialist trio had no hesitation in launching the politically and emotionally charged claim of genocide at Beijing. It appears the charge of genocide is to be used as a political football against governments deemed hostile to Washington’s interests. However, the mere suggestion of a using the word genocide to describe Israel’s campaign in Gaza elicits a furious reaction from Zionists and their supporters.

In Hilberg’s preeminent study, Perpetrators, Victims Bystanders (1992), he provided useful and necessary categories of participation when examining genocide. He elaborated on those communities and persons who, while not actually pulling the trigger in shooting people, carried out the policies and actions which facilitated the Holocaust, and comparative genocides such as the Armenian mass killings of 1915.

Keep in mind the categories described by Hilberg, when considering the following news item. The Dutch government released the names of 425 000 Nazi collaborators during the German occupation of their nation. These archives were released in early January this year.

The Dutch authorities promised to release the relevant documents from the archives back in 2023. They kept their pledge, in an effort to confront the distressing aspects of their own complicity in the genocide of European Jews.

We regard these collaborators as accomplices, helping to grease the wheels of the genocidal Nazi war machine. What does it say about the governments of Washington, London and Ottawa who consistently and unfailingly supply weapons and armaments to the Israeli authorities, enabling the latter to prosecute their genocidal campaign in Gaza?

As Joe Biden’s term in office comes to an end, it is important to reflect on his legacy – as an enabler of genocide. During his presidency, he never hesitated to send millions of dollars worth of armaments and ammunition to West Jerusalem, thus assisting Netanyahu’s government in its genocidal campaign in Gaza.

In December 2024, the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWSN), released a report highlighting the prospect of famine in northern Gaza. With the total blockade of food aid to northern Gaza, FEWSN warned that 75 000 Palestinians were at risk of undergoing famine conditions, and all the diseases consequent of mass starvation. The FEWSN is an organisation funded by the US Agency for International Development.

Not only did the Israeli government of Netanyahu denounce the FEWSN report and its findings, it demanded – along with the US government – that the original report be retracted. Its demand was granted earlier this month. I thought only totalitarian dystopian regimes, such as Stalinist Russia, engage in famine denial?

It is incumbent on all of us to meticulously document and expose the genocidal policies of the Israeli state, and expose the deceitful rationalisations offered as excuses by Zionism’s mouthpieces. We must condemn the governments which act as accomplices to genocide. Demolishing the entire conditions of life, and undermining the ability of the entire Palestinian population in Gaza to live and sustain itself, qualifies as ethnic cleansing.

Al Jazari, Leonardo Da Vinci, and the emergence of automation

We have all heard of Leonardo Da Vinci (1452 – 1519) the great Italian inventor, painter and scientist. That is the way it should be; there is no doubting his unparalleled genius. But how many of us know that the person, who can rightly be called the father of automation predated Da Vinci by two hundred years, and was a Muslim? Ismail Al-Jazari (1136 – 1237), a mechanical engineer and scientist, laid the foundations of automation and robotics through his prodigious inventions.

In fact, it is more chronologically correct to call Da Vinci the Al-Jazari of Europe. Today, we worry about robots taking our jobs, and automation has definitely undermined the need for manual workers in many industries. Anxieties about automation go back centuries, and indeed, Al Jazali invented machines that were not just playthings for the rich, but devices with practical applications.

First, we need to make some observations about our own Anglophone culture, so we can better approach an enormous gap in our understanding of science and society.

In our Anglophone nations, we regard ourselves as the products, and inheritors of, western civilisation. We have defined our origin story from the philosophical and cultural legacies of Ancient Greece and Rome. We like to think that our contemporary philosophy, for instance, traces its origins back to the thinkers of ancient Athens and Greek city states.

That is all well and good – and we have gained numerous insights from the cultural and scientific contributions of Ancient Greece. Marx and Engels themselves were fascinated by the achievements of Greece, and the associated Greek city states that made up Ionian civilisation. However, this point of view completely ignores the historic and no less remarkable contributions of non-European and nonwhite civilisations.

In our time, if there is one nonwhite culture that is demonised and vilified, it is the Islamic world. Maligned by harmful stereotypes of bearded fanatics waving guns, the Muslim communities in the West are targeted as an ‘enemy within.’ This rampant Islamophobia, heavily promoted by a corporate media owned by a financial oligarchy, blinds us to the incredible innovations, both scientific and philosophical, of the Islamic civilisation.

Ismail Al-Jazari, a mechanical engineer by trade, lived through turbulent political times as a loyal servant of the Artuqid dynasty. The latter was a 12th century Islamic Turkmen dynasty that ruled in what is today central southern Turkey, northern Iraq and Syria. Al Jazari’s birthplace, Diyarbakir, was a central stronghold of the Artuqids.

Every car driver today can tell you all about the crankshaft, a crucial feature of the internal combustion engine. Al Jazari was the first to design a basic crankshaft, elaborating the mathematical principles in converting reciprocating motion into rotational motion. His purpose in designing such a device was to come up with an effective water-drawing machine to assist farmers with irrigation.

Using a wheel which set in motion several crank pins was an innovation of Jazari’s. While wheels and crank pins had been used for centuries, it was Jazari’s connection of transforming rotary motion into linear movement that was crucial for the future emergence of steam engines as well as the internal combustion engine.

It is true that Jazari built upon the inventions of his predecessors. He was familiar with engineering techniques in China, Persia and so on. But it was his unique mindset and toolkit that made possible innovations which had a lasting impact. He documented his extensive efforts in a book of knowledge that has survived and been translated down the ages.

He also invented what can be regarded as the world’s first ‘robot’ – a musical device that automated the different functions of a musical quartet. Well, okay, he designed four robot musicians; a flautist, a harpist and two drummers. Much like a modern day music box – prior to digital music and Spotify – Jazari’s contraption could be programmed to play different melodies and tunes. This musical robot band, operated by hydraulic switching, is the earliest example of a ‘programmable’ instrument.

He also designed a water-driven hand washing device, with humanoid type servants offering soap and towels. The ‘peacock fountain’ was a hydraulic automaton, an early ‘robot’ to assist in the function of handwashing hygiene. A major portion of Jazari’s Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices was devoted to fountain mechanisms.

All this groundbreaking work and innovation in the field of mechanical automata make a strong case for regarding Al Jazari as the ‘father of robotics.’

Before any readers through seemingly clever yet monotonous retorts my way – ‘what about Al Qaeda?’ is one screaming red herring that gets tossed around when talking about Islam – denunciations of jihadist groups is not my concern. If you wish to condemn Al Qaeda, the Taliban, Boko Haram – be my guest. You may find shrill denunciations of these groups in the mainstream media echo chamber provided by Fox News and Murdoch’s News Corp propaganda outfit.

In our Anglophone community, the Global South is largely ignored, or treated as just a passing curiosity. Sure, we hear about Israel in the Middle East, particularly in the context of that nation’s military attack on Gaza. Maybe South Korea and Japan get a mention, because they are integrated into the US military apparatus.

This deliberately manufactured systemic cultural ignorance deprives Anglophone audiences of information regarding the accomplishments of nonwhite cultures. Redressing this imbalance is a necessary component of challenging the dysfunctional role of the corporate media in our hyper-consumerist society.

No disrespect is intended to Leonardo Da Vinci. Let’s give Ismail Al-Jazari the credit he deserves.