It is interesting that, in his book Crisis in Syria, the Lebanese-Canadian Kamal Dib suggests that power be shared equally between ‘minorities’ and Sunni Muslims who (according to him) make up 75 per cent of the population—virtually giving a ‘minoritarian’ three times the political fortunes of a ‘majoritarian’! This even surpasses the system of consociational democracy in Lebanon, to which this ‘secular’ author objects. According to Ahmed Beydoun, the Lebanese system is based on an equation that gives a Christian (only) twice as much weight as a Muslim!
Throughout the book, it is remarkable that the words ‘Islam’ and ‘Muslims’ are never mentioned in a positive or a compassionate context. Throughout Dib’s book, these two words are used in an uninhibited, remarkably straightforward manner: they always and exclusively appear in a negative context, in connection with the dangers of terrorism, beheadings, and the persecution of women, intellectuals, Christians and ‘minorities’.