The strange allure of our 'exes' Ziauddin
Sardar<http://www.newstatesman.com/writers/ziauddin_sardar>

http://www.newstatesman.com/religion/2008/09/muslim-exes-themselves-fame

To declare that you are an ex-fanatic or ex-Muslim is now the shortest route
to fame and fortune

It has become quite fashionable, in certain Muslim circles, to be an ex. We
have a number of ex-fundamentalists and ex-fanatics, such as Ed Husain,
promoting themselves as experts on fanaticism and terrorism and advising
various branches of the government. We have a group calling itself the
Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain, which specialises in denouncing all things
Islamic. We even have an odd ex-terrorist or two seeking book deals.

I have nothing against people who want to make a new identity for
themselves. That is their right. But it does seem strange to me that those
who want to distance themselves from a certain kind of Islam, or Islam
itself, still use Islam to describe their new identity. We don't have
reformed criminals calling themselves ex-criminals. Indeed, we don't even
have ex-atheists. So why ex-Muslims or ex-Islamists?

The answer tells us a great deal about contemporary Britain. When it comes
to Islam we are ready to believe anything and everything. Anything that
seems to help us fight fundamentalism is deserving of uncritical support.
The exes also enable us to perform a neat con-trick. By embracing them and
their call for "Islamic reform", we appear to demonstrate our support for
the Muslim community - thus drawing attention away from the fact that we
continue to discriminate against, and marginalise, the majority.

The uncritical embrace of exes is justified by the assertion that they bring
insider knowledge. They have been there, so they know what it's like to be a
fanatic, an Islamist, or a puritan Muslim. They are thus in a good position
to provide useful insights into fighting the nasty Muslims and stopping
their nefarious plans. This is a rather odd argument. How can someone who
didn't have the intellectual or spiritual capability to resist being
brainwashed lecture other Muslims on how to avoid such traps?

The exes themselves have realised that they are on to a good thing. To stand
up and declare that you are an ex-fanatic or an ex-Muslim is now the
shortest route to fame and fortune. One of the first to realise this was
Tawfik Hamid, a former member of the Egyptian terrorist group Gama'a
al-Islamiyya, who now lives in the US. Just over two years ago, he declared
himself an ex-terrorist and instantly found himself on Fox News and CNN.
Offers for confessional stories and books flooded in. He became an expert on
"terrorism" and "Islamic reformation" for the neoconservative Hudson
Institute.

The exes in Britain have followed similar trajectories. Who had heard of Ed
Husain, now jetting around the globe advising all and sundry about reforming
Islam, a few years ago? Or of Maryam Namazie, the "voice" of the Council of
Ex-Muslims of Britain? Has no one noticed that the Council consists largely
of Iranian exiles, card-carrying members of Mujahedin-e-Khalq, the
revolutionary Trots who fought the shah? They were hardly Muslims in the
first place.

I have nothing against these folk (though I think those who take them
seriously ought to be put in a straitjacket). Indeed, I am going to take a
leaf from their book. This will be my last column for the *New
Statesman*and I am therefore establishing a Council of Ex-Columnists.
But I plan to
parade my knowledge in longer articles for this magazine and elsewhere, thus
enhancing my considerable fame and fortune.

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