Fatah was a critic of Pakistan. He had questioned the legitimacy of the state and had advocated support for
Baloch separatists. He believed that if
Balochistan won independence, the remainder of
Pakistan would reunify with India. In February 2013, after the website of the
Toronto Sun was blocked in Pakistan; Fateh claimed credit. He rejected
antisemitism as incompatible with Islam and had supported Israel's right to exist and
Zionist projects; he had however called for an end to the "illegal and immoral"
Israeli occupation of Palestine and
anti-Arabism. In 2003, Fatah broke with
Irshad Manji in an article in the
Globe and Mail in which he repudiated the thanks she gave him in the acknowledgment section of her book
The Trouble with Islam. Fatah wrote of Manji's book that it is not addressed to Muslims; it is aimed at making Muslim-haters feel secure in their thinking. Manji replied saying that he told her in front of witnesses that "This book was written by the Jews for the Jews!" Fatah was subsequently quoted as indicating that he regrets his remarks and that he was unfair in slamming Manji's book. He said that she was right about the systematic racism in the Muslim world and that there were many redeeming points in her memoir, which he overlooked in his rush to judge it. Fatah has
criticized the
partition of India on the basis that it created the state of Pakistan and resulted in "the entire population of
Punjab’s indigenous Sikhs and Hindus in Pakistan was either slaughtered or driven out by raging mobs of Muslim fanatics." In a discussion hosted by
The Globe and Mail in 2007, Fatah claimed that "most of the Islamic radicalism that you see today stems from the empowering of Saudi based
Jihad groups that were funded and backed by the U.S. and the
CIA throughout the Afghan war against the
Soviet Union." In response to the 2017
Quebec City mosque shooting, Fatah endorsed the discredited
conspiracy theory that Muslims had participated as perpetrators in the attack that killed six people. According to the
National Post he had also said "Islam is riddled with termites ... and if we don't cleanse ourselves with truth, the stench of our lies will drive us mad", and that there are "hateful sermons in almost every mosque" in CanadaFatah himself never attended a mosque and encouraged Muslim parents to keep their children out of mosques because they have become, in his view, schools for fanaticism. In April 2008, the
Ontario Human Rights Commission (OHRC) dismissed a complaint about allegedly Islamophobic articles in
Maclean's magazine. However, the commission criticized the newsweekly for publishing articles that were inconsistent with the spirit of the Ontario Human Rights Code, and doing serious harm to Canadian society by promoting societal intolerance and disseminating destructive, xenophobic opinions. Fatah said that for the Commission to refer to Maclean's magazine and journalists as contributing to racism is bullshit, if you can use that word and that the commission has unfairly taken sides against freedom of speech in a dispute within the Canadian Muslim community between moderates and fundamentalists. ==Reception==